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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 2
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Future
With the unexpected retirement of Superintendent of Schools Dr. Debra Livingston, Manchester, once again, is searching for new leadership to try to bring forward momentum to the struggling district. What will the Board of School Committee look for in its new leader? Will it take this opportunity to move Manchester into the 21st century with a system that has learning at its core, or will it double down on the past with the timebased system designed over a century ago that advances students based on age rather than whether they have actually learned? My concern: The old-time model may prevail. It’s the easy way out. It’s the system that everyone knows. But it’s also the system that results in high dropout numbers and a high number of students saying that school is boring. Importantly, it’s also the system that the state is trying to move away from. The New Hampshire Department of Education has won numerous national awards for its bold efforts to move to a competency-based model where mastery of learning is the constant, with time and place as the variables. The state has even mandated this in its regulations, giving districts great flexibility to accomplish this. Manchester will eventually get there, but how many students will fall through the cracks in the meantime? Manchester has a great opportunity to reset its direction. I believe both Dr. Livingston and her predecessor, Dr. Thomas Brennan, were working to move Manchester in the right direction. Both tried to build on the extended learning opportunity option where students can get credit for learning options made available in the community (i.e. internships, apprenticeships) for credit. Will the next superintendent be an innovator committed to move Manchester into the 21st century? Or will he or she try to improve a 20th-century system that has not worked well enough for the city’s students? There’s an old saying: ”On the road to change, tradition will place 1,000 soldiers at every intersection to protect the past.” These traditionalists exist in Manchester as they do in every community in the state. But Manchester needs to change. I hope that the board finds the kind of innovative leader that this city so badly needs — and deserves. Fred Bramante is the past chairman of the NH State Board of Education. He speaks and consults on education redesign to regional, state and national organizations.
SEPT. 15 - 22, 2016 VOL 15 NO 35
News and culture weekly serving Metro southern New Hampshire Published every Thursday (1st copy free; 2nd $1). 49 Hollis St., Manchester, N.H. 03101 P 603-625-1855 F 603-625-2422 www.hippopress.com e-mail: news@hippopress.com
EDITORIAL Executive Editor Amy Diaz, adiaz@hippopress.com Managing Editor Meghan Siegler, msiegler@hippopress.com, ext. 113
ON THE COVER 14 FOR THE RECORD Local musicians and record store owners agree — vinyl is back. It’s a music experience different from anything an iPod has to offer, they say, and more people are starting to appreciate the old-school style. The Hippo found out why people might prefer vinyl, why it stopped being popular in the first place, and how local artists and store owners are loving the resurgence. ALSO ON THE COVER, it’s a super-sized event this year — Granite State Comic Con returns (p. 51). Also back for their umpteenth years are the Highland Games (p. 28) and Glendi (p. 40).
Editorial Design Ashley McCarty, hippolayout@gmail.com Copy Editor Lisa Parsons, lparsons@hippopress.com Staff Writers Kelly Sennott ksennott@hippopress.com, ext. 112 Angie Sykeny asykeny@hippopress.com, ext. 130 Ryan Lessard rlessard@hippopress.com, ext. 136 Matt Ingersoll mingersoll@hippopress.com, ext. 152 Contributors Sid Ceaser, Allison Willson Dudas, Jennifer Graham, Henry Homeyer, Dave Long, Lauren Mifsud, Stefanie Phillips, Eric W. Saeger, Michael Witthaus. To reach the newsroom call 625-1855, ext. 113 Listings Arts listings: arts@hippopress.com Inside/Outside listings: listings@hippopress.com Food & Drink listings: food@hippopress.com Music listings: music@hippopress.com
BUSINESS Publisher Jody Reese, Ext. 121 jreese@hippopress.com Associate Publisher Dan Szczesny Associate Publisher Jeff Rapsis, Ext. 123 jrapsis@hippopress.com Production Katie DeRosa, Emma Contic, Kristen Lochhead, Haylie Zebrowski Circulation Manager Doug Ladd, Ext. 135 dladd@hippopress.com Advertising Manager Charlene Cesarini, Ext. 126 ccesarini@hippopress.com Account Executives Alyse Savage, 603-493-2026 asavage@hippopress.com Katharine Stickney, Ext. 144 kstickney@hippopress.com Roxanne Macaig, Ext. 127 rmacaig@hippopress.com Stephanie Quimby, Ext. 134 squimby@hippopress.com Tammie Boucher, support staff, Ext. 150 Reception & Bookkeeping Gloria Zogopoulos To place an ad call 625-1855, Ext. 126 For Classifieds dial Ext. 125 or e-mail classifieds@hippopress.com. Unsolicited submissions are not accepted and will not be returned or acknowledged. Unsolicited submissions will be destroyed.
INSIDE THIS WEEK
NEWS & NOTES 4 Two new hotels planned for Manchester, PLUS News in Brief. 9 Q&A 10 QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX 12 SPORTS THIS WEEK 20 THE ARTS: 22 ART Two 50-year celebrations. 24 THEATER Listings for events around town. 27 CLASSICAL Listings for events around town. INSIDE/OUTSIDE: 29 KIDDIE POOL Family fun events this weekend. 30 GARDENING GUY Henry Homeyer offers advice on your outdoors. 31 TREASURE HUNT There’s gold in your attic. 32 CAR TALK Automotive advice. CAREERS: 38 ON THE JOB What it’s like to be a... FOOD: 40 GLENDI Shaken Not Stirred; the business of brewing; In the Kitchen; Weekly Dish; Wine; Perishables. POP CULTURE: 50 REVIEWS CDs, books, TV and more. Amy Diaz welcomes fall with Sully. NITE: 60 BANDS, CLUBS, NIGHTLIFE Truffle; Nightlife, music & comedy listings and more. 62 ROCK AND ROLL CROSSWORD A puzzle for the music-lover. 63 MUSIC THIS WEEK Live music at your favorite bars and restaurants.
ODDS & ENDS: 68 CROSSWORD 69 SIGNS OF LIFE 69 SUDOKU 70 NEWS OF THE WEIRD 70 THIS MODERN WORLD
1091893 HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE
NEWS & NOTES Hospital team-up
Catholic Medical Center in Manchester is planning on teaming up with two other hospitals in the state — Huggins Hospital in Wolfeboro and Monadnock Community Hospital in Peterborough — to create a parent organization called GraniteOne Health, and more information about what led to this partnership has been unveiled. The Union Leader reported the initiative was spearheaded by Monadnock Community Hospital in spring 2015, when it sent out requests for partnership proposals. It received responses from about 40 healthcare organizations, mostly inquiring for more information. Ultimately three proposals were submitted, and in October of last year Monadnock informed CMC it had been selected. Meanwhile, CMC was courting other partners and announced just a month later it was affiliating with Huggins. Due to confidentiality agreements, Huggins and Monadnock didn’t know they were both in talks with CMC. So, starting in February, the three hospitals began to meet together to talk about a three-way alliance. Under the new arrangement, the hospitals would maintain their liabilities and assets, but the parent entity will have the power of ratifying budgets and enabling a way to share more services.
GOP platform
As the New Hampshire Republican party discusses ways to change its platform, House Speaker Shawn Jasper has proposed a number of major changes to start off the negotiation. WMUR reported he’s suggesting the party do away with some of its current state goals such as the implementation of right-to-work legislation, a ban on casino video and slot machines, a limit on state spending linked to population and inflation and an opposition to any aspect of the Affordable Care Act, including expanded Medicaid. The legislature reauthorized Medicaid expansion this past session. Jasper said the current system of having 89 specific “points of implementation” in the platform is too divisive for a platform and it should be simplified to pitch a wider tent.
Liquor suit
A Superior Court judge has thrown out a lawsuit against the state liquor commission by a distribution company that failed to win a contract to warehouse and ship products for the New Hampshire Liquor & Wine Outlets across the state. The AP reported Judge Richard McNamara of the Merrimack County Superior Court rejected the suit by XTLNH, which alleged corruption in the New Hampshire Liquor Commission deprived them of a 20-year, $200 million contract. McNamara called the suit “nothing more than the grousing of a disappointed bidder.” The commission reached a $2.5 million settlement with its former distributor, Law Warehouses, last year over a similar lawsuit.
Hometown hero
New Hampshire’s own Olympic gold medal winner Tessa Gobbo was honored at the Statehouse recently. NHPR reported Gobbo, a rower on the women’s coxed eight rowing team in Rio and a native of Chesterfield, received a warm welcome from a room full of grade school-kids in the Executive Council chambers while Gov. Maggie Hassan proclaimed Sept. 9 to be Tessa Gobbo Day in New Hampshire. Gobbo told the kids that it’s important to work hard for their goals and “shoot for the stars.” She signed autographs for the students and let them pass around her medal.
Melissa Crews
After former HOPE for New Hampshire Recovery board chair Melissa Crews appeared in a Republican-funded attack ad against Democrat Maggie Hassan in her bid for U.S. Senate, Crews stepped down from her position on the board. But she’s still planning on being a vocal proponent of drug addiction treatment and recovery services. While her political statements caught many off guard and angered fellow advocates, Republican Senate President Chuck Morse recently named Crews to the Governor’s Commission on Drug and Alcohol Abuse, according to the Union Leader. The legislature made
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 4
some changes to how committee members get appointed and Morse still has one more legislative appointment to make, reserved for a medical practitioner.
Rivier grant
The National Science Foundation awarded a five-year, $650,000 grant to Rivier University in Nashua, aimed at helping to create more scientists in the workforce. The Telegraph of Nashua reported the money will fund a pilot program at the school called ARGYLES, which stands for Attract, Retain and Graduate Young Life Scientists. The program will provide fouryear merit-based scholarships to low-income students and work to connect biology majors to the workforce.
Job training
Gov. Maggie Hassan’s office announced matching job training grants for six New Hampshire companies and 147 workers totaling $61,505 for the month of August. According to a press release, the grants will be awarded to Early Learning New Hampshire ($32,142), Liberty Turned Components in Gonic ($10,300), Corbeil Enterprises in Bristol ($8,013), Tender Corporation in Littleton ($7,050), Stafford Oil in Laconia ($2,250) and Praxair Surface Technologies in Concord ($1,750). Early Learning New Hampshire plans to train the most employees, 115 child care workers at various early learning centers across the state, through Great Bay Community College.
CARTOONIST
What is currently a dead end in Pembroke will become a truck-friendly connection between routes 3 and 106, after a now-underway $3.2 million construction project is completed. The Concord Monitor reported the extension of Cooperative Way will provide a safer exit at a fourway intersection and divert trucks away from busy Route 3 traffic.
The Main Street redesign in Concord set aside 11 spaces for art installations, and it’s now up to the city council to pick at least two to install on a year-long-lease basis, the Concord Monitor reported. The Monitor posted an informal poll for residents to weigh in on their favorites online. CONCORD
Hooksett
Goffstown
Bedford
Construction began this week at Central Street in Amherst Hudson to fix a culvert over First Brook and repair a redMilfordThe Telegraph listed bridge. of Nashua reported drivers will be shifted to the shoulder and emergency lane during the work, which is expected to cost $185,000.
Clean water walk
Hundreds of people gathered to walk at Greeley Park in Nashua on Sept. 10 over the issue of clean drinking water. The Telegraph of Nashua reported the Water Walk was organized by the Thank You Project, an organization founded to address the lack of clean drinking water in some rural villages of Nigeria. The 200 participants
We now know who bought J.D. Salinger’s old New Hampshire home: a cartoonist who regularly contributes to The New Yorker. Salinger, the famously private author, first published in the same magazine before he published his short stories and novels as books. The New Yorker reported in a first-person narrative a visit to the Cornish home by the publication’s cultural correspondent to see the new owner, cartoonist Harry Bliss, and his collection of art by Charlotte’s Web illustrator Garth Williams. The home was put up for sale in 2014 by Joan Littleton. Littleton and her husband Jim had owned the house since the 1980s, when Salinger’s first wife, nearly 20 years divorced, sold it to them.
Work is underway to create a new playground at Bow Memorial Middle School. The Union Leader reported the plans involve incorporating traditional elements like monkey bars with new things like a community amphitheMANCHESTER ater, wheelchair-accessible features and fitness opportunities for adults.
Merrimack
Derry
Londonderry
NASHUA
raised money from donors ahead of the walk, in which they went to the Nashua River from the park with buckets and gourds, filled them with water from the river and walked back to the park. The act represented the daily chore families must perform in Nigeria to get water. Religious leaders from Christian, Muslim and Hindu faiths each participated.
INELIGIBLE CANDIDATES
Secretary of State Bill Gardner ruled two candidates for state office to be ineligible by state law. WMUR reported Republican state senate candidate Don Winterton was deemed ineligible because he hasn’t been a New Hampshire resident long enough. State law requires people who serve in the senate to be domiciled in New Hampshire for at least seven years, but records show Winterton voted in Florida in 2008, 2010 and 2012. Republican state Rep. Joe Duarte of Candia is also running for the seat, as well as Democrats Scott McGilvray and Kolawole Ernest Adewumi, both of Hooksett. Meanwhile, Michael Gill, the businessman known for his controversial billboards, is ineligible to run for governor as an independent, Gardner said, because he’s not registered to vote.
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NEWS
A tale of two hotels
How more rooms will impact the Queen City By Ryan Lessard
news@hippopress.com
Downtown Manchester is poised to benefit from two major hotel developments for the first time in a decade.
Economic benefits
and more customers to the restaurants and theaters and other sporting events.” Manchester developer Dick Anagnost said the Marriott, which he is developing, won’t come with a full-service restaurant. “So we’re going to be pushing our guests out to all of the downtown restaurants … which are all within walking distance,” Anagnost said. Preece said both hotels would help attract more tourists to the state, a major industry for New Hampshire’s economy, and attract more business at the SNHU Arena. Even the Radisson could benefit, developers say, because it would be able to host larger conventions in its convention space if there are more rooms available nearby for convention-goers to stay in. The two hotels could also have a psychological effect that could benefit the city economy. Pat Long, the chairman of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen, said the high visibility of two new and attractive buildings will signal to those driving by that Manchester is a city worth investing in. “The Granite Street bridge is a gateway coming into the city and to have people driving up to Elm Street and seeing a new building helps the outlook of Manchester,” Long said. City residents might also benefit from these buildings, as the downtown developments will start contributing to the city’s tax rolls. Long said a city the size of Manchester should be getting about 33 percent of its tax revenue from its downtown businesses, but in 2006 a study showed that it was only getting about 18 percent. Long said that’s now closer to 24 or 25 percent, but these hotels will inch the city even closer to the right balance.
There hasn’t been a new major hotel in downtown Manchester since the Hilton Garden Inn was built in 2006, but in a strange turn of events, it may get two by spring of 2018. Planning applications for a Residence Inn by Marriott to be built on the lot between Central Street and Lake Avenue next to the SNHU Arena (formerly the Verizon Wireless Arena) and for a Tru by Hilton in the Millyard area known as the “Bedford lot” were submitted to city planners on Sept. 6. The Marriott is expected to have 145 rooms, and 106 rooms are planned for the Tru. Counting the rooms at the existing Hilton Garden (125) and the Radisson Hotel (248), that amounts to a 40-percent increase in hotel rooms downtown. The next closest hotel is the La Quinta Inn & Suites at the Amoskeag Traffic Circle (owned by the same family who owns the Hilton Garden), which has 109 rooms. David Preece, the executive director of the Southern New Hampshire Regional Planning Commission, says there’s been demand for more rooms in the Queen City. “We have so much to offer but there’s just a very limited amount of accommodations and we need to do something about that,” Preece said. There have been more recent hotel developments in the area of the city closer to the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport, but Preece said it’s not enough. “We shouldn’t be just limited to what’s around the airport and what’s available in Market segments other communities,” Preece said. “This will Both hotels will be highly visible in the only bring more life to the downtown area city — up to six stories tall — but they will
New Hotels
Hotel developments are slated for prime downtown locations NEW Marriot Residence Inn
NEW Tru by Hilton
Radisson
Verizon Wireless Arena
Hilton Garden Inn Sources: Dick Anagnost, Peter Flotz (images)
be designed to follow very different business models. The Residence Inn, while it will be located a long toss from the Radisson, will not have any convention space and will cater to traveling business people. Anagnost said the Residence Inn brand is an extended-stay, upscale hotel. “There are people who are coming to see Dyn all the time,” Anagnost said. “There’s a ton of business travel that goes on in
Manchester.” Prices for both hotels are a moving target that will be decided on later, after things like construction costs are factored in. But the feasibility study done to investigate the market for a Residence Inn in Manchester suggested a price range of $98 to $148 per night, according to Scott Schubert, who works with Anagnost. The feasibility study for the Tru by Hilton showed a price range of $140 to $150, 8
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6 which is an average of what everyone won out. The Botnick family own the lot is expected to pay over the course of a year, where the Residence Inn would be built. according to Tru developer Peter Flotz. But “They were in preliminary talks and mayhe said he expects the actual prices to be be the developer thought they were further along than they were,” Anagnost said. lower than the Marriott’s. As for the Tru, Flotz had been planning That’s because Flotz said the Tru is a brand designed to cater to millennials, for the hotel to be a Hyatt Place for the people who are more price-conscious and past several months. He said it wasn’t the announcement of a Marriott that made him tech-savvy. “The Tru user is going to be probably 20 change hotel chains. Rather, it was the exisyears younger than me, maybe 30. They’re tence of the Hilton Garden Inn down the going to be more value-conscious, they’re road from the site of his development. “It’s essentially Hyatt’s version of what going to be willing to accept a slightly a Hilton Garden would be. It’s about the smaller room,” said Flotz, who is 58. The downstairs lobby will be designed same rate, typically the same kind of user with places for people to do work on their and, honestly, the Hilton chain has got millaptops in a social setting, with built-in lions more loyalty members than the Hyatt chairs equipped with soundproofing, plen- does,” Flotz said. “So we were concerned ty of power outlets, free and fast Wi-Fi and that we were going to be going head to head against somebody who’s already a winner in even a foosball table. “It honestly looks like the inside of a lot the market.” Going with Tru seemed like the solution of the office spaces that we’ve seen in the since it would ostensibly go after a different Millyard,” Flotz said. The Tru is a new brand that Hilton is roll- segment in the market. “I’m probably a typical Hilton Garden ing out — it doesn’t exist anywhere yet, but Hilton spokesperson Laura Schultz said in resident. I’m 58 years old, I travel a lot for my business, I have an email that there 400,000 points in are 200 Tru hotels in my Hilton account. the planning process, I want to make sure 120 with executI keep getting more. ed agreements. Of Why? I don’t know those, developers because I never use have broken ground them — but I want on seven projects those points,” Flotz and six more are said. expected to break But his 30-yearground later this old son is the typical month. DEVELOPER PETER FLOTZ ON THE Tru resident. Flotz “Other chains take NEW TRU HOTEL PLANNED FOR said marketing studa decade to build that MANCHESTER ies envision someone kind of brand, so this like a young prois really exciting. It’s one of the first brand new brands in a long grammer who drops his bags off in his room and feels more comfortable bringing his time,” Flotz said. Schultz said Tru isn’t just for millenni- laptop down to the lobby to work, whereals; it’s for Gen Xers and baby boomers too, as businessmen like Flotz are more at home and anyone with a “zest for life.” She said working in the privacy of their hotel rooms. there will be a number of tech-forward amenities like a “digital room key” available via Parking a smartphone app. The result of one project will be a loss of Flotz also said there will be a retail floor public parking, but the other will be built in the hotel that may feature things like a with extra public parking spots. sandwich shop, a cafe and maybe even a When Flotz’ project was still a Hyatt, he brew pub featuring a local beer selection. worked out a deal with the city to obtain air rights over nearby city street and sidewalk Touch and go property and build two parking decks for Some of the major details of these proj- public parking. The city is paying $750,000 ects coalesced in the last few days before the toward the project in exchange. The lot currently has about 110 public spots, according application deadline with the city. In the case of the Marriott, developers in to Long, but that will increase by about 50 Bedford working on the former Macy’s site spots with the new decks. The hotel parking were in talks to locate it there. About a week will be an additional 60 spots. As for the lot next to the arena, that will before the Marriott deal was announced, developers in Bedford even told report- no longer be used for event parking or pubers with the Union Leader that the Marriott lic parking. The Botnick-family-owned was coming there, before an agreement was E&R Cleaners building will be torn down to signed. But Anagnost and his partners, the make room for the hotel and all the parking Botnick Acquisition Development Team, will be dedicated to the Marriott.
Other chains take a decade to build that kind of brand, so this is really exciting.
NEWS & NOTES Q&A
Millennial candidate College student runs for state House
Amelia Keane of Nashua is a senior at University of New Hampshire at Manchester. She’s 25 years old and is running to be a Democratic state representative for Nashua Ward 4. Keane is also a finalist to win the College Student of the Year award from Stay Work Play. The winners will be announced at the Oct. 3 Rising Star Awards. First, can you tell me a little about yourself? I grew up in Nashua, graduated from Nashua High School North in 2009. I have three sisters, and after graduating high school I went to a school called Soka University of America in southern California. The school was a small liberal arts college focused on social justice and the Buddhist principles of peace, human rights and the sanctity of life. But I had always known that I wanted to pursue medicine and the school didn’t have what I needed. So I left that school and came home and because I had to pay for school myself, I was looking into options, and that’s how I came across an Army Reserve recruiter. In 2012, I joined the Army Reserve and went to medic school as well as nursing school as a way to help me pay for school.
when I was 15. It’s why I joined the military.
What made you decide to run for state rep? This past year I was interning with NextGen Climate. That’s sort of my first Courtesy photo. taste into politics. That was for the clean energy and environmental sector. It was in doing that, that I saw the interconnectedness of the environmental health, public health, racial injustice, economic injustice and how elected officials, in my opinion, need to be more focused on human security and protecting the individual. … I wanted to be able to, I guess, help out What are you studying at UNH? individuals and people from more avenues I started at UNH Manchester in the fall of than just environmental justice. 2014, majoring in biology. I’ll be graduating this year and applying to medical schools. What issues in New Hampshire are you While at this school, I started the environ- most passionate about? mental club. I identified some much needed Medicaid expansion, [which] my famirestructuring in our recycling and sustain- ly has used personally and [it’s] benefited ability programs. I spent all last year meeting them. But also the opioid crisis, that’s somewith various constituents from faculty, staff, thing that’s very near and dear to my heart, the dean of the school, the property manag- especially when it comes to veterans. There er, waste management, etc. to get a recycling are over 300 homeless veterans in the greatprogram established. That was finally rolled er Manchester area alone. Part of that is due out this summer and this fall. to mental illness, whether [it’s] the addiction or any other mental illness that’s allowing it What’s something people generally don’t so these individuals don’t integrate back into know about you? society. [Also], clean energy alternatives, Part of the reason that I’m running for state transportation and, of course, women’s access rep is recently my father … had brain sur- to healthcare. With Planned Parenthood, I’m gery. They found an aneurysm, unruptured, in glad they were able to get an extension in his brain. At the time my parents didn’t have their funding and I hope we can continue in health insurance — this is this past year — that trend. and trying to enroll in health insurance, they weren’t able to do that because the enrollment Do you think more young people should period was in November. Making a long sto- get more involved in politics? ry short, my dad ended up utilizing Medicaid, Absolutely. That’s part of the reason why but that was only because he got laid off from I’m doing it, is to … be an example of somework due to the aneurysm. … I didn’t grow one who is young and who can do it, hopefully up where I had a lot of opportunity handed to with success. And I think that in order to me. I had to create that opportunity for myself bring young people to the state and stay in much of the time, which is fine. … I had a job the state, they need to be better represented in their legislation. It’s unfortunate that it’s kind of designed in such a way that young peoWHAT ARE YOU REALLY INTO ple, especially younger people with families, RIGHT NOW? aren’t able to participate in being a member of I started playing the ukulele. That’s a the House. … They’re a significant portion of hobby that I have that not a lot of peothe population and they’re definitely underple know about. And I’m obsessed with represented. — Ryan Lessard astrophysics.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 9
NEWS & NOTES
QUALITY OF LIFE INDEX Dartmouth drops its ACO
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New questions are being raised about the viability of accountable care organizations as Dartmouth has decided to drop its ACO, a new Medicare program created via the Affordable Care Act. The Boston Globe reported Dartmouth made the call after staring down increasing financial losses. This is particularly noteworthy as Dartmouth College researchers were instrumental in creating the ACO model, which unites doctors and hospitals to coordinate care within the provider network and cut costs for Medicare. The Dartmouth ACO was actually successful at reducing Medicare spending on hospital stays and procedures and improved some quality-of-care goals, but it was still required to pay federal penalties for not reaching certain savings benchmarks. QOL Score: -1 Comment: The ACO model launched in 2012 and a number of ACOs have already dropped out due to financial uncertainty and “unrealistic” spending benchmarks.
Mosque vandalized
On the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks on New York’s twin towers and the Pentagon, someone threw rocks through the window of a mosque in Nashua. The Union Leader reported the vandalism occurred at 8 p.m. during a Sunday night worship service of the Islamic Society of Greater Nashua. The Massachusetts chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, an Islamic civil rights group, said the crime should be investigated as a possible hate crime. QOL Score: -2 Comment: According to a statement by CAIR-Massachusetts, this happened in a time of rising Islamophobia nationwide, due in part to the rhetoric of various public figures.
Powerball winner still anonymous
After more than a month of silence, lawyers for whoever purchased the Powerball-winning ticket at the Hannaford Supermarket store in Raymond this summer came forward this week to claim the $487 million prize — the largest lottery jackpot ever won in New Hampshire. But the ticket-holder wishes to remain anonymous; according to a WMUR report, the winner set up a trust and opted to take the lump sum payment of $256.3 million instead of signing the back of the ticket. Lottery spokesperson E.J. Powers said in a Union Leader article the ticket-holder’s family has indicated it’s committed to supporting philanthropic causes in New Hampshire. QOL Score: +1 Comment: Props to this winner, whoever he or she is; not everyone would be able to keep that secret, nor commit to sharing the large sum.
James of Generation Farm looking over a field of chard, basil and other young greens.
Major layoffs to come
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Dartmouth-Hitchcock will be laying off hundreds of employees after poor financial performance in the last fiscal year, according to an NHPR report. CEO James Weinstein told company employees in an email that Dartmouth-Hitchcock would need to shave $100 million in annual expenses to achieve financial stability, having finished the last fiscal year with a $12 million deficit. The reduction will include 3 to 5 percent of the total workforce across the Dartmouth-Hitchcock system — i.e., between 270 and 460 jobs. According to the story, the specifics of the cost-saving measures will be determined by the end of October. QOL Score: -2 Comment: Dartmouth-Hitchcock’s system-wide workforce was 9,239 in June, according to the Valley News. QOL score: 68 Net change: -4 QOL this week: 64 What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire? Let us know at news@hippopress.com.
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After last week’s preview of the Patriots’ prospects in the 2016 campaign it’s time to look at the rest of the NFL with a few random thoughts, predictions and beginning-ofthe-season awards. Happy to see the Rams back in L.A. where they belong. Now if they can go back to those all-white throwback uniforms with the blue trim and trot out Roman Gabriel, Jack Snow, Myron Pottios, the Fearsome Foursome and George Allen when Jeff Fisher gets it, I’ll be in heaven. Ray Hadley Award: After a horrid opening-day collapse, San Diego’s Mike McCoy took the lead in the race for first coach to be fired. Also in the running are Fisher in St. Louis, er, L.A., Gus Bailey in Jacksonville and Jim Caldwell in Detroit. On the other side, given what he did in his substitute teacher season in Indy and in the desert since he arrived to coach a franchise with their history, I’ve got Bruce Arians among the NFL’s top three coaches. Isn’t it great when good things happen to great people and vice versa? So, good to see Greg Hardy’s being radioactive now that his aberrant, tone-deaf act finally surpassed his QB sacking value. Joey Tribbiani Award: To local fav Chip Kelly. Because according to the Boston Globe’s Ben Volin he said in his NFL public info questionnaire his favorite food was “sandwiches.” Don’t know if they really are, he’s just messing around, or he likes Friends on TV where likable dimwit Joey Tribbiani’s favorite food also was sandwiches. Nice opening win for the post-Coughlin G-Men. Not sure if their under-appreciated ex-coach Tom Coughlin is a Famer, but if not, he’s close and definitely goes in the allopponents wing at the Pats’ Hall of Fame. Branch Rickey Award: With Stevan Ridley, Sterling Moore, Akeem Ayers, Kenbrell Thompkins, Sealver Siliga and Brandons Browner, Deaderick and Tate
Being there is why we’re here. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 12
getting it on cut-down day, it’s the latest indicator that either Patriots alums aren’t good fits elsewhere, or the brass follows Branch Rickey’s rule that it’s better to move on a year too early than a year to late Clay Buchholz Award: To, who else, Tony Romo for the most predictable annual injury. Star Trek All-Name Team: Despite their history of the last 20 years, I know my buddy George Copadis won’t throw in the towel yet. Even if his beloved Cowboys are down to their ninth-string QB already. But can they win with a guy who sounds like a character from Star Trek Deep Space 9 in Dak Prescott? The Chris Paul Award: To the much-ballyhooed Andrew Luck for being the most overrated player in his sport, as Paul is in the NBA. Pro Football Focus agrees, because they have him at just 9 in their QB ranking. If you’re wondering, Aaron Rodgers was No. 1, Brady 2 and Big Ben in Pittsburgh 3. No argument there, I guess. Chipper’s guy in SF, Blaine Gabbert, was last at 32. Matt Milan Award: To ex-Jets GM John Idzik after two of his highly touted draft picks got dumped last week. But since he let Darrelle Revis walk after drafting vaunted Alabama DB Dee Milliner to replace him, and later took tight end Jace Amaro to be NY’s Gronk-like beast, the NY media’s hammering is justified. Though totally hypocritical since they made Idzik out to be Vince Lombardi when he got hired. Though the “Revis Island Ain’t What He Used To Be” crowd picked up a more ammo when AJ Green torched the Jets secondary for 180 yards on 12 catches and Darrelle himself on a 54-yard TD bomb when the NYJ’s coughed up a shoulda-won 23-22 loss Sunday to Cincy. Don Majkowski Award: After getting beat out in Denver by a guy no one ever heard of, we’ll ask, has anyone’s career gone more directly downhill than the “sanchise”? Because after going to the AFC title game his first two seasons it’s like Mark Sanchez stepped in the career elevator and said to the
attendant, “Basement, please.” NFC Predictions: The NFC East is there for the taking by Washington’s Politically Incorrect-Skins. Central – even without Teddy Bridgewater Minnesota’s still the chic pic, but I’ll go with the always overrated Packers. South – I hate every team here except Carolina, so they’re a no-brainer. West – the division with the best two teams at the top in Seattle and Arizona. I’ll go with the C-Hawks because with the A.C. Green of football they’ve got the better QB in Russell Wilson. AFC Predictions: East – the Patriots for all the reasons mentioned last week. Central – despite all the criticism Marvin Lewis will win again in his amazing 14th season in Cincy. South – another division I hate, but Brock Osweiler will be OK, so Houston. West – could it be that the 30-years-dormant greatest football rivalry ever between KC and Oakland will have a revival? With Al Davis gone, probably not, but I’ll go with the silver and black in an upset. In Your Face Roger Award: To the Patriots for their not perfect but certainly satisfying 23-21 win over Arizona. Because on a day Roger Goodell crowed on, ahem, “impartial” financial partner NBC’s network about being “certain” he got deflate-gate right during the third less than penetrating interview of Matt Lauer’s bad week, they beat the plan of sending Tom Brady’s fill-in to face a Top 4 SB contender in hostile Phoenix to rub their face in it with a big opening-night loss. And, when you throw in the fact they did it facing the NFL’s most ferocious best pass rush without five starters on offense while the Colts, who started it all, and the rest of the AFC East all lost in excruciating fashion, I’d say it’s in the Top 5 regular-season wins and days of the Belichick era. The only question left is how the crybaby Indy media will blame the Pats for that bad loss to moribund Detroit and deposed exCoach Jim Caldwell.
Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress. com.
