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Contents
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factual inaccuracies known kno own to us. EDITO ORIAL EDITORIAL EDITOR EDITOR STEVE STEVE PALOPOLI PAL A OPOLI spalopoli@santacruzweekly.com spalopoli@santacruzw weekly.com
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CONTRIBUTING C ONTRIBUTING G EDIT EDITOR OR CHRISTINA CHRIS TINA WATERS WAT TERS PHOTOGRAPHER PHO TOGRAPHER CHIP SCHEUER S CONTRIBUTORS C ONTRIBUTORS BREZSNY, ROB BREZ B SNY Y, PAUL PAUL M. M DAVIS, DAV VIS, MICHAEL S. GANT GANT, T, JOE E GARZA, ANDREW GILBERT GILBERT, T, GRUSAUSKAS, MARIA GRUS SAUSKAS, JORY JOR RY JOHN, CAT JOHNSON, CA AT JO OHNSON, KELLY KELL LY LUKER, LUKER, SCOTT MACCLELLAND, SCOTT MA CCL LELLAND, AVERY A VERY MONSEN, V M PAUL WAGNER P AUL W AGNER
A ART & PRODUCTION PRODUC CTION DESIGN DI DIRECTOR RECTOR KARA KARA A BROWN BROWN PRODUCTION PROD DUCTION OPERATIONS OPER RATIONS COORDINATOR COORD DINATOR MERCY MERC CY PEREZ GRAPHIC DESIGNER DE ESIGNER TABI TA ABI ZARRINNAAL ZARR RINNAAL EDITORIAL ED DITORIAL PRODUCTION PROD DUCTION SEAN GEORGE DESIGNER AD DE ESIGNER DIANNA VANEYCKE VA ANEY YCKE C
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PUBLISHER PUBLI ISHER JEANNE HO H HOWARD WARD
PRESIDE PRESIDENT ENT & EXECUTIVE EXECU UTIVE EDITOR ED DITOR DAN D AN PU PULCRANO LCRANO
Give Credit Cre edit Re: R ee: “Big Empty” Empty” (Cover, (Covveerr, March March 5): Regarding R eegarding yyour our recent receent cover covveer and and article article on the the Rittenhouse Rittenhouse Building, B ding, I would Buil wo ould like like tto o add add some some details details that that I feel fee e lw were eere barely barely discussed in your your article. arrticle. First, First, Louis Rittenhouse Ri ttenhouse has has been beeen extraordinarily extraordinarily ggenerous enerous to to many, many, many many nonprofit nonprofit organizations or ganiza attions and and ar a artists. tists. I ffeel ee e lh hee h has as been eextremely xtremely generous gen nerous in allowing allowing m any artists artists (of (of whom whom I am one) one) to to many disp play their their work work in n his building. buildingg. He He display coul d have have used hiss windows windows tto o ad dveertise could advertise all sor ts o ercial en terprises—bu ut sorts off comm commercial enterprises—but in stead h hose tto o sshow how ar and en gage in instead hee cchose artt and engage p hilanthropy. philanthropy. T he ffact act th a at h as cchosen hosen tto o all ow The that hee h has allow m any w orthy or gan niza attions win dow many worthy organizations window sp ace in his buil din ng speak o th space building speakss tto thee sor sortt o off ccharacter haraccter o an h dh ave off a m man hee is. H Hee coul could have cchosen, hosen, in stead, tto o rent rent his sp ace ou ut to to a instead, space out W algreens. Is th a at th he type o tablishment Walgreens. that the off es establishment
that Santa Santa Cruz Cruz wants wan ntts right right on our beloved beelovveed that bea au uttiful downtown? down ntown? I, for fo or one, one, think k he he has has beautiful higgh standards standards and and that that many many artists artistss and and causes high have benefited benefited from from the the exposure exposure he he generously generously have allows us. An d llastly, astly, his buil ding manager man a ager allows And building Kevin v Melrose Melrose deserves deservees a great grea at deal deal of of credit credit for for o Kevin keeeping the the building building filled filled with with beautiful beau uttiful art art keeping and supporting supporting worthy wo orthy causes. The The man man works wo orks and endl d essly. Give Givve some some credit credit where where credit credi e t is due. due. endlessly. Catarrina Hosler Catarina Santa Cruz
Besieged by B F ake W a omen o Fake Women R e: e: “D eep Web” Web” (Currents, (Currents, March March 12): 12)): Tim, Re: “Deep iit's t's in interesting teresting tto on note ote th that at you yo ou don't don't come c e out com ou ut an d fl atl t y cclaim laim th at this sstory tory is un trrue. Y o ou and flatly that untrue. You just jus st d dance ance ar around ound the the ttopic opic wi with th lots lots of of selfselfrrighteous ighteous in dignattion and and claim claim "social "social media media indignation is rrife iffe with with such such thin things." gs." B Bu ut no, no, it it actually actually isn't. Show Show us another another But
instance (besides instance (besidess in your yo our own own mind) mind) where where somee mid som middle-aged dle-aged e dude dude wi with th a bear beard d is suddenly su ddenlly besi besieged eged db byy ffake ak a e beau beautiful uttiful w women om o en on Facebook Facebook who who say sa ay things things like, like, "A "Awesome, Awesome, Tim. Y You o ou are are so in inspiring." nspiring." Jus Justt on one. e. Hey, H eyy, if th thee ar article ticle is un untrue, nttrue, ggo o ah ahead ead an and d suee th su thee Weekly Weeekly for for or defamation. deffa amati t on. And And then, then, during d uring th thee discov discovery ver e yp phase, hase, yyou ou can ggo o o subpoena Facebook sub poena F acebo ook for for o the the IP addresses addresses of of these th ese su supposedly pposedly fictional fictional supporters, supporters, just just to to prove p rovve iitt wasn't wasn't yyou. ou o u. Brian MacDonald Santa Cruz
Big Pla Plans ans for The Ritt R ee: “Big Em pty”: Years Yeears ago, ago, I lived livved e in Santa San nta Re: Empty”: Cruz Cr uz llong ong en enough ough tto o gget et th thee fl flavor avor o o off th thee place, place, bu ut n ot llong ong enough enouggh ffor o or it it to to m ess my my mind. mind. I but not mess wasn't w asn't a a att th thee university, univveersityy, o off course course.. I rrecall ecall thinkin at the the then-new then-new thinkingg th that Rittenhouse Ri ttenhouse building buildin d g would would have have m made ade an eexcellent xcellen nt p residen ntial p lace for for o Saddam Saddam presidential place Hussein, w who ho w was ass sstill till n nominally ominally in po power ower a time. Think Think k of of all the the ttourist ourist d ollars att th thee time. dollars that th at would would fl flow ow in in, n, tto o see the the ceremonial ceremonial cchanging hanging o gu uard, an dm ayb be h ear th off th thee guard, and maybe hear thee occasional speech delivered from thee b balcony occasi onal speec hd elivveered fr om th alcon ny assumee th thee Ri Ritt h has one). off all, th thee Ir Iraqi (I assum as on e). Best Best o aqi presidential p residential gu guards ards coul could dh have ave p patrolled attrolled Pacific P acific A Avenue veenue an and d cchased hased th thee bums a away. way. As iitt is, if th thee fu future utur t e is Am Amazon, azon, I sugg suggest est that th at the the p place lace be used u b byy them. them. em Jus Justt have have it it absorb absor b Boo Bookshop kshop an and d Log Logos os ov overnight, veernight, lik likee an am amoeba oeba w would. ould. o dT The he roof, roof, which wh hich I believe believe is ttallest allest in th thee vi vicinity cinity on thr three ee sid sides, es, coul could d be used as a dr drone one launching laun a ching p pad. ad. Soon, U UCSC CSC will have have a new new program program in drone drone technology, technologyy, if iitt doesn't doesn't already. alread dy. Robert Allgeyer (F (Formerly Former o rly of) Santa Cruz and Aptos
CORRECTION CORRE ECTION In last week’s story sto ory “Pet “Pet Sounds,” the name of T Tales ales a to T Tails a ails coor ccoordinator dinator Laur Laura ra Whaley was misspelled. Santa S Cruz Weekly Weekly e rregrets eegrets the err error. ro or..
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Currents Chip Scheuer
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BUTT SERIOUSLY UCSC’s ban on smoking includes not only cigarettes, but also e-cigarettes and chewing tobacco, part of a shift toward limiting the health-care costs created by primary users.
Tobacco's Culture War The local movement to ban it isn’t just about secondhand smoke BY GEORGIA PERRY
'S
econdhand smoke kills.” We’ve all heard it, and it’s been used as justification for smoking bans great and small—in bars, on campuses and throughout cities. At this point, most can agree that it is not fair for nonsmokers to have to suffer the negative health effects caused by cigarette smoke. But new rounds of smoking bans, including the UC-wide smoking ban, which took effect on January 1, are increasingly banning the use of e-cigarettes and chewing tobacco along with traditional cigarettes, signifying that there’s more at stake than just secondhand smoke these days. “It’s a culture change,” says Saladin Sale, co-chair of the campus Smoke- and Tobacco-Free Policy
Implementation Committee. “We want UCSC to be a leader in advocating for a healthier society.” Sale compares it to laws requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets when riding. “When it comes to those who make certain lifestyle choices that are demonstrated to lead to disease processes that lead to higher healthcare costs, society is making a decision that it wants those users to either pay a premium for their behavior or to just stop doing it. We see downstream that health-care costs of smokers drive up health-care costs for everyone.” Chewing tobacco has been linked to mouth and tongue cancers, but there exist few studies about the health risks of e-cigarettes.