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SPORTS DAVE LONG’S PEOPLE, PLACES & OTHER STUFF
Brenner leaving F-Cats The Big Story: It’s the departure of F-Cats head man Rick Brenner. He announced last week he’s headed to Brooklyn, Michigan, to become president of Michigan International Speedway after spending 10 years doing a fantastic job as the F-Cats’ president and GM. Sports 101: With 39 and two weeks to go, Minnesota’s Brian Dozier seems a cinch to become just the fourth secondbaseman in history to hit 40 home runs in a season. Name the three who already did it. Good Knight Award: To Nashua North alum Trevor Knight for leading the comefrom-behind 39-28 win vs. Holy Cross by going 11-18 for 180 yards and 2 TDs as the U unveiled their new football digs, which Dalton Crossan helped christen with a 199-rushing yard, 2-TD day. Senior Moment of the Week: It was Nashua CC golfer Phil (com) Pleat winning a fifth NH Senior Amateur title in six years. He did it at the Montcalm Golf Club in Enfield by shooting even par 144 over two rounds for a four-shot win over Loudon CC’s Bob Landry. 2 – goals from (hey) Sailor Clark as Bedford moved to 5-0 with a 2-0 win over Nashua North. 3 – saves by Hannah Autenreith as the stingy Central D held Pinkerton to one goal in a 2-1 win where the goals came from Katya Levasseur and (turn the) Paige LaBerge. 5 – touchdown passes by Merrimack’s Justin Grassini with three going to Tyler DeNeill as Merrimack ran
over Memorial 56-14. 26 – minutes in and change when (san) Francisco Javier Velazquez scored what turned out to be the game-winning goal for Manchester Memorial in the Crusaders’ razor-thin 1-0 win over Bedford. 283 – rushing yards on 30 carries for Central’s Jeremyiah Rivera as he ran for 5 TDs rushed in Central’s 41-19 pasting of Londonderry. 402 – passing yards for
BG-QB Sam Raitt riddled Nashua South in a 23-for-31, 5-TD-pass, 1- rushing-TD day in the Cardinals’ 41-28 win over South. 716 – combined passing yards to go along with 8 TD passes by Goffstown’s Nik Moquin (363) and Pinkerton’s Aiden Goujon in G-town’s white-knuckle 37-33 win decided by a Moquin-to-Sgt. Carter Cormier 18-yard pass and catch with 1:12 in the game.
Sports Glossary
Matt Milan: Arguably the worst GM in NFL history, who got hired from the broadcast booth with zero front office experience and promptly ran Detroit into the ground, which included the only 0-16 season in history, in part because he kept taking wideouts with Top 5 overall picks who all busted, except the last one, Calvin Johnson, who arrived too late to help. Don Majkowski: Known as the Majik man after coming out of nowhere in 1989 to lead the Pack back from oblivion for the first time since the Lombardi era for a 10-6 season when he threw 27 TD passes after throwing 9 the year before. But the majik disappeared in 1990 and Green Bay dropped back to 6-10. Deep Space 9: Star Trek knock-off romp about a floating station in deep space where everyone seemed to be called Dax, starring Avery Brooks as Captain Cisco and va-va-voom Jeri Ryan as former Borg drone Seven of Nine. Ray Hadley: Never to be heard from again after being put out of his misery two seasons in as the hopelessly over his head replacement for Bill Parcells with the G-Men. Roger Goodell: NFL commissioner who said on national TV in 2014 he felt certain he got it right in the Greg Hardy, Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson domestic violence cases, before changing his mind for political reasons when his lack of compassion for their victims led to a tidal wave of public opinion against his inept decisions in those cases.
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The Numbers
Soccer Hat Trick City: They were produced last week by Katya Levasseur in leading Central to a 7-0 win over Keene and Jeff Pratt in Derryfield’s 5-0 win over Hillsborough. Sports 101 Answer: The three 40-homer second basemen are Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg, 40 in 1990; Davey Johnson, who hit 43 in 1973 just after Baltimore traded him to Atlanta, when he, Hank Aaron and Darrell Evans became the only threesome to hit 40 or more homers in the same season for one team; and the great Rogers Hornsby, who hit 42 when, oh by the way, he also batted .401 with St. Louis in 1922. On This Date – Sept. 15: 1960 – a day of mourning in Montreal where beloved Canadian sniper Maurice (the Rocket) Richard retires with a then all-time NHL record 544 goals. 1961 – the soon to be great Jack Nicklaus gives first notice he will soon to a force to be reckoned with on the PGA tour by winning the U.S. Golf Amateur Championship. 1985 – Europe beats US, 16½-11½ at (bats in) The Belfry, England, for the Ryder Cup title.
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 13
By Angie Sykeny
asykeny@hippopress.com
Vinyl records are back, and with today’s top artists like Adele, Coldplay and Taylor Swift jumping on the trend, they’re cooler than ever. That’s good news for independent record stores, which now have a new wave of customers ditching the digital downloads for something that feels more authentic and joining longtime vinyl enthusiasts in experiencing music the oldfashioned way. It was the mid-1980s when Bill Proulx, owner of Metro City Records in Manchester, read an article in Musician magazine HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 14
stating that within five years’ time, music they were going to do because everything stores as people knew them would cease was about to change, according to this artito exist. It was a bold cle,” he said. “What’s prediction considerinteresting is, they said ing commercial internet five years, but it took … until 2006 to 2008 wasn’t available yet for that to start hapand home computers were still few and far pening … and now it’s between, but for Proulx bouncing back.” and others in the record With streaming and industry, the feeling digital downloads domof impending doom inating the way music is consumed and the wasn’t easy to shrug CD market bordering off. “I remember, when on nonexistent, Proulx that got printed, every- Sweet. Courtesy photo. said people looking to one in this industry was experience music on shaking in their boots. No one knew what a physical medium are turning to the one
that started it all: vinyl records. But this new chapter for the record industry has a new face. The collapse of international music retail empire Tower Records in 2006 and other music store chains within the last decade has paved the way for independent stores to take the reins, and since the launch of Record Store Day in 2007 (see sidebar on p. 19), their presence has continued to grow. “The estimate for records sold in the U.S. for 2016 is 20 million. In 2007, it was a little under 2 million, so in general the trend has reversed, and there are more stores opening than closing,” said Chris Brown, who first proposed the idea for Record Store Day and works as the head of marketing and finance for Bull Moose,
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an independent chain of music stores with locations in New Hampshire and Maine. “There’s been a few high-profile closings, but people don’t always hear about the enormous wave of neighborhood stores opening up.” The restored interest in records has inspired local artists like Young Frontier and The Connection, both of Portsmouth, Tan Vampires of Dover and Tristan Omand of Manchester to make their music available on vinyl. Omand’s 2012 album Wandering Time was his first to be sold as a vinyl record. When his 2014 follow-up album Eleven Dark Horses was only offered on CD and digital download, some of his fans reached out, saying they wished it was available on vinyl. He decided to return to the format for his latest album, The Lesser-Known Tristan Omand, released in April of this year, and plans to re-release Eleven Dark Horses on vinyl in the future. “It’s definitely growing with more and more bands putting their music out on vinyl,” Omand said. “You put so much time and work into an album that you want to present it in the best way possible and with the highest quality, and right now I think that’s vinyl.” While it’s difficult to pinpoint what’s driving the resurgence of vinyl, record store owners have a few theories. The era of digital music is one of convenience; people can store thousands of songs on a portable device and have access to their entire music library at their fingertips. But Bruce Bennett, the owner of Thrifty’s Second Hand Stuff, a music-focused thrift store in Manchester, says the convenience doesn’t come without a cost. More music lovers are beginning to feel like there’s something missing from digital music and are turning to vinyl to fill the void. “We went from selling the experience to selling the music,” he said. “When the needle drops on a record and there’s the actual friction of something touching something,
it’s an emotional experience. How do you fall in love with a band when you have a thousand [songs] on your iPod that you’re randomly firing through as opposed to sitting down and truly listening to an album?” For Mark Matarozzo, owner of Spun Records in Dover, the record revival also BEGINNER TIPS New to the world of vinyl? Here are some basics that every record collector should know, courtesy of Mark Matarozzo, owner of Spun Records in Dover. • Never buy a record without inspecting the quality first. Look at the cover and more importantly at the record to make sure it meets your standards. • Surface scratches and scuffs will not affect how a record plays, but deep scratches will. If you can feel a scratch with your finger, the record is going to pop or skip in that spot. Look closely for scratches that run with the grooves of the record as those are harder to see but more likely to skip. • Check if the record is warped by holding it up flat and looking across the top of it. You should be able to see both edges. If one side is higher than the other, the record is warped. Slight warping is common in used records and usually doesn’t affect the sound quality, but it could cause the needle to jump and scratch the record. • If you can’t find a record you’re looking for at a record store, don’t be afraid to ask the attendant about it. Many stores, especially small ones, have tons of records in backstock that they don’t have room for in the main storefront or haven’t gotten around to pricing yet. • Be sure to clean every record you purchase before playing it. This will help to preserve your needle. Skip the expensive cleaning solutions and make your own with three parts distilled water and one part isopropyl alcohol. Never use straight alcohol as it will damage the record. • Always store your records standing upright. Laying them down flat in a pile makes them more prone to warping.
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hands and actively engage with can make it a more personal experience and allow them to feel closer to the artist. “We all know music makes jogging and driving and cooking more fun,” he said, “but when you think of the intensity young people have for music and how much it’s tied up with their identity, if they’re really touched by an artist, they want to focus on it, and I think records lead to that kind of deeper listening.” It’s one of the reasons Omand decided to make his music available on vinyl in the first place. For his latest album, he released only 300 limited-edition copies, all of which he hand-numbered himself. “If you’re a collector and you know there’s only 300 copies and you have No. 62, it makes it more special,” he said.
SPINS FROM THE PROS If you’re not sure how to start your collec- Coolest record to come through your shop: tion or what record to buy next, check out The Beatles, Abbey Road, Green Vinyl Edithese picks from local record store owners tion, U.K. import, 1978 (rock) and workers for some inspiration. Chris Brown, Bull Moose Bill Proulx, Metro City Records Favorite record Favorite record of of all time or at the moment: La all time or at the moment: KarmakanPlanete Sauvage ic, In a Perfect World, (Fantastic Planet) Soundtrack, 1973 2011 (jazz/rock) Essential record (jazz, funk, soul) Essential record every collection should have: The every collection should have: Kamasi WashCars, The Cars, 1978 (rock) ington, The Epic, 2015 (jazz, funk, soul) Coolest record to come through your shop: Coolest record to come through your shop: Masked Marauders, Masked Marauders, Courtney Barnett, Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit, 2015 (rock/pop) 1969 (rock, parody)
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means the revival of the concept of an album, which he said has been lost since music download services made it possible to download individual songs, and it’s exposing people to music they never would have discovered if they continued to pick and choose the songs they already know they like. “Generally with records, you’re listening to a whole album the way the artist wanted it presented, as opposed to a download where you play one tune, then skip one and play another and aren’t appreciating the fullness of the actual album,” he said. The packaging of vinyl records also plays a part. The artwork on the record cover, Thrifty’s. Courtesy photo. the way the cover is folded or constructed, the included lyrics sheets, posters or other the fact that when you buy a record, everymaterials and the song credits all enhance thing is encompassed,” he said. “If you want to know, ‘What’s the lyrics to that the album and elevate it song?’ or ‘Who played from a disc with music the bass on that track?’ to a comprehensive, it’s all there in one multi-sensory experiplace. You don’t get that ence. Those things are when you’re streaming absent from a digital music online.” download, save a small Since Bull Moose thumbnail image of the focuses primarily on album cover. It may not records by current artbe the only reason peoists, Brown said many ple are switching to of its customers are vinyl, but John Beneteens and young adults dict, owner of Music looking to vinyl as an Connection in ManchesFantastic Planet. Courtesy photo. additional way to enjoy ter, says it’s definitely their favorite music. Having the music in one of the big ones. “I think people are becoming tuned in to a physical form that they can hold in their
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 16
Bruce Bennett, Thrifty’s Second Don Pingree, Wingo’s Wecords Hand Stuff Favorite record Favorite record of of all time or at all time or at the the moment: The moment: The Sweet, Beach Boys, Pet Desolation BouleSounds, 1966 (rock/ vard, 1974 (rock) pop) Essential record Essential record every collection every collection should have: The should have: John Coltrane, Blue Train, Beatles, any record (rock) 1957 (jazz)
Coolest record to come through your shop: The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Axis Bold as Love, mono, white label promo, 1967 (rock/psychedelic) John Benedict, Music Connection Favorite record of all time or at the moment: The Beatles, Revolver, 1966 (rock) Essential record every collection should have: The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Time Out, 1959 (jazz) Coolest record to come through your shop: Spice Girls, Spice, 1996 (pop) Mark Matarozzo, Spun Records Favorite record of all time or at the moment: Tom Waits, Rain Dogs, 1985 (rock, blues) Essential record every collection should have: Fleetwood Mac, Rumours, 1977 (rock) Coolest record to come through your shop: Sun Ra, bootleg live recording (jazz)
“That’s the cool thing about vinyl. It’s a closer link to the artist than an MP3 download, so it’s treasured a little more.” Finally, there’s the question of sound quality. While different aspects are widely debated amongst record collectors and retailers, most will agree that the delivery of music on vinyl is superior to that of a digital download. Because a music download is compressed, the individual pieces of the song are neutralized, causing it to sound mashed up and, as it’s often described, “cold.” Vinyl records allow songs to maintain their complexity so that each piece pops, giving them a richer and “warmer” sound. “When you download a song or burn a CD, you’re missing some of the music. I’ve experienced a song that had clapping during the chorus that you couldn’t even hear in the download,” Proulx said. “But people are becoming more educated on it and are realizing that they’re sacrificing quality for quantity, and I think that’s the reason they’re grasping onto vinyl.” Even with the increased interest in records, owning a record store doesn’t come without its challenges, the biggest one being attracting new customers and maintaining the regulars. While the heft of a stack of records is part of the charm, it can also be a hurdle
for people who have space limitations or move frequently. Benedict said new customers are rarely sustainable long-term and typically don’t make it past a collection of 200 records. “The days of having a huge record collection are gone,” he said. “No one wants to lug that around; they just want something manageable, so discovering new people who really want to get into this is the biggest challenge.” For smaller stores, the inventory can get stale quickly for repeat customers, making it tricky to maintain regular business. Many have started carrying new vinyl reissues and albums by current artists to keep their inventory fresh. However, the new vinyl market carries its own set of problems. As records grew outdated and declined in sales over the years, many pressing plants shut down, and now there are not enough to accommodate the dramatic spike in demand. What that means for record stores is a limited selection of new vinyl to choose from, longer wait periods between new releases, and big costs with a small return. To make matters worse, many new albums are too long for a single record and have to be sold as a set of two, which means even longer wait times and retail prices as high as $30 or $40. For Matarozzo and a lot of other store owners, it’s not worth the trouble.
Since the trend for older music is generally always music from two decades into the past, Benedict said he’s struggling to meet the current demand for ’90s music because record production and sales at that time were negligible. Of course, some music maintains the same level of demand year after year. “There are certain genres that sell and ones that don’t,” said Don Pingree, owner of Wingo’s Wecords, an extension of R.S. Butler’s Trading Co. in Northwood. “Vintage rock, psychedelic, soul and blues are all good areas, but you get into classical, easy listening and some country and those are hard to sell.”
Tristan Omand. Courtesy photo.
“The new vinyl market is terrible. There’s very little markup and only a mediocre demand for it,” he said. “There’s a mediocre demand for anything more than $20 to $25. That’s what I’ve found to be the breaking point.” Music trends are another factor that’s out of the record stores’ control and can present some challenges depending on what they are.
Most of the surviving independent record stores are surviving because they offer additional services and products beyond records or employ creative marketing strategies. Nearly all of them sell some other media like CDs, cassette tapes, 8-tracks, DVDs and Blu-rays, video games and books, as well as audio equipment like turntables, stereos and speakers, and pop culture collectibles and memorabilia. Wingo’s Wecords, Bull Moose, Pitchfork Records & Stereo in Concord and many others also sell products online to broaden their customer base. Wingo’s and Spun have been using one of the simplest yet most effective strate-
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gies: low prices. “There’s a lot of people overpricing records just because they can,” Matarozzo said. “Online, you can sell a record for $100, but that’s to a global market. I have to think, ‘Is it going to sit on my shelf forever?’ So I mark it at $60 and it’ll move, and someone will be happy they got it for a better price.” Other record store owners are making the most of whatever special resources and distinctive qualities they have to give their stores an edge. At Metro City Records, which started as a record label before evolving into a retail business, Proulx utilizes his connections with record labels and distributors,
including distributors from overseas, to do special orders for his customers and procure products that aren’t widely available. Benedict, who bought Music Connection last September, is using the store’s 25-year history to his advantage. To maintain its reputation and existing customer base after the ownership switch, he kept the name, inventory and other characteristics of the original store while renovating the store’s interior and adding a larger selection of contemporary vinyl to attract new customers. Like many record store owners, he uses social media to boost awareness of the store and share updates about new record arrivals and special sales. Ironically, Thrifty’s Second Hand Stuff
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• Bobby Dee’s Records and Audio Repair (132 Main St., Pembroke, 289-2688, bobbydeeaudiorepair.com) sells used records and audio equipment and offers audio repair services. • Bull Moose (419 S. Broadway, Salem, 898-6254; 82-86 Congress St., Portsmouth, 422-9525; West Street Shopping Plaza, 401B West St., Keene, 354-3591; and other locations in Maine, bullmoose.com) sells new and some used vinyl records and CDs, DVDs and Blu-ray, video games and books at its storefronts and online at its website. • Metro City Records (691 Somerville St., Manchester, 665-9889, metrocityrecords. com) sells used and some new records, CDs, DVDs and Blu-ray and specializes in special orders for hard-to-find, out-of-print, rare, limited-edition and imported records and other media. • Music Connection (1711 S. Willow St., Manchester, 644-0199, musicconnection. us) has new and used records, CDs, DVDs, cassettes, record cleaning products and protective sleeves, turntables and replacement needles, stereo equipment and storage solutions. • Pitchfork Records & Stereo (2 S. Main St., Concord, 224-6700, pitchforkrecordsconcord.com) sells new and used records,
CDs, DVDs and T-shirts at its storefront and online at stores.ebay.com/cocosteam, as well as record cleaning equipment, turntables, speakers and a variety of other audio equipment. • Skeletone Records (50 N. Main St., Rochester, 948-1009, facebook.com/skeletone.radict) sells new and used records and CDs, cassettes, turntables, speakers, stereos and various other audio equipment, alternative clothing and more. • Spun Records (6 Grove St., Dover, 7426939, spundover.com) has used and some new records, CDs, cassettes, DVDs and more. • Thrifty’s Second Hand Stuff (1015 Candia Road, Manchester, 518-5413, thriftysnh. com) has thousands of used records, CDs, DVDs, videogames, comics and pop culture collectibles, turntables and other audio equipment, musical instruments and various other second hand items. The store doubles as a rock ‘n’ roll museum with a large collection of music memorabilia lining the walls. • Wingo’s Wecords (R.S. Butler’s Trading Company, 102 First NH Turnpike, Northwood, 942-5249, find them on Facebook) sells vintage records and music memorabilia at its storefront and online at stores.ebay. com/WINGOS-WECORDS.
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has always marketed itself as a thrift shop walls, it just makes sense that it’s becoming even though it has accrued the largest such a popular overall music store.” record inventory in New England, estimatThe camaraderie and connections ed at about half a million. between independent record stores have “I’d love to say we sat at the drawing also been key in helping them survive and board and decided to have the world’s big- thrive. Wingo’s Wecords supplies the Bull gest record store, but if you were to tell me Moose New Hampshire stores in Salem four years ago that we’d have hundreds of and Portsmouth with their stock of used thousands of records, I’d be like, ‘Wow, records, and Bull Moose in return refers now that’s interesting,’” Bennett said. people looking for more used records or For the past few years, he said, he’s looking to sell their records to Wingo’s. been “riding the wave” When Thrifty’s was of the vinyl resurgence still a budding busiand promoting Thrifty’s ness, Music Connection passed along the records more as a music store with unique attractions it didn’t have room for like the RecordMobile, to Thrifty’s to help it a pink bus filled with grow. Bennett said most thousands of records of the New Hampshire record stores “truly for sale, which appears want to help each othat community events er” and continue to and other random locations; kiosks filled with refer customers to othrecords and CDs for er stores if they don’t have what the customer sale at the New Hamp- The Beatles’ Revolver. Courtesy photo. is looking for. shire Chunky’s Cinema Even though record stores still have to Pub locations; a rock ’n’ roll “museum” incorporated into the store with memora- fight to stay afloat, Brown said it’s the bilia like guitars signed by Eric Clapton, fight that’s helping to shape and advance Stevie Ray Vaughn, Kurt Cobain and oth- the industry. “It’s tough to make any new business ers; and occasionally live music at the work, so what I’m looking forward to are professional sound stage inside the store. “Right now, Thrifty’s is a cool second- the innovations and new ideas,” he said. hand store that one day we may call a music “In five or 10 years from now, half of the store,” Bennett said. “It got to a point when new stores that opened up in the last five we realized that 90 percent of our sales are years will have grown and figured out new music-related, and because of the environ- ways to connect people with the music they ment and all the cool music stuff on the love.”
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RECORD STORE DAY When international music retail chain Tower Records went under in 2006, it brought a feeling of hopelessness to every corner of the record store industry. Store owners figured that if an empire as big as Tower Records couldn’t make it, the end of record stores must be near. But what many people didn’t realize was that the high-profile closing did not provide a full picture of the industry. Yes, some of the corporate chains were struggling, but the independent record stores actually seemed to be doing OK. In the summer of 2007, Chris Brown, head of marketing and finance for the local independent music store chain Bull Moose, was serving as a chairman on the board for a music store coalition. He proposed an idea to the president for a universal event to celebrate and promote independent record stores. “Everyone knew that something needed to happen, that we needed some kind of big, industry-wide promotional campaign,” Brown said. “Fortunately, independent record stores had been banding together for a while, so the idea spread and very quickly there were hundreds of people on board.” The inaugural Record Store Day took place in the spring of 2008 and has since been an annual event that takes place on one Sat-
urday in April at participating independent record stores. It follows a format similar to Free Comic Book Day and features all kinds of special events, appearances by wellknown music artists, and limited-edition records pressed specially for Record Store Day. The event has brought new life to the industry, and many record store owners and collectors consider it a driving force behind the vinyl resurgence. “It changed the tone within the industry,” Brown said. “It went from, ‘All the stores are closing, it’s terrible,’ to ‘Wow, there’s all these stores we’ve never heard of that are doing well, this is exciting.’” Record Store Day has also inspired stores to host release parties and other special events, and artists and record labels to release more special-edition pressings throughout the year to keep people excited and engaged with their local record stores. The next Record Store Day, in April 2017, will be the 10th anniversary of the event’s inception, and Brown said it’s going to have some extra special things going on. For more information about Record Store Day and to see a list of participating record stores near you, visit recordstoreday.com.
A Fun Fundraiser For Equality Health Center (Formerly Concord Feminist Health Center)
7:00pm - Enjoy divine cocktails, savor scrumptious hors d’oeuvres & bid on your favorite Silent Auction items. 8:00pm - An amazingly fabulous show featuring New Hampshire’s most audacious Drag Performers.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 19
THIS WEEK
Coin Show
EVENTS TO CHECK OUT SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016, AND BEYOND
Sunday, September 18th 9am–2pm
Friday, Sept. 16
The Rochester Fair returns for more than a week’s worth of festivities, including New Hampshire’s largest carnival midway, dozens of livestock exhibits, a demolition derby, delicious fair food and much more. The fair will be in town at 72 Lafayette St. in Rochester from Friday, Sept. 16, all the way through Sunday, Sept. 25. Admission is $14 for adults and free for kids under 36 inches. Call 332-6585 or visit rochesterfair.com for more details.
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Saturday, Sept. 17 Saturday, Sept. 17 Friday, Sept. 16
Acclaimed indie and alternative rock band Guster performs a show at the Capitol Center for the Arts (44 S. Main St., Concord) at 8 p.m. The band formed at Tufts University in Boston during the emerging alternative rock scene of the 1990s and has since released seven studio albums and several charting singles. Tickets start at $29. Call 225-1111 or visit ccanh. com for more information.
Infamy
December 7th, 1941
Honoring the 75th Anniversary of the Attack on Pearl Harbor
EAT: barbecue Join the Pelham Public Library (24 Village Green, Pelham) for its monthly Cookbook Explorers meetings. The group explores a new type of cuisine or diet each month. Their next meeting will be from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 21, and all are welcome. Share your cooking success and challenges and leave with new recipes. For this meeting, bring a dish and recipe you would bring to a barbecue. Admission is free. Call 635-7581 or visit pelhampubliclibrary.org for more details.
August 29th through October 24th
This exhibition was created by the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. Courtesy photo. The Wright Museum of WWII
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Join the Pope Memorial SPCA of Concord-Merrimack County for the annual Walk for the Animals, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Delta Dental Field (Delta Drive, Concord). Walk for one or three miles, then stay for food, beverages, a kids zone, live demos, vendors and more. Proceeds will benefit the PMSPCA and help support homeless and abandoned pets in and around central New Hampshire. Registration is $25. Call 856-8756 or visit popememorialspca.org/walk.
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 20
Interested in trying yoga for the first time? YogaBalance (135 Hooksett Road, Manchester) will be offering a Beginners’ Yoga Workshop from 1 to 4 p.m. that is specifically tailored to newcomers. The workshop will include a 30-minute discussion about the history of yoga and its various styles, as well as the physical and mental benefits of practicing yoga. Basic yoga postures with specific attention to alignment and poses will also be covered. The cost is $30 and includes mats and props, but feel free to bring your own. Call 6254000 or visit yogabalance.info.
DRINK: at Passport NH Craft Fest Sample from more than 20 small and large breweries at the annual Passport NH Craft Fest, an event sponsored by New Hampshire Public Television to be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17, at the Strawbery Banke Museum (14 Hancock St., Portsmouth). The beers will be paired with appetizers prepared by local chefs, and the festival will also feature live music. Tickets start at $30. Call 868-1100 or visit nhptv.org for more information.
Sunday, Sept. 18
Celebrate the halfway point to St. Patrick’s Day in style by running or walking in the annual Northeast Delta Dental Halfway to St. Patrick’s Day 5K, the next of Millennium Running’s signature event series. The race kicks off at 10:15 a.m. at The Wild Rover Pub (21 Kosciuszko St., Manchester) and the first 1,000 runners who register will receive a kilt. The cost to register in advance is $30 for adults ages 21 and up, $25 for youth ages 12 to 20 and $10 for kids ages 11 and under. Race day registration costs $35/$30/$10. Call 4727867 or visit millenniumrunning. com/halfway for more details.
BE MERRY: at an artisan festival Join the Canterbury Shaker Village (288 Shaker Road, Canterbury) in celebrating the Canterbury Artisan Festival, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17. The event will feature a variety of arts and agricultural demonstrations, as well as crafts, food, music, and several family-friendly activities. Tickets are $12 for adults, $6 for kids ages 6 to 17, and free for kids ages 5 and under and for members. Visit shakers.org or call 783-9511.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 21
ARTS 50-year celebrations
Exeter, Manchester art groups host anniversary events By Kelly Sennott
ksennott@hippopress.com
This weekend, two New Hampshire art organizations celebrate 50 years — one with an exhibition, one with an annual art festival.
Exeter Fine Crafts
Exeter Fine Crafts celebrates its 50th anniversary at Phillips Exeter Academy’s Lamont Gallery with “Rock Paper Scissors: 50 Years of Exeter Fine Crafts,” on view now through Oct. 15 with a reception Friday, Sept. 16, from 5 to 7 p.m., and a gallery talk Saturday, Saturday, Sept. 17, at 10 a.m. The show features more than 150 pieces by 60 member artists in a traditional gallery setting, a five-minute walk from EFC’s shop and classroom space on Water Street. Lamont Gallery Director and Curator Lauren K. O’Neal, also a new EFC board member, arranged the pieces by aesthetic themes — color palettes, shapes, gestures — with the help of volunteers. It’s caused her to see the art in a new way. “I knew I loved the work, because I had seen it at the shop, but you look at it differently when you start to arrange it in a show. You look at it closely, or you see it in a new light,” O’Neal said during an interview at the gallery, a day before it was set to open. “[At the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen’s Fair], there are a lot of artists, a lot of tents, but down here, people can really look at the objects individually.” Lit by gallery lights, along the walls, in cases and on shelves, are every kind of fine craft imaginable: scarves, jewelry, ceramics, woven baskets, prints, multimedia collages, framed pressed botanicals, sculptures, pillows and stoneware arches. Many of the featured craftspeople, O’Neal said, pay close attention to materials; for instance, Sharon Dugan’s baskets contain wood from New Hampshire forests. Joan Szoke’s pressed botanical designs are made from florals she grew herself, and Terri Talas created pictural animal carvings from shedded caribou antlers. Others capture local “Rock, Paper, Scissors: 50 Years of Exeter Fine Crafts” Where: Lamont Gallery, Phillips Exeter Academy, 11 Tan Lane, Exeter When: On view now through Oct. 15; reception Friday, Sept. 16, from 5 to 7 p.m.; gallery talk on Saturday, Sept. 17, at 10 a.m. Contact: 777-3461, exeter.edu/lamontgallery, gallery@exeter.edu, open Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 22
“February Morning, Mount Washington” by William Mitchell, on view at the Lamont Gallery. Courtesy image.
“Blue Sky Over Boston” by Doug Johnson, on view at the Lamont Gallery. Courtesy image.
scenes — like William Mitchell’s white mountain and birch tree prints and Doug Johnson’s framed beaded depiction of Phillips Exeter Academy. Plenty are utilitarian, but a large portion are purely decorative. “I don’t think people are as worried about what is fine craft and what is fine art. I think those things are merging together,” O’Neal said. “Having the show in a gallery like this, they can branch out and show some of their other pieces.” EFC is actually older than 50 years; when it first began, it was Exeter Home Industries Group and encouraged one-person businesses, promoting self-sufficiency during the Great Depression. A volunteer staff ran the cooperative organization, EFC store Manager Janice Earley said during an interview at the shop, and community members learned new skills and sold their work, from baked goods to crafts. In 1966, EFC became a satellite gallery for the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen (though at the time it was called the Exeter Craft Center, the sign for which still hangs in EFC’s downstairs classroom studio space). It had 280 members and opened with a $750 grant from a charitable trust and $400 from the League in the Masonic building on Water Street. The shop featured work by League members and local craftspeople who were accepted into the shop via an in-house jury. It began offering classes in jewelry making, pottery, weaving, basket making, stained glass art and chip carving. But some of the most defining changes happened the past 20 years. In 2001, it began running as an independent arts and crafts gal-
lery separate from the League, which at the time was beginning to standardize its practices and statewide shops. The goal was to sell more local crafts, not just statewide juried products. “Our board was going in one direction, their board was going in another,” Earley said. “We wanted to get bigger, and we wanted some control over what we could have in here.” EFC members created their own jurying system, one that’s a little less stringent than the League’s, and the store expanded to twice its size the year following. The result, Earley said, is that the gallery and shop are more accessible to beginning artists. In 2012, it became a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. It recently received a $5,000 grant from the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation to run youth art classes at the YMCA. Today it boasts about 200 juried members, some who’ve been around almost as long as EFC itself; Earley pointed to Dave and Cathy Robinson, Weare ceramicists who’ve been EFC members 49 years. Their royal blue pottery sits in the shop and in the gallery show. O’Neal said the Lamont Gallery’s mission is educational, as it sees members of the public and students from all over the state, in addition to those at Phillips Exeter. The space is often curated to contain artwork and pieces that students and gallery patrons wouldn’t necessarily see otherwise. “I think it’s also important for our students, and the adults who come to the gallery, to know there are these amazing artists and craftspeople living and working today in our midst,” O’Neal said. Earley said she feels lucky EFC has lasted so long.
“Fifty years in any business these days is amazing. But to have the community support for an arts business, especially over the last 10 years, when arts businesses have been folding left and right … we were lucky to survive, so we’re very happy. It’s a big celebration for us,” Earley said.
Manchester Artists Association
The Manchester Artists Association has been celebrating its 50th anniversary via commemorative events the past year, but the season finale is this weekend’s Art in the Park, on Saturday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Watson Park in Merrimack. The show typically features fine art — photography, paintings, sculpture — by 25 to 30 member artists, some just selling, some performing demonstrations throughout the day. Current MAA President Laurie LaFleur said the event moved from Manchester’s Veterans Park last year due to finances; Queen City prices went up, and members decided to find a new place since a portion of sales typically go to the MAA scholarship (whose winner this year was Exeter High School senior Shelby Bernard). The past 50 years, the organization has awarded thousands of dollars to high school seniors and held art exhibitions all around the area, from the New Hampshire Audubon to the Carol M. Rines Center in downtown Manchester. Its 50 members meet monthly at the New Hampshire Institute of Art to catch up, trade tips and hold artist presentations and demonstrations. LaFleur, who was also president during
ARTS
NH art world news
the organization’s 25th anniversary, attended one of these meetings for the first time in 1988. She wasn’t a super experienced artist, but she’d taken classes at the NHIA — then called the Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences — and wanted to learn more. “When you’re an artist learning in school or in an art class, you have to do things the way the instructor tells you. When you’re on your own, you develop your own way of doing things. But when you see someone else working, you can study their technique,” LaFleur said. “Everyone works differently, so you pick up tips from one another.” Much of the in-depth history has been lost over the years throughout its roller coaster life, but LaFleur said most of MAA remains the same. She’s more concerned about the future than the past. “We’ve had our ups and downs, of course, and some lean years — a few years ago, when
Artist James Leonard visits Studio 550 Sept. 20. Courtesy photo.
ing trolleys, which stop at each venue every 30 minutes. The trolleys start at City Hall at 5 p.m. but you can hop on at any venue. This year’s participants include Langer Place (55 S. Commercial St.) (Althea Haropulos Photography Studio, Dickinson Art and The Ingbretson Studio); the Millyard Museum (200 Bedford St.), which contains two shows, “Woven in Time” and “It’s Showtime! A History of Manchester’s Theaters;” the SEE Science Center (200 Bedford St.); D.M. Penny Press (250 N. Commercial St., 2nd floor); E.W. Poore Framing, Inc. (775 Canal St.); Art 3 Gallery (44 W. Brook St.), which contains a show, “Unwritten Thoughts;” the Manchester Artists Assoc. Carol Rines Center (1528 Elm St.); Framers Market (1301 Elm St.) which highlights photography by Susan Lirakis; the New Hampshire Institute of Art (77 Amherst St.), which features “Book Works” by Joy Drury Cox; StudioVerne (81 Hanover St.), which will host a demonstration; GREGORVIOS Graphic Design Studio (83 Hanover St.); Art on the Wall at City Hall (One City Wall Plaza); Dancing Lion Chocolate (917 Elm St.); and Studio 550 (550 Elm St.), which will contain an exhibition of multimedia art from around New England under the theme, “Complex 550.” Visit opendoorsmanchester.com or its Facebook page or call 669-7469. — Kelly Sennott
the market crashed, artists were hurt first, so a lot of people dropped out at that time — but I think they’re coming back now,” LaFleur said. “Right now, we need to recruit more young people.”
October 1st, 2016
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• Climate change art: Visiting Studio 550, 550 Elm St., Manchester, on Tuesday, Sept. 20, from noon to 7 p.m., is Brooklyn artist James Leonard. The artist has created a portable sacred space — a hand-sewn tent made with recycled materials — where he uses tarot cards to talk to people about their personal relationships to climate change. He’s been traveling across the country, making one-day stops to give free climate change divinatory readings inside his tent, and the Manchester art center’s the 25th of 27 stops. From the outside, the tent looks like a “cross between a post-apocalyptic wigwam and a children’s blanket fort,” as described in the press release, and the inside was made from brightly colored clothing and took more than 500 hours to sew. Tea-colored ink paintings of plant and animal species reportedly affected by climate change are pinned to the outside. Readings are free and private, last between 10 and 15 minutes and are given on a first-come, firstserved basis. “I wanted to create a space for contemplation, where participants can slow down, articulate questions and find clarity. Climate change is a universal concern. Art is the perfect place for expressing and evaluating concern,” Leonard said in a press release. Visit jamesleonard.org/work or 550arts.com or call 232-5597. • Doors are open: The last Open Doors Arts and Cultural Tour of 2016 happens Thursday, Sept. 22, from 5 to 8 p.m., in downtown Manchester. The event is a self-led tour to various arts and cultural venues throughout downtown, accessible by foot or two travel-
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ARTS
Notes from the theater scene
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• Manchester theater: At the Manchester Millyard Museum, 200 Bedford St., Manchester, you’ll get a taste of Queen City theater in a way you won’t in frontrow seats; it hosts an exhibition, “It’s Showtime! A History of Manchester’s Theaters,” Sept. 19 through Dec. 17, with an opening on Monday, Sept. 19, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. The exhibit will showcase the Palace Theatre and many other area theaters that haven’t lasted, such as the State, the Strand, the Lyric, the Modern, the Vitaphone, the Crown and others. The show contains photos from MHA’s own collection, complemented by artifacts, posters, costumes, memorabilia and mementos from the vaudeville, burlesque and motion picture eras. RSVP by calling 622-7531 or emailing history@manchesterhistoric.org, or visit manchesterhistoric.org. Admission to the museum is $8 for adults, $6 for seniors and college students and $4 for children ages 12 to 18. • Presidents play: In honor of the upcoming elections, the Merrimack Repertory Theatre, 50 E. Merrimack St., Lowell, presents 45 Plays for 45 Presidents by Andy Bayiates, Sean Benjamin, Genevra Gallo-Bayiates, Chloe Johnston and Karen Weinberg, now through Oct. 2, with direction by Sean Daniels. In this “roll-
24 Theater
Includes listings, shows, auditions, workshops and more. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.
Terrell Donnell Sledge, Aaron Munoz, Celina Dean, and Nael Nacer all portray Teddy Roosevelt as his daughter (Veronika Duerr) remembers him in 45 Plays for 45 Presidents. Photo by Meghan Moore.
er coaster ride of American history,” each commander in chief gets two minutes in the spotlight, and at the end, audiences choose the 45th play. It spans 227 years of triumph and adversity, presenting an American civics lesson in two hours. Tickets start at $15. Visit mrt.org or call 978-654-4678. • Master musicians: 3S Artspace, 319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth, presents Merasi: Master Musicians of Rajasthan on Thursday, Sept. 22, at 8 p.m. The Merasi troupe’s music springs from 38 generations of musicians who performed for Rajput maharajas and at temple festivals. Musicians will recite oral histories of Indian kings, share insight into their cultural heritage and bring to life the stories seen in Indian miniature paintings with their performance. Doors open at 7 p.m. and tickets are $12 for general admission, $8 for students; visit 3Sarts. org or call 766-3330. — Kelly Sennott
25 Art
Includes listings for gallery events, ongoing exhibits and classes. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.
27 Classical
Includes symphony and orchestral performances. To get listed, e-mail arts@hippopress.com.
Looking for more art, theater and classical music? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play. Theater Auditions/open calls • AUDITIONS: THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK Sat., Sept. 17, 1-3 p.m. For youth ages 13 to 18. The Performer's Playground, 794 John Stark Highway, Claremont. Email amplifiedartsnh@ gmail.com or theperformersplayground.org.
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Productions • 45 PLAYS FOR 45 PRESIDENTS Merrimack Repertory Theatre production. On view Sept. 7 through Oct. 2. Merrimack Repertory Theatre, 50 E. Merrimack St., Lowell. Visit mrt.org. • CRY HAVOC Thurs., Sept. 15, at 7:30 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 16, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 4 p.m. Peterborough Players Theatre,
55 Hadley Road, Peterborough. $39. Call 924-7585. Visit peterboroughplayers.org. • DORKS IN DUNGEONS: SEASON 4, EPISODE 1 Improv based on Dungeons & Dragons. Fri., Sept. 16, at 8 p.m. 3S Artspace, 319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth. $12 online, paywhat-you-can at the door. Visit 3sarts.org or dorksindungeons. com. • OLIVER! Produced by Friends of the Amato Center. Fri., Sept. 16, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 2:30 & 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 2:30 p.m. Amato Center for the Performing Arts, 56 Mont Vernon Road, Milford. $18. • LAUGHTER ON THE 23RD FLOOR Seacoast Rep comedy. Sept. 16 through Oct. 9. Thursdays at 7:30 p.m.; Fridays at 8 p.m.; Saturdays at 2 and 8 p.m.;
Sundays at 2 p.m. Seacoast Repertory Theatre, 125 Bow St., Portsmouth. Call 433-4472. Visit seacoastrep.org/tickets. • DANCING AMONG THE WILDFLOWERS One-act play by David John Preece. Fri., Sept. 16, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 7:30 p.m. Hatbox Theatre, Steeplegate Mall, 270 Loudon Road, Concord. $16.50. Visit hatboxnh.com. • SISTER ACT Palace Theatre production. Sept. 9 through Oct. 1. Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester. $25-$45. Visit palacetheatre.org. Call 6685588. • ARCADIA Play by Tom Stoppard. Players' Ring production. Sept. 2-18. Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 3 p.m. The Players' Ring, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth. $15. Visit play-
STUDENT COMPOSER The Manchester Community Music School presents “The Last Sonatas of Summer,” a concert with original compositions by one of its adult students, Manchester native James Tebbetts, at the Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester, on Wednesday, Sept. 21, at 7 p.m. Tebbetts has been a music school student since 2004 at the age of 43, and over the years, he’s studied the recorder, flute, piano, plus music theory and musical composition. His three original pieces will be performed by professional musicians, including some MCMS faculty. The concert is free and open to the public, but registration is required; call 644-4548 or email aubrie@mcmusicschool.org. ersring.org. Call 436-8123. • CONCORD CITY AUDITORIUM OPENING GALA Ice cream social, variety show previewing upcoming season, raffle. Sun., Sept. 18, at 6 p.m. Concord City Auditorium, 2 Prince St., Concord. Ice cream social (6 p.m.) is free, variety show at 7 p.m. is $5. Call 3444747. Email nhdm40@comcast. net. • NOT AT FIRST SIGHT: AN IMPROVISED ROMANTIC COMEDY Stranger Than Fiction improv and comedy. Tues., Sept. 20, at 8 p.m. Seacoast Repertory Theatre, 125 Bow St., Portsmouth. Call 433-4472. Visit seacoastrep.org. • OMEGA Edgar Levi Productions. Sept. 23-Oct. 9. Shows Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 3 p.m. Players' Ring, 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth. $15. Visit playersring.org. Call 4368123. • GRANITE STATE PLAYWRIGHT’S WORKSHOP Sun., Sept. 25, at 2 & 6:30 p.m., at Hatbox Theatre, 270 Loudon Road, Concord. Inspired by 24-hour theater festivals. $16.50. Visit hatboxnh.com. • STUPID F—ING BIRD Theatre KAPOW production. Fri., Sept. 30, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 1, at 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 2, at 2 p.m.; Fri., Oct. 7, at 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Oct. 8, at 7:30 p.m. Derry Opera House, 29 W. Broadway, Derry. Visit tkapow.com. Tickets $20. • PORTSMOUTH UNDERBELLY Walking tour chronicling underbelly of Portsmouth, telling scandalous stories usually swept under the rug. Monday and Saturday evenings at 6 p.m. Corner of State and Pleasant St., Portsmouth. $15. Call 978-6837745. Reservations recommended. Visit underbellyports.net. Workshops/other • 2ND ANNUAL ANDY'S SUMMER PLAYHOUSE AUCTION Live performances, auction. Sat., Sept. 17; 4 p.m.
Keller's Barn, 605 Isaac Frye Highway, Wilton. Visit andyssummerplayhouse.org. Call 654-2613. • THE ACTOR'S TOOLS NH Theatre Project workshops. Mondays, Sept. 19 through Oct. 24. 5-6 p.m. for ages 10 to 15. 6:30-8:30 p.m. for 17 to adult. West End Studio Theatre, 959 Islington St., Portsmouth. $25$40 per workshop depending on number of attendees. Visit nhtheatreproject.org. Call 4316644, ext. 4. Email info@nhtheatreproject.org. • PEACOCK PLAYERS ANNUAL DINNER & AUCTION Themed wizarding feast with silent auction, followed by dinner and entertainment by Alexandra Socha. Fri., Oct. 7, at 6 p.m. Crown Plaza, 2 Somerset Parkway, Nashua. $50. Visit peacockplayers.org. Call 886-7000. Art Events • HAMPTON ARTS NETWORK ART WALK Free events in downtown Hampton. Artwork by more than a dozen HAN members at local downtown businesses. Sept. 17 through Sept. 24. Downtown Hampton, Hampton. Visit hamptonartsnetwork.wordpress.com. • WHERE ART MEETS TECHNOLOGY: TOUR OF THE PORT CITY MAKERSPACE Fri., Sept. 16, 6-8 p.m. Port City Makerspace, 68 Morning St., Portsmouth. Visit nhcreativeclub.org. • DOWNTOWN ARTS FESTIVAL Presented by Positive Street Art. Sat., Sept. 18, noon-6 p.m. Le Parc De Notre Renaissance Française, Nashua. Visit positivestreetart.org. • PHOTOGRAPHERS FORUM CAMERA CLUB COMPETITION/MEETING Welcoming new members. Mon., Sept. 19, at 7:15 p.m. Bishop Guertin High School, 194 Lund Road, Nashua. Visit
photographersforum.org. • PAINT NIGHT: RECREATE "PLOWING THE FIELDS" Carla Roy from Currier presents event connected to NEA Big Read, celebrating The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck. Tues., Sept. 20, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Amherst Town Library, 14 Main St., Amherst. Visit nhhumanities.org. • AFTER DARK PAINT SOCIAL: CREATE YOUR SUMMER GLOW Positive Street Art benefit paint night event. $25. Includes art lesson, supplies, complimentary drink. Thirsty Turtle, 8 Temple St., Nashua. • BECK'S ARTS EXPRESS OPEN HOUSE Fri., Sept. 23, 6-7:30 p.m. Beck's Arts Express, 89 Amherst St., Nashua. Call 566-1393. Visit artsexpressnh.com. • ART OF GIVING Featuring landscapes by Sally Ladd Cole. Food and wine pairings. Proceeds benefit Windham High School students. Sat., Sept. 24, 7-9:30 p.m. Tidewater Catering's Riverside Room, 250 Commercial St., Manchester. Call 437-0686. • CONCORD ARTS MARKET Featuring locally-made arts, crafts, pottery, jewelry, clothing, etc. June 4 through Sept. 24, Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Bicentennial Square, Concord. Visit concordartsmarket.net. Email kitty@concordartsmarket.net. • ANDRES INSTITUTE OF ART 18TH ANNUAL SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM Artists from around the world come to Brookline to make sculptures for sculpture park. Open daily. Sept. 10 through Oct. 1. Closing reception Sat., Oct. 1, at 4 p.m. Andres Institute of Art, 98 Route 13, Brookline. Visit andresinstitute.org. • ARTWALK Sat., Oct. 15, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun., Oct. 16, noon-4 p.m. Downtown Nashua. Visit cityartsnashua.org.
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The League of New Hampshire Craftsmen hosts an exhibition, “End of the Rainbow,” Sept. 16 through Dec. 16 at the League’s gallery at The Craft Center, 49 S. Main St., Concord, this fall. Thirty-two master craftsmen have interpreted the theme and built a multi-media exhibition, from intricate quilts and ornate jewelry to decorative wood hangings and mixed media. There’s an opening reception on Friday, Sept. 16, from 5 to 7 p.m., where the public can meet and speak with participating exhibitors. The gallery’s open Mondays through Fridays from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturdays while the exhibition is up from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Pictured, “Azaleas by the Fence” by Karen Hudnall. Courtesy image. Fairs • HOLLIS OLD HOME DAY ARTISAN MARKET Produced with Wild Salamander Creative Arts Center. Sat., Sept. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Lawrence Barn, 28 Depot Road, Hollis. Visit wildsalamander.com. Call 465-9453. • CANTERBURY ARTISAN FESTIVAL Featuring craft fair, farmer's market, music, artisan food, demonstrations. Sat., Sept. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Canterbury Shaker Village, 288 Shaker Road, Canterbury. $12. Visit shakers.org. • HAMPTON FALLS CRAFT FESTIVAL Sat., Sept. 17, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun., Sept. 18, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Hampton Falls Town Common. Route 1. Visit castleberryfairs.com. • BEAVER BROOK FALL FESTIVAL AND ART SHOW More than 75 regional artists. Live animal presentations, petting zoo, nature crafts for children, demonstration on beekeeping, live music and homemade food. Caroline Burns of The Voice will perform. Beaver Brook Association, 117 Ridge Road, Hollis. Free Call 4657787 or visit beaverbrook.org. Sat., Sept. 24, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 25, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. • DERRY ART FAIR Sat., Oct. 1, noon-5 p.m. Town Green, 1 1/2 E. Broadway, Derry. Openings • "7,000 MILES FROM DURHAM" Featuring work by Margaret Carson Hubbard in Africa and Marion E. James from India. Guest curated by Catherine Hunter. On view Aug. 31 through Oct. 16. Lecture by Karen Elizabeth Milbourne Thurs., Sept. 15, 5:30-6:30 p.m. "Imagine a Nation: Art, Leadership and the Vision of an African Kingdom." UNH Museum of Art, 30 Academic Way, Durham. Call 862-3713. Visit unh.edu. • "THE PAST IS PRESENT" Six New England artists exhibit
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artwork that transcends time and place. On view Sept. 10 through Oct. 30. Opening Thurs., Sept. 15, 5-7 p.m. Twiggs Gallery, 254 King St., Boscawen. Visit twiggsgallery.wordpress.com. Call 975-0015. • "ROCK, PAPER, SCISSORS: 50 YEARS OF EXETER FINE CRAFTS" Featuring work of the hand and heart. On view Sept. 7 through Oct. 15. Opening Fri., Sept. 16, 5-7 p.m. Lamont Gallery, Frederick R. Mayer Art Center, 11 Tan Lane, Exeter. Visit exeter. edu/lamontgallery. • "END OF THE RAINBOW" League of NH Craftsmen show. On view Sept. 16 through Dec. 16. Reception Fri., Sept. 16, 5-7 p.m. League of NH Craftsmen Craft Center, 49 S. Main St., Concord. Visit nhcrafts.org. Call 224-3375. • SIBEL ALPASLAN September Artist of the Month. Reception Sat., Sept. 17, 1-4 p.m. Exeter Fine Crafts, 61 Water St., Exeter. Call 778-8282. • "UNWRITTEN THOUGHTS" Art exhibition on view at Art 3 Gallery. On view Sept. 22 through Jan. 13. Reception Thurs., Sept. 22, 5-8 p.m. Art 3 Gallery, 44 W. Brook St., Manchester. Call 668-6650 or visit art3gallery.com. • SUSAN LIRAKIS Featured artist exhibition. On view now through Nov. 12. Reception Thurs., Sept. 22, 5-8 p.m. Framers Market, 1301 Elm St., Manchester. Visit framersmarketnh. com. Call 668-6989. • "CELEBRATION" Women's Caucus for Art show. On view Oct. 1 through Oct. 29. Reception Thurs., Oct. 6, 5:30-7:30 p.m. RiverStone Custom Framing, 33 N. Main St., Rochester. Email riverstonecustomframing@gmail.com. Call 812-1488. • "MOUNT WASHINGTON: THE CROWN OF NEW ENGLAND" Currier art exhibition featuring Mount Washington-themed work. On view Oct. 1 through Jan. 16. Currier
Museum of Art, 150 Ash St., Manchester. Regular admission, plus a $5 special exhibition fee. Visit currier.org. Call 669-6144, ext. 108.
In the Galleries • ANNE MARIE FARLEY ZANFANGA Artist show. Also includes work by other NAAA artists. On view now through Sept. 22. Art Hub, 30 Temple St., Nashua. Visit NAAAArtHub.org. • "BILL OAKES: THE ART OF CREATIVITY" Featuring work of late NH artist, author. On view Aug. 20 through Sept. 22. Keefe House Gallery at Woodman Museum, 182 Central Ave., Dover. Call 742-1038. Email director@woodmanmuseum.org. • "LASTING IMPRESSIONS: ART QUILTS 2016" On view Aug. 13-Sept. 24. Whistler House Museum of Art, 243 Worthen St., Lowell. Call 978452-7641 visit whistlerhouse. org. • "GLOOSCAP/KLUSKAP OF THE WABANAKI" Contemporary Art Gallery show. Maliseet artist Dozay portrayed the adventures of the Wabanaki hero Kuslap in series of paintings. On view through Sept. 30. Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum, 18 Highlawn Road, Warner. Visit indianmuseum.org. Email info@indianmuseum.org. Call 465-2600. • MONA ADISA BROOKS On view through Sept. Trumpet Fine Arts Gallery, 8 Grove St., Peterborough. Visit trumpetgallery.com. • ISLES OF SHOALSTHEMED ART Art exhibition featuring work by 13 artists; pieces depict Isles of Shoals. On view through September. Todd Bonita Art Gallery, 39 Ceres St., Portsmouth. • ELMA FABIANA GOMEZ Dover Public Library artist of the month. On view through Sept. Dover Public Library, 73 Locust St., Dover. Call 516-6050.
Open calls • CAMERA COMMONS CALL FOR ART: ABANDONED PLACES Looking for photos of abandoned places. Deadline Oct. 1. Exhibition is Oct. 16-Jan. 8. Camera Commons, 652 Central Ave., Dover. Email gallery@cameracommons.com. Call 842-4713. • CALL FOR ARTISTS: CRAFT FAIR YMCA Craft Fair. Sat., Nov. 12, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nashua YMCA, 24 Stadium Drive, Nashua. $50 per vendor. Call 882-2011. Email tjoslin@ nmymca.org. Workshops/classes/ demonstrations • COMMUNITY EDUCATION For adults, teens, and children at NH Institute of Art. Disciplines include ceramics, creative writing, drawing, metalsmithing, photography, printmaking, fibers, and more. NH Institute of Art, 148 Concord St., Manchester. Prices vary depending on type of class and materials needed. Call 6230313. Visit nhia.edu. • COMMUNITY EMPTY BOWLS Make clay bowls to donate to Manchester Empty Bowls event to benefit New Horizons. First Friday of the month 3-6 p.m. Studio 550, 550 Elm St., Manchester. Free; beginners and advanced artists welcome. Visit 550arts.com. Call 232-5597. Classical Music Events • SYMPHONY NH KICK-OFF EVENT Free concert, meet new music director Jonathan McPhee, new executive director Marc Thayer. Thurs., Sept. 15, at 6 p.m. Hunt Memorial Building, 6 Main St., Nashua. Visit symphonynh. org. Call 595-9156. • THE LAST SONATAS OF SUMMER Concert featuring original compositions by one of its own adult students James Tebbetts. Wed., Sept. 21, at 7 p.m. Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash
St., Manchester. Free. Call 6444548. Email aubrie@mcmusicschool.org. RSVP required. • SOUNDING OUT! Concert featuring UMass Lowell music faculty, students, alumni. Fri., Sept. 23, at 8 p.m. Durgin Concert Hall, 35 Wilder St., Lowell. $15. Visit uml.edu. • NASHUA COMMUNITY CONCERT ASSOCIATION: THE KAT TRIO Victoria Gorbich on violin, Vladislav Gorbich on clarinet, and Joseph Ross on piano. Sat., Sept. 24, at 8 p.m. Keefe Center for the Arts, 117 Elm St., Nashua. Visit the site for ticket prices. Visit nashuacommunityconcerts.org. • BRIGHTER TOMORROWS Broadway concert featuring uplifting show tunes to benefit SHARE Outreach in Milford. Featuring Rachel Cerullo, Seraphim D’Andrea, Kat Bolling, Meredythe Leonard, Mike Colena, Bob Frasca, and Elliot Robert Owens and Laura Millar. Sat., Sept. 24, at 7 p.m. Church of Our Savior, 10 Amherst St., Milford. $10. Bring item or food or clothing. • LAKE SUNAPEE AREA FLUTE CHOIR Concert. Sat., Sept. 24, at 7 p.m. Wilmot Community Association Red Barn, 64 Village Road, Wilmot. Free. Visit wilmotcommunityassociation.org. • OMER STRING QUARTET Concert. Part of Historic Portsmouth Chamber Music presentations for 2016. Sun., Sept. 25, at 3 p.m. North Church, 2 Congress St., Portsmouth. Visit portsmouthathenaeum.org. Call 363-5258. • UNH MUSIC DEPARTMENT FACULTY CONCERT SERIES Featuring presents Peggy Vagts, flute, Elizabeth Gunlogson, clarinet and Hsiang Tu, piano with Nathan Jorgensen, saxophone. Sun., Sept. 25, at 3 p.m. UNH, Paul Creative Arts Center, 30 Academic Way, Durham. Free. Visit unh.edu/music. Call 862-2404.
NOT AT FIRST SIGHT Stranger Than Fiction Improv and Comedy returns to the Seacoast Repertory Theatre, 125 Bow St., Portsmouth, to present Not at First Sight: An Improvised Romantic Comedy on Tuesday, Sept. 20, at 8 p.m., paying homage to screwball comedies of the ‘30s, ‘40s and ‘50s. (Think of the playfulness and humor of It Happened One Night, His Girl Friday or Some Like it Hot, but improvised.) The entirety of the story will be created based on audience suggestions. STF Artistic Director Tara McDonough said in a press release the show was inspired by her love of old movies and the Rep’s current production, Laughter on the 23rd Floor. Visit seacoastrep.org or call 433-4472. Tickets run $15 to $20, with discounts available for students and seniors. Courtesy photo.
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• "CUBA SI" Cuban art and photography, organized by Diane Stradling. On view Sept. 1 through Sept. 30. Portsmouth Public Library, 175 Parrott Ave., Portsmouth. Visit cityofportsmouth.com/library. "WENDY TURNER: • ISLAND LIGHT" Art exhibition. On view through Sept. 30. Discover Portsmouth Center, 10 Middle Road, Portsmouth. Visit portsmouthhistory.org. Call 4368433. • GRETCHEN WARSEN Abstract art show. Aug. 20 through Oct. 1. Epsom Public Library, 1606 Dover Road, Epsom. Visit epsomlibrary.com. • "PORTSMOUTH TO PITTSBURG: THE SALT AND SAWDUST OF NEW HAMPSHIRE" Art show featuring work by Bruce Bacon. On view Aug. 31 through Oct.1. Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery, 136 State St., Portsmouth. • 37TH ANNUAL PARFITT JURIED PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITION On view Aug. 31-Oct. 1. Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery, 136 State St., Portsmouth. Visit nhartassociation. org. Call 431-4230. • MAIN STREET PAINTERS ART SHOW Featuring work by Susie Choate, Diana Conrad, Heather Dahlberg, Dolores Gosselin, and Gay Hartman. On view Aug. 27 through Oct. 6. Hancock Town Library, 25 Main St., Hancock. Call 525-4411. • "I/D 2016: ILLUSTRATION AND GRAPHIC DESIGN" On view now through Oct. 7. Derryfield School, 2108 River Road, Manchester. Visit derryfield.org. Email lyceumgallery@derryfield.org. • "SHAPE SHIFTING & RADIANT CHROMA" Art exhibition with work by Nancy Simonds. On view Sept. 6 through Oct. 7. McGowan Fine Art, 10 Hills Ave., Concord. Call 225-2515. Visit mcgowanfineart.com.
For more information Call 603-924-7585 or visit us online at peterboroughplayers.org
PROUDLY PRESENTING OUR 2016 SUMMER SEASON
Cry Havoc
A drama by Stephan Wolfert
Aug 14 - Sept 18 “American summer repertory theater at its most accomplished.” -The Wall Street Journal
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 27
LISTINGS 28 Children & Teens Games, clubs, fun... 28 Clubs Hobby, service... 28 Continued Education Classes, seminars, lectures... 29 Crafts Fairs, workshops... 31 Dance Ballroom, folk... 31 Festivals & Fairs Community, agricultural, expos... 31 Marketing & Business Networking, classes.... 31 Miscellaneous Fairs, festivals, yard sales... 34 Museums & Tours Exhibits, events... 34 Nature & Gardening Hikes, animal events... FEATURES 29 Kiddie pool Family activities this week. 30 The Gardening Guy Advice on your outdoors. 31 Treasure Hunt There’s gold in your attic. 32 Car Talk Click and Clack give you car advice. Get Listed From yoga to pilates, cooking to languages to activities for the kids, Hippo’s weekly listing offers a rundown of all area events and classes. Get your program listed by sending information to listings@hippopress.com at least three weeks before the event. Looking for more events for the kids, nature-lovers and more? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or online at hipposcout.com.
INSIDE/OUTSIDE Scottish celebrations NH Highland Games and Festival returns By Matt Ingersoll
mingersoll@hippopress.com
For one weekend each year, Loon Mountain transforms into the Scottish Highlands as competitors from all over the world battle it out in intense heavyweight, music and dance contests that are quintessentially Scottish during the New Hampshire Highland Games and Festival. This flagship event of the New Hampshire Gathering of the Scottish Clans, or NH SCOT for short, is happening Friday, Sept. 16, to Sunday, Sept. 18. “Our mission is to foster interest in Scottish culture and heritage by providing these interesting experiences, and the Games are certainly one of the ways we do that,” said Terri Wiltse, NH SCOT’s executive director. “Being of Scottish heritage isn’t a requirement for competitors or spectators … some are and some aren’t.” The event started back in 1975 as a small clam picnic for the Clan Murray that also featured a pipe band and has since evolved into a three-day annual Scottish-themed NH Highland Games and Festival When: Friday, Sept. 16, to Sunday, Sept. 18, access to grounds opens at 8 a.m. each day Where: Loon Mountain Resort, 60 Loon Mountain Road, Lincoln Cost: $60 for weekend pass; $20 for Friday only; $35 for Saturday only; $25 for Sunday only; free for kids ages 14 and under on any of the three days Visit: nhscot.org
Children & Teens Children events • BATMAN DAY This special celebration of all things Batman will include crafts, cartoons, coloring and more. Wear a costume if you wish. Sat., Sept. 17, 1 to 2 p.m. Concord Public Library, 45 Green St., Concord. Free. Call 225-8670. • TALK LIKE A PIRATE DAY Stop by the Children's Room, tell the buccaneer at the desk "shiver me timbers," and choose a treasure from the treasure chest. Mon., Sept. 19, all day. Concord
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 28
A show of athleticism. Courtesy of the New Hampshire Gathering of the Scottish Clans.
festival. Wiltse said last year’s Games attracted almost 30,000 people from all across the United States and other countries like Scotland, Iceland and Canada for each of the three days. She added that Loon Mountain serves as a perfect venue for the event due to its terrain resembling that of the Scottish Highlands. “Traditionally, these games and competitions take place in mountains and high hills,” she said, “so that works, but we are also here because we need housing for people. We have to put up judges that are coming in from Iceland, from Scotland, from the Netherlands … and we need places to put them.” At the heart of the event are the athletic competitions, which feature hand-selected athletes in four different levels — profession-
al, master, amateur and disabled — with awards to be given out to winners in each level. There will be heavy athletic competitions like the caber toss, the hammer throw and the sheaf toss. Also included will be music and dancing competitions like individual piping and drumming and pipe bands. “The athletic competitions are pre-selected as far as who gets to participate, but anybody can sign up for dance, or fiddle, or piping and drumming,” Wiltse said. An honorary chieftain of the games is selected each year, and this year will be Dr. Joseph John Morrow, Scotland’s current Lord Lyon King of Arms. “One person is selected each year [as the honorary chieftain] to help lead the opening ceremony as well as
Public Library, 45 Green St., GUILD MEETING Enjoy show 'n tell, and see what the AmoConcord. Free. Call 225-8670. skeag Quilters' Guild has to offer. Guests are welcome. Thurs., Dance • STORYDANCE Join Miss Sept. 15, 7 p.m. Emmanuel BapTanya for StoryDance, where tist Church, 14 Mammoth Road, ballet and books come to life Hooksett. Free. Call 463-7587. through dance, props, play and the imagination. Mon., Sept. 26, Garden HOOKSETT GARDEN 1 to 2 p.m. Wadleigh Memorial • Library, 49 Nashua St., Milford. CLUB: SEPTEMBER MEETING Wed., Sept. 28, 4 to 7 p.m. Free. Call 249-0645. Hooksett Public Library, 31 Mount St. Mary's Way, Hooksett. Free and Clubs open to the public. Email hookCraft • AMOSKEAG QUILTERS' settnhgardenclub@gmail.com.
the closing ceremony,” Wiltse said, “and he’ll be coming all the way from Scotland, so it’s a big deal.” A variety of both Scottish and non-Scottish food options will be available during each of the three days of the event, including haggis, a pudding made from stuffed sheep stomach that is known as the country’s national dish. Also featured will be beer and whiskey tastings, with a new whiskey tasting event this year that will pit single Scottish malts against American bourbon and malts. Wiltse said even though the whiskey that is classified as an American malt is aged in Virginia, it is distilled in Scotland before being shipped overseas. “We’ve got two guys coming from Scotland who are really into the tradition of what they believe true whiskey should be, and they will be coming to help participate in that debate,” she said. Saturday night will feature a performance by Skerryvore, a Celtic rock group Wiltse said has become known as the “hottest new young band” in Scotland but is relatively unknown in the United States. “You definitely get the Scottish flavor with them, but they really are a fusion band with lots of different sounds,” she said. For the kids, there will be a variety of athletic and craft projects, as well as a passport program that has become a popular feature at the festival. “We have these little passports printed, and kids get to go around the festival grounds and get passport stamps for different places,” Wiltse said.