“I think it’s good they ban cigarettes,” says Omeed Ahrary, a sales associate at Green Vapors in downtown Santa Cruz, of the UCSC smoking ban. “But I think it’s kind of dumb how they have to deem e-cigarettes the same as cigarettes. Because they aren’t. They’re completely different.” In the small shop, lined with vials of “e-liquid” in a variety of flavors, Ahrary demonstrates how a cloud of vapor from certain high-tech types of e-cigarettes can fill the entire room. Seeing who can create the biggest cloud is a growing trend among e-cigarette users, he says. Trends aside, however, Ahrary says that a majority of the store’s customers are former cigarette smokers who are trying to quit. The UCSC Smoke- and Tobacco-Free
Policy Implementation Committee offers students information about using patches and gum for quitting cigarettes, but Saladin says he doesn’t consider e-cigarettes in league with these other quitting tools. “Nicotine gum, nicotine patches and lozenges are all cessation resources that are acknowledged and regulated by the FDA. There are requirements about disclosing ingredients and disclosing how much nicotine is present. They’re considered safe. They’ve been studied. The e-cigarettes and vaporizers and all this—at the present time it’s the Wild West. It is totally unregulated,” Sale says. Studies of e-cigarettes are pretty few and far between, but some claim to show that they contain carcinogens— though fewer than traditional cigarettes. Regulating e-cigarettes isn’t just happening on college campuses. Nearly 50 California cities and counties have revised their smoke-free policies to address e-cigarette use. On Tuesday, Santa Cruz’s city council discussed a proposed amendment to the city’s smoking ordinance that would, among other things, prohibit the use of e-cigarettes in all areas where smoking is prohibited. Sale says that if keeping tobacco products away from young people results in a generation of non-smokers, it is the right move. “If a generation of leaders comes to maturity in a smokefree environment, they’re much more likely to just assume, well, that’s what it is. That’s how I think we can get to the goal of a tobacco-free society,” he says. As far as a certain other popular smoking trend on the UCSC campus goes, the smoking ban literature doesn’t really address it, aside from saying it is regulated by the federal government. “The smoking ban is really focused on tobacco and nicotine addiction,” says Sale . But will the smoking ban affect the campus’ infamous 4-20 celebration? Most likely not. “I’ve not heard anything to say that there’s going to be a revolutionary change this year. Fourtwenty is an anomaly,” says Sale. “It is this strangely Santa Cruz event.” 0
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Clown Princes
TOE TO TOE The McCoy Tyler Band, left to right: bassist Chad Bowen, guitarist-vocalist McCoy Tyler and drummer Clinton Brown.
As the McCoy Tyler Band rises in the thriving local roots-music scene, they take their music seriously. But that’s about it. BY JACOB PIERCE
T
he McCoy Tyler Band has dressed up to play the Freedom Rotary Club’s 30th anniversary party. Drummer Clinton Brown threw on a dress shirt, and upright bassist Chad Bowen, the trio’s self-described “recovering jam band fanatic,” put his long hair in a ponytail with a rubber band he borrowed from the raffle table. The Santa Cruz guys—known in the local Americana scene for their serious songwriting and goofy senses of humor—have been trading glances, grinning sheepishly most of the night as they play under the fluorescent lighting of the convention
center-like Harvest Room at the Santa Cruz County Fairgrounds. And it’s going okay, at least until an organizer steps up to the microphone after their second set. “Let’s hear it for the Colt McCoy Band!” he says. Colt McCoy is a former backup quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers. This is a perfect example of a frustrating, though not uncommon, moment for any band trying to make it. But as the three men jog down the metal steps off the makeshift stage for their second intermission, they can’t stop laughing. “Well, I guess we’re changing our name,” quips McCoy Tyler, the group’s guitarist and frontman. Tyler didn’t know what to expect tonight.
Accustomed to playing shows at Don Quixote’s, he and his two band mates know occasional gigs like these do come with the territory, and for good reason: they pay well and don’t run past 10pm. But the club members and volunteers below them chowing down on enchiladas probably would prefer to hear “Brown-Eyed Girl” and “Sweet Caroline,” not some eclectic blend of clever country ditties and moving ballads with the occasional John Prine song tossed in. “This is a well-lit room, and that’s a little weird,” Tyler admits, waiting in line for a cold intermission Budweiser. “I don’t like to see people’s disinterest.” The band’s policy is clear, however: no more covers, no way.
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HIS STORY OF ROOTS There’s a bit of a throwback vibe to frontman McCoy Tyler’s style. “It’s a dark road. You know what I mean?” Tyler adds. I really don’t, but the 28-year-old Brown is quick to elaborate. “The shows I enjoy most are when everyone isn’t there to hear old covers, but is there to dance and check out new music,” Brown explains in a sincere moment for a band that doesn’t get very serious too often. “You should just leave these chops,” bassist Bowen says, suddenly interrupting with shaving advice as he points to Brown’s face. (Bowen is also the band’s “beard coach.”) “This right here is ready to be chopped! When you’re ready to cut it, you need to spend at least a day with lamb chops, dude.”
Mixing Time It’s a Wednesday evening, and Tyler has invited me up to the property where he grew up in the Soquel Hills—and where he now lives in a back house with his girlfriend—as the band puts finishing touches on an
album they’re calling Time Machine. It could be the foundation of a new identity. “The first one was more of folk record. We have a bluegrass-y edge,” Tyler says in the mixing room. “This album will give us more of a sound.” Barefoot and wearing a striped V-neck shirt with a redwood tree tattoo showing on his right arm, Tyler is sitting at a desktop MacBook Pro with Logic recording software on the screen. A busted classical guitar and two extension cords hang on the wall. Bowen, 36, is standing a few feet away cradling a mandolin. He’s also barefoot, revealing a matching-friend foot tattoo he shares with fellow Ohio native and local bassist Jeff Kissell. It’s a tattoo of the Buckeye State with bass notes on top of it, and it was administered by the guitarist from Miss Lonely Hearts, a local honky tonk band. Tyler’s songwriting falls somewhere between folk, rock and country. The song themes are serious
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and their craft, creative—bringing in occasional jazz elements. And when he plays “To the Bone,” a new song, live, Tyler works the first four bars of “Stairway to Heaven” into the middle of an instrumental break. When he solos, he moves quickly up and down the neck, wailing and plucking his instrument like it’s a banjo. Tyler played more electric guitar on this new album, which features several guest appearances, including members of Steep Ravine and rambling songwriter John Craigie, a UCSC grad, on harmonica.
When he plays ‘To the Bone’ live, Tyler works the first four bars of ‘Stairway to Heaven’ into the middle of an instrumental break. When he solos, he moves quickly up and down the neck, wailing and plucking his instrument like it’s a banjo. All three musicians sing, harmonizing on most songs, and their voices blend nicely. Brown— without any fancy fills—finds interesting rhythms and keeps a fun interplay with Tyler. McCoy Tyler Band, which averaged more than a show per week last year, plays Don Quixote’s this Friday
and will also be playing the Do It Ourselves Festival at Camp Krem in Boulder Creek next month. In live concerts, the group prides itself on getting a lot of sound out of three people, speeding up and slowing tempo seamlessly while playing complex arrangements. New fans sometimes compare the group to Crosby, Stills and Nash or Paul Simon, but a specific genre is difficult to pin down. “Chad and I have talked a lot about whether or not to pigeonhole ourselves. We call ourselves a folk band, but a lot of people would hear this and get pissed off because there’s electric guitars,” Tyler says, pointing to the tracks on the screen. “That’s why I say we come up with our own: prog folk,” Bowen chimes in. “We’re trying to come up with terms that encompass what we do,” Tyler says. “Like ‘California country.’” Brown is in the next room, visible through a large glass window, laying down rhythm tracks— shakers, tambourine and a couple vibraslaps—as Tyler toys with the levels and Bowen tries to make Brown laugh. “It gets weird in here as it gets late,” Bowen says, noodling on the mandolin. “There’s a witching hour when things get silly.”
Internet Mating The band’s antics began almost three years ago, and it’s a coincidence, in a way, that the three members get along as well as they do, since they met on the Internet. Tyler graduated from San Francisco State with a creative writing degree in May 2011, moved home and devoted his time to writing songs. He placed a Craigslist post in the “musicians” category saying he was looking for people to play music and who wanted to sing. Brown and Bowen are the only two from the ad he ever met up with to practice. The three of them, musically speaking, got here from different places. Brown played drums in his middle school band and later joined a Sacramento funk band with guitarist Daniel Talamantes, now a member of Santa Cruz’s Mark Twang, a country rock group. Bowen has been playing various instruments since he
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HYBRID MOMENTS Employing both electric guitars and a Led Zeppelin obsession in their folk music, the group doesn’t want to let their sound be pigeonholed. was eight, and upright bass for the past four years. Tyler got an acoustic guitar from his older brother when he was 13 years old, but it didn’t see much action while he stayed busy following his true passion—dirt bike racing. But his teenage career came to an end when he broke his leg and got airlifted via helicopter from Hollister to San Jose. The injury left plenty of time to play guitar and listen to the guitar solo from “Whole Lotta Love” off Led Zeppelin II on repeat. Soon he was shredding lead guitar in a local metal band called Trigger Renegade, which played the 418 Project and the Blue Lagoon. He enjoyed climbing on top of the speakers during the encores. “And wasn’t there a big show when you ripped your shirt off?” Bowen asks. “Yeah, that was my big moment: playing with my shirt off with my 17-year-old chest exposed, standing on a speaker at the Blue Lagoon,” Tyler says. “I’ve always accepted I will
never be more of a rock star than I was at that moment.”