Hobby • MERRIMACK COUNTY STAMP COLLECTORS: MONTHLY MEETING All who are interested in stamp collecting are invited to attend this meeting, share their interest, and buy, sell and trade. Tues., Sept. 20, 1 p.m. Bow Mills United Methodist Church, 505 South St., Bow. Free. Call Dan Day at 228-1154.
Toastmasters members give hilarious speeches! Mon., Sept. 19, 6 to 8 p.m. Granite Ledges, 151 Langley St., Concord. Free and open to the public. Contact Rachel Merrill at 345-1357 or at rachel.lynn.merrill@gmail.com.
Continuing Education Open houses • PRE-COLLEGE PLANNING WORKSHOP Counselors from Bishop Guertin High School will Toastmasters • PLEASANT STREET present this workshop, which is TOASTMASTERS: FREE open to all and a is a great opporAREA CONTEST Come watch tunity to understand how choices
IN/OUT
Bored? Find out what’s going on
Bored?
for children and teens in Nashua.
Family fun for the weekend
Yep, Hippo has
Yep, Hippo hasuocsthat tuocsfor oppiHthat an app oppih Yep, Hippo has an app tfor t u o c s o t u o c s o p p i H an app for that Hippo’s Calendar App and Website ppiH
Family fun
Ducks in a row
The annual Auburn Day event returns to Auburn Village (22 Hooksett Road) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17. Activities will include a duck race, an antique car show, local artisans and vendors, an apple pie contest and a barbecue courtesy of the Auburn Fire Department. Several kids’ activities are also planned, including a children only duck race, a children’s tent with blow-up ducks, face painting, duck fishing, and more. The event is the main fundraiser for the Auburn Historical Association. Admission is free but prices vary for food and other products sold. Call 483-2547 or visit auburnhistorical.org.
Feeling like fall
The 21st annual Fall Fun Fest will return to Presentation of Mary Academy (182 Lowell Road, Hudson) on Saturday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The school will continue its traditional penny sale, featuring more than 200 items and theme baskets in a super raffle. There will also be a bake sale, a petting zoo, a touch-a-truck event, face painting, pumpkin painting and more. Fresh grilled food including pulled pork, Nan King teriyaki chicken, Kendall Pond pizza, and homemade apple crisp will be featured. Inflatables for all ages including Zorb balls will be there, and new this year will be the festival’s first ever bungee jump. made in middle school affect ahigh school and college opportunities. Thurs., Sept. 29, 1 p.m. Nashua Catholic Regional Junior High School, 6 Bartlett Ave., Nashua. Free. Call 882-7011. Crafts Workshops • WET-FELTED HANDBAG WORKSHOP Learn the art
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Pick-Yourown apples at
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Weekdays 1–5:30 Weekends 10–5:30
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Admission is free. Call 710-6841 or visit pmaschool.org for more details. Hooksett Old Home Day returns to Donati Park (35 Main St., Hooksett) from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17. The festivities will be held rain or shine and include a watermelon eating contest, a pizza eating contest and a pie eating contest, in addition to dozens of rides and craft and food vendors. From noon to 5 p.m., a barbecue featuring chicken, ribs and pulled pork will be served. Admission is free, but prices for different foods and crafts may vary. Visit hooksettoldhomeday.org or call 785-6639.
Fantasyland
1 minute from the intersection of 101 and 101A in west Milford
www.mcleodorchards.com OPEN SEPTEMBER - LATE OCTOBER Fresh Picked Apples • Pumpkins • Fall Items
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Join the Grappone Conference Center (70 Constitution Ave., Concord) for the annual Military Family Expo, to be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17. All service members and veterans and their families are invited to this free, family-friendly event, which will feature DIY workshops, a health fair, a climbing wall, a photo booth, art for all ages, a gaming competition and more. Former Capt. Luis Carlos Montalvan, a wounded warrior, and the golden retriever who saved him are also expected to make an appearance. Call 5685780 or visit naminh.org to register.
It’s apple picking time
CLUB tuCONCORD ocsoppiFENCING H Olympic style sport fencing. Want to learn? Concord Fencing Club will show you!
oppiH
Join us on Saturday October 1st from 10am-noon.tuocs Coaches will go over the basics in an Intro to Fencing Class. Who should attend? Anyone! What ages? From 7 and up. What does it cost? $25
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126 Hall Street, Concord, NH 03301 603.224.3560 www.concordfencingclub.org
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Join the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth-Hitchcock in celebrating its annual Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, at Manchester Community College (1066 Front St., Manchester) from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17. This special event is a preview of the Storybook Ball, held at the college at 5:30 p.m. that night. The event invites kids ages 3 to 12 to participate as official table judges of more than 30 designed tables that will reflect some of the most popular children’s stories and fairy tales, including Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella, Rapunzel, The Lorax and more. Also included will be red carpet photos with the Mad Hatter, table tour and judging and a reading and singalong with children’s book author Dave Bastein, featuring his newly released book Pick Me! Pick Me! The Story of the Magic Pumpkin. Admission is free for adults and $15 per child. Call 629-1234 or visit chadstorybookball.org.
of 3-dimensional wet felting. Choose your own colors and unique design. No sewing is required, and all experience levels are welcomed. Sat., Sept. 17, 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. League of NH Craftsmen: Nashua Fine Craft Gallery, 98 Main St., Nashua. $56 tuition (additional $35 for materials). Call 5958233.
• THE ABC'S OF LETTERPRESS PRINTING Learn the basics of letterpress printing in the Canterbury Shaker Village Print Shop and print your own party invitations. Sat., Sept. 24, 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Canterbury Shaker Village, 288 Shaker Road, Canterbury. $75 for Village members; $90 for nonmembers. Call 783-9511.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 29
IN/OUT THE GARDENING GUY
Harvest time
How to know when to pick By Henry Homeyer
listings@hippopress.com
169 South River Rd, STE 2 Bedford, NH 03110
110075
Bradley & Leonard’s Vintage and Home
APPRAISAL EVENT To benefit the Animal Rescue League of Bedford!
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The Quill Restaurant
The Quill is now open for the Fall semester! We are serving lunch on Tuesdays and Fridays and dinner on Thursdays! Make a reservation today!
Reservations Phone: 603-629-4608 Email: finedine@snhu.edu
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 30
The Quill Restaurant 2500 North River Road Manchester, NH 03106
103119
My garden is finally paying me back for all the work I’ve done this year. I’m putting up the harvest and eating vegetables until they (almost) pop out of my ears. It’s been a great summer. Let’s look at how to know if your vegetables are ready to harvest, as it’s not always obvious. Potatoes, for example, are not obvious – the tubers are underground. The earlier you harvest, of course, the smaller the potatoes. But you can snitch a few after they have bloomed. If you have loose fluffy soil you can poke your hand into the soil under a plant and grab a spud without disturbing the plant – or the other potatoes that are still growing. Or you can dig up one plant and leave the others to grow. To avoid damaging potatoes at harvest time, plunge a garden fork into the soil a foot from the plant, tip it back, and the roots, spuds and all, will be visible. Grab ’em, but place gently in a bucket so as not to damage the still tender skins. Harden off in a cool, dark place, and leave the soil on if you want to store them. Generally I let potatoes grow through September, harvesting only after the leaves have yellowed and died back. But I keep testing to see if they have reached the size I like. Some varieties develop hollow spots in the center if they get too big. That’s not a big issue for me. But I don’t want them too small and I generally start mine in June, long after most gardeners have started theirs. I do that to minimize potato beetle damage, and it seems to work. I didn’t see one beetle this year! I grew artichokes again this year, though I don’t always. It is often hard to know when to pick them – an immature artichoke looks exactly like a mature one, but for the size. Same color, same feel if you squeeze them. But if you wait too long, the leaves get hard and unappealing. I picked my first ‘choke when it was about 3 inches across and didn’t seem to be getting bigger. That plant also produced a second flower (artichokes are actually flowers), and I picked it when it was about half the size. Again, it seemed to have stopped growing. Summer squash can be picked at any size, from tiny to mammoth. My favorite variety is Romanesco, which has stripes along its ribbed sides. I like it small, but it is still good to eat even if it “escapes” and gets huge. I just take a big spoon and scrape out the seeds. Generally I grate the big ones in my food processor and freeze the results in zipper bags for use in winter soups. I don’t blanch the squash but do try to use it within a few months. Blanching kills enzymes that promote aging, while freezing does not. So squash is less appealing
Artichoke. Courtesy photo.
after months in the freezer. It is tougher to know when winter squash is ready to pick. In general it is best to let winter squash like butternuts and hubbards stay on the vine until the leaves start to yellow and the stems turn brown and dry. But the best test is what I call the “fingernail” test: push your thumbnail against the skin. It should be tough enough that your nail leaves no mark. If you feel it digging in, stop pushing your nail against it. When picking winter squashes or pumpkins, bring a sharp knife or a pair of pruners so that you can cut the stem, leaving a 3-inch “handle.” But don’t carry it by the handle, as you don’t want it to pull off. Most winter squashes also need some time in a warm sunny place to cure after being picked. Acorn squashes should go directly to a cool location, as they can get stringy if left in the sun. Always store winter squash in a low-humidity area. Never, I repeat never, let winter squash get frosted. If you don’t want to harvest them and frost is forecast, pull the comforter off your bed and cover them up. Or use an old sheet, I suppose, or even a plastic tarp. Speaking of frost, which I hope is still weeks away, here are some veggies that will not survive even a light frost: basil, beans, cucumbers, eggplants, peppers, tomatoes and squash of all types. On the other hand, plants that survive light frost include artichokes, beets, carrots, cauliflower, celeriac, lettuce, parsnips and Swiss chard. Plants that can still thrive after a hard frost include broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, kale, kohlrabi, parsley, radishes, spinach, turnips and leeks. I often pick kale and Brussels sprouts in December. My onions were ready to harvest weeks ago. I know when they are ready to pull because the tops flop over. I cure them in a warm sunny place outdoors until the tops dry up. I store them, along with winter squash, in a low-humidity cool location indoors. Growing vegetables really is for cooks. I probably would only grow flowers if I didn’t love fresh veggies so much. And of course being able to store and use my vegetables all year makes all that work even more worthwhile. Want to have big Brussels sprouts? Read Henry’s blog for a 10-second trick: dailyuv.com/news/859799. Henry is the author of four gardening books. His website is Gardening-guy.com.
IN/OUT TREASURE HUNT
Dear Donna, I am wondering if you could help me with the value of this deck of cards. We played with them when I was young and now I would like to pass them on with any information you might be able to provide. It’s a compete set with the original package. All the cards show scenes of New Hampshire. They all have The Old Man of the Mountains on one side. It’s a very nice and interesting set of New Hampshire But most of the decks I researched came up in the $30 range. information. Still, I think doing more research on the Wendy from Bow company and writing down the story of how you yourself played with these cards Dear Wendy, when you were young really makes for a You are absolutely right; the deck of great gift to pass on. To me these are a treacards is a great piece of New Hampshire sure from New Hampshire. memorabilia. Just to have the deck comDonna Welch has spent more than 20 years plete is amazing after all these years. What you have were souvenir cards in the antiques and collectibles field and owns from The Chisholm Brothers out of Maine. From Out Of The Woods Antique Center in They did the cards but other paper prod- Goffstown (fromoutofthewoodsantiques.com). ucts as well. You can find postcards, book, She is an antiques appraiser and instructor. pamphlets etc. Not all were about New To find out about your antique or collectible, Hampshire. The playing cards were done in send a clear photo of the object and information about it to Donna Welch, From Out Of The the early 1900s. Woods Antique Center, 465 Mast Road, GoffsThe value on these decks is not very town, N.H., 03045. Or email her at footwdw@ high, I found. I would have thought that aol.com. Or drop by the shop (call first, 624anything that has made it through time 8668). complete should be a rarity to find today.
Other craft events • ZENTANGLE FOR KIDS AND TEENS Zentangle is a method of creating beautiful images using repetitive patterns and can be a fun escape from a busy technology-oriented world. Kids can enhance their creativity, relax, gain focus and reduce anxiety, all while having fun. Sat., Sept. 17, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. St. Joseph Hospital, 172 Kinsley St., Nashua. $15 fee (includes supplies). Call 595-3168. Dance Other dance events • CONTRA DANCE The NEA Big Read celebrates Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath at a very special contra dance featuring fiddler Jordan TirrellWysocki and guitarist Jim Prendergast leading the Milford musicians. Fri., Sept. 23, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Milford Town Hall Auditorium, 1 Union Square, Milford. $7 for adults; $5 for seniors and students; free for kids ages 12 and under. Call 249-0645. Festivals & Fairs Events CONCORD FAM• ILY YMCA: COMMUNITY BLOCK PARTY There will be carnival games, a bounce house, food, and much more. You do
not need to be a member of the YMCA to take part in this event. Fri., Sept. 16, 5:15 to 6:30 p.m. Warren, Green and N. State Streets, Concord. Free. Call 228-9622. • AUBURN DAY & 24TH ANNUAL DUCK RACE Activities include a duck race, an antique car show, local artisans and vendors, a BBQ by the Auburn Fire Department, the Salmon Falls Apple Pie Contest, children's activities, and more. This is a rain or shine event. Sat., Sept. 17, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Auburn Village, Auburn. Free admission. Call 483-2547. Expos • LOVING LIFE EXPO More than 40 exhibitors will be on hand at this annual event, featuring an array of products, services and more, including crystals, jewelry, candles, oils, art and energy healers. Sun., Sept. 18, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Executive Court Function Center, 1199 South Mammoth Road, Manchester. Free and open to the public. Call 321-4818. Marketing & Business Workshops • WORKPLACE VIOLENCE PREVENTION This conference will examine what can be done
in the workplace to reduce workplace violence as well as how to de-escalate potential violent situations. Thurs., Sept. 15, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. IBEW Local 490, 48 Airport Road, Concord. Free (includes lunch; pre-registration is required). Call 232-4406. Networking groups • SOCIAL MEDIA FOR BUSINESS WORKSHOP The goal of this workshop is to help small business owners and nonprofits get started or improve and manage use of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and video marketing. Fri., Sept. 23, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications, 749 E. Industrial Park Drive, Manchester. $50 registration, which includes lunch. Call 627-0005. Miscellaneous Car & motorcycle shows • 5TH ANNUAL DRIVE ELECTRIC WEEK CELEBRATION This event is one of several held as a means to draw attention to the environmental, economic and other benefits of plug-in electric vehicles. Sat., Sept. 17, 8:30 a.m. to noon. City Plaza, New Hampshire State House, North Main Street, Concord. Free and open to the public. Call 224-8222.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 31
IN/OUT CAR TALK
The heart wants what it wants Dear Car Talk: I own a 1955 Ford Fairlane Victoria hardtop (two-door). The car is almost entirely original and runs very well, except for the blast of furnace heat I get from By Ray Magliozzi the engine when sitting in the driver’s seat. (It’s great in the cold weather, though.) I enjoy driving this vehicle, and get many compliments for it. But I bought it in its present condition, and I’m not a mechanic. I haven’t worked on cars for 40 years. Perhaps owning this car is just an expression of my love of vintage cars, or trying to recapture my youth. My question: Given my lack of mechanical skills and limited resources to repair this vehicle, is keeping this car, if only for sentimental reasons, a good idea? Or, put another way, are there other old guys who can’t change a tire but who own these types of cars and still love just the sight of them in their garage, hoping they never break down? Thank you. — Vince Vince, love is everything. If that car makes you happy when you see it and when you drive it, it’s a great idea to keep it. In fact, I insist!
But you’ll need two things: (1) a backup car — like a 2008 Hyundai Elantra — so that when your ‘55 Ford breaks down, your life will still go on until you get it fixed. And (2) an old mechanic — someone who still knows how to adjust valves and clean carburetors. When you go into a prospective shop, ask the oldest mechanic in there to smile. If he still has more than four teeth, he’s not the guy for you, Vince. Actually, the best way to find someone like that is to find your local old-car club. There are plenty of wackos — I mean people — like you who have an unnatural affection for these inanimate objects. They probably get together on a regular basis to admire each other’s cars ... and compare the deals on reverse mortgages. You need to find those guys near you and sign up. You may find that some of the owners are pretty good mechanics themselves, and are willing to work on your car. Or they’ll certainly know mechanics in the area who do work on vintage cars. Since you can’t do the work yourself, having a good mechanic is essential. At the very least, you want to make sure the car is safe — and that the furnace blast from the firewall isn’t actually fire. And when you find a good mechanic,
it’s best to formally adopt him. Bring him home for dinner and introduce him to your wife first, then you can add him to the will. Good luck, Vince. Dear Car Talk: I have a 2000 Chevy Monte Carlo with a 3.4-liter engine. I want to do a tuneup, and I need spark plugs, plug wires and coil packs. When I started shopping around, the price for this set of items came to anywhere between $299 and $699. The originalequipment stuff from the manufacturers is at the high end, and the aftermarket stuff, like NGK and MSD, is lower. Should I use the original-equipment stuff? Are aftermarket parts OK? And if so, which ones should I use? — Robert Well, you certainly can’t go wrong using the original equipment parts from the manufacturer (OEM parts). And if you haven’t done so, you should call your dealer’s parts department and ask for the prices. Prices vary tremendously from part to part. And while the dealer’s prices often are more expensive than aftermarket sellers’, they’re not always. It’s also worth searching online for the OEM parts. You often can find them at steep discounts. The downside is that you
have to wait a few days for delivery. But since you’re doing the work yourself, and the car is currently running, that’s not a problem. On the other hand, aftermarket parts are a perfectly good option, too. Your car is 16 years old — it’s old enough to get a license and drive itself, Robert. So I also wouldn’t have any reservations about using goodquality aftermarket parts. In our shop, in addition to originalequipment parts, we use Bosch, NGK and Nippon-Denso tuneup parts. I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend any of those — they’re all good quality. In fact, those companies often make the “original equipment” parts for the manufacturers, including Chevrolet. I’m sure there are other good-quality aftermarket parts, but those are the ones we’ve had excellent experiences with. So get the best prices you can on any of those, or the original-equipment parts, and do your tuneup. And don’t be afraid to mix and match brands, Robert. They’ll work well together. It’s not like putting on a suit jacket with a bathing suit. Visit Cartalk.com.
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IN/OUT
Bike for a cause
Pedaling for Payson cycling fundraiser returns
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Grab your bike and get ready to ride along some of New Hampshire’s most beautiful roads during the annual Pedaling for Payson event, happening Saturday, Sept. 17, at Elm Brook Park in Hopkinton. Concord Hospital Trust will be hosting the fundraiser for its 11th year. The route options feature a 100-mile ride starting at 7 a.m., a 77-mile ride at 8 a.m., a 51-mile ride at 9 a.m., a 30-mile ride at 10 a.m., and a 6-mile ride at 11 a.m. There will also be an adult and a youth mountain bike ride, each kicking off at 9:30 a.m. The bike rides travel through many of the paved and dirt roads surrounding Elm Brook Park, but the longer ones also venture into the neighboring towns of Warner, Henniker, New London and Sutton. The mountain bike route was added to the event two years ago and features a rest stop at the Henniker Brewing Co. At the conclusion of the races, enjoy a barbecue and beer truck with live music at Elm Brook Park. It’s all to benefit the Gene Gillis Fund, which was established to support Concord Hospital’s Payson Center for Cancer Care. “The fund helps support cancer patients with the small things that make a difference but that sometimes get lost,” said Jessica Bailey of Concord Hospital Trust. “So it provides gas cards to patients that have to always come to and from the hospital for treatment … it supplies grocery cards for them to buy groceries and other supplements and other out-of-pocket expenses that associated with cancer treatment.” Bailey said almost $1 million has been raised since the event started in 2006. The fund has also recently been able to provide hospital patients with a “nurse navigator,”
a staff member brought on specifically to help them make appointments and learn more about their treatment. “Over the past couple of years, we’ve raised over $180,000 for each year,” she said. “We always try to increase it a little, and this year, we’re going for over $200,000. … We have really passionate riders [for] the cause who are great fundraisers for us.” Bailey said riders who are members of the same business or organization often put together their own fundraising teams, but individual riders can also register for the event for just $10. Each rider has a minimum fundraising contribution to be reached by Oct. 1. The amount is $25 for the youth mountain bike ride, $50 for the adult mountain bike ride and $100 for each of the cycling rides. “It’s peer-to-peer fundraising, which basically means that you as an individual ride in the event and you go out and ask family members, colleagues or friends to help donate to the cause to support you in the ride,” Bailey said. “You can raise that amount or pay for it yourself if you choose.” Register by calling Concord Hospital Trust or visiting pedalingforpayson.org. Registration will also be available during an early packet pick-up at the hospital on Friday, Sept. 16, or at the park on the day of the event, beginning at 6:15 a.m.
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Pedaling for Payson. Photo by Tom Bailey.
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Pedaling for Payson When: Saturday, Sept. 17 (races kick off between 7 and 11 a.m., depending on the mileage distance) Where: Begins and ends at Elm Brook Park, 2097 Maple St., Hopkinton Cost: $10 registration (minimum fundraising donation of $25 to $100 by Oct. 1, depending on the mileage distance) Visit: pedalingforpayson.org
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 33
FAMILY YOGA CLASSES 10-25% OFF
Join the Manchester Jazzercise Fitness Center (32 Hayward St.) for its new Family Yoga program, an 8-week term of classes featuring 45 minutes of fun yoga all while using your imagination. Classes will be held on Fridays beginning Sept. 16, and through Nov. 4, from 10:45 to 11:30 a.m. Maura Barber, a certified yoga instructor with YogaFit, will be teaching each class. The cost is $64 per family for all eight classes, or a $10 drop in fee per family if you are interested but are unable to attend the full program. Call 624-9122 or visit facebook.com/mostyleyoga for more details.
All in stock canoes, kayaks, paddleboards & select accessories!
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• CAR SHOW TO BENEFIT SHRINERS HOSPITALS FOR CHILDREN Join the Great Bay Corvette Club as members and guests showcase their vehicles while listening to music and enjoying some food. Sat., Sept. 17, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sig Sauer in the Pease Tradeport, 72 Pease Blvd., Newington. Free admission. Call 396-4129.
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The GAP at GHS Fall Semester 2016 These Courses meet Tuesday or Thursday
Genre
Instructor
Earn Credit
Day
Start and End Dates
Time
Tuition
Civics/Economics
Academic
D. Pare
½
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
3-5pm
$150
HiSet/GED-Language
N/A
A. Miller
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
6-8pm
$30
Independent GAP
Elective
B.Carey
½
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
3-5pm
$150
Earth/Space Science
Academic
J.Graton
½
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
3-5pm
$150
Creative Welding
Elective
R. Caradonna
½
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
3:45-5:45pm
$150+$50
Creative Welding
Elective
R. Caradonna
½
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
6-8pm
$150+$50
Biology
Academic
N. Lambert
½
Thursday
Oct. 13-Dec. 15
5-7pm
$150
Geometry
Academic
K. Sargent
½
Thursday
Oct. 13-Dec. 15
3-5pm
$150
HiSet/GED-Math
N/A
N. Bracy
N/A
Thursday
Oct. 13-Dec. 15
6-8pm
$30
English
Academic
P. Galamaga
½
Thursday
Oct. 13-Dec. 15
3-5pm
$150
Physical Science
Academic
C. Lauzon
½
Thursday
Oct. 13-Dec. 15
3-5pm
$150
Enrichment
Open to 16+
Music-Private Lessons
Music
Contact Josh Desrochers
N/A
Check Web
By appoint.
By appoint.
$30/hour
Career Exploration
Enrichment
A. Lafond
N/A
By appoint.
By appoint.
By appoint.
Free
Creative Welding
Enrichment
R. Cardonna
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
3:45-5:45pm
$120+$50
Creative Welding
Enrichment
R. Cardonna
N/A
Tuesday
Oct. 11-Dec. 13
6-8pm
$120+$50
Register By Mail or Call Today! Goffstown Adult Education Program Adult Diploma, GED, Lifelong Learning 27 Wallace Road • Goffstown, NH 03045
Tuition to be paid by cash, check or money order payable to Goffstown School District - GAP
603-660-5302 Bill Ryan • 603.497.5257 (Fax)
Attendance for all credit bearing classes is required. Registration is secured with a payment in full. You will be contacted ONLY if a class is canceled or full. 109581 HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 34
Religion-related events • BACK TO CHURCH SUNDAY CELEBRATION Following the 10 a.m. church service at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, enjoy face painting and a clown to entertain kids of all ages, music, delicious food, ministry exhibits, and St. Paul's famous annual pie contest. Sun., Sept. 18, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. St. Paul's Episcopal Church, 21 Centre St., Concord. Free. Call 224-2523. Workshops • "BUTTON UP NH" WEATHERIZATION WORKSHOP Participants will learn basic building science concepts and learn the basics about air sealing, insulating, and conservation measures that reduce fuel and electricity use. Fri., Sept. 16, 7 to 8:30 p.m. Pembroke Town Library, 313 Pembroke St., Pembroke. Free. Call 485-8498 or 485-7851. Yard sales/fundraisers/ auctions • AVIATION MUSEUM OF NEW HAMPSHIRE: 16TH ANNUAL FUNDRAISING GALA & AUCTION There will be hors d'oeuvres, a full sit-down dinner, cash bar, and a silent and live auction, which will include unique items such as scenic flights (aircraft and helicopter), a railroad excursion, wine tasting, and more. Sat., Sept. 17, 5 to 8 p.m. PlaneSense, 115 Flightline Road, Portsmouth. $75. Call 669-4820. • GREATER MANCHESTER NASHUA HOME BUILDERS & REMODELERS ASSOCIATION ANNUAL YARD SALE Local businesses and members of
the community donate unwanted building material for this yard sale. The material is then sold for under-market prices with all the proceeds going to charity. Sat., Sept. 17, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Riverside Park, 48-50-52 Bridge St., Nashua. Free. Call 591-2776. • ANIMAL ALLIES OF NH YARD SALE All proceeds from this yard sale will benefit Animal Allies of New Hampshire. Sat., Sept. 17, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. (rain date of Sat., Sept. 24). Animal Allies of New Hampshire, 476 Front St., Manchester. Free admission; varying costs for items sold. Call 228-5667. • LIVE AUCTION TO BENEFIT STEVENS-BUSWELL COMMUNITY CENTER AND BEDFORD HISTORICAL SOCIETY The event will have quilts, artwork, antiques, jewelry from M. Mills Co., vintage dinnerware, a one of a kind dollhouse with electricity that comes with more than 150 pieces of accessories, duplicate items from the Society's collections, furniture, objects that never "lived" in Bedford, and more. Sat., Sept. 17, 11 a.m. Bedford Historical Society, 24 N. Amherst Road, Bedford. Free. (costs vary for food). Call 472-3217. • SOUTHERN NH DOLL SHOW AND SALE Sun., Sept. 18, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Crowne Plaza Hotel, 2 Somerset Pkwy., Nashua. $5 admission. Call 4723523. Museums & Tours History & museum events • COLLINGS FOUNDATION WINGS OF FREEDOM Join the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire to see these World War II aircraft on display, including the world's only flying B-24J Liberator, the iconic B-17 Flying Fortress, and the TP-51C Mustang. Mon., Sept. 19, noon to 5 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 20, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, 9 a.m. to noon. Aviation Museum of New Hampshire, 27 Navigator Road, Londonderry. $12 for adults, $6 for children ages 12 and under. Call 669-4820.
Nature & Gardening Birding events • RAPTOR FESTIVAL AND RELEASE PROGRAM This annual event is timed to coincide with peak migration, so bring your binoculars and prepare to witness a spectacle. Festivities will occur all day long at the observatory as International Hawk Migration Week is celebrated. Sun., Sept. 25, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Carter Hill Raptor Observatory, 73 Carter Hill Road, Concord. Free. Call 2249909 x334.
Nature art & photography • NATURE PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP Geoff Forester, photo editor at the Concord Monitor and a photographer for more than 30 years, will lead this one-day workshop on nature photography. Sat., Oct. 1, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications, 749 E. Industrial Park Drive, Manchester. $50 registration for the day, which includes lunch. Call 627-0005.
Nature hikes & walks • FALL FOLIAGE COMMUNITY EVENT Join the education team at Quarrybrook Outdoor Learning Center for a fall morning in the woods. Sat., Oct. 1, 9:30 a.m. to noon. Quarrybrook Outdoor Learning Center, 39 Roulston Road, Windham. Free. Call 890-1222.
Other outdoors • NH AUDUBON'S ANNUAL GATHERING AND MEETING This event is a fun-filled day of exploration, learning and friendship. Highlights include guided field trips, keynote speaker Bernd Heinrich, and a chance to visit with NH Audubon's new president, Doug Bechtel. Sat., Sept. 17, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Massabesic Audubon Center, 26 Audubon Way, Auburn. $35 for Audubon members; $45 for non-members. Call 224-9909 x313.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 35
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CAREERS
What kind of education or training did you need for this job? I received a bachelor of science in sign language interpretation from UNH Manchester. … It was a very new program when I took it. … There are language classes, interpreting classes, there are the concentration-in-specific-language classes, linguistic classes, deaf culture and interpreting classes … and as you get higher into your senior year, there is a mentorship with a working interpreter that is required. There’s also a level of requirement to even maintain your certification. … For Jodi Lefort of Manchester is a nationally certified ASL interpreter with a Certifi- any specialty that you want to go into, whethcate of Interpretation and a Certificate of Transliteration. She is a graduate of er it’s medical or legal interpreting, you have the University of New Hampshire’s ASL/English Interpreting program, known as to have a lot of specific hours and a minimum one of only 14 accredited programs — and the first of its kind — in the country. number that you get every year.
Jodi Lefort
American Sign Language interpreter
lege and get a degree, then we just deserve it … but the thing is, we are intimately involved in deaf people’s lives on a daily basis, and we have to earn that right.
What do you wish you’d known at the beginning of your career? After years of experience, you learn that you’re going to see a lot of hard things … and it’s important to be able to have a good support system and mentors and know how to handle what you may or may not see.
What is your typical at-work uniform? We kind of have to match the environment, so obviously you wouldn’t show up to a court wearing jeans … but also, typically what an interpreter’s uniform would be is something How do you find your current jobs? that contrasts skin color … so for me, I wear What [the referral agencies] do is match up a lot of darker, solid colors, with not a lot of where you are at with what is required for the patterns or anything that would be distracting job and the deaf person who is involved. … or tired on the eyes. There are all these things like life experience in that training to how they match you up, What was the first job you ever had? and they base it on the certification, as well I served ice cream at Goldenrod in Manas your level of experience and also that deaf chester. — Matt Ingersoll person’s own preference.
Explain what your How long have you been in current job is. your career? We are ASL English I’ve had my national certificainterpreters, so basicaltion for 19 years now. ly we go anywhere deaf people go … job interviews, doctor’s How did you get interested in appointments, therapy appointthis field? ments, weddings, funerals, classes I went to Memorial High Courtesy photo. … parent-teacher meetings, courts, School [in Manchester] and was it could be anywhere. … A lot of times a place in class with deaf students, and I took an interwho needs an interpreter will contact a referral preting class as a sophomore in high school What’s the best piece of work-related agency who will then search for [interpreters … and in that class, there was a test I had that advice anyone’s ever given you? for them]. … Most of us are self-employed. I did well on and the teacher wrote, ‘Wow The best piece of advice I’ve ever gotten is … There’s no set town that I work in. I travel Jodi, what are your future plans?’ … I decid- that I did not earn the right to be an interpreter ed then that I wanted to be an ASL interpreter. … we think that after we work hard in colall over and my hours change weekly.
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Looking for Employees? Find them in the Hippo! With unemployment below 4% in NH, your best potential employees may not be cruising the job boards. But they ARE reading the Hippo, the regions largest print publication.
The United States Postal Service is hiring Casual Mail Handlers for Part-time, temporary Holiday Positions At the Manchester & Nashua Processing & Distribution Centers Employee’s will earn $12.00-$14.00/hr Find them Employment is from mid-November through the end of December. With unemployment below
Expand your pool of applicants by reaching out directly to the Hippo’s local audience of 205,000 readers across southern New Hampshire.
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Hippo is where the best and For potential more info, call Jeff Rapsis at to go. brightest decide what do With the right opportunity, it could be 4% in NH, your best where (603) 263-9237 and where to go. With the right they decide to work, too! employees may NOT be cruising 109631 opportunity, it could be where the job boards. But they ARE they decide where to work, too. reading the Hippo, the region’s largest print publication. For more info, call Jeff Rapsis at Expand your pool of applicants (603) 263-9237. by reaching out directly to Hippo’s local audience of 205,000 readers across southern New Hampshire. 099961
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We are a family-owned business in Manchester NH, that has been in operation for over 95 years. We are known for our incredible customer service & top notch quality. At E&R we take great pride in our 200+ employees whom make the difference with our customers each & every day. We’re looking for the best to help us as we continue to grow throughout NH & New England. If you have passion and expertise in a warehouse environment & have a “hands on” mentality, E&R may be the perfect
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 39
FOOD Good times at Glendi Greek food festival returns to Manchester By Angie Sykeny
News from the local food scene
asykeny@hippopress.com
By Angie Sykeny
Greek or not, chances are you’ll find something you like among the enormous spread of stuffed grape leaves, lamb, baklava and other Greek specialties that will be available at the annual three-day food festival known as Glendi. “People, especially non-Greeks, really like to eat our food,” Cathy Moufarge, festival co-chairman, said. “They’re willing to stand in lines for hours for it. For us, it’s not a big deal because it’s a staple in our households, but we can understand why everyone likes it. Something about the Greek flavors with the seasonings and the way the meats are marinated just tastes delicious.” Glendi, which means “good times” in Greek, will be held at the Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Manchester from Friday, Sept. 16, through Sunday, Sept. 18. The menu includes traditional entrees like the popular pastitsio (Greek lasagna), stuffed peppers, dolmades (stuffed grape leaves), Greek meatballs, gyros, loukaniko (Greek sausage), barbecued lamb and baked lamb shank. “A lot of people come just for the lamb shanks,” Moufarge said. “Everyone who likes lamb goes crazy for them.” This year’s menu also features a new dish
food@hippopress.com
• New market day: In response to the public’s interest in having a weekday evening market in Nashua, the Nashua Farmers Market will now operate on Wednesdays from 4 to 7 p.m., on the Main Street Bridge through September. If there is a good turnout, the Wednesday market will continue for the remainder of this year’s market season and at next year’s. The regular market, held Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., will continue as usual. Visit facebook.com/ NashuaFarmersMarket. • Cold brew coffee: A&E Coffee & Tea (135 Route 101A, Amherst; 1000 Elm St, Manchester, 578-3338, aeroastery.com) has launched a new cold brew, Hopped Nitro Cold Brew, served on tap in both of the cafe’s locations through September. A&E started producing cold brew and nitro cold brew on tap over a year ago, but this will be its first flavored option. “We use cascade hops during the cold brew process for a light, crisp, citrus-floral hop flavor. We gas it with nitrogen and serve it on tap,” A&E’s cold brew manager Tim Ralich said in a press release. “We thought it would be good, but we were really surprised at how good it is. The combination of the cascade hops and our cold brew coffee comes together to create an extraordinary beverage.” Other seasonal specials include the Indian Summer Latte with almond and cardamom blended with espresso and topped with steamed milk, and Sideways Cider, a blend of apple cider with espresso, cinnamon and a touch of cayenne served over ice. • Queen City Giorgio’s: Giorgio’s Ristorante & Bar has opened its third restaurant, at 270 Granite St. in Manchester. The new location serves the same Italian and Greek cuisine as the restaurant’s existing locations in Merrimack and Milford and is open for dinner all day on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.; and Monday through Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., and Thursday through Saturday to 11 p.m., with lunch served until 4 p.m. Giorgio’s opened its first full restaurant in Merrimack in 2001, and its second location in Milford in 2006. Visit giorgios.com, or call 232-3323 to reach the Manchester restaurant. • Try a kiwiberry: The UNH kiwiberry research team is inviting the public to sample kiwiberries at New Hampshire 46
Looking for more food and drink fun? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and hipposcout.com. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 40
Glendi Where: St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 650 Hanover St., Manchester When: Friday, Sept. 16, and Saturday, Sept. 17, from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., with food service until 9 p.m., and Sunday, Sept. 18, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Cost: Free admission. Food priced per item. Visit: saintgeorgeglendi.com
Glendi Greek food festival at St. George Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Manchester. Courtesy photo.
called chicken souvlaki, which is seasoned chicken topped with lettuce, red onion and tzatziki sauce, wrapped in pita bread. There are as many kinds of pastries offered as there are entrees, including spanakopita (layers of phyllo dough with spinach and cheese filling) which is always a favorite, baklava, galatoboureko (layers of filo dough with Greek custard) and a variety of cookies, but the most anticipated pastry, Moufarge said, are the loukoumades — freshly made fried dough puffs soaked in syrup and sprinkled with cinnamon and powdered sugar. “The loukoumades draw their own line which runs the length of the church hall. It’s ridiculous how many people wait for those,” she said, “but those are definitely one of the things people come for because they are out of this world.” Other sweet treats include rice pudding, baklava ice cream and baklava sundaes and frappes, which Moufarge said are “to die for.” There will also be specialty drinks like
Greek coffee, beer and wine. Cooking operations for Glendi begin as early as June, and food is stored in big walk-in freezers until the week of the festival. Most of the recipes used are modified versions of old family recipes from the church’s members. “Of course, it’s difficult when you have to use a recipe for an at-home normal-sized portion of something and make it work for thousands of people,” Moufarge said. “It takes some practice, but we finally have it down to a science and have used these recipes for a while.” In addition to the food, Glendi will highlight other aspects of Greek culture with live music and dancing, including a Greek dance troupe that will showcase traditional Greek clothing, and a small market with Greek imported goods and crafts like jewelry, crocheted items and more. There will also be blast inflatables and activities for kids, a penny raffle, church tours and recipe books for sale.
Stir it up
Bond-themed event features winetini contest, gourmet food By Angie Sykeny
asykeny@hippopress.com
Put on your best James Bond or Bond Girl look and spend an evening creating winetinis and enjoying gourmet food during “Shaken Not Stirred” on Tuesday, Sept. 27, at LaBelle Winery in Amherst. The winery will be transformed into a casino with blackjack, roulette and craps
tables throughout the rooms. At 5:30 p.m., the games will open and appetizers including artisan cheeses, crudités vegetable platters and Mediterranean tapas will be served. Starting at 6:15 p.m., teams of 10 will put their mixology skills to the test in the Winetini Blending Challenge. Participants will be given LaBelle fruit wines like cranberry, apple and blueberry, spirits like gin and vodka and various garnishes with
which they can create original cocktails. “It gives the people who don’t want to partake in the gaming a chance to do something fun while stirring, shaking, sipping and tasting as a team to build their own unique drinks,” said Jean Perry, director of development and special events for the Front Door Agency, which puts on the annual fundraiser. The teams will have several tries to perfect their winetinis before giving 42
It’s Breakfast Time All the Time
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Please Join us
Enjoy oulre delectab treats! Try Our Cronuts
Friday 9/16 2:30-5:30 Complimentary Wine Tasting Featuring Arias Wines by David Ortiz
Wine Sales Benefit the David Ortiz Children's Fund
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40 them a name and designing a label. When they’re done, they’ll present their creations to the judges — LaBelle Winery owners Amy LaBelle and Cesar Arboleda and the director of the Front Door Agency — who will score the drinks based on taste and creativity. The top three teams will each receive a prize. “There are a lot of different aspects that the teams will have to get creative with, so that will be a fun activity,” Perry said. Following the Winetini Blending Chal-
081961
Shaken Not Stirred
School is tough...
Where: LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst When: Tuesday, Sept. 27, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Cost: $75 for games and food only, $100 if participating in the Winetini Blending Challenge. Limited tickets available. Purchase online. Visit: frontdooragency.org/events/ winetini
Make Dinner EASY! STUDENTS SAVE 20% Every Tuesday!
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Food & Drink Author events/lectures • COOKBOOK EXPLORERS: SEPTEMBER Group explores a new type of cuisine or diet each month. Share your cooking successes and challenges and leave with new recipes. For September meeting, bring a dish you would bring to a BBQ. Wed., Sept. 21, 12:30 p.m. Pelham Public Library, 24 Village Green, Pelham. Free and open to the public. Email wflint@pelhamweb.com.
fill of delicious, golden mac n’ cheese! Just flash your student ID every Tuesday and get 20% off of your dinner. Kick the school year off right, and feed your appetite & your mind!
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 42
We Have Gluten Free!
497 Hooksett Road, Manchester, NH
Beer, wine & liquor dinners • TUSCAN KITCHEN BEER DINNER Five-course beer dinner featuring the beers of Wachusett Brewing Company. Wed., Sept. 21, 6 p.m. Tuscan
lenge from 6:45 to 8 p.m., there will be several carving and gourmet food stations with dishes including maple-glazed carved pork loin with apple relish, peppercorncrusted beef sirloin, salads and pastas with a selection of seasonal sauces. Gluten-free options will also be available. “When they’re ready to eat, people can just walk up to the food stations throughout the venue and try all the different meals prepared by LaBelle chefs,” Perry said. The games will close at 8 p.m., and the evening will wrap up with gourmet coffee and dessert from 8 to 8:30 p.m. The winning teams for the Winetini Blending Challenge will also be announced. Proceeds from the Shaken Not Stirred event will help families in the greater Nashua area that are facing homelessness. “It’s a good event to get together and have fun with friends or coworkers, or to celebrate a birthday or another special occasion, and you’re supporting a good cause,” Perry said.
Kitchen , 67 Main St., Salem. Visit tuscanbrands.com. • HENNIKER BEER TASTING DINNER Four-course farm to table dinner paired with four Henniker Brewing Company beers, including limited batches of Ora (golden Belgian) and Hometown Brown. Thurs., Sept. 29, 5:30 to 8 p.m. Colby Hill Inn, 33 The Oaks, Henniker. $50. RSVP suggested. Visit colbyhillinn.com. Beer, wine & liquor festivals & special events • NH BEER CLUB Monthly meetings feature a Granite State brewer, plus a limited edition or unique brew. Mon., Sept. 19, Oct. 17, Nov. 21, Dec. 19, Jan. 16, March 20, April 17, May 15, at 6:30 p.m. New England's Tap
House Grille, 1292 Hooksett Road, Hooksett. Cost is $30 per event. See nhbeerclub.com. • CAPITAL CUP BREW FESTIVAL Part of Concord Weekend on the Water. Features 20 breweries with local selections and hard-to-find varieties from around the country. Sat., Sept. 24, 1 to 4 p.m. Riverfront Park , Concord. $20 in advance, $25 at the gate. Visit concordwow.org. • SHAKEN NOT STIRRED James Bond-inspired evening of casino gaming and a Winetini Blending Challenge where 10 guests will compete to create the best cocktail creation by blending wines and spirits. Tues., Sept. 27, 5:30 to 9 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 NH-101, Amherst. $75 for gaming and food only, $100 to compete in Winetini
FOOD
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Brewery workshop covers the business of beer
fresh new menu!
Now serving Grilled Chicken and Pulled Pork Sandwiches, Sloppy Joes, Delicious Healthy Options and more.
Craft Brewery Startup Workshop: The Business of Beer When: Monday, Sept. 26, through Friday, Sept. 30, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Where: Various seacoast breweries Cost: $1,300 Visit: learn.unh.edu/brewing
great food. great vibes. Local Craft Beer & Wine and Great Shakes
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Those interested in opening their own brewery can get a comprehensive look at what it takes in a new, unique workshop offered by the University of New Hampshire later this month. The Craft Brewery Startup Workshop is an intensive five-day program taught by brewery owners and staff on site at eight seacoast breweries. The workshop was proposed by the director of professional development and training at UNH, Chris LaBelle, who had launched similar programs a few years ago at Oregon State University that were very popular and had students who went on to open successful breweries. “The intention is to provide participants with a greater awareness of what it takes to start a brewery and expose them to the full set of considerations,” LaBelle said. “I think many people don’t realize until they get experience or spend time with brewers or take a workshop like this that, yes, there’s the science to understand, but you have to know about the business side as well.” The program is geared toward people of all levels of experience and interest, including established brewers who want to deepen their knowledge of the business, hobbyists thinking about taking their passion to the next level, or young adults looking to get an internship or a foot in the door. Participants will be visiting Throwback Brewery, Redhook Brewery, 7th Settlement, Garrison City Beerworks, Smuttynose Brewing Co., Earth Eagle Brewing, Liars Bench Beer Co. and Tributary Brewing Co. in Kittery, Maine. “We wanted to cover the full spectrum of brewery types, so we have ones like Liar’s Bench which is just coming out of the nano phase and then ones like Redhook which is producing and distributing in high volume and then breweries in between,” LaBelle said. “It’s really a nice mix of resources.”
A big part of the workshop will be hearing the brewery’s stories and experiences about what worked for them and what didn’t. Discussion and lecture topics will cover how to get started (writing a business plan, choosing a location, defining a style, constructing a facility), community engagement (obtaining permits, zoning, planning boards), finances (obtaining funding, startup costs, budgeting basics, etc.), legal issues (licensing, labeling, state and federal regulations, inspections, safety), internal affairs (staffing, training, payroll, insurance) and business strategies (branding, public relations, marketing tools, event planning, etc.). Students will have the opportunity to start developing a personalized business plan with guidance and feedback from brewery owners. There will also be more beer-focused topics like developing recipes, ingredients (purchasing, storing, disposing, water testing), brewing basics, beer packaging, on-site serving and running a tap room, distributing and beer analytics. Other speciality topics will include innovative brewing, starting a brew pub, food pairing and brewery collaborations. Students who are interested in learning more about starting a brewery after the workshop are encouraged to check out UNH’s new craft brewing minor program, which will be offered starting next year. “Being savvy about product quality … that’s the real driver of success and the piece I always hear brewers coming back to,” LaBelle said. “I think there are still opportunities in the market if you prioritize quality, are methodical and can find your unique place in the market.”
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By Angie Sykeny
asykeny@hippopress.com
Tasty Gluten Free & Vegan Options Too We prioritize local & regional foods whenever available.
der s P icks
Proud Winner. Best Burger treat yourself to amazing authentic italian gelato & gourmet ice cream at the adjoining buza dairy bar
603.856.8671 | vibesgourmetburgers.com
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 43
IN THE
Kitchen
WITH AMBERLY GIBBS
This is how we do an
apple-a-day!
Coffee Cake • Turnovers • Cookies • Pies • Bars & Cannolis!
109526
Serving Manchester for 20 Years.
819 Union St., Manchester • 647-7150 • Michellespastries.com Mon 7:30a-2p • Tues-Fri 7:30a - 5:30p • Sat 8a-12p
088541
Start Your Day off Right! Breakfast at Alan’s Saturdays: 7am-11:30am Sundays: 8am-12pm (Buffet Only)
Full menu available on our website. 105841
D WITH A CRE AT OO F T
What is your must-have kitchen item? What is your favorite local restaurant? It’d have to be an oven, because we Cotton. When I go out to eat I like to get don’t deep-fry anything, so fries go in the something that I can’t make myself since oven, tenders go in the oven, everything. I work in a kitchen so much. Last time I was there, I got the pan-seared scallops What would you choose for your last and they were so good. … I just like that meal? you can get a high-end meal there without Something with seafood. Probably sea- grossly overpaying. food fettucini. What is the biggest food trend in New What is your favorite dish on your Hampshire right now? menu? Everyone is definitely talking about I would probably have to say our sig- gluten-free. Gluten-free items and whole nature steak and cheese. We cut the steak gluten-free menus. That definitely seems and marinate it here and it’s really good. to be a trend on the rise.
19 88.
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What celebrity would you like to share a meal with? Guy Fieri from Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. He comes around and reviews restaurants. I think he recently came and did Tuckaway Tavern, and I was like, “He should come here!”
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CR AT CH.
T WIS ET IV
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603-753-6631 | N. Main St., Boscawen | AlansofBoscawen.com
This month marks four years since Amberly Gibbs and her business partner Brenda Cadieux purchased The Village Trestle (25 Main St., Goffstown, 497-8230, villagetrestle.com). They were both employees at the restaurant when the previous owners offered it to them, so they decided to take on the new venture together. It wasn’t always easy; 11 weeks after the purchase, Cadieux was diagnosed with cancer, leaving Gibbs to run the restaurant alone for 15 months while she underwent treatment. “We were dealt every challenge that could come our way,” Gibbs said. “It’s actually a real success story not many people know about.” Gibbs grew up in a family of restaurant workers and started working in the industry herself as a teenager. She was a bar trainer at several chain restaurants before ending up at the Village Trestle. Now, she handles the food and kitchen operations while Cadieux manages the bar and front of the house.
N . SI BY HAND
672.0500 • Route 101, Amherst Open Daily Serving lunch, dinner and Sunday brunch
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Manchester • 270 Granite St. • 603.232.3323 Merrimack/Nashua • Pennichuck Square • 603.883.7333 Milford • 524 Nashua St. • 603.673.3939 giorgios.com HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 44
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Tuscan White Bean Soup From the kitchen of The Village Trestle 2 14-ounce cans cannellini beans 2 14-ounce cans Great Northern beans 2 14-ounce cans butter beans 3 pieces thick-cut bacon 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil 2 cups diced onions 1 cup diced celery 1 cup diced carrots 4 garlic cloves 1 14-ounce can diced tomatoes 2 quarts vegetable stock Water as needed 1 cup chopped spinach, escarole or kale 1 bay leaf 2 teaspoons Italian seasoning
What is your favorite meal to cook at home? Lamb. Lamb chops or roast lamb. I’m half Greek so I cook with a lot of Greek flair, and that’s definitely something that I like to make at home. — Angie Sykeny
Salt and pepper to taste In a large soup pot, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the bacon, cooking until slightly crispy about 3 minutes. Saute the onion, celery, carrot and garlic for 3 to 4 minutes. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste. Add the diced tomatoes, the rinsed and drained beans, and the Italian seasoning and cook for 5 minutes. Add the vegetable stock and bay leaf. Cook for 15 to 20 minutes, then add the chopped greens. Continue cooking until the beans are completely tender.
Sunday Brunch Being Served 10am-3pm Serving Dinner (3pm-10pm) Visit our Build-Your-Own Bloody Mary Bar $5 Mimosas
Inspired classic American fare in a warm, inviting atmosphere. We are open 7 Days Lunch Mon - Sat: 11:30am - 4pm Sun Brunch: 10am-3pm
Dinner
Mon - Thurs: 4pm - 10pm Fri & Sat: 4pm-11pm Sun: 3pm-10pm
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bite-sized lessons Your local Hannaford dietitian is full of healthy ideas that help you stay on track, such as this one:
A vibrant variety of flavors There’s a sandwich for every taste so it’s no wonder why it’s everyone’s favorite go-to lunch. Now you can upgrade your sandwich with a new flavorful, guilt-free condiment with Sabra Spreads™. It has all the benefits of hummus and includes fiber, protein, and 0 saturated fat.
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Visit hannaford.com/dietitians to learn more. 105982
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 45
Weekly Dish
Martini Tuesday’s
Continued from page 40
ALL DAY TUESDAY
$7 |
(Reg. $12.00)
Name Brands: Any Variety Grey Goose • Stoli • Titos “Our Seafood is Delivered Fresh Daily” See our menu online at www.lobstertail.net
Zack’s 4 Cobbetts Pond Rd., Windham 890-5555 • www.lobstertail.net
109482
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Parmesan potato encrusted cod served over roasted sweet and red potato, rainINNE bow carrots and an arugula pesto and topped with heirloom cherry tomatoes Re s ader s P ick
110 Hanover St. Manchester 606 -1189 | hookedonignite.com 109182
Great Gluten Free
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Willkommen
You’ll Say...
you “Are SURE it’s
gluten free?”
YES!
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German Food Open During Construction! Come See What We’re Up To.
as it should be done
Mon/Tues: Closed • Wed-Fri 4pm-Close • Sat-Sun 1130-Close – Reservations Highly Recommended –
72 Manchester Street, Concord, NH (603)224-4101 | TheRedBlazer.com
Granite Hill Business Center 1461 Hooksett Rd • Hooksett Entrance Located in Rear of Plaza 108410
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 46
836-5280
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farmers markets during the month of September. The kiwiberry is smooth-skinned and about the size of a grape with a soft texture and tropical flavor. It’s been grown in private New England gardens for 140 years but never reached commercial production. The researchers will use the public’s feedback to assess consumer demand for the fruit. Try it at the Nashua market on Sunday, Sept. 18; Bedford on Tuesday, Sept. 20; Merrimack on Wednesdays, Sept. 21 and Sept. 28; Manchester on Thursday, Sept. 22, and many other markets around the state. Visit unh.edu/halelab/kiwiberry for more information. • Fall sampling: Get your tickets now for the Fall Food & Wine Festival on Sunday, Challenge. Early reservations suggested as space is limited. Visit tinyurl.com/winetini. • LAKES REGION BARREL TASTING WEEKEND Sat., Oct. 1, and Sun., Oct. 2. Hermit Woods Winery, 72 Main St., Meredith. See hermitwoods. com. • RED, WHITE AND BREW A draft beer and wine festival. Also features food, a car show, music, local artisans and a military appreciation day. Sat., Oct. 1, 2 to 5 p.m., with special VIP hour from 1 to 2 p.m. FunSpot, 579 Endicott Street North, Weirs Beach/Laconia . Visit vetscount. org/nh. • BEER FOR HISTORY SERIES Enjoy colonial music and games, beer samples and food. Thurs., Oct. 20, from 5 to 8 p.m. American Independence Museum, Folsom Tavern, 164 Water St., Exeter. Cost is $30, $12 for children ($25 for member adults, $10 for children). See independencemuseum.org. • FLAG HILL STRAIGHT RYE WHISKEY RELEASE PARTY Roaring '20s themed release party for new straight rye whiskey featuring a menu prepared by Chef James, specialty cocktails and more. Fri., Oct. 21. Flag Hill Distillery & Winery , 297 N. River Road, Lee. Visit flaghill.com. Chef events/special meals • NHPR 35TH ANNIVERSARY HARVEST DINNER Guests will enjoy appetizers and a dinner with five courses made with ingredients from local farms to celebrate NHPR's 35 years on the air. Wed., Sept. 14, 6:30 p.m. 1810 Post and Beam barn, Gould Hill, Contoocook. $89 per person. Visit thefarmersdinner.com. • TEA BY THE SEA Enjoy tea fare and teas in a cool room casually decorated with a sea-
Sept. 25, at LaBelle Winery (345 Route 101, Amherst). The annual event will feature samples of over 70 wines, artisan cheeses, chocolates and specialty food products including gourmet pastas, caramel and hot fudge, mustards, spicy ketchups, relishes and chutneys, dressings, jellies, infused maple syrups, infused sea salts, olive oils, balsamic vinegars and more. There will also be opportunities to meet local winemakers, cheese connoisseurs, chocolatiers and other local food producers. Tickets for this 21+ event cost $40 for samplers and $10 for designated drivers (who can still sample food items). Choose between two time slots: noon to 2 p.m., or 3 to 5 p.m. Purchase tickets at fallfoodandwine.eventbrite.com.
side theme. Sun., Sept. 18, 1 to 3 p.m. The Cozy Tea Cart, 104 Route 13, Brookline. $34.95. Call 249-9111 to reserve your spot. • BRUNCH & BUBBLES IN THE VINEYARD Enjoy Sparkling Cayuga and handcrafted specialty Bloody Marys. Sun., Sept. 25. Flag Hill Winery & Distillery, 297 N. River Road, Lee. Visit flaghill.com. Call or email for reservations. • MAIN STREET FARMERS DINNER Farm-to-table event highlights local food and cooking. Main Street will be closed to traffic and festively decorated for 200 people to enjoy a multicourse dinner created by downtown chefs using locally sourced ingredients. There will be musical entertainment, guest speakers and a farmers market. Sun., Sept. 25. Downtown, Nashua. Visit thefarmersdinner.com. Classes/workshops • FRENCH MACARONS Learn how to make classic French macaron from scratch with ganache filling. Wed., Sept. 14, 6 to 9 p.m. at Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost is $60. Visit finessepastries. com or call 232-6592. • THE WINEMAKER'S KITCHEN COOKING SERIES: MARINADES & DRESSINGS Class line-up includes making wine vinaigrettes, making marinades and understanding the theory behind using them and covering the basis for creating successful salads. Wed., Sept. 14, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. LaBelle Winery, 345 Route 101, Amherst. Cost $25. Call 672-9898 or visit labellewineryevents.com. • ARTISAN BREADS I Learn the basics of bread baking while making sweet Challah bread, herb ciabatta and cheesy Gruyere rolls. Thurs., Sept. 15,
from 6 to 9:30 p.m. at Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost is $75. Visit finessepastries.com. • GLUTEN FREE COOKING CLASSES Cooking demonstrations for people with celiac disease or people thinking of trying a gluten free diet, or anyone who wants new food ideas. Taught by Chef Oonagh Williams, featured chef on WMUR's Cooks Corner segment. Wed., Sept. 21, Oct. 12, Nov. 16, and Dec. 14, 7 to 9 p.m. Function Hall in Wasserman Park , 116 Naticook Road, Merrimack. $45 for Milford residents, $50 for non-residents. Visit merrimackparksandrec. org/adult-programs.html. • FALL THEMED FRENCH MACARONS Learn techniques to make classic French macarons and fall flavored fillings such as pumpkin pie, maple and caramel, and learn tips and tricks from the chef. Thurs., Sept. 22, from 6 to 9 p.m. at Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost $75. Call 232-6592, or visit finessepastries.com. • PUFF PASTRY Make classic puff pastry dough from scratch, then make turnovers, Palmiers and Sacristan. Fri., Sept. 23, from 6 to 9:30 p.m. Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost is $75. Visit finessepastries. com. • FRENCH MACARONS Learn how to make classic French macaron from scratch with ganache filling. Wed., Sept. 28, 6 to 9 p.m. at Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost is $60. Visit finessepastries. com or call 232-6592. • PATE A CHOUX Learn how to make pate a choux. Make, fill and finish eclairs, cream puffs and Paris-Brests. Thurs., Sept. 29, from 6 to 9 p.m. at Finesse Pastries, 968 Elm St., Manchester. Cost $60. Call 232-6592, or visit finessepastries.com.
FOOD
perishables Tasty food from fresh ingredients
Breakfast makeover About a year ago, I had a breakfast makeover. I needed to let go of my own ways and start anew. I thought I was eating the right things for breakfast but was so very wrong. I was eating foods loaded with sugar and carbohydrates that, rather than filling me up, gave me a temporary high that led to a notso-temporary low. From cereal to buttered English muffins, my breakfasts were not only boring but also missed all the marks for a healthy and filling breakfast. I needed to put down the Honey Nut Cheerios. So, breakfast — what should it entail? Some of this depends on your morning schedule and routine. I wake up and work out, so having a hearty breakfast off the bat doesn’t make sense for me. So I start with a half of a banana, and then, after I work out, have a protein-rich smoothie filled with some good fats (recipe below). The banana gives me some carbs to burn during my workout and the smoothie fills me up the way a good breakfast should. You might need something a little different to fuel your day, and hopefully some of the options below will appeal to you. I’m a big proponent of breakfast. For one, I always wake up hungry, and for another, I need fuel to power my workout and my days with my kiddos. I’m not exactly pleasant when I’m hungry. But when you are eating breakfast, choose wisely. Eat fresh, nutrientrich foods that your body deserves. Here are some of my favorite ideas: Greek yogurt. Go for plain so as to avoid added sugar, or, if you do need some sweetness, add some fruit, raw nuts, honey or syrup. Local honey or syrup is plentiful in New Hampshire so be sure to support your farmer neighbors. So much protein, so filling and so very easy.
Fairs/festivals/expos • PASSPORT: CRAFT BEER AND CULINARY WORLD TOUR Guests are invited to enjoy a savory tour of craft beers from over 20 small and larger brewers, paired with appetizers prepared by local chefs. Learn about beer styles and the cuisines they complement. Vegetarian appetizers are available. There will also be live music. Sat., Sept. 17, 5 to 7:30 p.m. Strawbery Banke Museum, 14 Hancock St., Portsmouth. Tickets cost $75. Designated driver tickets cost $30. Visit strawbery-
LOCAL CRAFT BEERS • BEST SEAFOOD • PRIME RIB Overnight oats. A great breakfast if you like prepping the night before and having something delicious waiting for you in the morning. Take ½ cup rolled oats and cover with the same amount of unsweetened almond milk. Add a little peanut butter and/ or maple syrup to spice it up. Really want to up the ante? Add a couple teaspoons of chia seeds. In the morning, add fruit if you’d like. Hardboiled eggs. Make these beforehand. I just throw a bunch of eggs in a pot, bring to a boil and then take off the heat and allow to sit for about 12 minutes. Veggie egg cups. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Mix 12 eggs in a large bowl and add your fixings. Choose from goat cheese, mushrooms, chopped peppers, onions or tomatoes. You can make mini omelets for yourself in the oven. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes and store in the fridge to have all week long. Avocado egg toast: This is a great recipe for someone who wants to savor their breakfast. Fry an egg using a little coconut oil and throw over toast. Top with ¼ avocado, some greens and a teaspoon of olive oil. Add a little salt and pepper or nutritional yeast for some extra yum. Protein smoothie: Blend 8 ounces unsweetened almond milk, ½ to 1 cup cold coffee, chocolate protein powder, 1 cup of blueberries, a giant handful of spinach, 2 teaspoons of natural (no sugar added) peanut butter and eight to 10 ice cubes. So good, and really good for you. The moral of my story is: stop eating things for breakfast that don’t fuel you. You’re busy, you’re important and you deserve more. Go for fresher, more nutritious options and your body will thank you. — Allison Willson Dudas
banke.org/events/passport.cfm. • FROSTING FRENZY Features local chefs from senior care facilities and a student from SNHU Culinary Program showcasing their talents in a cakes and candy competition. Thurs., Sept. 22, 6 to 8 p.m. Puritan Conference Center, 245 Hooksett Road, Manchester. $25 per person or a block of 10 for $200. You may Visit easterseals.com/ nh or call 621-3619. • EAT LOCAL FALL FOOD FESTIVAL New event celebrating local agriculture, culinary arts, musicians and makers.
Includes local chefs using local ingredients throughout downtown, a harvest celebration at the Nashua Farmers Market and more. Sat., Sept. 24, to Sun., Oct. 2. Downtown, Nashua. Visit downtownnashua.org. • SCHNITZELFEST NEW HAMPSHIRE Festival features authentic German food, entertainment, beer and wine. Sat., Sept. 24, noon to 8 p.m. Butler Park, Hillsborough. Meal tickets are available to purchase online for $15, and beer tokens are $22 for five, until Thurs., Sept. 22. Visit schnitzelfestnh.org.
323 Derry Rd, Hudson | 886-3663 | www. HudsonNorthSideGrille.com HOURS: MON–THUR & SAT, 6AM-10PM • FRI, 6AM-11PM SUN, 7AM-3PM 106445
110057
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 47
DRINK
Wine Dinner
A visit to Coffin Cellars
6pm • Tuesday, September 20th
Plus a look at the Good Libations Tour
Call For Reservations.