What’s Next? One way to learn more about any band is to ask members who they would tour with. It shows not just who the group emulates, but where they think they stand in terms of their readiness. In this case the three musicians cover all the bases. Tyler mentions The Wood Brothers, his biggest songwriting inspiration—a folk duo not yet famous enough to be totally out of reach. He and Bowen also suggest Willie Nelson, whose wide-ranging career they admire—including his jazz period. They even like his 2005 reggae album. But Tyler says, even in a perfect world, he’d probably prefer touring with local bands like Ben Lomond’s Coffis Brothers and Mountain Men— friends of his, with whom the band often shares billing. “I would rather tour with people
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who care about our music,” Tyler says. “I would rather tour with people I really like. If we could just tour with Marty O’Reilly, Steep Ravine, Coffis Brothers and Miss Lonely Hearts, that would be the ultimate experience.” Touring is a big step, though. And while Brown would love to go on a three-month tour, he says the band has more legwork and promotions left to do before everyone’s ready to put it all on the line. “If there were a way for me to pay all my bills and do this, I’d be down, but I don’t think we’re there yet,” he says.
‘That was my big moment: playing with my shirt off with my 17-year-old chest exposed, standing on a speaker at the Blue Lagoon. I’ve always accepted I will never be more of a rock star than I was at that moment.’ —MCCOY TYLER
EVENTS • NEWS • MUSIC • RESTAURANTS BEACHES • GIVEAWAYS
All three musicians have day jobs— Brown for a semiconductor company in San Jose, Tyler for Sylvan Music and Bowen for Trader Joe’s. But they do have one idea for how to get out. “We’ve been trying to court John Craigie a long time,” Tyler says. “My argument is: Bob Dylan took The Band on tour with him. We could be your band, John.” Tyler’s band opened for Craigie
twice at Kuumbwa Jazz Center and even backed him up for a few songs, filling out the solo singer/songwriter’s sound. Craigie, who tours year-round, says he’d be up for the adventure. “I’ve had some secret wishes to do an album with them as a backing band. They’re really cool, and they match with my sound. So yeah, anytime, man,” Craigie says. “If we haven’t already talked about that, we’ve definitely been courting each other.” Still Tyler, who’s becoming more of a “homebody,” says he might miss sitting in the mountains and building new songs. He says long, successful tours aren’t necessarily the end goal anyway. “I want to play quality shows, and I want to have fun doing that, and I never want it to feel like work. I don’t want it to feel like a nine-tofive,” Tyler says. “The moment that happens, what’s the point? That’s the goal: play quality shows and enjoy doing it. If the money comes, that’s good.” In the meantime, they’re working to get better. As the band prepares to release Time Machine in May, Tyler, Brown and Bowen have been focusing on their new songs— many of which they’ve only played live once. The recording process allowed the band to listen, track by track, and figure out what worked best for each song. Now they’re sitting down and listening to the tracks trying to remember what they did— arranging their new works for the road and their CD release. That leaves the door open for possibilities and more changes. “Going back to what I said earlier, this album will define us, but yeah—actually that’s bullshit what I told you,” Tyler says. “We’re still in flux.” There’s always time to expand your sound after all. “We’re going to do a reggae album next,” Bowen adds. “Willie style.”
McCoy Tyler Band Fri, March 28 $12 adv/ $15 door; 8pm. Don Quixote’s, Felton
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AE E!! RAMBLIN’ MAN Leo K Kottke o ottke has pr pretty etty mu much uch banned himself fr from om live interviews, i because he can’t st stop top talking. He wrote wr ote Santa Santa Cruz C uz Weekly Cr Weekly ffrom from the safety saffeety off his computer as he prepared prepared for fo or his show at the Rio.
Drool Dro ool On n
Leo Kottke Kottk o e desperately desperately cchases hases his muse mu use BY JACOB PIER PIERCE RCE
L
eo Kottke Kotttke si sits ts d down own wi with th an acous tiic gui gguitar—likely itar—lik likely one one of of acoustic his tr trademark ad demark Taylors—as Taylors—as the the uproarious uproarious applause applause of of the the full theater thea ater before quiets. beffor o e him qu uiets. He He launches launches into “William in nto “W William m Powell,” Powell,” plucking plucking and and hammering hammering away away furiously furiously at at an open open E chord chord for fo or about ab bou ut four fo our bars. bars. Then Then he he takes tak kes a breath brea ath t and and stops. stops. “That’s little “That’t s a li tttle ffast. a ast. I’m going going to to slow slow it it down,” down,” he he tells tells the the crowd crowd in Boulder, Boulderr, Colo. Colo. This This opening openin ng scene scene from from his 1995 live livve album is Kottke Kottke at at his finest: finest: patient pati t en nt and and willing wiilling to to give givve things things a second try. Whatever second tr y. Wh hatever e it it takes takes to to gget et the to the song song right—because right—because — to Kottke, Kottke, not not much much matters mattterss more more than than the the music. music. “I'd probably probably be hiding hiding in a dumpster dumpster without with hou ut it. it. It never neveer changes, changes,
bu but ut I do,” do,” K Kottke ottke ttells ells Santa Cruz W eekly e kl abou b ut his hi musi ic, via i em ail. il Weekly about music, email. “I 'm the the drooling, drooling, twitching twi w tching supplicant supplican nt “I'm h oping ffor or an o other ffew ew b ars tto o com hoping another bars comee al long. T he dr ooling an d ttwitching wi w tching along. The drooling and ggets e worse, ets worse o , more more desperate desperate and and h u umilia atting, bu ut th es ar err. humiliating, but thee tun tunes aree bett better. W ell, th ey're dif ffer e en ntt. All th at dr oolin l g Well, they're different. that drooling cchanges hanges thin gs.” things.” T his is cclassic lassic K ottke, ttoo: oo: irr eveeren entt, This Kottke, irreverent, qu uirkyy, self-effacing. self--efffa acing. And And apparently apparentlly quirky, th he more more h ools, th er his the hee dr drools, thee bett better so ongw writing ggets. ets. songwriting Kottke, w ho ttakes akes th tage a Kottke, who thee sstage att th thee Riio Theater Thea ater F riday M arch 28, in sistss Rio Friday March insists nd oing interviews in nterviews through through email email on doing beecause once once he he sstarts tarts ttalking, alking, h an’t because hee ca can’t stop. In con cerrts, t his charming charming stories stories stop. concerts, go on ffor o or about abou ut four fo our minutes minutes with with no no go beeginning or en d. At som nt h beginning end. somee poin point hee jus justt
llooks ooks d own an d sstarts tarts his h n ext son g. down and next song. H as been b k kn ow wn tto o llet ett a 10-min i ute Hee h has known 10-minute p hone in nterview ggo o on for for o an hour. hourr. phone interview M en ntored by by th late John John Fahey, Faheyy, Mentored thee late 68-y year-o e ld Leo K ottke p lays m ostly 68-year-old Kottke plays mostly in strumen ntals th at ffall all som a ssomewhere ewhere instrumentals that bet tween e Am erricana an nd rrock. ock. between Americana and P eople lis ten because o utiful t People listen off his beau beautiful son gw writing, his kn ack ffor o or k eeping songwriting, knack keeping rrhythm hythm t wi th alternating allternattin ng b ass n otes with bass notes w hil h ep layying llead ead an d,, o while playing and, off course course,, his pur ger speed. Bu ut K ottke think puree fin finger But Kottke thinkss o off his sstyle tyyle n ot as ffast, as a t, bu ut d ense. not but dense. “Wh en I w as a kid, al ll I w an anted tto o “When was all wanted d o was was kn ock m yself ou utt. I w as a h a og,” do knock myself out. was hog,” K ottke sa ays. “An d I rrushed. ushed. R us u hing Kottke says. “And Rushing is n astyy. I sstill till p lay som at d ense nasty. play somee o off th that dense sstuff, tufff, bu ut I kn ow h ow tto od o iitt n ow. I can but know how do now. m ake rroom oom ffor or eeverything, o ver e ytth hing, n ot jus make not justt th thee ggoing oing n uts.” t nuts.”
Really Kottke’s songwriting, R eeally iit’s t’s K ottke’s son gwr writing, instrumental and otherwise, that in strumen nttal an d oth errwise w , th at sets apart from thee rrest. When comes him a part ffr om th est. Wh en iitt com es actually playing, hee un understates tto o ac tually p layying, h derstates his mastery off his instrument. m astery o instrument. In watching watching once hee ggets thee z zone, him, iit’s t’s cclear: lear: e on ce h ets in th one, thee gui guitar over. th tar ttakes a es ov ak ver er. bad practicer,” hee wr writes. “I'm a b a p ad racctticerr,,” h ites. “Sonically, blend off ssloth “Soni callly, I'm an eevil vil b lend o loth and The more drool and an d ggluttony. luttton ny. T he m ore I dr ool an d though, thee m more willing ttwitch, wi w tch, th ou ugh, th ore I'm willin g tto o do somee ac actual work. much more d o som cttual w o orrk k. I'm mu ch m ore writer than musician. write a wr iter th a a musi an cian. I can wr ite a tune, but the guitar me. tun e, bu ut th he gui tar rruns uns m e. If yyou're ou're a o musician, thee gui guitar.” musi cian, yyou ou rrun o un th tarr..” Kottke, Grammy nominee K ottke, a ttwo-time wo-time Gr amm my n ominee with Midwestern wit,t, h has overcome wi th a Mid dweestern wi as ov veercome odds becomee on onee o off th thee bes bestt ssteep teep od ds tto o becom guitarists Hee suf suffered high-end gui tarists ttoday. o ay. H od ffer e ed hig h-end hearing from firecracker h earing lloss osss fr om a fir ecracker as a and thee N Navy during cchild, hild, an d llater ater in th avy d uring a firing practice. More hee had fir ing p racti t ce. M ore rrecently, ecen ntl tly, h had tto o thee posi position off his rright hand cchange hange th tion o ight h and tto o thee iim impacts off ttendon damage llessen essen th paccts t o endon d amagge in his arm. Athens, Kottke Born in Ath A ens, Ga., K ottke grew grew up up over thee coun country—in different all ov veer th ntr t y— —in 12 dif ffer e en nt sstates—as tates—as his h family fa amily moved movveed eevery ver e y ffew ew Hee p played trombone yyears. ears. e H layed e tr ombone as a yyoung o oung until, att ag agee 11 when cchild hild un til,, a when living living in Oklahoma, hee discov discovered thee gui guitar O klahoma, ah veered th tar and never back. After thee gui guitar, an dn ever e llooked ooked b ack. Aft er th tarr, hee sa says, these days thee tr trombone h ays, th e d ese ays th ombone is sstill till second-best instrument—although his secon d-best in strumen nt—although hee ad adds, “It’s h ds, s “It Ittt’s a big gap.” gap.” And And somehow somehow those and Kottke on th ose 20 0 frets frets an d six sstrings, trings, K ottke always manages find something al lways m an nages tto o fin d som ething original hee h hasn’t done or iginal h asn’t d one yyet—and eet—and hopefully no onee eelse has either. h opefully n o on lse h as ei therr. justt h having time,” hee “I'm jus avving a ggood ood tim e,” h writes. frustrating when find wr ites. “It's fr ustratting w hen yyou ou fin o d out that thee tun tunee yyou justt wr wrote thee ou ut th at th o ou jus ote is th theme from Bullwinkle,, bu but th eme fr om m Rocky and Bullwinkle ut thee thing th thing that th hat matters, mattters, in that that instance, instance, that out. There's justt is th at yyou o ou ffound ound ou o utt. T here's jus something about thee guitar som ething abou ut th guitar that that I can't can t enough of.” gget et en ough o f..”
Leo K Leo Kottke o e ottk Fri, March, Marrch, 28, $35; $35; 8pm Rio Theatre, The eatre, Santa Cruz
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List your local event in the calendar! Email it to calendar@santacruzweekly.com, fax it to 831.457.5828, or drop it by our office. Events need to be received a week prior to publication and placement cannot be guaranteed.
Stage DANCE
Central Coast: Watercolor paintings. Gallery hours: Wed-Sat, noon-5pm; Sun, noon-4pm. Thru April 19.. Wed-Sat, noon-5pm, Sun noon-4pm. 526 Broadway, Santa Cruz, 831.426.5787.
Bellydance Showcase VinoCruz Pulse of Nature. Oil paintings by Maggie Renner Hellmann: Seascapes, landscapes and flowers. TuesdaysSundays, thru April 30. 725 Front St #101, Santa Cruz, 831.426.8466.
CONCERTS
CONTINUING
Santa Cruz Chamber Players
Cabrillo College Gallery
From Weed to Reed: Music from the Renaissance through the modern age, played on woodwind instruments. www. scchamberplayers.org. Sat, Mar 29, 8pm and Sun, Mar 30, 3pm. $25 general; $20 senior: $10 youth. Christ Lutheran Church, 10707 Soquel Dr, Aptos, 831.425.3149.
The Soft White Sixties San Francisco-based indie rock. Sat, Mar 29, 5pm. Streetlight Records Santa Cruz, 939 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.421.9200.
Art
Cabrillo Gallery. Bridging Santa Cruz: A survey show spanning 50 years of printmaking in Santa Cruz County. Gallery hours: Mon-Fri, 9am-4pm & MonTues, 7-9pm. Thru April 11. 6500 Soquel Dr, Aptos, 831.479.6308.
Pajaro Valley Arts Council The MPC Printmakers. Printmaking On and Off the Wall: An exhibit of contemporary fine art prints, sculptures, handmade books and more. Gallery hours: Wed-Sun, 11am-4pm. Thru April 19. Free. 37 Sudden St, Watsonville, 831.722.3062.
Santa Cruz Mountains Art Center
OPENING
Prime Time: The "best of the best" submitted by local artists. Judged by George Rivera. Thru April 5. Free, 831.336.3513. Wed-Sun, noon-6pm. 9341 Mill St, Ben Lomond.
Santa Cruz Art League
Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History
GALLERIES
Santa Cruz Watercolor Society. The Best of the
Nikki McClure. Cutting
education class by the City of Capitola Recreation Department. Begins April 10. $84-$98. Capitola Community Center, 4400 Jade Street, Capitola, 831.475.6115.
Beat Sanctuary Various Santa Cruz County Bank Locations SC County Bank Arts. Off the Wall: Local artists create works exploring the beauty and space of our 3-dimenstional world. Mon-Thurs, 9am-5pm, Fri 9am-6pm. Thru May 2. Free. n/a, Santa Cruz.
Events LITERARY EVENTS Poetry Santa Cruz Poetry reading by George Bilgere and Diana Hartog. www.poetrysantacruz. org. Tue, Apr 1, 7:30pm. $3 suggested donation. Bookshop Santa Cruz, 1520 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.464.8983.
Storytime Former Shakespeare Santa Cruz actress Billie Harris and Book Cafe manager Jill Rose perform animated readings of children's stories. Mon, 11am. Capitola Book Cafe, 1475 41st Ave, Capitola, 831.462.4415.
NOTICES Adult Education The Five Stages of Transformation: An adult
A dance class for exploring authentic movement as connection, exercise, prayer and spiritual practice. Wed, 7:30-9:15pm. $15. A weekly class for exploring exercise and spirituality through dance. Wed, 7:30-9:15pm. $15. Santa Cruz Yoga, 402 Ingalls Street, Santa Cruz, 585.278.0080.
A Course In Miracles Study Group A weekly meeting on learning how to forgive and live in peace. Drop-ins are welcome. Thu, 7-9pm. The Barn Studio, 104b Park Way South, Santa Cruz, 831.272.2246.
Diversity Center Professionals Mixer Ocean views, appetizers, beverages and opportunities for networking with other businesses and professionals. Wed, Mar 26, 6-7:30pm. $10. Santa Cruz Dream Inn, 175 West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz, 831.425.5422.
Energy Workshop Empowerment training for identifying and clearing the people and events from the past that limit growth. Fri, Mar 28, 6:30-8:30pm. Body & Soul, 738 Chestnut St, Santa Cruz, 831.264.7000.
Figure Drawing Weekly drawing from a live model, facilitated by Open Studio artist Richard Bennett. Mon, 7-10pm. $16. Santa Cruz Art League, 526 Broadway, Santa Cruz, 831.426.5787.
Grief Support A lunchtime drop-in support group for adults grieving the death of a family member or friend. Tues. 6-7pm at 125 Heather Terrace, Aptos; Fri. noon-1pm at 5403 Scotts Valley Dr. Ste. D, Scotts Valley. free. Various sites, NA, Santa Cruz, 831.430.3000.
Postpartum Health Circle
FRIDAY 3/28—SUNDAY 3/30
Santa Cruz PaddleFest The 28th annual PaddleFest welcomes elite paddle surfers and beginners alike for a full weekend of races, surfing contests and parties stretching from Cowell’s to Steamer Lane. Friday, March 28 through Sunday, March 30 at Lighthouse Point/Steamer Lane, Santa Cruz. Free to watch.
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
Different belly dancers each week on the garden stage. Presented by Helene. www. thecrepeplace.com. Sat, 1:30pm. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.429.6994.
Her Own Path 1996-2013: McClure transforms black construction paper into graphic stories of daily life. Thru May 25. Museum hours Tue-Sun, 11am-5pm; closed Mon. 705 Front St, Santa Cruz, 831.429.1964.
A weekly community circle offering support and information about postpartum changes for mothers. Wed, 1:30-2:30pm. $5-$10 donation. Luma Yoga & Family Center, 1010 Center St., Santa Cruz, 831.325.2620.
Qigong Flow Led by Bonnie Eskie, MFT. Tue, 10-11am. $10-$12. Louden Nelson Community Center, 301 Center St, Santa Cruz, 831.515.4144.
Support and Recovery Groups
SATURDAY 3/29
Conversations with Creative Heroes: James Durbin The Santa Cruz Sentinel’s Wallace Baine, in what is intended to be a recurring interview series, will have a one-on-one dialogue with American Idol’s James Durbin—a native Santa Cruz singer. Come for the creative insights, stay for the Durbin promotional door prizes. Saturday, March 29 at 7:30pm at the Cabrillo College Samper Recital Hall, 6500 Soquel Dr, Aptos. Tickets $15 general; $12 students & seniors. Ongoing groups and weekly meetings. ADHD: 831.818.9691. Alzheimer's: 831.464.9982. Cancer: Katz Cancer Resource Center, 831.351.7770; WomenCARE, 831.457.2273. Candida: 831.471.0737. Chronic Pain: American Chronic Pain Association, 831.423.1385. Grief and Loss: Hospice, 831.430.3000. Lupus: Jeanette Miller, 831.566.0962. Men Overcoming Abusive Behavior: 831.464.3855. SMART Recovery: 831.462.5470. Trans Latina women: Mariposas, 831.425.5422. Trichotillomania: 831.457.1004. 12-Step Programs: 831.454. HELP (4357). Pagans in Recovery: 831.428.3024. Narcotics Anonymous: saveyoursanity@aol.com. Clutterers Anonymous: 831.359.3008. Recovering Couples Anonymous: 408.592.6377. Female Survivor Support: 831.425.4030.