Featuring 5 Wines from Southern France
By Stefanie Phillips food@hippopress.com
5 Course Dinner $85 per person*
Each course is perfectly paired with wine. *plus tax & gratuity Chef Owned & Operated. Monthly Wine Dinners. 488-5629 |170 Rt. 101 Bedford | RestaurantTeknique.com
109886
Easy, Affordable Party Planning! SHOWERS, ANNIVERSARIES, BIRTHDAYS, YOU NAME IT! A choice of award winning food or a menu of your choosing • No pressure event planning • At our place or yours - you choose • Need bartending? We have the best! Visit the catering section of our website to send us your ideas
Stella Blu
Stella Blu 70 East Pearl St. Nashua • 578-5557
StellaBlu-NH.com
Thank you for a great Summer!
Closed for the Season
107929
INTRODUCING OUR NEW...
Tandoori Chicken, Buffalo Chicken, Margherita, Pork Al Pastor, Shrimp Curry Alfredo & More Starting At $7
See you next Spring! spec
103037
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 48
Plenty of Parking in Free Lot or on Street!
201 HANOVER STREET, MANCHESTER, NH 603.627.2677 | VERANDAGRILLE.COM
107572
185 Concord St. Nashua TheBig1icecream.com Find us on Facebook!
It is always exciting to see hard work pay off. Coffin Cellars in Webster has a beautiful new tasting room, just in time for fall events. The Austin family has been diligently working to transform the 1840s structure on their property into their new tasting room, and it is now ready for guests. The Austins turned to their friend, Derrick, to bring their vision for the building to life. Work began in the summer of 2014 and has taken about two years to complete. The building was originally a shoemaker shop during the 1860s, where soldiers’ boots were constructed. Jaime Austin said later on it was his grandmother’s playroom. At that time, the building had two floors. The upper level has been removed to give it a more open feel. They began by gutting the inside of the building. Local timber was used to construct the post and beams inside, made completely of dowels. Jamie said they had an Amishlike barn raising when it was time to put the walls up and thankfully everything fell into place. Derrick milled the wood onsite, and visitors will appreciate his attention to detail. The wood from the floors of the tasting room was reused and re-sanded before being laid down. The highlight of the entrance is the Coffin Cellars signature coffin logo inlaid in the floor in front of the bar. I also love the wagon wheel light in the middle of the room. Derrick got it from a homeowner in Salisbury and it fits in perfectly with the space. The entire look and feel of the room is rustic but comfortable and it just feels like a nice place to hang out and sip wine. They recently received all the necessary approvals to officially open the room for guests. The Austins held their first private event in it a few weeks ago and are hoping to hold more events, in addition to tastings at special events like the Barrel Tasting Weekend/Good Libations Tour (more on that later). A great time to check out their new room is during their sixth anniversary celebration on Oct. 30. Guests are invited to visit in their Halloween costumes for a chance to win a prize. They will also have giveaways and food, in addition to wine tastings, of course. Coffin Cellars has a couple other new wines in progress, too. They are experimenting with flower wines, having made a dandelion wine last year. They are also working on a Shiro Plum wine (which I hear is pretty good) and a couple other wines, too. Of course, they still have some of their classics like the cranberrypomegranate, blackberry, elderberry and kiwi berry wines. Their jalapeno wine may not
Courtesy photo.
be my first choice for sipping but it is great in chili and bloody marys. Sometimes their wines sell out, so ask them what they have when you visit. (I am hoping they make more lime wine too!) They are currently open on weekends from 1 to 5 p.m. For more information, visit coffincellarswinery.wixsite.com/home-1.
Good Libations Tour (Barrel Tasting)
This year, the annual Lakes Region barrel tasting event will be a little bit different — and bigger than ever. Its name has changed to the Good Libations Tour and will involve not only wineries, but breweries and distilleries as well. The event will span three days, Sept. 30 to Oct. 2. In partnership with the Lakes Region Chamber of Commerce, six wineries, two distilleries and four breweries will be on the tour this year. Participants include Coffin Cellars; Gilmanton Winery; Sap House Meadery in Center Ossipee; Hermit Woods Winery in Meredith; Whippletree Winery in Tamworth; Seven Birches Winery in Lincoln; Tamworth Distillery; Cold Garden Spirits; Hobbs Tavern & Brewing Co. in West Ossipee; Canterbury Aleworks and Big Water Brewery in Salisbury. Guests can still sample young wines directly from the oak and stainless steel barrels, as well as sample beer and spirits at the respective locations. Guests can meet the winemakers, brewers and distillers, take tours and learn all about the development process. To partake in the event, participants need to purchase a commemorative wine glass, beer glass and spirits glass for $25, and will also have the chance to win prizes from local businesses. For more information about the event, visit hermitwoods.com.
We have all of your Health & Fitness needs Brazilian Steak House
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 49
CDs
pg##
• Thor & Friends, Thor & Friends A • Shadows & Mirrors, Aria BBOOKS
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• Falling: A Daughter, a Father, and a Journey Back A • Book Report Includes listings for lectures, author events, book clubs, writers’ workshops and other literary events. To let us know about your book or event, e-mail Kelly Sennott at ksennott@ hippopress.com. To get author events, library events and more listed, send information to listings@hippopress.com. FILM
pg56
• Sully B Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play or hipposcout.com.
POP CULTURE
MUSIC, BOOKS, GAMES, COMICS, MOVIES, DVDS, TV AND MORE Thor & Friends, Thor & Friends (LM Dupli-cation Records)
I’d imagine that holding down the role of “multi-percussionist” for over a decade with the Swans has to come with its own psychological trips and traps. The band has, after all, put the “avant” in avant garde for over … well, their entire existence, so it’s no surprise that Thor Harris is often photographed looking like the nuttiest guy at your local Lollapalooza. He also invents his own mallet-struck instruments, if I didn’t tell you that yet, and the “friends” on this debut solo LP are two weird girls who specialize in appropriately related instruments like marimba and xylophone. This collection isn’t out to hurt anyone’s ears though, even when kickoff tune “White Sands” expends the last of its dreamy tropical steez and that tune’s followup “Whose Fingers” steps in with an essay seemingly focused on Swans-ish subterranean mole-man dread. No, what this wants to be is understated minimalist experimentalism with actually a lot going on, sort of an underground, (mostly) analog answer to Animal Collective’s late-Aughts stuff, earbud trips for curing craziness. Or at least muffling it a little. A — Eric W. Saeger Shadows & Mirrors, Aria (Nub Music)
From what I’ve seen, this has been lumped as darkwave, meaning it should be full of techno/electro sounds that are creepy, obsessed and outwardly menacing. It’s the third release from Illinois native Brian Diamond, the one-man crew who makes up Shadows & Mirrors, which has seen some minor successes up to this point. His shtick is being prolific, bragging of writing 500 songs for this project, which he undertook after going on a grunge-band bender from age 15 up until just a few years ago. But anyway, where were we, yes, darkwave. Tee-off track “The Stranger” has a nice crawling darkness to the opening part, which Skinny Puppy would have abandoned after maybe 10 seconds to move into something wildly noisy, but it just hangs around, eventually joined by Diamond’s imitation of Trent Reznor. Then it goes into monotone chugging, whereupon the adage about taking the boy out of the grunge scene rears its head and he turns into Layne Staley, the Alice in Chains guy. Things do get better, especially if you like She Wants Revenge and such (“I Don’t Mind”) or Depeche Mode (“Confession”). But the big mistake Diamond made here was buying big-dollar studio time (the famous Alchemy Studio in London) instead of hanging around his bedroom getting some depth into these songs. Honest try anyway. B- — Eric W. Saeger
PLAYLIST A seriously abridged compendium of recent and future CD releases • Some people think of Staten Island’s Cymbals Eat Guitars as a shoegaze/emo crossover band, but since I actually like them, I call them a cross between Black Lips and Clinic, punky but no-waveish, pretty filthy but still a tad poppy when they’re at their best. The leadoff single for their new album Pretty Years is “Wish,” which is a departure from anything you may have heard from them before. It’s Bowie-blues-noise with a Jane’s Addiction vocal line for the chorus, sort of Spoon-ish, nice and messy, something cool to snap you out of accidentally listening to a Strokes album or something similarly wacky. • You all know how awesome El Perro del Mar is, or at least I hope you do. No, this isn’t some annoying bunch of 98-pound weaklings who hate hooks, you know the type, beloved by Pitchfork writers who crank up such stuff in their mom’s basement just to annoy her. No, this is a one-girl indie-pop chill thing, made up of Swedish girl Sarah Assbring. It’s sort of like Raveonettes doing 1960s girl-group stuff, or at least it was when I last checked in, which was, OMG, 10 years ago. So, right, the new LP is called KoKoro, streeting in a few days. Many people first heard the new single “Breadandbutter” at H&M stores, which brought them to YouTube to give H&M some free publicity. Are you beginning to see how the corporate Matrix works now? In principle, yes, you should hate this single for being a tool to advertise H&M, but we’re all helplessly past that stuff now, and besides, the song itself is cool, a surging low-key tribal beat under which Assbring sings in a bee-stung Madonna style. It’s a good song. I don’t know if H&M makes good clothes, but if they’re as good as this song, they’re good clothes. The moral is this: If you want to hear hip, non-sucky new songs five months before they’re released, you have to go to the mall and try on a brand-name top that cost $1 to manufacture in China but which will cost you $48. See how it works? Good, let’s slog onward. • Meat Loaf is back, not that you kids will need to take a quiz about who he is, or was, before he went mad and started screaming at people to vote for Mitt Romney for president, even though Mr. Loaf himself didn’t vote at all because he didn’t understand voter registration. See how this works? Right, like other arena-pop stars from the 1800s, he had a huge album, Bat Out of Hell, which included “Paradise by the Dashboard Lights.” If you want to know what that song sounds like, ask your mom and dad, who will immediately perform an impromptu Rocky Horror bit, right in your living room, while you die of embarrassment. For his upcoming new album Braver Than We Are, Mr. Loaf got the old Bat Out of Hell crew together, at least the folks who answered the phone. The single “Going All the Way” features the whole crew, but instead of being a sex-charged Rocky Horror thing, it sounds like a bunch of grandparents trying to be Les Miserables. It’s lame. • Emo-metal thingamajig Taking Back Sunday release Tidal Wave this week, which will please people who don’t immediately barf when they hear emo-metal. The single “Tidal Wave” sounds basically like the Ramones but with no personality. — Eric W. Saeger
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King Con
Supersized Granite State Comic Con features guest stars, lightsaber duels and cosplay By Kelly Sennott
ksennott@hippopress.com
The Granite State Comic Con has officially grown to its full capacity at the Radisson. The event is happening Saturday, Sept. 17, and Sunday, Sept. 18, and will take over every available function room at the hotel — including the recently added Armory Ballroom. “Last year, we had everything in the Expo Center, and we were crunched for space. To accommodate more people and more things, we added [the Armory],” Double Midnight Comics co-owner and festival co-organizer Chris Proulx said via phone. “The whole convention scene in general is just booming. You’ve got kids, you’ve got adults, you’ve got men, women and teenagers. It’s all over the map these days.” Inside this new room, visitors will find the FanZone, also new, which includes the Kids Con (with things like coloring and activity tables, face painting, cartooning and drawing lessons and Disney character storytimes), costume groups, Harry Potter-themed interactive magic classes and lightsaber dueling. The lightsaber dueling class is organized by Granite State Saber Academy, a recently formed organization spearheaded by J.D. Lauriat, a Star Wars fan who’s studied martial arts and stage combat for almost 30 years, and who also holds regular classes at The Knights Hall on Lake Street in Nashua.
From the 2015 Comic Con. Ryan Boehike photo.
Comic Con 2015. Photo by J. McDonald Media.
The class includes direction Kart) with tournaments you can on how to choreograph and enter for $1. execute staged lightCelebrity guests saber fights with a include Adrian Paul partner; participants (actor from Hightypically range in lander series), age from kids to Steve Cardenas 50-plus. (actor from Mighty “Everybody Morphin Powhas, at some point, er Rangers) Ian picked up an empty Whyte (actor from wrapping paper roll Game of Thrones, and pretended it was Alien vs. Predator), a lightsaber,” Lauriat Dave Barclay (pupsaid via phone last week. peteer from Return of “Here, people can live out Photo by J. McDonald Media. the Jedi), Jeremy Howard their over-the-top fantasy (actor from Teenage Mutant style fights. Everything is designed to be Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows), safe.” Dameon Clarke (actor from Dragon Ball Besides these new additions, Com- Z), Samantha Newark (actor from 52 ic Con, now in its 14th year, will feature most of the same details that have made it Granite State Comic Con a destination event. Cosplayers will walk Where: Radisson Center of New Hampthe streets, courtyard and hotel hallways, shire, 700 Elm St., Manchester and out front will sit a big Optimus Prime When: Saturday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. replica truck. to 6 p.m. (VIP entry at 9:30 a.m.), and Inside, there’s so much programming, Sunday, Sept. 18, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., it’s impossible to hit everything, so VIP entry at 9:30 a.m. attendees should plan their days accordAdmission: $20 for a Saturday or Suningly. Panels fill both days and tackle all day pass ($25 at the door), $35 for a kinds of themes and topics, including but weekend pass ($45 at the door), free not limited to voice acting, cover art, Batfor kids younger than 10, VIP pass $65, man, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, includes early entry and after hour event audiobooks, head-sculpting and creatoraccess, T-shirt, goodie bag (must order owned comics. Artists will exhibit and VIP ticket by Sept. 15) demonstrate all weekend long. Other entry fees: $20 for Dragonball Z For hard-core gamers, there’s a DragRegional Entry on Ball Z regional qualifier, HeroClix Contact: Double Midnight ComRealms open championship and a Gamics, 245 Maple St., Manchester, er’s Sanctuary arcade room full of ’90s 669-9636, granitecon.com, facebook.com/ granitecon/?fref=ts era games (Pokemon, Pac-Man, Mario
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51 Jem and the Holograms) and Lewis Smith (actor from The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai). And from the fan community, visitors will get to meet the New England Brethren of Pirates, The Hero Army, the 501st New England Garrison & Rebel Legion, Kingdom of Goldenvale liveaction role players and representatives from The Angry Geeks show and Mark Pinksten, whose nerd magic show is inspired by Star Wars, Dr. Who, Indiana Jones, Back
Everybody has ... picked up an empty wrapping paper roll and pretended it was a lightsaber.
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to the Future, Marvel Comics and Jaws. If two full days of geek programming aren’t enough, the con includes a number of supplemental events, like a screening of The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension Friday night with a Q&A with Lewis Smith and W.D. Richter. Saturday night, there’s Drink & Draw J.D. LAURIAT aevent at the Thirsty Moose, which Proulx expects a lot of weekend comic book artists to attend, and an after party at the Radisson. This year, Double Midnight Comics owners and festival organizers hired CrowdFood to bring five food trucks to sit along Pleasant Street, so that instead of breaking your day up with a sit-down lunch, you can make a quick pit stop, grab a sandwich and get your food to go so you don’t have to miss anything.
Lip Sync Battle Kick-off: 25 spots, 18-plus event, free; submit song choice and second song choice to pat@dmcomics.com, plus name and age, at Radisson Center of New Hampshire Curriers room, Friday, Sept. 16, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Screening of The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension: Friday, Sept. 16, at 8 p.m., includes Q&A with Lewis Smith and W.D. Richter, $12, at Cinemagic Theatres, 1226 Hooksett Road, Hooksett, 644-4629 Granite State Comic Con Drink & Draw: Saturday, Sept. 17, at 9 p.m., at the Thirsty Moose, 795 Elm St., Manchester, facebook.com/thirstymoosemanchester, which has 100 beers on tap and will have comic-themed cocktails Dancin’ To Bantha Trax after party: Saturday, Sept. 17, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., at the Radisson, $10, DJ, costume contest, drinks, Robbins Studios and Photography, games courtesy of Gamer’s Sanctuary, live body painting by Chameleon Colors, 18 and older only
From the 2015 Comic Con. Ryan Boehike photo.
POP
Poetry fest turns 2
Event grows in second year
Last September, the inaugural New Hampshire Poetry Festival went off without a hitch. Seats at the venue — the New Hampshire Institute of Art — were full, with 150 poets, poetry teachers, students and enthusiasts in attendance. Panels were lively, workshops were thoughtful and people exchanged books, tips and ideas. “There was a palpable energy throughout the day. People were incredibly happy, enthusiastic and almost overjoyed to be there. It really gave us the sense we were filling a need in the state,” Festival Director Jennifer Militello said via phone. Militello had pushed the idea for the 2015 festival to the Poetry Society of New Hampshire board just months before the first event. She’d had the sense, and the nonprofit agreed, that New Hampshire was ready and eager for something like this. “I knew New Hampshire was a strong poetry state, and that’s one of the reasons I live here and have always wanted to live here. … But I was surprised by the degree to which people had been longing to have this kind of event available to them,” Militello said. “It was like putting a plate of food in front of a starving person.” The second annual New Hampshire Poetry Festival, happening Saturday, Sept. 24, from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., will retain a similar structure, occurring in various buildings at NHIA, which is producing the festival along with PSNH. It will feature panels and workshops that celebrate the medium and focus on craft, reading, publishing and the New Hampshire poetry community. The difference in this year’s extravaganza is the size. Each time slot has an additional panel, and the workshops and discussions are filled with new poets, topics and themes. One panel honors New Hampshire poet and U.S. Poet Laureate Maxine Kumin. Others address audience, literary citizenship, encountering the sacred in poetry, booklength poems or feature group readings with local organizations or publishing houses. New Hampshire Poet Laureate Alice B. Fogel led a writing workshop in 2015, and this year, she’s part of a panel discussion about poetry and community. She said the event is a great addition to the New Hampshire poetry scene, offering a chance for people to delve into different kinds of poetry or practices they might not otherwise. It’s also inspiring, she said, and encourages attendees to feel good about investing time, energy, even money into writing, not unlike Writers’ Day, organized by the New Hampshire Writers’ Project in the spring.
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New Hampshire Poetry Festival Where: New Hampshire Institute of Art, 148 Concord St., Manchester When: Saturday, Sept. 24 Admission: $120, $55 for students Visit: poetrysocietyofnewhampshire.org Schedule of events 8-8:45 a.m.: Registration 8:45 to 9 a.m.: Welcome; coffee and pastries 9:15-10:30 a.m.: Panels (“Speaking of Max: A Conversation on the Work of Maxine Kumin;” “Is There Anybody Out There? Knowing When to Ignore or to Cultivate AudienceResponse in Poetry;” “A Panel Discussion of Poetry and Community;” “The Water Between Us: Borders, the White River and other Ley Lines;” “A Circle-of-Community”) 10:45-noon: Workshops (“The Pastoral Elegy” with Paige Ackerson-Kiely; “Engaging the Senses to Write a Poem of Place” with Wyn Cooper; “When Money Talks, Nobody Walks: Poems on Place in Time” with Cate Marvin; “Note to Self” with January Gill O’Neil) Noon-1:30 p.m.: Lunch 1:30-2:45: Panels (“The Resurgence of the Book-Length Poem;” “Wild and Holy;” “Metaphysics and Faith in Translation;” “From Midway to Manchester: A Reading of Boston-Area Midway Journal Poets;” “Write Short and Share”) 3-4:15 p.m.: Panels (“Poetry as Raw Emotion: A Group Reading;” “Poetry and Literary Citizenship;” “The Connecticut River Valley Poets: A Group Reading;” “Terrapin Books: From Seed to First Fruit;” “Hobblebush Granite State Poetry Series Group Reading”) 5-6 p.m.: Headliner reading with Ellen Bryant Voigt, followed by Q&A
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“This is another opportunity to get that same kind of inspiration and re-commitment,” said Fogel. A handful of new organizations have joined the festivities, like the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts and the New England Poetry Club. January Gill O’Neil, who organizes the Massachusetts Poetry Festival, will lead a workshop, “Note to Self,” about looking to oneself as a center for language, experience and inspiration. Throughout the day, there will be live tweeting, and after the last panels, there will be a headliner reading featuring Vermont poet Ellen Bryant Voigt, a 2015 MacArthur Fellow whose collections have been finalists for the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. This year, three PSNH members will attend the event on scholarships. “In future years, we’re hoping we can look to sponsorships and things like that, so we can continue to reduce the rate and allow in even more people looking to attend,” PSNH member Kyle Potvin said.
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POP CULTURE BOOKS
Falling: A Daughter, a Father, and a Journey Back by Elisha Cooper (Pantheon, 143 pages) Memoirs written by parents of children with life-threatening illnesses are never easy to read. In many cases, the child dies and the parents are left trying to find some kind of goodness from the horrible, soul-crushing experience. Often, in an effort to create reason from madness, the parents will start a charity, create a new law, or even raise money toward a cure. In the end, however, the parents of a sick child simply stumble toward hope and pray for a continued direction forward. Falling: A daughter, a father, and a journey back is the memoir of Elisha Cooper, a father who discovers a lump on his 5-year-old daughter’s side when they are at a baseball game. After tests, he and his wife find out that the lump is cancer. Cooper is a children’s book author and illustrator. He is a stay-at-home dad while his wife works in academia. He is the one who picks up his two daughters from school and then takes them to the park to teach them how to throw a ball. He is the one who teaches them with stories. He is the one who feels he has betrayed his family. Falling tells of the three-year journey of surgery, radiation therapy, chemotherapy and endless hours of worry that becomes the new norm. Although the story reflects on Zoe’s cancer, it more squarely sits in the seat of a young father who is trying his hardest to protect his family and who ultimately realizes that when it comes to cancer, all bets are off the table. You can’t protect loved ones from that disease. You can only manage your lives if it comes to visit. This is a memoir of extreme pain and confusion — pain at the thought of losing what has become most precious to Cooper, and confusion at trying to pretend his life is normal. “It’s going to be okay,” the oncologist says before we leave the last time, giving me a hearty handshake. Is it? What is “it”? This unspoken it. But we know what it is. It is everything, and it is all in the biology, and it is what we have become, and we would think more about it but we have a birthday party to plan.” Falling is an unflinching and sometimes darkly humorous account of a father’s absolute love for his family. Fully aware that nothing is under control, Cooper chronicles the times he loses selfcontrol, when he lashes out at others when the unfairness of his daughter’s cancer overcomes him. He smashes a car mirror. He yells at people and then he hides when he realizes he has lost it and doesn’t even
know who he is anymore. His daughter’s illness has changed him forever. But ultimately that’s really what Falling in its truest essence is about. It’s about change and the loss of control felt when you live in a world where you were convinced you would be always able to protect your children — if you just babyproofed enough, if you just made them wear helmets, if you just held them close to you long enough. At one point little Zoe falls and breaks her wrist. “It’s so unfair,” cries the mother. “Enough.” But that’s just it — things like accidents and cancer aren’t fair. Pain and disease can and do happen to anyone. Life doesn’t play by the rules. Cooper manages to get his daughter to a place where she is safe; she makes it to her three-year post-surgery/therapy mark. It’s a very good spot for her to be. But Cooper realizes that the worry of the cancer’s return will never really go away. Not only has Zoe’s life been altered by her cancer, but Cooper’s and the family’s have also been forever changed. There is no more safety. Even so, Cooper does not give in to his fears and instead decides to move forward with humor and inner strength. “Humor is not always pretty, or even funny. Humor may not even be humor. It may just be saying something true. But we use it to shake our fists at all that scares us, and with our laughter the world regains its balance. I’m not sure if we can laugh at all the sadness the inevitably comes into our lives, but do we have a better response?” A — Wendy E.N. Thomas
POP CULTURE BOOKS
Book Report
• Book sale week: If you’re looking for new reads on the cheap, check out a book sale this weekend. The Pembroke Town Library Yard and Book Sale is Saturday, Sept. 17, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the library, 313 Pembroke St., Pembroke, and will feature recently discarded texts from the collection selling for 25 cents; call 4857851. The Manchester City Library, 405 Pine St., Manchester, hosts a $10-bag book sale in its Winchell Room Saturday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Participants can bring average-sized grocery bags and fill them with the selections from more than 10,000 available for $10 per bag. Proceeds benefit library programs and projects. Visit manchester.lib.nh.us. • Walk in the words: The Friends of Bedrock Gardens presents A Walk in the Words: A Literature and Garden Festival Saturday, Sept. 17, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday, Sept. 18, from noon to 4 p.m., at Bedrock Gardens, 45 High Road, Lee. The weekend-long event will offer a variety of nature-inspired literary activities, from a Word Garden and Shape Poetry Slam to writing prompts and poetry readings. Author Rebecca Rule participates in the kick-off event Saturday, Sept. 17, at 10:30 a.m., which also includes a “Poets in the Garden” reading with David Ferry, Diane Freedman and Gary White. The event happens with the help of a grant from the New Hampshire Humanities Council. There’s a suggested $10 donation; visit bedrockgardens.org/walkinthewords or nhhumanities.org. • Slam time: Slam Free or Die hosts the fourth annual VOX POP Poetry Slam Tournament (formerly known as N.U.T.S.) Friday, Sept. 23, and Saturday, Sept. 24, at Stark Brewing Co. (formerly known as Milly’s Tavern) at 500 N. Commercial St., Manchester. The two-day event offers poetry writing and performance workshops and will culminate in a team poetry slam with a $1,000 prize. At the Friday slam, which starts at 7 p.m. and has a $5 cover, 10 poets will face off across three rounds for a $100 prize. On Saturday, SFOD offers two-hour writing and performance workshops starting at 10 a.m. ($5 to $10), and the main event is later that night, with doors opening at 6 p.m. ($5 cover). The slam comprises 10 pick-up teams who will compete in two five-team bouts, the top two advancing to a final “Deathmatch.” (Pick-up teams allow poets to choose their own teammates; normally, teams are decided through competition.) Entry fee for each team is $100, $10 for each poet. Anyone can compete, and the poetry battles (or bouts) are open to the public. Visit tinyurl.com/VOXPOP2016. — Kelly Sennott
Books Author Events • ROSS ALAN BACHELDER Author talks about Happy Dawg Walks the Sad Man. Thurs., Sept. 15, 5-7 p.m. RiverStones Custom Framing, 33 N. Main St., Rochester. • DOUGLAS ROOKS Author talks about Statesman: George Mitchell and the Art of the Possi-
ble. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Thurs., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. • STEPHEN CLARK Author talks about, signs copies of The Last Run. Thurs., Sept. 15, at 6:30 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Call 431-2100. Email info@riverrunbookstore.com. • LOCAL AUTHORS NIGHT
With authors Brad Boucher, Shelby June and Denis Lipman. Thurs., Sept. 15, at 6:30 p.m. Rye Public Library, 581 Washington Road, Rye. Call 964-8401. • JOHN PERKINS Author talks about/signs upcoming book, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. Sat., Sept. 17, at 2 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Visit toadbooks.com. Call 673-1734. • HOWARD MANSFIELD Author talks about Sheds. Toadstool Bookshop, 12 Depot Square, Peterborough. Sat., Sept. 17, at 11 a.m. •JAMES WALLER Author discusses Confronting Evil. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Sat., Sept. 17, at 2 p.m. • MARJORIE BURKE Author talks about Melting Ice: Shifting Sand. Sun., Sept. 18, at 2 p.m. MainStreet BookEnds, 16 E. Main St., Warner. • J. DENNIS ROBINSON Author speaks about Mystery on the Isles of Shoals: Closing the Case on the Smuttynose Murders of 1873. Tues., Sept. 20, at 6:30 p.m. Hampton Falls Free Library, 7 Drinkwater Road, Hampton Falls. Visit hamptonfalls.library. org. Call 926-3682. • JOE SMIGA Author talks about Blackest of Fridays. Tues., Sept. 20, at 7 p.m. Manchester City Library, 405 Pine St., Manchester. • JANYCE STEFAN-COLE Author reads from new novel, The Detective's Garden: A Love Story and Meditation on Murder. Thurs., Sept. 22, at 6:30 p.m. RiverRun Bookstore, 142 Fleet St., Portsmouth. Call 431-2100. Email info@riverrunbookstore.com. •CATHERINE MUSEMECHE Author talks about Hurt: The Inspiring, Untold Story of Trauma Care. Water Street Bookstore, 125 Water St., Exeter. Fri., Sept. 23, at 7 p.m. • ROB CHIRICO Author signs new memoir Not My Mother's Kitchen. Sat., Sept. 24, at 2 p.m. Toadstool Bookshop, 614 Nashua St., Milford. Visit toadbooks. com. Call 673-1734. • PHILIP SOLETSKY Local author Philip Soletsky will discuss his mysteries featuring a volunteer firefighter in New Hampshire. Sat., Sept. 24, 1 to 3 p.m. Pembroke Town Library, 313 Pembroke St., Pembroke. Free. Call 485-7851.
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 55
POP CULTURE FILM REVIEWS BY AMY DIAZ
Sully (PG-13)
Tom Hanks plays the airline pilot who landed a passenger plane in the Hudson River after it lost its engines in Sully, probably the best possible movie that could be made from this subject and released at roughly this moment in history.
Capt. Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger (Tom Hanks, because of course) is having nightmares and trouble sleeping in the days after he is forced to make an emergency landing on Jan. 15, 2009. He and co-pilot Jeff Skiles (Aaron Eckhart) have just taken off when their plane runs into a flock of birds, resulting in the loss of both engines. Unable to make it back to LaGuardia, or ultimately any other area airport, Sullenberger brings the plane down on the Hudson River, the only flat, people- and building-free surface available. Despite the water being just above freezing and the air temperature considerably below, all of the crew and passengers — babies, older people, people who get separated from loved ones, people who are injured or plunged for several minutes into the water — survive. Sully is relieved when he hears this but quickly he becomes plagued by something else: the thought that he made the wrong decision. The National Transportation Safety Board begins an investigation almost immediately and almost immediately they claim he could have made it back to an airport. Sully insists to them that he made the only decision that offered any hope for survival but board members (Mike O’Malley, Jamey Sheridan, Anna Gunn) tell him that computer models and early information about the damage to the plane suggest differently. Privately, Sully agonizes with his wife, Lorraine (Laura Linney), over whether he indeed did make the right choice. Despite knowing about this event and how it turned out, despite the movie itself
AT THE MULTIPLEX * Indicates movies worth seeing.
Coming soon Opens Sept. 16: Bridget Jones’s Baby (R) Continuing the 2016 run of sequels nobody asked for, Renée Zellweger returns as Bridget, still single and now pregnant with the baby of either her ex, played by Colin Firth, or requisite third point in the love triangle Patrick Dempsey; Blair Witch (R) See above re: sequels; the one-trickpony from 1999 gets another go-around in this tale of college students, one of them the brother of the ill-fated Heath-
Sully
basically “spoiling” the event’s outcome in its earliest scenes, I found Sully a very tense and even somewhat emotional movie to sit through. Part of this is that the crash is depicted a couple of times from a couple of perspectives and all of those scenes put you there, in the cockpit or with the passengers or watching the radar as the air traffic controller hears the pilot in distress and then watches the signal disappear. The movie does a very good job of allowing you to imagine how you’d feel in each circumstance. But the other reason for the tension is, I think, that we’ve seen these scenes before and we are not conditioned to expect a good outcome for an airplane in distress in New York City. Which is to say that, indirectly perhaps, Sully is also a 9/11 movie. Fifteen years ago, people did their jobs competently and with dedication, helped their fellow man and endured a great tragedy. In January 2009, a little less than seven and a half years later and a little more than seven and a half years ago, people did their jobs competently and with dedication and helped
er, who enter the woods; Snowden (R) Director Oliver Stone (but of course) tells the story of Edward Snowden (played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt). In theaters now: Bad Moms (R) Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell. Kathryn Hahn rounds out the trio of moms who decide to take a break from trying to be perfect in this slight but occasionally funny movie. BFlorence Foster Jenkins (PG-13) Meryl Streep, Hugh Grant. This movie about one of the
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 56
most famous bad singers in history rather lazily rests itself on the performance of Streep (which is, as ever, solid). B-
their fellow man — and everybody lived. In the movie, people hug Sully, the guys at the bar cheer him on, everybody calls him hero. You get the sense — at least I do, and I’ll bet many viewers old enough to have a full memory of 2001 and the mood of the country would too — that these hugs and handshakes and cheers are a kind of relief, a “finally, some good news” to make up for the time when many of the heroes and the people they tried to save didn’t make it. (Add the economic situation of early 2009 to this and you can understand why “relief” seems like the primary emotion of this movie.) How much of this is in the movie and how much of this is just what I’m reading into it? The movie makes a few indirect references to Sept. 11, which suggests to me that it (and director Clint Eastwood) knows what it’s doing. But who’s to say? I guess in a few decades I can watch this movie in my living room holodeck with my children, who were born long after 9/11, and see what they think.