The Speaker's Gym Instructor Noel Murphy provides leadership coaching and public speaking skills every week. www.thespeakersgym.com. Wed, 7-9:30pm. Discovery Gym, 75 Mt. Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley, 831.238.1234.
Touched By Adoption Group Adoptive families, adult adoptees, families waiting to adopt and birth parents
meet monthly to connect in a safe, confidential setting. Last Sat of every month, 10am-12pm. Free. Live Oak Family Resource Center, 1438 Capitola Rd, Santa Cruz, 1.866.219.1155.
831.425.3431. Basic: Land of the Medicine Buddha, Wed, 5:30-6:30pm, 831.462.8383. Zen: Ocean Gate Zendo, first Tue each month 6:30-7pm. All are free.
Women's Commission Reception
AROUND TOWN
A reception for more than 100 "Women Who Care," who have raised over $100,00 for nonprofits in Santa Cruz County. Thu, Mar 27, 6-7:30pm. Santa Cruz County Office Building, 701 Ocean St, Santa Cruz.
Yoga Instruction Pacific Cultural Center: 35+ classes per week, 831.462.8893. SC Yoga: 45 classes per week, 831.227.2156. TriYoga: numerous weekly classes, 831.464.8100. Yoga Within at Aptos Station, 831.687.0818; Om Room School of Yoga, 831.429.9355; Pacific Climbing Gym, 831.454.9254; Aptos Yoga Center, 831.688.1019; Twin Lotus Center, 831.239.3900. Hatha Yoga with Debra Whizin, 831.588.8527.
Zen, Vipassana, Basic: Intro to Meditation Zen: SC Zen Center, Wed, 5:45pm, 831.457.0206. Vipassana: Vipassana SC, Wed 6:30-8pm,
Comedy Open Mic A rotation of the best up-and-coming stand-up comedy acts from the Bay Area. Thu, 8:30pm. Free. Blue Lagoon, 923 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.423.7717.
English Country Dance Second and fourth Thursdays of each month; beginners welcome. Fourth Thu of every month. $5-$7. Peace United Church of Christ, 900 High St, Santa Cruz, 831.426.8621.
Holi Festival A Hindu tradition celebrating the arrival of Spring by throwing gulual—holy colored powder. Sat, Mar 29, 12:30-2pm. $8 general; $5 members, students & seniors. Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St, Santa Cruz, 831.429.1964.
Sanctuary Camp Gala A multi-course meal catered by India Joze plus live music and a
tour of a 2.5 acre jungle garden. Fundraiser for the proposed Santa Cruz Sanctuary Homeless Camp. Sun, Mar 30, 4:30-10pm. $40-$45. The Jungle House, 535 Spring St., Santa Cruz.
Santa Cruz Paddlefest A surfing contest for kayaks, stand-up paddle boards and wave skis. Fri, Mar 28, Sat, Mar 29 and Sun, Mar 30. Lighthouse Point, West Cliff Dr, Santa Cruz, 831.458.3648.
Wharf Wildlife Tours Free eco-tours of the wharf by the Seymour Discovery Center. Sat-Sun, 1 and 3pm. Thru Dec 31. Free. Santa Cruz Wharf, Beach Street, Santa Cruz.
Film Cesar Chavez Q&A An opening night screening of Chavez's new biopic followed by a Q&A with some of his local friends and colleagues. Fri, Mar 28, 7:15pm. $10.50. Del Mar Theatre, 1124 Pacific Ave, Santa Cruz, 831.469.3224.
Beatscape
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THURSDAY TH HURS SDAY 3/27 3 /2 7
WILLIAM WIL LLIAM M TYLER
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
Mentioninng the name John Fahey Mentioning in circles cles iss like having the n certain cir password secret society.. The assword to a secr ret society late ate ffingerpicking ingerrpicking gguitar uitar master is surrounded mythology urroundeed by a m ythology and discipleship speaks iscipleship that sp peaks of his music in n hushed,, rreverential everential tones. One off today’s standou standoutt ffingerpickers ingerpickers is William TTyler yler of thee bands Lambchop and Silver Jews. nd the Si lver Jews s. Furthering the Fahey legacy simultaneously ahey lega acy whilee simul taneously creating reating hhis is own haunting and beautiful instrumental universe, nstrumenntal unive erse, the Nashvillebased possesses ased TTyler yyleer posses ses a talent that ffeels eels att once tim timeless and progressive. meless an nd pr ogressive. Also on Baird n the bill: bill: Meg Ba ird from from Espers and Matt Baldwin. Baldw win. Crepe Creppe Place; $8; 9pm. (Cat Cat Johnson) Johnsson)
THURSDAY TH HURS SDAY 3/27 3 /2 7
JEF JEFFREY FFREY HAL LFO ORD & THE HALFORD HEA ALERS HEALERS
I’ve ve alway always ys though thought ht it would be tough too be a sin singer-songwriter Richardd nger-sonngwriter like Richar Thompson hompsonn or Davee Alvin—one known ass much ffor wizardry or guitarr wizar dry as lyrical songcraft. even ongcraft.. Alvin ev ven told me one time that hat there there have been beeen plenty of nights he’s he’ss been pouring een pour ring out hhis is soul on an acoustic guitar bar uitar in a noisy ba ar and ffinally inally given up and switched electric nd switc hed to el lectric ripping when hee got dr drowned out. Jeffrey Halford o owned ou ut. Jeffr ey Half ord is another nother ooff those guys g who can excite the guitar geeks uitar gee eks with his h skill, but has the soul It’s oul of a poet. p It ’s nice to see the latter latest win out onn his late est and deepest rrelease, elease, Rainmaker Rainmake er. Moe’s Moe’s Alley; $9/$12; 8:30pm.
FRIDAY F FRID AY 3 3/28 /28
TOUBAB TOU UBA AB KREWE
CORE GROUP Snowapple plays Don Quixote’s Sunday.
Fusing using thee music of o Mali with American roots styles, North oots style es, the No orth CCarolina-based arolina-based instrumental Krewe circles nstrumen ntal bandd TToubab oubab o Kr ewe cir cles back the ack on th he musical intersection that paved aved thee way ffor or rrock ock & rroll, oll, by way of the Wheree some he blues. Wher s fusion acts ffall all into nto the musical m ppit it of being pleasant, yet watered-down, Krewe water ed-ddown, TToubab ou oubab Kr ewe goes right for heart both emerges or the he art of bo oth styles y and emer gges something that with some ething th hat is rrough, ough, rraw aw and extraordinary. Having significant xtraordinnary. Hav ing spent signif icant time studying me livingg and stu udying in Africa, the band’s knowledge and’s kn owledge of Malian music is as legit down-home gritty, egit as itss down-h home take on gritty y, Southern Think outhern blues. Th hink TToumani oumani o Diabate sitting itting in with w the Black Keys. Keys. Moe’s Moe’s Alley; $12 12 adv/$15 adv/$ $15 door; 9pm. (CJ)
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SATURDAY 3/29
Celebrating Creativity Since 1975
SOFT WHITE SIXTIES
SUNDAY 3/30
BLUE OCTOBER An alt-rock band that hit the scene in the the mid-1990s, Blue October was grinding through the major record label game: hustling up label attention, playing shows, getting picked up by a record label, recording, getting dropped by said record label—round and round. They finally hit it big in 2003 with the song “Calling You,� and again in 2006 with the charmingly-titled “Hate Me.� Perpetually residing in a post-grunge, pre-emo niche full of brooding and emotional confessions, the band has flirted with superstardom but always stayed just on this side of widespread recognition. Catalyst; $24 adv/$28 door; 8:30pm. (CJ)
SUNDAY 3/30
ALL THINGS MUST PASS George Harrison would have turned 71 this past week. In celebration, Bay Area musicians are getting together to honor one of his crowning achievements— the 1970 post-Beatles masterpiece All Things Must Pass. The album’s singles, “My Sweet Lord" and "What Is Life?"— as well as the title track—were rejects and leftovers that John Lennon and Paul McCartney had passed on in the 1960s. On this album they became classics for all time. Steve Pile and his band, Lazyman, will give them new life in this Sunday matinee. Don Quixote's; $10; 2pm. (Jacob Pierce)
U
7:30 pm | No Comps
CAMINOS FLAMENCOS
Gypsy singers & dancers from Spain! Monday, March 31 U 7 pm | No Comps World-Class Guitarist!
Greg Brown
STANLEY JORDAN
Sunday, March 30 U 7 pm
Concerts
KIMBERLY GORDON WITH MARSHALL OTWELL TRIO
BRYN LOOSELY AND THE BACK PAGES Mar. 28 at Crepe Place
Friday, April 4
KIMBERLY GORDON WITH MARSHALL OTWELL TRIO Mar. 30 at Kuumbwa
Monday, April 7
PARTICLE Mar. 30 at Moe’s Alley
Friday, April 11
CARLOS NAKAI Mar. 31 at Don Quixote’s
Sunday, April 13 U 7 pm
GREG BROWN Apr. 23 at Rio Theatre
SUNDAY 3/30
SNOWAPPLE Sparse guitar and mandolin playing accompany the smooth three-part harmonies and gentle, sometimes beautifully aimless lyrics of Snowapple. Also playing violin, accordion and glockenspiel, these three Dutch girls are reminiscent of the 1960s American folk scene that gave us Peter Paul & Mary and Joan Baez. “I might be mistaken, but the way I been awakening with a smile that lasted for a while now,� they sing on one song. “I may be mistaken, but the way my heart is shaking—all of the aching has faded now.� Don Quixote's; $10; 7pm. (JP)
MONDAY 3/31
STANLEY JORDAN It takes two guitars, a ton of talent and a lot of tapping to make Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven� an even more moving experience. Guitarist Jordan, in one of his most popular videos, taps on one guitar suspended in air with his right hand while playing chords with his left on another axe strapped over his shoulder. Now 54, Jordan is an innovator in jazz and fusion guitar. This is billed as a “solo� show, but no one gets a more complete full-band sound with their own two hands. Kuumbwa; $25 adv/$30 door; 7pm. (JP)
Tickets: brownpapertickets.com U
7 & 9 pm | No Comps
BRAD MEHLDAU TRIO
Larry Grenadier– bass and Jeff Ballard – drums U
7 pm
RENE MARIE “I Wanna Be Evil - With Love to Eartha Kitt� U
7 pm
CHIHIRO YAMANAKA TRIO
LIVING LEGENDS OF GYPSY FLAMENCO: MIGUEL FUNI & JUAN DEL GASTOR Tickets: funi.eventbrite..com
Unless noted advance tickets at kuumbwajazz.org and Logos Books & Records. Dinner served 1-hr before Kuumbwa presented concerts. Premium wines & beer. All ages welcome.
320-2 Cedar St [ Santa Cruz 831.427.2227
kuumbwajazz.org Santa Santa Cr Cruz uz
ART AR RT LEA LEAGUE GU UE
Watercolor W atercolor
“The B est ooff The C entral Coast� Coas a t� “The Best Central Mar. 28 - Apr. Apr. 19, 2014 Mar. Reception: Sun. Sun. Apr. Apr. 6th, 6th, 2-4pm 2-44pm Reception: Open O pen to to Central Central Coast Coast Artists. Artists. Contact C ontact tthe he Sa Santa nta Cr Cruz uz W Watercolor atercolor SSociety ociety Drop Drop Off: T Tuesday, ues u day, M March arch 25,, 2-5p 2-5pm pm www.santacruzwatercolorsociety.com www.santacruzwatercolorsociety..co om Coming Coming Soon! Soon! 59th Annual Annual High High School School Show Show .BZ t 3FDFQUJPO 4BU .BZ QN . BZZ t 3FDFQUJPO 4BU .BZ QN
New N ew Ongoing Ongoing C Classes lasses and and d Weekend Weekend Workshops Workshops www.scal.org w ww..scal.org 526 B Broadway roadway Sa nta Cruz, Cruz, CA Santa (831) 426-5787 W ed-Saatt. 12-5/Sun 12-5/Sun 12-4 Wed-Sat. 1s ri. 12-9 1stt F Fri. Artist: A rtist: Nancy Nancy Howe Howe
95 Years Years ooff IImagination magination
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
Purveyors of what they call “working class soul,� the Soft White Sixties have a rough-around-the-edges sound that hits in all the right ways. Hailing from San Francisco, the band (which just dropped its debut full-length) is one part fuzzy garage rock, one part toocool-for-radio R&B and one part roomrocking, ass-kicking groove-ery. Need more? Paste magazine named the Soft White Sixties one of the best shows at last year’s SXSW. Catalyst; $12 adv/$15 door; 9pm. (CJ)
Friday, March 28
22
1011 PACIFIC AVE. SANTA CRUZ 831-423-1336 Thursday, March 27 ‹ In the Atrium s AGES 18+ plus Clark
SOUND REMEDY
Kent !DV $RS s P M P M
Friday, March 28 ‹ AGES 16+ ‹ numbskullshows.com
LA DISPUTE
plus
Pianos Become Teeth also Mansions
!DV $RS s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M Friday, March 28 ‹ In the Atrium s AGES 21+
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
LA ULTIMA BANDA
!DV $RS s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M
Saturday, March 29 ‹ AGES 18+
THE POLISH plus
Liminus also
AMBASSADOR Wildlight Saqi & Ayla Nereo and
3PEC !DV !DV $RS s $RS 3HOW P M Saturday, March 29 ‹ In the Atrium s AGES 16+
S SANTA CRUZ BLUE B BL UE LA LAGOON GOON
WED 3 3/26 /26 Liv Live eR Rock ock
923 9 23 P PaciďŹ c aciďŹ c A Ave, ve, S Santa anta C Cruz ruz
T THE CATALYST CATAL ALYST ATRIUM ATRIUM
Sou Sound und R Remedy emedy
AT THE $OORS ONLY s $RS OPEN P M 3HOW P M
Monday, March 31 ‹ In the Atrium s AGES 21+
EXMORTUS $RS ONLY s $RS P M 3HOW P M Apr 3 Emancipator Ensemble (Ages 18+) !PR CunninLynguists (Ages 16+) Apr 7 Schoolboy Q (Ages 16+) Apr 14 Bonobo (Ages 16+) !PR Dark Star Orchestra (Ages 21+) Apr 16 A$AP Ferg/ Flatbush Zombies (Ages 16+) Apr 17 Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Ages 21+)
L Lydia ydia L Loveless oveless
W William illiam Tyler Tyler
11134 134 Soquel A Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
La Ultima Banda Ban nda
The Soft White White
La Dispute Dispute
The Polish Polish
Bryn Loosely Loosely y&
Bear Lincoln Lincoln
the Back P Pages age es
Jim m Lewin Lewin Band
Hip Shake Shake
DAVENPORT D AVENPORT ROADHOUSE ROADHOUSE
Room Room 9 Esoteric Esoteric Collective Collective
1D Davenport avenport A Ave, ve, S Santa anta C Cruz ruz
HINDQUARTER H HINDQU ARTER
Karaoke Karaoke
303 3 30 3 Soquel A Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
W With ith Choic Choice e Music M
H HOFFMAN’S BAKER BAKERY Y CAFE
Pr Preston e ton Brahm es Brahm Trio Trio
Mapanova Mapanova
11102 102 P PaciďŹ c aciďŹ c A Ave, ve, Santa Santa C Cruz ruz
Isoc Isoceles eles w with ith G Gary ary M Montrezza ontrezza
KUUMBWA K UUMBWA JAZZ JAZZ CENTER
Caminos Flamencos Flam mencos
3 320-2 Cedar Cedar St, St, Santa Cruz
MOE’S M MOE S ALLEY
K Kabaka abaka P Pyramid yramid
11535 535 C Commercial ommercial W Way, ay, Santa Cruz
Jef Jeffrey ffrey Halford Halford &
Toubab Toubab o Kr Krewe ewe
Extr Extra a Lar Large ge
the Healers
MOTIV M MO TIV
DassWassup! DassWassup!
11209 209 P PaciďŹ c aciďŹ c A Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
b by y Zagg
T THE REEF
Open Mic
Libation Lib bation Lab Liv Live ve R Reggae eggae
BIG B Liv Live e Ha Hawaiian waiian n
Liv Live eR Rock ock & R Reggae eggae
1120 20 Union St, St, Santa Cruz
R THEATRE RIO THEATRE
Leo Leo Kottke Kottke
11205 205 Soquel A Avenue, venue, Santa Cruz
S SEABRIGHT BREWERY BREWERY
Jimmy Jimmy Dewrance Dewranc a e
Unless otherwise noted, all shows are dance shows with limited seating.