And, playing a Texas Ranger nearing retirement, Jeff Bridges. Excellent performances all around in this tale of two brothers in West Texas Hands of Stone (R) who decide to save the famiRobert De Niro, Edgar ly ranch by paying back what Ramírez. they see as a predatory bank This Roberto Duran biopic loan by robbing branches of tells the story of the boxer who that very bank. It’s a solid beat Sugar Ray Leonard only cops-and-robbers tale with lots to walk out during a rematch, of suspense and humor in all with a side order of bits about the right places. A Panamanian/U.S. relations and boxing manager Ray Arcel *Kubo and the Two Strings and his relationship with the (PG) New York mob. BCharlize Theron, Matthew McConaughey. *Hell or High Water (R) Beautiful if occasionally terChris Pine, Ben Foster. rifying, this animated tale of a
Ultimately what I find winning about this movie are the scenes of people — not just Sullenberger but also the flight attendants, the water rescue crew, the various boats that head out to help the airplane, the passengers themselves — doing their job, doing it competently and taking care of each other. For me, the most chill-inducing moments of the film are when we hear the flight attendants repeating, in unison, the instructions to the passengers for how to brace for impact. Something about people leaning on their training to get through a crisis — it’s scary and yet at the same time strangely optimistic. Sully is basically a movie about, as Sully says, 208 seconds, which is something of a narrative challenge that the story, for the most part, works with well. We do get the varying views of the central event. And the tale of the investigation (and what a poor outcome could have meant for Sullenberger and his family) adds enough of an element of the unknown (or, at least, was a part of the story I didn’t know about) to give the movie some drama and the characters something to do to keep them from being one-dimensional. Though all the actors do solid work here, it is of course Hanks on whom the movie rests and, as in Bridge of Spies and Captain Phillips, Hanks does a very good job of making a heroic figure a human being without diminishing his heroics. Sully isn’t necessarily a fun movie to watch but it is an engrossing one that leaves you with a general sense of optimism about the abilities of everyday people to rise to an occasion. B Rated PG-13 for some peril and brief strong language. Directed by Clint Eastwood with a screenplay by Todd Komarnicki (based on the book Highest Duty by Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger and Jeffrey Zaslow), Sully is an hour and 36 minutes long and distributed by Warner Bros.
boy whose magical family has been torn apart by a vengeful villain called the Moon King is a solid adventure (probably for 8- or 9-year-olds and up). A The Light Between Oceans (PG-13) Michael Fassbender, Alicia Vikander. Based on a novel by the same name, this lovely and everso-sad movie tells the story of a lighthouse keeper and his wife in post-WWI Australia who keep and raise as their own a child they find adrift in the ocean. Need a good cry? Here’s your movie. B
Mechanic: Resurrection (R) Jason Statham, Jessica Alba. No amount of faceless henchmen punched or boats exploded adds life to this dud of an action movie (and another of this summer’s sequels). Statham and Alba work together to make each other’s performances flat and dull. CPete’s Dragon (PG) Bryce Dallas Howard, Robert Redford. Though a bit drowsy, this gentle tale of a boy who is lost in the woods but finds a friend in a big green dragon is a sweet old-fashioned (1980s) kid adventure. B
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k a P h Lunc n o o s e c fi f o r u o Coming to y
Lunch Pak is quarterly mailing of local lunch menus sent to workplaces.
Manchester Lunch Pak- arriving late October Nashua Lunch Pak- arriving late November Concord Lunch Pak- arriving late September
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 57
POP CULTURE FILMS
WILTON TOWN HALL THEATRE (603) 654-FILM (3456)
AMC Tyngsboro 440 Middlesex St., Tyngsborough, Mass., 978-649-4158. Chunky’s Cinema & Pub 151 Coliseum Ave., Nashua, chunkys.com Chunky’s Cinema & Pub 150 Bridge St., Pelham, 635-7499 Cinemagic Hooksett 1226 Hooksett Road, Hooksett,
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10:00pm: LearnCINEKIDS more at arthousetheaterday.org RED RIVER'S SERIES - A TOWN CALL PANIC: SEPTEMBER 24, OWN 2016 THE SPECIALS - and - BRING YOUR BABY (BYOB) 1:00pm: Learn more arthousetheaterday.org WILLY WONKA ANDatTHE CHOCOLATE FACTORY: GENE WILDER TRIBUTE 3:30pm: SEPTEMBER 24, 2016 SILENT FILM: SUNRISE WITH JEFF RAPSIS 8:00pm: DANNYLearn SAYS more at arthousetheaterday.org 10:00pm: LO ANDSEPTEMBER BEHOLD, REVERIES OF24, THE CONNECTED 2016 WORLD
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 58
O’Neil Cinema 12 Apple Tree Mall, Londonderry, 434-8633 Regal Concord 282 Loudon Road, Concord, 226-3800 Regal Hooksett 8 100 Technology Drive, Hooksett Showcase Cinemas Lowell 32 Reiss Ave., Lowell, Mass., 978-551-0055
MOVIES OUTSIDE THE CINEPLEX
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Children (under 12) and Seniors (65 and over) $5.00 | Active Military FREE
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RED RIVER THEATRES 11 S. Main St., Concord, 2244600, redrivertheatres.org • Florence Foster Jenkins (PG13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 2:05 p.m. • The Innocents (PG-13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 2:10, 5:35 & 7:50 p.m. • The Light Between Oceans (PG-13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 2, 5:25 & 8 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 16, at 2 & 8 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 2 & 8 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 4 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 19, at 2 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 20, at 8 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, at 2 & 8 p.m.; Thurs., Sept. 22, at 2 & 8 p.m. • The Beatles: Eight Days A Week — The Touring Years (NR, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 6:30 p.m.; Fri., Sept. 16, at 5 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 5 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 6:30 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, at 5:25 p.m. • Miss Sharon Jones (NR, 2016) Fri., Sept. 16, at 1:30 & 3:30 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 1:30, 3:30, 5:40 & 7:30 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 1:30, 3:30 & 5:40 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 19, at 2:10, 5:40 & 7:30 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 20, at 7:30 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, at 2:10 p.m.; & Thurs., Sept. 22, at 2:10 & 7:30 p.m. • Hell or High Water (R, 2016) Fri., Sept. 16, at 1, 3:15, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m.; Sat., Sept. 17, at 1, 3:15, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m.; Sun., Sept. 18, at 1, 3:15 & 5:30 p.m.; Mon., Sept. 19, at 2:05, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m.; Tues., Sept. 20, at 2:05, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, at 2:05, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m.; Thurs., Sept. 22, at 2:05, 5:30 & 7:45 p.m. • Spies (1928) Fri., Sept. 16, at 7 p.m., silent film with musical accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis • Romeo and Juliet (NR, 2016) Sun., Sept. 18, at 12:30 p.m. • Pirates of Penzance (G, 1983) Mon., Sept. 19, at 6:30 p.m. • Art House Theater Day Sat., Sept. 24 WILTON TOWN HALL 40 Main St., Wilton, 654-3456, wiltontownhalltheatre.com • Florence Foster Jenkins (PG-13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, through Thurs., Sept. 22, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screening Sun., Sept. 18, at 2 p.m. • Don’t Think Twice (R, 2016)
Thurs., Sept. 15, through Thurs., Sept. 22, at 7:30 p.m. Additional screenings Sun., Sept. 18, at 2 & 4:30 p.m. • Miracles from Heaven (2016) Sat., Sept. 17, at 4 p.m., free admission • On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970) Sat., Sept. 17, at 4:30 p.m., free admission • Time as Money (2015) Sun., Sept. 18, at 4:30 p.m., free admission MILFORD DRIVE-IN 531 Elm St., Milford, 673-4090, milforddrivein.com, Fri., Sept. 16, and Sat., Sept. 17; first film starts at 7:30 p.m., the second at 9:30 p.m. • Screen 1: Sully (PG-13, 2016) & War Dogs (R, 2016) • Screen 2: Blair Witch (R, 2016) & Don’t Breathe (R, 2016) DOWNTOWN BEDFORD 20 County Road, Bedford, greaterbedfordwomenade.org • Star Wars: The Force Awakens Fri., Sept. 16, at 6:15 p.m., movie begins at dusk, 3rd Annual Outdoor Movie Night, $10 CAPITOL CENTER FOR THE ARTS 44 S. Main St., Concord, 2251111, ccanh.com • The Audience (National Theatre Live) Wed., Sept. 21, at 6 p.m. MANCHESTER CITY LIBRARY 405 Pine St., Manchester, 6246550, manchester.lib.nh.us • Zootopia (PG, 2016) Wed., Sept. 21, at 1 p.m. NASHUA PUBLIC LIBRARY NPL Theater, 2 Court St., Nashua, 589-4611, nashualibrary.org • Hush (R, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 22, at 7 p.m. WARNER TOWN HALL 5 E. Main St., Warner, 4562298, warner.nh.us • Peter and John Fri., Sept. 23, at 7 p.m. EXETER PUBLIC LIBRARY 4 Chestnut St., Exeter, NH 03833, 772-3101, exeterpl.org
• Fall Teen Movie Matinee Tues., Sept. 20, at 3:30 p.m.
PETERBOROUGH COMMUNITY THEATRE 6 School St., Peterborough, 9242255, pctmovies.com, movies@ pctmovies.com • Fighting Back (documentary, 1957-1962) Tues., Sept. 20, at 7 p.m., free
THE MUSIC HALL 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org, Some films are screened at Music Hall Loft, 131 Congress St., Portsmouth • Cafe Society (PG-13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. • Zero Days (PG-13, 2016) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. • Telluride by the Sea 2016 weekend film festival Sept. 16-Sept. 18 • One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (R, 1975) Tues., Sept. 20, at 7 p.m. • The Beatles: Eight Days A Week — The Touring Years (NR, 2016) Tues., Sept. 20, at 7 p.m.; Wed., Sept. 21, at 7 p.m.
3S ARTSPACE 319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth, 3sarts.org • Raiders! The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made (documentary) Thurs., Sept. 15, at 7 p.m., includes documentary screening, followed by Raiders: The Adaptation screening, includes Q&A with directors, $15
THE FLYING MONKEY 39 S. Main St., Plymouth, 5362551, flyingmonkeynh.com • The Freshman (1925) Thurs., Sept. 22, at 6:30 p.m., silent film with live musical accompaniment by Jeff Rapsis
Hipposcout Looking for more book, film and pop culture events? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 59
NITE Bandiversary Local music news & events
By Michael Witthaus mwitthaus@hippopress.com
• Femmes centric The monthly Siren Series adds comedy to its mix of all-women entertainment, as Keene stand-up Naomi Stone performs. Host Jules Johnson welcomes singer-songwriters Tanya Darling, Jasmine Mann and Lauren Hurley to the stage. The event begins with a networking session and cocktail hour where a scuba diving lesson will be raffled off, with other prizes. Go Thursday, Sept. 15, at 7 p.m. at Shaskeen Pub, 909 Elm St., Manchester. See bit.ly/2cvS87Q. • Rename, resume: With a new moniker, the state’s largest venue welcomes Eric Church for a night of country rock. Church recently introduced a line of furniture – he grew up in the trade – and doubled down on ticket scalpers for his latest tour. He also released the anti-hate ballad “Kill a Word” last month in response to the vitriolic election season. Go Friday, Sept. 16, at 7 p.m. at SNHU Arena (formerly Verizon Wireless Arena), 555 Elm St, Manchester. Tickets $30-$89 at ticketmaster.com. • Shop & rock: Live music complements artisan food as local performers play weekend solo sets in Goffe’s Watering Hole at the new Whole Foods Market. When Jonathan Richman opened his 1976 debut album with a song called “Rockin’ Shopping Center,” he surely had no idea this was the shape of things to come. See Dan Walker on Friday, Sept. 16, and Amanda McCarthy on Saturday, Sept. 17, at 6 p.m., at Whole Foods Market, 121 S. River Road, Bedford, wholefoods.com. • Old friends: Former denizens of a favorite Manchester watering hole gather for the Uptown Reunion. Playing at the afternoonto-evening benefit for Wounded Warriors Project are Problem Child, Ronnie Adams, Outta Our Heads and Sam Productions. Before closing in 2007, the Uptown Tavern was a popular stop on the local music scene, with live bands most weekends. Go Sunday, Sept. 18, at 4 p.m. at Auburn Pitts, 167 Rockingham Road, Auburn. See bit.ly/2cxXuzr. • Smokin’ fun: Cigar aficionados gather for an afternoon of blues, barbecue and stogies at Twins Smoke Shop Smokin’ Blues BBQ. Limited to 200 tickets, the event features Jeff Pitchell & Texas Flood channeling Stevie Ray Vaughn, and soulful local Boo Boo Groove, along with over 20 different cigar makers showcasing their wares. Go Sunday, Sept. 18, noon (11 a.m. VIP) at Twins Smoke Shop, 80 Perkins Road, Londonderry. Tickets are $150 and $175 (VIP). Want more ideas for a fun night out? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store, Google Play and online at hipposcout.com. HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 60
Truffle celebrates 30th with shows, album By Michael Witthaus
mwitthaus@hippopress.com
Savoy Truffle formed in 1986, taking its name from a song by The Beatles, a group that lasted only eight years. They later shortened it to Truffle — but nothing else is abbreviated about the good-time Seacoast band. Thirty years on, what began as singer, guitarist and frontman Dave Gerard, bassist David Bailey, multi-string player-vocalist Ned Chase and drummer Brian Dionne remains mostly the same. Mike Gendron took over on drums in 1996 — he’s jokingly called “Rookie” by the the others — and percussionist Pete Kowalski is a part-time member. Truffle is marking its three-decade milestone with a career-spanning two-disc “bootleg anthology” of live recordings. The collection contains unreleased songs, covers and originals. It also features several guest appearances, including a pair from Little Feat’s Bill Payne. “There’s him joining us on one of our tunes and then us joining him for ‘Tripe Face Boogie,’” Dave Gerard said in a recent phone interview. “The music is all from discs that tapers gave us or stuff up on archives.org.” The oldest song is from 1988, and that one took a bit of studio wizardry to restore. “It was on a cassette and we had to re-set the levels — you can imagine the difference between then and 2016,” Gerard said. “Then we had to bring tape speed up to the proper pitch.” Along with the new record, they’re playing a bevy of “Bandiversary” gigs, including a show at Nashua’s Riverwalk Cafe on Sept. 17, and a Sept. 18 set at the Harvest Moon Festival at Portsmouth’s Red Hook Brewery. For the latter, a benefit for Womenade, Truffle will play prior to Jason Spooner and the headlining Adam Ezra Group. Is Gerard amazed by Truffle’s longevity? “Yes,” he said. “Amazed in the sense that 30 years has gone by. That’s just an amazing number for anything, but I’m not amazed when I think about what we’ve done.” Early tenacity and dedication got them to where they are today. Gerard explained that Truffle: 30th Anniversary Show w/ Stash Wyslouch When: Saturday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m. Where: Riverwalk Cafe, 35 Railroad Square, Nashua Tickets: $7 at riverwalknashua.com
Truffle. Courtesy photo.
the band came before everything else, especially during the heady 1990s, when Truffle rose from the ranks of regional act to tour the country and share the stage with their musical heroes. “We grew with it and decided we want to keep playing music with each other,” he said. “We fit it into our lives. As we have gotten older we had kids, but that’s why we have young kids. Dave and I have 9- and 6-year-olds because we waited. There was nothing else but music in those years, except for the occasional girlfriend, and those girlfriends became our wives.” Obviously, the multi-year collaboration with Payne was thrilling. It included an intimate Storytellers-style show in Dover and a raucous Rochester Opera House Halloween party with Truffle’s Mardi Gras Horns joining in. But there are many more high points, Gerard insisted. “I think of some of the venues that we played over the years — we headlined and supported other great bands in addition to
Little Feat,” he said. “Playing with The Band was huge. I mean, we grew up covering their tunes and then we did a show with them in Connecticut. That is pretty mind-blowing when you’re an up-and-coming band.” That’s not the entire reason for carrying on, however. “When you’ve been in a band for 30 years, it becomes bigger than you,” Gerard said. “We look out at a show like the park concert in Dover last night and see a bunch of different Truffle shirts — 2011, 2000, someone has an old ’90s shirt. It’s a community DAVE GERARD of music lovers and friends that is bigger than us.” Beyond that, the group strives to keep things fun and fresh. “We keep writing music and bring back things we haven’t done in a while,” Gerard said. “We’re always blowing the rust off of something and changing up the set list. We used to joke with our old sound man Andy Ferrell — ‘let’s bang it out and see what happens.’ That’s kind of what we have lived by since we started.”
We grew with it and decided we want to keep playing music with each other. We fit it into our lives.
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Accidentally in Puzzle Across 1. ‘Clouds’ A __ Handshake 5. ‘Give It All’ __ Against 9. Pear-shaped cousins of mandolins 14. Counting Crows “When __ __ you, a blanket of stars covers me in my bed” (1,3) 15. What Iggy Pop wanted to be on ‘69
hit (1,3) 16. Cage The Elephant ‘__ __ Ear’ (2,3) 17. Onyx hit about stage dive gone wrong? 18. At the end of amp cord 19. Richard Thompson wife/partner 20. ‘77 Grateful Dead album about a train stop, perhaps (8,7)
LLY IN PUZZLE 2
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S A T A N
A R E N A
N E E D S
A S H A
P O O L
I D O L
A R A B
M I M E
O F M E
LIP SANK T O N S
A N A T O M T Y A K E G M O E B F O R
M A N G F U R N A C E S
S H A R E S A B O Y O N O
E A T A S H R I E S K S S E A H E Y S O D T E S U H A G O C O T S T A C A U T H Y A I I L P
F L Y I N G I N A
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J A R O N
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Down 1. You throw it in the air for favorite song 2. What festival spot Wight is on 3. Where ‘Back Door Man’ exits 4. No Doubt ‘Excuse __ __’ (2,2) 5. Rodney Dangerfield ‘___ Rodney’ 6. Meat Loaf ‘__ __ For You (And That’s The Truth)’ (2,3) 7. ‘66 Simon & Garfunkel album (6,2,7) 8. Tribe Called Quest ‘Ham N __ ’9. Jeff Buckley ‘___ Wine’ 10. Like band that sticks together 11. Singer Tennille 12. Miami nu metal band 13. Reggae rapper Kingston
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 62
21. Van Halen ‘___ Punk’ 22. Album name 25. Washed out LA poprockers? 26. Musical component (1,4) 27. Who ‘Live At ___’ 28. The King ‘Viva __ Vegas’ 30. Delicate Kings Of Leon song? 32. Simply Red ‘__ __ Don’t Know Me By Now’ (2,3) 33. ___ Doggy Dogg 34. What you do to lyrics of favorite album 36. Dylan lyric? 37. Craft service has them 40. Beastie Boys ‘__ __ Sound From Way Out!’ (3,2) 41. David Geffen’s 90-99 label 46. ‘83 Metallica debut ‘__ __ All’ (4,2) 48. Wet Pearl Jam song? 50. Counting Crows ‘Best Of’ comp ‘__ About Ghosts’ 52. Fugees ‘Ready __ __’ (2,3) 53. Sheryl Crow ‘Tomorrow Never ___’ 54. Queens Of The Stone Age ‘__ __ By The Ocean’ (1,3) 55. “Round here we stay up very, very __” 56. Hard rocking knob on amp 57. Timberlake ‘__ Me Up’ 58. “Alright boys! And __ __ and a two” (1,3) 59. Beyonce ‘Single Ladies (__ __ Ring On It)’ (3,1) 60. Tortoise song about the Greeks’ cupid?
Start Here . . .Go Anywhere!
34. What you do to lyrics of favorite album 36. Dylan lyric? 37. Craft service has them 40. Beastie Boys '__ __ Sound From Way Out!' (3,2) 41. David Geffen's 90-99 label 46. '83 Metallica debut '__ __ All' (4,2) 48. Wet Pearl Jam song? 50. Counting Crows 'Best Of' comp '__ About Ghosts' 52. Fugees 'Ready __ __' (2,3) 53. Sheryl Crow 'Tomorrow Never ___' 54. Queens Of The Stone Age '__ __ By The Ocean' (1,3)
SPARE TIME SPECIALS
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spots 49. Neil Diamond ‘__ __ Don’t See You Again’ (2,1) 51. Dokken ‘Under __ And Key’ 53. NJ mathcore rockers __ __ Plan (9,6) 61. Pretenders ‘Loving You __ __ I Know’ (2,3) 62. She ‘Begins’ w/Counting Crows on ‘August & Everything After’ 63. OK Go ‘1,000 Miles Per __’ 64. ‘86 David Lee Roth album ‘__ __ And Smile’ (3,2) 65. Legend 66. Wailin’ Jennys ‘Something To Hold __’ 67. Touring rocker holds these flower parts to get back in house 68. Tour does this, after grosses 69. Some are ‘Black Eyed’
Live Music
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23. Faber Drive ‘Tongue __’ 24. Counting Crows “Baby I surrender to the strawberry __ cream” 25. Gaslight Anthem leader Brian 29. CA hardcore record label 31. Public slander against another, slang 35. Ed Sheeran’s favorite Mr T show? (1,4) 36. ‘Mercy Kiss’ Abandoned __ 38. Acronymed Semisonic song 39. ‘Dawn Of The Dead’ __, Yeah? (4,2,6,3) 42. Traveling Wilburys ‘__ Of The Line’ 43. Part of the body The Band will get a ‘Fever’ 44. Darkness ‘Everybody Have __ __ Time’ (1,4) 45. Struggling rocker’s daytime “instrument” 47. Electric & Musical Industries label 48. What early birds will do to good GA
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ROCKANDROLLCROSSWORDS.com BY TODD SANTOS
Want more music, comedy or big-name concerts? Check out Hippo Scout, available via the Apple App Store or Google Play.
Capri Pizza 76 Derry St 880-8676 JD Chaser’s 2B Burnham Rd 886-0792 Nan King 222 Central St. 882-1911 SoHo 49 Lowell Rd 889-6889
Manchester A&E Cafe 1000 Elm St. 578-3338 Amoskeag Studio 250 Commercial St. 315-9320 Breezeway Pub 14 Pearl St. 621-9111 Penuche’s Ale House Amherst East Hampstead Millie’s Tavern British Beer Company 6 Pleasant St. 228-9833 Pasta Loft LaBelle Winery 17 L St. 967-4777 Laconia 1071 S. Willow St. Pit Road Lounge 345 Rte 101 672-9898 220 E. Main St. 378-0092 North Beach Bar & Anthony’s Pier 232-0677 388 Loudon Road Grille 931 Ocean Blvd. 263 Lakeside Ave. Bungalow Bar & 226-0533 Auburn Epping 967-4884 366-5855 Grille Red Blazer Auburn Pitts Holy Grail Old Salt Baja Beach Club 333 Valley St. 72 Manchester St. 167 Rockingham Road 64 Main St. 679-9559 409 Lafayette Rd. 89 Lake St. 524-0008 518-8464 224-4101 622-6564 Telly’s 926-8322 Broken Spoke Saloon Cactus Jack’s Tandy’s Top Shelf 235 Calef Hwy 679-8225 Ron’s Landing 782 South Willow St. 1 Eagle Sq. 856-7614 Bedford Tortilla Flat 379 Ocean Blvd 929-2122 1072 Watson Rd 866-754-2526 627-8600 True Brew Barista Bedford Village Inn 1-11 Brickyard Sq Savory Square Bistro Faro Italian Grille 72 Central Ale House 3 Bicentennial Sq. 2 Olde Bedford Way 734-2725 32 Depot Sq 926-2202 Endicott St. 527-8073 23 Central St. 660-2241 225-2776 472-2001 Popovers Sea Ketch 127 Ocean Fratello’s City Sports Grille Copper Door 11 Brickyard Sq 734-4724 Blvd. 926-0324 799 Union Ave. 528-2022 216 Maple St. 625-9656 15 Leavy Drive 488-2677 Contoocook Stacy Jane’s Covered Bridge Shorty’s Epsom 9 Ocean Blvd. 929-9005 Holy Grail of the Lakes Club ManchVegas 12 Veterans Square 50 Old Granite St. Cedar St. 746-5191 206 Rte 101 488-5706 Circle 9 Ranch The Goat 737-3000 222-1677 Farmer’s Market 39 Windymere 736-3111 20 L St. 601-6928 Margate Resort Crazy Camel Hookah 896 Main St. Belmont Hilltop Pizzeria Wally’s Pub 76 Lake St. 524-5210 and Cigar Lounge 746-3018 Lakes Region Casino 1724 Dover Rd 736-0027 144 Ashworth Ave. Naswa Resort 245 Maple St. 518-5273 1265 Laconia Road 926-6954 1086 Weirs Blvd. Derryfield Country Club Claremont 267-7778 Exeter 366-4341 625 Mammoth Rd New Socials Shooters Tavern Pimentos Hanover Paradise Beach Club 623-2880 Rt. 3 DW Hwy 528-2444 2 Pleasant St. 287-4416 69 Water St. 583-4501 Salt Hill Pub Whiskey 20 Shooter’s Pub 7 Lebanon St. 676-7855 322 Lakeside Ave. 366-2665 20 Old Granite St. Deerfield Boscawen 6 Columbus Ave. Canoe Club 641-2583 Nine Lions Tavern Alan’s 772-3856 27 S. Main St. 643-9660 Patio Garden Lakeside Ave. Fratello’s 133 N. Main St. 753-6631 4 North Rd 463-7374 Pitman’s Freight Room 155 Dow St. 624-2022 Francestown Henniker 94 New Salem St. Ignite Bar & Grille Derry Bow Toll Booth Tavern Country Spirit 100 Hanover St. 494-6225 Drae Chen Yang Li 740 2nd NH Tpke 262 Maple St. 428-7007 527-0043 Tower Hill Tavern Imago Dei 520 South St. 228-8508 14 E Broadway #A 588-1800 Pat’s Peak Sled Pub 264 Lakeside Ave. 123 Hanove St. 216-2713 24 Flander’s Road 366-9100 Jewel Halligan Tavern Bristol Gilford 888-728-7732 Weirs Beach Lobster 61 Canal St. 819-9336 Back Room at the Mill 32 W. Broadway Ellacoya Barn & Grille Pound Karma Hookah & 965-3490 2 Central St. 744-0405 2667 Lakeshore Road Hillsborough 72 Endicott St. 366-2255 Cigar Bar Purple Pit 293-8700 Mama McDonough’s 1077 Elm St. 647-6653 28 Central Sq. 744-7800 Dover Patrick’s 5 Depot St. 680-4148 Lebanon KC’s Rib Shack 7th Settlement Brewery 18 Weirs Road 293-0841 Tooky Mills Rumor Mill Salt Hill Pub 837 Second St. 627-RIBS 50 S Main St, 217-0971 47 Washington St. 9 Depot St. 2 West Park St. 448-4532 Midnight Rodeo (Yard) 373-1001 Goffstown 464-6700 1211 S. Mammoth Rd Asia Concord Village Trestle Turismo 623-3545 42 Third St. 742-9816 Barley House 25 Main St. 497-8230 55 Henniker St. 680-4440 Londonderry Coach Stop Tavern Milly’s Tavern Cara Irish Pub 132 N. Main 228-6363 176 Mammoth Rd 500 Commercial St. 11 Fourth St. 343-4390 Hampton CC Tomatoes Hooksett 437-2022 625-4444 Dover Brick House 209 Fisherville Rd Ashworth By The Sea Asian Breeze Stumble Inn Modern Gypsy 2 Orchard St. 749-3838 295 Ocean Blvd. 753-4450 1328 Hooksett Rd 20 Rockingham Rd 383 Chestnut st. Fury’s Publick House Cheers 926-6762 621-9298 432-3210 Murphy’s Taproom 1 Washington St. 17 Depot St. 228-0180 Bernie’s Beach Bar New England’s Tap Whippersnappers 494 Elm St. 644-3535 617-3633 Granite 73 Ocean Blvd 926-5050 House Grille 44 Nashua Rd 434-2660 N’awlins Grille 96 Pleasant St. 227-9000 Sonny’s Tavern Boardwalk Inn & Cafe 1292 Hooksett Rd 860 Elm St. 606-2488 83 Washington St. Hermanos 139 Ocean Blvd. 929-7400 782-5137 Loudon Penuche’s 742-4226 11 Hills Ave. 224-5669 Breakers at Ashworth Hungry Buffalo 96 Hanover St. 626-9830 Top of the Chop Makris 295 Ocean Blvd. 926-6762 Hudson 58 Rte 129 798-3737 Portland Pie Company 1 Orchard St. 740-0006 Breakers By the Sea 354 Sheep Davis Road AJ’s Sports Bar 786 Elm St. 622-7437 225-7665 409 Ocean Blvd 926-7702 11 Tracy Lane 718-1102
Thursday, Sept. 15 Concord Amherst Granite: CJ Poole Duo LaBelle Winery: Sonic Boomers Hermanos: John Franzosa Penuche's Ale House: Mindseye Auburn Auburn Pitts: Jam w/ Tom Dover Ballerini Blues Band Cara: Bluegrass w/Steve Roy Fury's: Five Of The Eyes Bedford Copper Door: Chad Lamarsh Epping Telly's: Max Sullivan Boscawen Alan's: John Pratte Exeter Exeter Inn: Qwill Station 19: Thursday Night Live
Gilford Patrick's: Paul Warnick Schuster's: Dan the Muzak Man Hampton CR's: Steve Sibulkin Wally's Pub: Skindred & Soil
Lebanon Salt hill: Celtic Open Session Londonderry Coach Stop: Brad Bosse
Manchester Central Ale: Jonny Friday Blues Hanover City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Salt hill Pub: Irish Trad' Session Derryfield: Mugsy Duo Randy Miller/Roger Kahle Foundry: Chad Verbeck Fratello's: Jazz Night Hillsborough Karma: DJ Midas, SP1 & Reed Turismo: Line Dancing on drums Murphy's: Jimmy & Marcelle
Salona Bar & Grill 128 Maple St. 624-4020 Shaskeen 909 Elm St. 625-0246 Shorty’s 1050 Bicentennial Drive 625-1730 South Side Tavern 1279 S Willow St. 935-9947 Strange Brew Tavern 88 Market St. 666-4292 Thrifty’s Soundstage 1015 Candia Road 603-518-5413 Tin Roof Tavern 333 Valley St. 792-1110 Wild Rover 21 Kosciuszko St. 669-7722
Nashua 110 Grill 27 Trafalgar Sq. 943-7443 5 Dragons 29 Railroad Sq. 578-0702 Arena 53 High St. 881-9060 Boston Billiard Club 55 Northeastern Blvd. 943-5630 Burton’s Grill 310 Daniel Webster Highway 888-4880 Country Tavern 452 Amherst St. 889-5871 Dolly Shakers 38 East Hollis St. 577-1718 Fody’s Tavern 9 Clinton St. 577-9015 Fratello’s Italian Grille Mason 194 Main St. Marty’s Driving Range 889-2022 96 Old Turnpike Rd Haluwa Lounge 878-1324 Nashua Mall 883-6662 Killarney’s Irish Pub Meredith 9 Northeastern Blvd. Giuseppe’s Ristorante 888-1551 312 DW Hwy 279-3313 O’Shea’s 449 Amherst St. 943-7089 Merrimack Peddler’s Daughter Homestead 48 Main St. 821-7535 641 DW Hwy 429-2022 Portland Pie Company Jade Dragon 14 Railroad Sq 882-7437 515 DW Hwy 424-2280 Riverwalk Pacific Fusion 35 Railroad Sq 578-0200 356 DW Hwy 424-6320 Shorty’s Tortilla Flat 48 Gusabel Ave. 882-4070 594 Daniel Webster Stella Blu Hwy 262-1693 70 E. Pearl St. 578-5557 Thirsty Turtle Milford 8 Temple St. 402-4136 J’s Tavern 63 Union Square 554-1433 New Boston Lefty’s Lanes Molly’s Tavern 244 Elm St. 554-8300 35 Mont Vernon Rd Pasta Loft 487-2011 241 Union Square 672-2270 Newbury Shaka’s Bar & Grill Goosefeathers Pub 11 Wilton Rd 554-1224 Mt. Sunapee 763-3500 Tiebreakers at Salt Hill Pub Hampshire Hills 1407 Rt 103 763-2667 50 Emerson Rd 673-7123 Union Coffee Co. New Castle 42 South St. 554-8879 Wentworth By The Sea 588 Wentworth Rd Moultonborough 422-7322 Castle in the Clouds 455 Old Mountain Road New London 478-5900 Flying Goose 40 Andover Road 526-6899
Penuche's: Zach Haithcock and Phileep Shaskeen: Siren Series Shorty's: Kieran McNally Strange Brew: Soup du Jour Whiskey's 20: DJs Shawn White/ Ryan Nichols/Mike Mazz Wild Rover: Jenni Lynn Band Merrimack Homestead: Amanda Cote
Nashua 110 Grill: Attik Agave Azul: DJ K-Wil Ladies Night Arena: College Night, DJ Hizzy Country Tavern: Brian Kellett Fody's: White Steer Fratello's: Matt Richardson Riverwalk: John Reischman & the Jaybirds Shorty's: MB Padfield
Milford Newmarket Union Coffee: Phileep and Will Stone Church: Jordan TirrellKindler Wysocki & Jim Prendergast HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 63
Newington Paddy’s 27 International Drive 430-9450 Newmarket Riverworks 164 Main St. 659-6119 Stone Church 5 Granite St. 659-7700 Three Chimneys 17 Newmarket Rd. 868-7800
ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK FRIDAY THE 16TH
LAST LAUGH
Newport Salt Hill Pub 58 Main St. 863-7774
SATURDAY THE 17TH
Peterborough Harlow’s Pub 3 School St. 924-6365
RADIO STAR
Pelham Shooters 116 Bridge St. 635-3577
DECK LIVE MUSIC
Pittsfield Molly’s Tavern 32 Main St. 487-2011
6:00PM-9:30PM
16TH TMFI 17TH JIMMY & MARCELLE
“SPIN THE WHEEL” Prizes & Giveaways! COORS LIGHT OR BUD LIGHT ¢ Buffalo, Plain, BBQ or Honey Chipotle
5
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200 SEAT BANQUET FACILITY • OFF-SITE CATERING • SPECIALIZING IN WEDDINGS & CORPORATE MEETINGS
625 Mammoth Rd., Manchester, NH • (603) 623-2880 • DerryfieldRestaurant.com
HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 64
106031
.39 WINGS! ANY FLAVOR!
Plaistow Crow’s Nest 181 Plaistow Road 974-1686 Racks Bar & Grill 20 Plaistow Road 974-2406 Portsmouth Blue Mermaid Island 409 The Hill 427-2583 British Beer Company 103 Hanover St. 5010515
Cafe Nostimo 72 Mirona Rd. 436-3100 Demeters Steakhouse 3612 Lafayette Rd. 766-0001 Dolphin Striker 15 Bow St. 431-5222 Fat Belly’s 2 Bow St. 610-4227 Grill 28 200 Grafton Road 433-1331 Hilton Garden Inn 100 High St. 431-1499 Lazy Jacks 58 Ceres St. 294-0111 Martingale Wharf 99 Bow St. 431-0901 Oar House 55 Ceres St. 436-4025 Portsmouth Book & Bar 40 Pleasant St. 427-9197 Portsmouth Gas Light 64 Market St. 430-9122 Press Room 77 Daniel St. 431-5186 Red Door 107 State St. 373-6827 Redhook Brewery 1 Redhook Way 430-8600 Ri Ra Irish Pub 22 Market Sq 319-1680 Rudi’s 20 High St. 430-7834 Rusty Hammer 49 Pleasant St. 319-6981 Thirsty Moose 21 Congress St. 427-8645 Raymond Cork n’ Keg 4 Essex Drive 244-1573
Peterborough Harlow's: Bluegrass Night La Mia Casa: Soul Repair
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Rochester Gary’s 38 Milton Rd 335-4279 Governor’s Inn 78 Wakefield St. 332-0107 Lilac City Grille 103 N. Main St. 3323984 Revolution Tap Room 61 N Main St. 244-3022 Radloff’s 38 N. Main St. 948-1073 Smokey’s Tavern 11 Farmington 330-3100 Salem Barking Bean 163 Main St. 458-2885 Black Water Grill 43 Pelham Rd 328-9013 Jocelyn’s Lounge 355 S Broadway 870-0045 Sayde’s Restaurant 136 Cluff Crossing 890-1032 Seabrook Castaways 209 Ocean Blvd 760-7500 Chop Shop 920 Lafayette Rd 760-7706
Belmont Lakes Region Casino: DJ Mark Plaistow Racks: Rock Jam w/ Dave Boscawen Thompson Alan's: On 2 Duo Portsmouth Fat Belly's: DJ Flex Bridgewater Portsmouth Book & Bar: Jerry Bridgewater Inn: Shameless Tillett Claremont Portsmouth Gaslight: T.M.F.I. Press Room: Beat Night/After Taverne on the Square: Brad Funk Myrick Red Door: Green Lion Crew Rudi's: Dimitri Concord Makris: Downtown Dave & The Thirsty Moose: Sam Robbins Deep Pockets Seabrook Pit Road Lounge: Street Legal Red Blazer: Mike Morris Chop Shop: Spent Fuel Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz Weare (105.5 JYY) Stark House: Lisa Guyer Solo True Brew: Laid to Dust with Miketon and the Nightblinders Windham Derry Common Man: Triana Wilson Coffee Factory: Dave LaCroix Friday, Sept. 16 Alton Dover Cara: Club Night w/ DJ JP China: Deuces Wild Band Shawnny O Auburn Dover Brickhouse: Michael Auburn Pitts: Out of Bounds Graves/The Outsiders Fury's: Todo Bien
Sunapee One Mile West Tavern 6 Brook Road 863-7500 Sunapee Coffee House Rte. 11 Lower Main St. 229-1859 Suncook Olympus Pizza 42 Allenstwon Rd. 485-5288 Tilton Black Swan Inn 354 W Main St. 286-4524 Warner Local 2 E Main St. 456-6066 Weare Stark House Tavern 487 S Stark Hwy 529-7747 West Lebanon Seven Barrel Brewery 5 Airport Rd 298-5566
Somersworth Hideout Grill at the Oaks 100 Hide Away Place 692-6257
Bedford Shorty's: Kevin Burt
Kelley’s Row 417 Route 108 692-2200 Old Rail Pizza Co. 6 Main St. 841-7152
Windham Common Man 88 Range Rd 898-0088 Jonathon’s Lounge Park Place Lanes, Route 28 800-892-0568 Red’s Tavern 22 Haverhill Dr. 437-7251
Top of the Chop: Funkadelic Fridays East Hampstead Pasta Loft: Ralph Allen Epping Holy Grail: Dan Walker Telly's: Rob & Jody Gourlay Francestown Toll Booth Tavern: Boogie Men Gilford Patrick's: Dueling PIanos Schuster's: Julia Velie Goffstown Village Trestle: Gardner Berry Hampton CR's: The Last Duo Old Salt: Don Severence Ron's Landing: Karen Grenier Savory Square: Joe Riillo
Hanover Canoe Club: Michael Blum & Jim Stinnett Jesse's: Wild Roots Salt Hill Pub: John Lackard Hillsborough Mama McDonough's: White
Chris
NITE MUSIC THIS WEEK Peterborough Harlow's: ROC Soundsystem
Fury's Publick House: Avenue/ Okdoverfest 2016
Hudson River's Pub: Bad Medicine
Portsmouth Fat Belly's: DJ Cootz Martingale Wharf: Tim Teriault & Jamie DeCato Portsmouth Book & Bar: Chris Klaxton Band Portsmouth Gaslight: RC Thomas Band Press Room: Big Ol' Dirty Bucket Red Door: Datacet Ri Ra: Mugsy Rudi's: Mike Effenberger Thirsty Moose: Fighting Friday
Epping Holy Grail: Karen Grenier -1/2 way to St. Patricks' Day party! Telly's: Brian Johnson
Laconia Paradise Beach Club: Funnel Pitman's: Ameranouche Gypsy Jazz Lebanon Salt Hill Pub: Muddy Ruckus Londonderry Coach Stop: Paul Luff Manchester Amoskeag Studio: Frank Wallace Central Ale: The Uncovered City Sports Grille: DJ Dave Derryfield: TMFI/Last Laugh Foundry: Tristan Omand Fratello's: Chris Cavanaugh Murphy's: Justin Cohn/Wize Crackaz Penuche's: Space Bugs Shaskeen: Firm Fest Strange Brew: Gravel Project Whiskey's 20: DJs Jason Spivak & Sammy Smoove Wild Rover: Fat Bunny Merrimack Homestead: Jeff Mrozek Jade Dragon: Groove Alliance Milford Pasta Loft: Sage and Whiskey Tiebreakers: Amanda Cote Nashua Country Tavern: Joe McDonald Fody's: Hunter Fratello's: Brad Bosse Haluwa: Close Range Riverwalk: The Zolla Boys Speaker's Corner: Mike Iodice and Dave Chiasson Stella Blu: Wood, Wind & Whiskey Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Acoustic Truffle Newmarket Riverworks: Joel Cage Stone Church: Red Tail Hawk Newport Salt Hill Pub: Arthur James & Northbound
Rochester Magrilla's: Chris Lester Radloff's: Dancing Madly Backwards Duo Seabrook Chop Shop: Shakedown Sunapee Sunapee Coffeehouse: Bombadils
The
Suncook Olympus Pizza: Nicole Knox Murphy Weare Stark House: Kenny Weiland Saturday, Sept. 17 Alton JP China: Flash Drive Band Rusty Moose: Double Take Bedford Shorty's: Brad Myrick Boscawen Alan's: Doug Mitchell Bristol Back Room at the Mill: High Range Band Rumor Mill: Gary's Big Idea Concord Hermanos: Paul Lovely Penuche's Ale House: Cole Robbie Band Pit Road Lounge: Shameless Tandy's: DJ Iceman Streetz (105.5 JYY) Dover Cara: Club Night w/ DJ Shawnny O Dover Brickhouse: Martin England and The Reconstructed
NH beer club monthly meetings
Sept. 19th featuring Kelsen Beers.
Epsom Circle 9: Nuff Said Band Gilford Patrick's: Half Way to St. Paddy's Day Party Schuster's: Dan the Muzak Man Goffstown Village Trestle: Roxanne & the Voodoo Rockers
Buy your ticket today at www.nhbeerclub.com 1292 Hooksett Rd, Hooksett| 782-5137 | TapHouseNH.com
Hampton Bernie's: Rob Benton Old Salt: Jimmy D Savory Square: Mel & John Sea Ketch: Ray Zerkle
Keep Your Dogs Conditioned, Fit & Trim
Hanover Canoe Club: Randall Mullen Salt Hill Pub: The Squids Skinny Pancake: Revibe Henniker Daniel's: South Street Blues Band/Tedd Evans/Pete Kiebala/ John Hoik/Pete Carlson Hudson River's Pub: Casual Gravity
Sample Kelsen Beers • Enjoy delicious paired food • $10 of every ticket donated to charity
109800
Hooksett Asian Breeze: DJ Albin
26’ Indoor Heated Salt Pool & Aqua Paws Water Treadmill
• Doggie Daycare • Boarding •Training
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COMEDY THIS WEEK AND BEYOND
Murphy's Taproom: Saturday, Sept. 24 Laugh Free Or Die Manchester Headliners: Harrison Friday, Sept. 23 Stebbins Portsmouth Friday, Sept. 16 Wed., Sept. 21 Music Hall: Marc Maron Wed., Sept. 28 Londonderry Manchester Manchester Tupelo: Sue Costello, Shaskeen: Sean PatShaskeen: Shawn Sean Lynch, Ben Fidler ton/Bryan Cook/Drew Carter, Dan Gilbert Dunn/Steve Gould $5 Murphy's: Laugh Free Thurs., Sept. 15 Derry Hilltop: Alana Susko Comedy on Purpose
Saturday, Sept. 17 Manchester Headliners: Mark Scalia
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 65
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 66
Strange Brew: Matthew Stubbs Band Whiskey's 20: DJ Hizzy/Shawn White Wild Rover: Boys of Rockingham Merrimack Homestead: Kieran McNally Jade Dragon: DJ Ronnie Milford Pasta Loft: Baby Jakes Nashua 110 Grill: Joe Mack Agave Azul: DJ Roberto Tropical Saturday Boston Billiard Club: DJ Anthem Throwback Dolly Shakers: Horizon Annual Pink Show Fratello's: Paul Luff Haluwa: Close Range Peddler's Daughter: Irish Whispa (Halfway To St Patrick's Day) Riverwalk Cafe: Truffle: 30th Anniversary Show Stella Blu: Groove Cats Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Dixie D & the Diamonds Newmarket Stone Church: Stone Church Oyster Fest ft. the Barn Burners String Band/ Hilton Park Peterborough Harlow's: Duncan Pelletier and Friends Pittsfield Main Street Grill: Nicole Knox Murphy Portsmouth Blue Mermaid: Joel Cage Cafe Nostimo: Acoustic Night with Austin Pratt Fat Belly's: DJ Provo Hilton Garden: Cormac McCarthy Martingale Wharf: Velvis Underground Portsmouth Book & Bar: Lyle Brewer Portsmouth Gaslight: Oktoberfest 2016/Conniption Fits/Sean Coleman Press Room: Jazz Lunch/Dub Apocalypse Red Door: Patrick Barry Ri Ra: In Session Rudi's: Bryan Kilough Trio White Heron: Jerry Short Raymond Cork n Keg: Radio Active
Rochester Magrilla's: Louis Goodwin Salem Sayde's: Average Joel Seabrook Chop Shop: Overdrive Weare Stark House Tavern: Mikey G Sunday, Sept. 18 Auburn Auburn Pitts: Uptown Tavern Reunion w/ multiple bands Bedford Copper Door: Paul Luff Concord Hermanos: Eric Chase Dover Cara: Irish Session w/ Carol Coronis & Ramona Connelly Dover Brickhouse: Jazz Brunch Sonny's: Sonny's Jazz Goffstown Village Trestle: Wan-tu Blues Band & Jam Hampton Bernie's: Rob Benton Sea Ketch: Ray Zerkle Wally's Pub: Buckcherry & Candlebox Hanover Canoe Club: Bob Lucier Laconia Looney Bin: Michael Spaulding Manchester Central Ale House: C&C Derryfield: Chad Lamarsh Murphy's: Clint LaPointe Shaskeen: Rap night, Industry night Strange Brew: Jam Wild Rover: DJ Dance Nite/ MB Padfield Meredith Giuseppe's: Open Stage with Lou Porrazzo Milford Union Coffee: Justin Cohn Nashua Agave Azul: DJ Rich - Smokin' Sunday Riverwalk Cafe: Riverwalk Jazz Sundays: The Wide Avenue Cohort Newbury Salt Hill Pub: Side Porch Music Series
Portsmouth Portsmouth Gaslight: Jimmy D Press Room: Sunday Night Jazz ft. UNH Faculty Group Red Door: Trap Night w/ Adfero & Yung Abner Ri Ra: Irish Session Rudi's: Jazz Brunch With Ms. Sharon Jones Raymond Cork n Keg: Brandon Lapere
Rochester Lilac City Grille: Brunch Music @9:30 Radloff's: James McGarvey
Seabrook Chop Shop: Sunday Funday Music with Artty Monday, Sept. 19 Concord Hermanos: Paul Donahue Hanover Canoe Club: Marko the Magician Salt Hill Pub: Hootenanny
Manchester Central Ale House: Jonny Friday Duo Derryfield: Ryan Williamson Fratello's: Rob Wolfe or Phil Jacques Murphy's Taproom: Justin Cohn Merrimack Homestead: Doug Thompson Milford Union Coffee: DJ Tekkhed
Nashua Dolly Shakers: Monday's Muse w Lisa Guyer Fratello's Italian Grille: Phil Jacques
Newmarket Stone Church: Blues Jam w/ Wild Eagles Blues Band
Portsmouth Dolphin Striker: Old School Portsmouth Gaslight: Chris Lester Press Room: Judith Murray Ri Ra: Oran Mor Tuesday, Sept. 20 Concord Hermanos: Kid Pinky Kombo
Dover Fury's Publick House: Tim Theriault and Friends Sonny's: Soggy Po' Boys
Get the crowds at your gig Want to get your show listed in the Music This Week? Let us know all about your upcoming show, comedy show, open mike night or multi-band event by sending all the information to music@hippopress.com. Send information by 9 a.m. on Friday to have the event considered for the next Thursday’s paper.
NITE MUSIC THIS WEEK
Hanover Canoe Club: Cormac McCarthy Manchester Derryfield: Chris Lester Fratello's: Amanda McCarthy Murphy's: Brad Bosse Shaskeen: Tom Deniston Strange Brew: Peter Parcek Whiskey's 20: Sammy Smoove & DJ Gera Merrimack Homestead: Paul Luff Nashua Fratello's Italian Grille: Justin Cohn Newmarket Stone Church: SpeakEazy: Church Street Jazz Band / Bluegrass Jam Late North Hampton Barley House: Traditional Irish Session Peterborough Harlow's: Celtic Music Jam
Portsmouth Portsmouth Gaslight: Tom Emerson Press Room: Jazz Jam w/ Larry Garland & Friends
Manchester Derryfield: Brandon Lepere Fratello's: Justin Cohn Murphy's Taproom: RC Thomas
Seabrook Chop Shop: Bare Bones
Merrimack Homestead: Ryan Williamson
Wednesday, Sept. 21 Bedford T-Bones: Liz Grubbs
Nashua Country Tavern: Charlie Chronopolous Jam Fratello's Italian Grille: Jeff Mrozek
Concord Hermanos: Mike Morris Dublin DelRossi's Trattoria: Celtic and Old Timey Jam Session Gilford Patrick's: Cody James - Ladies Night Goffstown Village Trestle: Acoustic Night Hanover Canoe Club: Tom Pirozzoli Hillsborough Turismo: Blues Jam, Jerry Paquette & the Runaway Bluesmen
Plaistow Racks: DJ Sensations Portsmouth Portsmouth Gaslight: Scott McRae Press Room: Dave Holland Project Red Door: Red On Red w/ Evaredy (Ladies Night) Ri Ra: Erin's Guild Rudi's: Dimitri Rochester Lilac City Grille: Tim Theriault - Ladies Night Radloff's: Tony Santesse Ladies Night
NITE CONCERTS Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion at Meadowbrook 72 Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, 293-4700, meadowbrook.net Capitol Center for the Performing Arts 44 S. Main St., Concord, 225-1111, ccanh.com The Colonial Theatre 95 Main St., Keene, 352-2033, thecolonial.org Dana Humanities Center at Saint Anselm College 100 Saint Anselm Drive, Manchester, 641-7700, anselm.edu/dana The Flying Monkey 39 S. Main St., Plymouth, 5362551, flyingmonkeynh.com Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom 169 Ocean Blvd., Hampton Beach, 929-4100, casinoballroom.com
Leddy Center 38c Ladd’s Lane, Epping, 679-2781, leddycenter.org Lowell Boarding House Park 40 French St., Lowell, Mass., lowellsummermusic.org Lowell Memorial Auditorium East Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass., 978-454-2299, lowellauditorium.com The Middle Arts & Entertainment Center 316 Central St., Franklin, 934-1901, themiddlenh.org The Music Hall 28 Chestnut St., Portsmouth, 436-2400, themusichall.org The Old Meeting House, 1 New Boston Road, Francestown Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St., Manchester, 668-5588, palacetheatre.org
Prescott Park Arts Festival 105 Marcy St., Portsmouth, prescottpark.org, 436-2848 Rochester Opera House 31 Wakefield St., Rochester, 335-1992, rochesteroperahouse.com Stockbridge Theatre Pinkerton Academy, Route 28, Derry, 437-5210, stockbridgetheatre.com Tupelo Music Hall 2 Young Road, Londonderry, 437-5100, tupelohall.com Verizon Wireless Arena 555 Elm St., Manchester, 644-5000, verizonwirelessarena.com Whittemore Center Arena, UNH 128 Main St., Durham, 8624000, whittcenter.com
• Mike Peters (Alarm) Thursday, Sept. 15, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Jeff Dunham Thursday, Sept. 15, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Brubeck Brothers Quartet Thursday, Sept. 15, 8 p.m. Stockbridge Theatre • Don Henley Friday, Sept. 16, 8 p.m. Meadowbrook • Eric Church Friday, Sept. 16, 7 p.m. SNHU Arena • Elvin Bishop Friday, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Dropkick Murphys Irish Festival Saturday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m. Meadowbrook • Savoy Brown Saturday, Sept. 17, 8 p.m. Tupelo • John Waite & the Axemen Wednesday, Sept. 21, 8 p.m.
Tupelo • Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy Friday, Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • New Riders of the Purple Sage Friday, Sept. 23, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Wishbone Ash Sunday, Sept. 25, 8 p.m. Tupelo • Ziggy Marley Sunday, Sept. 25, 8 p.m. Casino Ballroom • Garrison Keillor Tuesday, Sept. 27, 8 p.m. Colonial Theatre • The Handsome Family Thursday, Sept. 29, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Eric Church Friday, Sept. 16, 7 p.m. SNHU Arena • Carrie Underwood Thursday, Sept. 29, 7 p.m. SNHU Arena • Tom Brosseau (duo) Friday,
Sept. 30, 8 p.m. Music Hall Loft • Music of ABBA - Arrival From Sweden Friday, Sept. 30, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Hiroya Tsukomoto Saturday, Oct. 1, 7 p.m. Franklin Opera House • Live Free Country Festival w/ Lee Brice/Joe Nichols Saturday, Oct. 1, 1 p.m. NE Delta Dental Stadium • Leon Russell Saturday, Oct. 1, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • George Thorogood and The Destroyers Sunday, Oct. 2, 8 p.m. Colonial Theatre • New Orleans Suspects Sunday, Oct. 2, 7:30 p.m. Flying Monkey • Chad Perrone Sunday, Oct. 2, 8 p.m. Tupelo
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HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 67
JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS BY MATT JONES
“Ageless” — and hopefully timeless, too Across 1 ___ de gallo (salsa variety) 5 Home of the Bills and Chargers, for short 8 Extinguishes birthday candles 13 Federal org. that inspects
workplaces 14 Day-___ colors 15 Canadian dollar coin nickname 16 Identical online message, but sent backwards? 18 Fragrant evergreen with starlike
flowers 19 “Gangnam Style” performer 20 Did some tricks at a skate park? 22 Biter on the bayou 24 Get out of debt 25 Three-dimensional figures 27 Competes on eBay 29 “A Boy Named Sue” songwriter Silverstein 30 “Für ___” (Beethoven dedication) 32 Misfortune 35 Do some drastic wardrobe reduction? 39 She’s your sibling 40 Die-___ (people who won’t quit) 41 Chichen ___ (Mayan site) 42 ___ mojado (Spanish side of a “wet floor” sign)
9/8
Bored?
ored?
43 Drop it already 45 Be in the driver’s seat 48 Hollow-centered muffin 51 With 57-Across, what was always covered with a sock until just now? 53 Org. with lots of clubs 56 Portugal’s part of it 57 See 51-Across 59 Firming, as muscles 60 Suffix for the extreme 61 Choral voice range 62 Benny Goodman’s genre 63 “Dude ... your fly” 64 Bust’s counterpart
17 Carried a balance 21 Trips for Uranus, e.g. 23 Narc’s weight 25 Mach 2 fliers, once 26 “Fancy meeting you here!” 28 Somewhat, in suffixes 30 “The Final Countdown” band 31 British version of Inc. 32 Olympic team game with a goalkeeper 33 Granular pasta 34 “Voice of Israel” author Abba 36 Sounding like a ceiling fan 37 ___ in “Oscar” 38 Buckle under pressure 42 Look through a window, maybe Down 43 “Kick-Ass” star Chloe Grace ___ 1 “___ and Circumstance” 44 Kitchen unit 2 Spy agency on “Archer” 45 Fits of pique 3 LeBaron and Pacifica, for two 46 Quarterback known for his active 4 Rower’s blade knee 5 Concurs (with) 47 “___ wouldn’t do that!” 6 City with a contaminated drink- 49 “Masters ___” (Showtime drama ing supply since 2013) 7 Count in French? 50 Verse-writing 8 Chef on cans 52 Reusable grocery purchase 9 Actor Peter and TV producer 54 Visit Chuck, for two 55 Infinitesimal bit 10 Ready to drink 58 Awesome 11 Pebbles Flintstone’s mom 12 Oozing ©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords 15 K-O combination? (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)
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Search by town, distance, date, and other characteristics HIPPO | SEPTEMBER 15 - 21, 2016 | PAGE 68
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SIGNS OF LIFE All quotes are from Yes Please, by Amy make your partner look good and if you are Poehler, born Sept. 16, 1971. afraid to look stupid you should probably go home. Don’t be afraid to look stupid. Virgo (Aug. 23 – Sept. 22) Figure out Aries (March 21 – April 19) You will what you want. Say it loud. Then shut up. never climb Career Mountain and get to the Can’t put it any more clearly than that. top and shout, “I made it!” You will rareLibra (Sept. 23 – Oct. 22) Some- ly feel done or complete or even successful. times I would fantasize about answering Make a rough week at work better by living the question “How do you do it?” with in the moment. quick one-word answers: “Ambivalence.” Taurus (April 20 – May 20) I don’t see “Drugs.” “Robots.” Celery. a lot of rock shows because sometimes I am Scorpio (Oct. 23 – Nov. 21) I say “sor- afraid I won’t get out. I used to squeeze my ry” a lot. When I am running late. When little self into the scrum and jump around I am navigating the streets of New York. and cause tiny trouble. Now I just want to When I interrupt someone. I say, “Sorry sor- sit down and have someone perform my five ry sorry,” in one long stream. The sentence favorite songs while I eat a light dinner and becomes “Sorrysorrysorry” and it’s said receive a simultaneous pedicure. Is there really fast, as if even the act of apologizing is some kind of awesome indie/alt/hip-hop/ something to apologize for. But this doesn’t electronica music tour that can do that? mean I am a pushover. Say “sorry” if you There probably is and you can find it. mean it, and don’t if you don’t. Gemini (May 21 – June 20) We would Sagittarius (Nov. 22 – Dec. 21) I like to go out for recess and spend the whole time refer to the transition period of any new job walking and talking. … The physical act as “finding out where the bathrooms are.” of walking combined with the opportuniIt’s a good place to start. ty to look out at the world while you are Capricorn (Dec. 22 – Jan. 19) The pres- sharing your thoughts and feelings is very sure of “What are you going to do?” makes comforting to me. You are in charge of the everybody feel like they haven’t done any- route and the amount of eye contact. Take thing yet. Don’t ask, just watch and see. a friend for a walk. Aquarius (Jan. 20 – Feb. 18) I was nevCancer (June 21 – July 22) I loved waiter great at auditions. When I was nervous I ing tables because when you cashed out at would often underprepare and act too cool the end of the night your job was truly over. for school. I would try to reject them before You wiped down your section and paid out they rejected me, which was confusing since your busboy and you knew your work was I had decided to audition and acted angry done. I didn’t take my job home with me, to be there. Try not to confuse people. except for the occasional nightmare where I Pisces (Feb. 19 – March 20) I had would wake up in a cold sweat and remembailed on a scene. That meant I had started ber I never brought table 14 their Diet a scene with someone and either failed to Coke. Don’t take your job home with you. commit, laughed, or negated that person’s Leo (July 23 – Aug. 22) If it’s not funny, choice. Improvisation is like the military. you don’t have to laugh. Don’t try to fake You leave no man behind. It’s your job to it. It won’t work anyway.
By Dave Green
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NEWS OF THE WEIRD BY CHUCK SHEPHERD
Dumpster shoes
The upscale clothier Barneys New York recently introduced $585 “Distressed Superstar Sneakers” (from the high-end brand Golden Goose) that were purposely designed to look scuffed, well-worn and cobbledtogether, as if they were shoes recovered from a Dumpster. The quintessential touch was the generous use of duct tape on the bottom trim. Critics were in abundance, accusing Barneys of mocking poverty.
News that sounds like a joke
(1) The British food artists Bompas & Parr are staging (through Oct. 30) a tribute to the late writer Roald Dahl by brewing batches of beer using yeast swabbed and cultured from a chair Dahl used and which has been on display at the Roald Dahl Museum in Great Missenden, England. (2) A 16-year-old boy made headlines in August for being one of the rare survivors of a brain-eating amoeba that he acquired diving into a pond on private property in Florida’s Broward County.
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• The Drug Enforcement Administration has schemed for several years to pay airline and Amtrak employees for tips on passengers who might be traveling with large sums of cash, so that the DEA can interview them with an eye toward seizing the cash under federal law if they merely “suspect” that the money is involved in illegal activity. A USA Today investigation, reported in August, revealed that the agency had seized $209 million in a decade, from 5,200 travelers who, even if no criminal charge results, almost never get all their money back (and, of 87 recent cash seizures, only two actually resulted in charges). One Amtrak employee was secretly paid $854,460 over a decade for snitching passenger information to the DEA. • Update: In August, the Defense Department’s inspector general affirmed once again (following on 2013 disclosures) that the agency has little knowledge of where its money goes this time admitting that the Department of the Army had made $6.5 trillion in accounting “adjustments” that appeared simply to be made up out of thin air, just to get the books balanced for 2015. (In part, the problem was laid to 16,000 financial data files that simply disappeared with no trace.) “As a result,” reported Fortune magazine, “there has been no way to know how the Defense Department, far and away the biggest chunk of Congress’s annual budget, spends the public’s money.”
Wait, what?
• In August, the banking giant Citigroup and the communications giant
AT&T agreed to end their two-monthlong legal hostilities over AT&T’s right to have a customer service program titled “Thanks.” Citigroup had pointed out that it holds trademarks for customer service titles “thankyou,” “citi thankyou,” “thankyou from citi” and “thankyou your way,” and had tried to block the program name “AT&T Thanks.” • The July 2012 Aurora, Colorado, theater shooter, James Holmes, is hardly wealthy enough to be sued, so 41 massacre victims and families instead filed against Cinemark Theater for having an unsafe premises, and by August 2016 Cinemark had offered $150,000 as a total settlement. Thirty-seven of the 41 accepted, but four held out since the scaled payout offered only a maximum of $30,000 for the worstoff victims. Following the settlement, the judge, finding that Cinemark could not have anticipated Holmes’s attack, ruled for the theater, making the four holdouts liable under Colorado law for Cinemark’s expenses defending against the lawsuit ($699,000).
Weird China
• Misunderstandings: (1) “Mr. L,” 31, a Chinese tourist visiting Dulmen, Germany, in July, went to a police station to report his stolen wallet but signed the wrong form and was logged in as requesting asylum, setting off a bureaucratic nightmare that left him confined for 12 days at a migrant hostel before the error was rectified. (2) In August at a hospital in Shenyang, China, “Wang,” 29, awaiting his wife’s childbirth, was reported (by People’s Daily via Shanghaiist.com) to
have allowed a nurse to wave him into a room for anesthesia and hemorrhoid surgery, a procedure that took 40 minutes. (The hospital quickly offered to pay a settlement but insisted that, no matter his purpose at the hospital, he in fact had hemorrhoids, and they were removed.) • Evidently, many Chinese wives who suspect their husbands of affairs have difficulty in confronting them, for a profession has risen recently of “mistress dispellers” whose job instead is to contact the mistress and persuade her, sometimes through an elaborate ruse, to break off the relationship. For a fee (a New York Times dispatch said it could be “tens of thousands of dollars”), the dispeller will “subtly infiltrate the mistress’s life” and ultimately convince her to move on. A leading dispeller agency in Shanghai, translated as the “Weiqing International Marriage Hospital Emotion Clinic Group,” served one wife by persuading the mistress to take a higher-paying job in another city.
Ironies
Flooding from rains in August tore down a basement wall of the Connellsville (Pennsylvania) Church of God, wrecking and muddying parts of the building and threatening the first-floor foundation, but under the policy written by the Church Mutual Insurance company, flooding damage is not covered, as rain is an “act of God.” (Church Mutual apparently uses a standard insurance industry definition and thus recognizes, contrary to some religious beliefs, that not everything is caused by God.) Visit weirduniverse.net.
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