5 Seabright A 519 Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
Tickets subject to city tax & service charge by phone 877-987-6487 & online
T THE POCKET
G Gary ary Carpent Carpenter er
3102 3 310 2 Portola Portola Dr Dr.,., Santa Cruz
Jam m Session Session
www.catalystclub.com
The Killert Killertones ones
Ambas Ambassador sador
Harpin Jonny Jonny &
plus Dr. Luna
Special E Event vent Night
O’Cr O’Craven aven
11011 011 P PaciďŹ c aciďŹ c A Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
the Gr GrooveHounds ooveHounds
WARCORPSE
DJ DJ Marc Marc
Sixties
T THE CATALYST CATAL ALYST
2 2218 Eas Eastt Cliff Dr Dr,, Santa Cruz
!DV $RS s P M P M Sunday, March 30 ‹ In the Atrium s AGES 21+
Rat Rat King
11101 101 P PaciďŹ c aciďŹ c A Avenue, venue, Santa Cruz
CROW’S C CRO W’S NES NEST T
BLUE OCTOBER Architects
Liv Live eD DJ J
1140 40 Encinal E i l St, St, t Santa S t Cruz C
Sunday, March 30 ‹ AGES 21+
plus
SAT 3 3/29 /29
D DJ J A.D A
Hotel Hotel
C CREPE PLACE PLACE
CofďŹ s Brothers s P M P M
Liv Live ve C Comedy omedy Rai Rainbow inbow L Lounge ounge
529 5 29 Seabright A Ave, ve, Santa Cruz
THE SOFT WHITE SIXTIES
plus The
FRI 3 3/28 /28
+8 80’s 0’s d dance ance party party
BLUE B BL UE L LOUNGE OUNGE BOCCI’S B BOC CI’S CELLAR
THU TH HU 3 3/27 /27
Br Brad ad Wilson Wilson
Jak Jake e Nielson & Triple Triple Threat Threat
23 Like SANTA CRUZ MOUNTAIN BREWING
SUN
3/30 3/30
MON
3/311 3 3/3
Karaoke Karaoke
Comedy C omedy Open Mic
Karaoke Karaoke
Desmadres Desmadr es
F. F. Dupp
Warcorpse W arcorpse
Exmortus Exmortu us
Fusebox Fusebox D DJ’s J’s + Musicians Musicians
Kevin Kevin Robinson Robinson
SANTA CRUZ BLUE BLUE LAGOON LAGOON 831.423.7117 831.423.7117
BLUE BLUE LOUNGE LOUNGE 831.425.2900
BOCCI’S BOCCI’S CELLAR 831.427.1795 831 427.1795 831.42
THE CA CATALYST ATAL LYST ATRIUM ATRIUM T 831.423. 831.423.1338 1338
Blue October October
THE CATALYST CA ATAL LYST 831.423.1336 831.423.1336
Lonesome L onesome Shack
Bob Wayne Wayne & the
7 Come Come 11
Outla Outlaw w Carnies C
CREPE PLACE PLACE 831.429 831.429.6994 .6994
Live Liv e Comedy Comedy
CROW’S CROW’S NEST NEST 831.4 831.476.4560 76.4560
Bleu & V Virgil irgil Thrasher Thrasher
DAVENPORT DAVENPORT ROADHOUSE ROADHOUSE 831.426.8801 831.426.8801
HINDQUARTER HINDQUARTER 831.426.7770 831.426.7770
Dana Scruggs Trio Trio
Jazz by by Five Five
Barry Scott Scott
Kimberly Gordon Gordon
Stanley Stanley Jor Jordan dan
Jazz Kiln
& Associates Associates
HOFFMAN’S BAKERY BAKERY CAFE 8 831.420.0135 31.420.0135
K KUUMBWA UUMBWA J JAZZ AZZ CENTER 831.427.2227 831.427.2227
Particle P article
MOE’S MOE S ALLEY 831.479.1854 831.479.1854
Rasta Ras ta Cruz Reggae Reggae Jazzy Evening Evening
Eclectic Eclectic c by by
Hip-Hop by by
Primal Pr Productions oductions
D DJ J AD
Open Blues Jam
MOTIV MOTIV 831.4 831.479.5572 79.5572
THE REEF 831.459.9876 831.459.9876
RIO THEA THEATRE TRE 831.423.8209
SEABRIGHT BREWERY BREWERY 831.426.2739 831.426.2739
THE POCKET
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
Goth/Industrial Goth/Indus trial
TUE 4/ 4/11
24
WED 3 3/26 /26 A APTOS / RIO DEL MAR / SOQUEL SOQ QUEL
THU TH HU 3 3/27 /27
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
BRITANNIA B BRIT TANNIA A ARMS
FRI 3 3/28 /28
SAT 3 3/29 /29
Live Live Music
Karaoke Karaoke
Jake Jake Nielson
Marshall La Law w
110 11 0 Mont Monterey erey A Ave., ve., Capit Capitola ola
THE T HE FOG BANK
with E Eve ve
Jack of All T Trades rades
211 21 11 Esplanade, Esplanade, Capitola Capitola
MANGIAMO’S M MANGIAMO S PIZ PIZZA ZA AND WINE BAR
Triple Triple Threat Threat
Da David vid P Paul aul Campbell
Da David v P vid Paul aul Campbell
Geor George ge Chris Christos tos
R Roberto-Howell oberto o-Ho Howell
7th Wave Wave
Wild Wild d Blue
Hit N Run
Stormin’ Stormin’ Norman
783 7 8 Rio del Mar Blv 83 Blvd, d, Apt Aptos os
MICHAEL’S M MICHAEL ’S ON MAIN 2591 25 591 Main S St, t, Soquel
PARADISE P ARADISE BEA BEACH CH GRILLE
Lisa T Taylor aylor
215 21 15 Esplanade Esplanade,, Capit Capitola ola
SANDERLINGS S ANDERLINGS
Sambasa
In Thr Three ee
B-Movie B-Movie Kings s
Barbara Barbara & Davis Davis
Joe Ferrara Ferrara
Bebop
Straight Straight Up
The Joint Chiefs
The Th Sam S Chase Ch se Chas
Spirit S i it off ‘7 ‘76 6
Drifting Compass Comp pass
Suborbitals
Mariachi Ense Ensemble mble
KDON D DJ J Sho Showbiz wbiz
1 Seascape S Resort Resort Dr Dr,, Rio del Mar
w w/ / Lisa T Taylor aylor
SEVERINO’S S EVERINO’S BAR & GRILL
Don n McCaslin & the
7500 7 5 500 Old Dominion Ct, Aptos Aptos
Amazing Ama azing Jazz Geezers Geezers
SHADOWBROOK S HADOWBROOK
K Ken en nC Constable onstable
1750 17 750 Wharf Rd, Rd, Capit Capitola ola
THE T HE UGLY UGL LY MUG 4640 4 640 Soquel Dr Dr,, Soquel
ZELDA’S Z ELDA’S 203 20 03 Esplanade Esplanade,, Capit Capitola ola
S SCOTTS VALLEY / SAN LORENZO LORE ENZO VALLEY D DON QUIXOTE’S QUIXOTE’S
J h Cruz John C
6275 6 275 Hwy Hwy 9, 9, F Felton elton
H HENFLING’S T TAVERN AVERN 9450 94 450 Hw Hwy y9 9,, Ben L Lomond omond
W WATSONVILLE / MONTEREY Y / CARMEL C CILANTRO’S
Hippo Happ Happy y Hour
11934 934 Main Main St, St, W Watsonville atsonville
MOSS M MO SS LANDING INN Hwy H wy 1, Mos Mosss Landing
&K KDON DON D DJ JS SolRock olRock
Open Jam
25 Like SANTA CRUZ MOUNTAIN BREWING
SUN
3/30 3/30
MON
3/311 3 3/3
TUE 4/ 4/11 APTOS / RI RIO IO DEL MAR / SOQUEL Songwriter Songwriter Sho Showcase wcase
831.464.2583
THE FOG BANK
Pro Pr o Jam
831.462.1881 831.462.1881
MANGIAMO’S MAN NGIAMO’S NGIAMO S PIZ PIZZA ZA AND WINE BAR 831.688.1477 831.688.1477
MICHAEL’S MICHAEL’S ON MAIN 831.479.9777 831.479.9777
Lara Lar a Price Price
Chris Kelly Kelly
PARADISE PARADISE BEACH BEACH GRILLE 831.4 831.476.4900 76.4900
SANDERLINGS SANDERLINGS 831.662.7120 831.662.7120
SEVERINO’S BAR & GRILL 831.688.8987 831.688.8987
SHADOWBROOK SHADOWBROOK 831.475.1511 831.475.1511
Open Mic c
THE UGL UGLY LY MUG
w/ w/ Mosep Mosephus hus
831.477.1341 831.477.1341
ZELDA’S ZELDA’S
831.4 831.475.4900 75.4900
SCOTTS VALLEY / SA SAN AN LORENZO VALLEY Snowapple S Sno wapple l
R Carlos R. C l s Nakai N kaii Nak
Sylvia Sylvia l i Herold H old Her ld &
tthe he R Rhythm hythm Bugs Bugs
Karaoke Karaoke with Ken Ken
DON QUIXOTE’S QUIXOTE’S 8 831.603.2294 31.603.2294
HENFLING’S TAVERN TAVERN V 831.336.9318 831.336.9318
WATSONVILLE / MONTEREY M / CARMEL Santa Cruz Trio Trio
KPIG Happy Happy Hour
Happy Happy hour hour
Karaoke Karaoke
CILANTRO’S 8 831.761.2161 31.761.2161
MOSS MOSS LANDING INN 831.6 831.633.3038 33.3038
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
Vinny V inny Johnson
BRIT BRITANNIA ANNIA ARMS
M A R C H 2 6 -A P R I L 1 , 2 0 1 4
26
Film
with blueblooded fascists, including Adrien Brody, the Black Michael of this Zenda and his leather-wrapped thug Jopling (a snarling Willem Dafoe).
Jailbreaks, alpine assassination, harrowing castles and political discord make this an unusually ripsnorting Anderson film. THEY WANT TO BE ALONE Zero (Tony Revolori) and Agatha (Saoirse Ronan) find love among the bakery boxes in ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel.’
Hotel Row ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’ is one of Anderson’s best BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
A
PPROACHING Wes Anderson’s mostly delightful The Grand Budapest Hotel can give you the foreboding you feel when encountering the word “artisanal.” It’s seriously under-femaled, and it pauses to congratulate itself for its cleverness. At worst, Anderson is a director of ducky films, but this nested story of Central European skullduggery seems to have more of a spine than anything he’s made since Fantastic Mr. Fox. Anderson claims to have
been influenced by the writer of Austrian decline, Stefan Zweig. I thought there was a different influence, though, by the Czech author Bohumil Hrabal’s I Served the King of England. It’s a tale told by the proprietor of a declining luxury hotel during the 1960s in the Slovenia-like nation of Zubrowka. F. Murray Abraham is the turtlenecked proprietor Moustafa, a man who looks as haunted as Solzhenitsyn. In a conversation over dinner, this elder tells a young writer (Jude Law) about the life
Moustafa had between the wars. He was a lad (played by Tony Revolori) back when the carpets were a sumptuous imperial crimson and not a repulsive Intourist burntorange. In those days Moustafa was mentored by the suave concierge M. Gustave (Ralph Fiennes, terrifically louche), a heavily scented, indifferently heterosexual squire to wealthy elderly women. His oldest client (Tilda Swinton, grotesque in old-age makeup) bequeaths Gustave a valuable painting. Thus the upstart hotelier becomes involved
Jailbreaks, alpine assassination, harrowing castles and political discord make this an unusually ripsnorting Anderson film. Far more like him are his asides: mentions of a far-off land called “Dutch Tanganyika,” rides on the trams of the gloomy capital city, Lutz, and a visit to the Bureau of Labor and Servitude. It doesn’t seem to be all about the art direction. Anderson styles his productions American Empirical, and he finally seems to have a fully running studio: a script department, a tabletop special effects lab, a first-rate music department and a stable of actors, including an artistically disfigured Saoirse Ronan, Harvey Keitel as a bald convict and Jeff Goldblum, in spectacles that make him look like Sartre.
THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL R; 99 min. Now playing at the Nick
Film Capsules New
NOAH (PG-13; 138 min) The plot of this DarrenAronofsky-directed Biblical epic can best be summed up thusly: God said to Noah, there’s gonna be a floody, floody/God said to Noah,
SH O WT I ME S
there’s gonna be a floody, floody/Get those animals out of the muddy, muddy! (Opens Thu at 41st Avenue, Scotts Valley, Green Valley) PRINCESS MONONOKE (1997) Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki’s breakthrough film (in America, at least) is basically Star Wars, but set in a forest, and even more awesome. (Plays Fri and Sat at midnight at the Del Mar) SABOTAGE (R; 109 min)
Movie reviews by Steve Palopoli
A squad of DEA agents led by Arnie rob a drug cartel, because they are really stupid. To the surprise of no one ever, retribution is forthcoming. (Opens Fri at Santa Cruz 9)
Reviews 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE (R; 102 min) As hotly anticipated as a commemorative plate, this sequel to Frank Miller’s
horrendous mangling of world history comes long after anyone cared, and without original director Zach Snyder or star Gerard Butler. Mainly what it promises is a lot more men in skirts screaming, and untold gigabytes of CGI blood as Greeks and Persians clank, slice and hack their way through comic-book-style battles. 12 YEARS A SLAVE (R; 133 min) Based on an 1853 memoir, this story of a free African American kidnapped
Showtimes are for Wednesday, March 26, through Wednesday, April 2, unless otherwise indicated. Programs and showtimes are subject to change without notice.
APTOS CINEMAS
122 Rancho Del Mar Center, Aptos 831-426-7500 www.thenick.com
Muppets Most Wanted —Daily 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 9:30 plus Sat-Sun 11:45am. (no Sat 7:15pm) Divergent — Daily 2; 5; 8 plus Sat-Sun 11am. The LEGO Movie — Wed-Thu 2:45; 5; 7:15. Mr. Peabody & Sherman — Wed-Thu 2:30; 4:40; 7.
41ST AVENUE CINEMA
1475 41st Ave., Capitola 831.479.3504 www.cineluxtheatres.com
Noah — (Opens Thu 7pm) 11; 12:30; 2:15; 3:45; 5:30; 7; 8:45; 9:30. Need for Speed — Wed-Thu 11:30; 2:30; 5:30; 8:30. (no Thu 5:30 or 8:30) Mr. Peabody & Sherman—Wed-Thu 11:20; 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 10:15; Fri-Wed 11:30; 2; 4:30. Veronica Mars— Wed-Thu 11:30; 1:45; 4:40; 7:30; 9:40; Fri-Wed
DEL MAR
1124 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com
Bad Words —(Opens 10pmThu) 2:30; 5; 7:30; 9:50 plus Fri-Sat 11:45pm and Sat-Sun 12pm. Cesar Chavez —(Opens Fri) 2:15; 4:45; 7:15; 9:40 plus Sat-Sun 11:45am. (no Fri 9:40pm) Muppets Most Wanted — Wed-Thu 11:45; 1:30; 2:15; 4; 4:45; 6:30; 7:15; 9; 9:45; Fri-Wed 2; 4:30; 7; 9:30 plus Sat-Sun 11:30am.
Particle Fever — Wed-Thu 11:30; 9:30. (no Thu 9:30pm) The Wind Rises — Wed-Thu 1:40; 4:15; 6:50. Princess Mononoke — Fri-Sat midnight.
NICKELODEON
Lincoln and Cedar streets, Santa Cruz 831.426.7500 www.thenick.com
Blood Ties — Wed-Thu 12; 9. Enemy — Fri-Wed 4:30; 8:20 plus Fri-Sat 10:20pm. The Grand Budapest Hotel — Wed-Thu 12:15; 1; 2:30; 3:15; 4:45; 5:30, 7; 7:45; 9:15; 10; Fri-Wed 1; 2:30; 3:15; 4:45; 5:30; 7; 7:45; 9:15; 10 plus Fri-Sun 12:15pm; Sat-Sun 10:45am. The Lunchbox — Fri-Wed 2:45; 5; 7:15; 9:30 plus Fri-Sun 12:30pm. Tim’s Vermeer —Wed-Thu 1:40; 3:30; 5:15; 7:10; Fri-Wed 2:15; 6:30 plus Fri-Sat noon. Veronica Mars — Wed-Thu 2:45; 5; 7:30; 9:45.
RIVERFRONT STADIUM TWIN
155 S. River St, Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1701 www.regmovies.com
Son of God — Wed-Thu 3:30; 6:30; 9:20; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Frozen — Wed-Thu 4; 7; 9:30; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.
SANTA CRUZ CINEMA 9
1405 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz 800.326.3264 x1700 www.regmovies.com
Sabotage (Opens 8pm Thu) — call for showtimes. 300: Rise of an Empire — Wed-Thu 12:25; 1; 3; 3:35; 6:15; 8; 9; 10:30; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. (no Thu 9pm) 300: Rise of an Empire 3D — Wed-Thu 5:25pm; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Divergent — Wed 3/26 12; 12:35; 3:15; 3:45; 6; 6:30; 7:10; 9:20; 9:45; 10:15; Thu 3/27 12; 12:35; 3:15; 3:45; 6; 7:10; 8:45; 9:20; 10; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. The LEGO Movie — Wed-Thu 12:05; 2:35; 5; 7:30; 10:05; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. (no Thu 10:05pm)
Need for Speed —Wed 3/19 12:10; 7;Thu 12; 6; 6:30; 9:25 Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Need for Speed 3D — Wed 3:10; 10; Thu 3:05pm; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Non-Stop — Wed 3/26 12:20; 2:50; 5:20; 7:50; 10:20; Thu 12:20; 2:50; 10:20; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. (no Thu 7:45 or 10:20)
Mr. Peabody & Sherman — Wed 3/26 12:15; 2:40; 9:45; Thu 12:15; 12:40; 6:45; 9:15; Fri-Wed call for showtimes.
Mr. Peabody & Sherman 3D — Wed-Thu 12:45; 3:25; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Elton John: The Million Dollar Piano — Wed 3/26 7pm. Cape Fear — Thu 9pm.
CINELUX SCOTTS VALLEY CINEMA 226 Mt. Hermon Rd., Scotts Valley 831.438.3260 www.cineluxtheatres.com
Noah — (Opens Thu 7pm) 11; 11:55; 1:15; 2:15; 3:30; 4:30; 5:30; 6:45; 7:45; 8:45; 10. 300: Rise of an Empire — Wed-Thu 7:30; 10:10. (no Thu 7:30pm) Divergent — Wed 11; 11:55; 1; 2:15; 3:45; 4:30; 5:30; 7:20; 9:15; Thu 11; 11:55; 1; 2:15; 3:45; 4:30; 7; 7:45; 8:45; 10:15; Fri-Wed 11:55; 1:30; 3:45; 4:45; 7; 8; 10.
Grand Budapest Hotel —Fri-Wed 11:15; 12:15; 1:45; 2:45; 4:15; 5:15; 7; 7:45; 9:30; 10:15. The LEGO Movie —Wed-Thu 11:30; 2; 4:40. The Monuments Men — Wed-Thu 8:15pm. Mr. Peabody & Sherman — Wed-Thu 11; 11:40; 2; 4:20; 6:45; 10; Fri-Wed 11:30; 2; 4:30; 7; 9:30.
Muppets Most Wanted—Wed-Thu 11; 11:45; 1:45; 2:45; 4:30; 5:30; 7:20; 9:15; Fri-Wed 11:20; 2; 4:40; 7:20; 10:15.
Need for Speed — Wed-Thu 11:10; 2:15: 5:15; 8:30. (no Thu 8:30) Non-Stop — Wed-Thu 2; 4:45; 7:30; 10:15. Veronica Mars— Wed-Thu 11:20; 1:30; 4:20; 7:10; 9:45. To Have and Have Not—Thu 7pm; Sat 11am.
GREEN VALLEY CINEMA 8
1125 S. Green Valley Rd, Watsonville 831.761.8200 www.greenvalleycinema.com
Noah — (Opens 7pm Thu) call for showtimes. Cesar Chavez — (Opens 8pm Thu) call for showtimes. Cesar Chavez in Spanish — (Opens 8pm Thu) call for showtimes. Sabotage — (Opens 8pm Thu) call for showtimes. Muppets Most Wanted—Wed-Thu 1:45; 4:30; 7:15; 9:45; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. 300: Rise of an Empire—Wed-Thu 1:45; 4:30; 7:30; 10; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Dallas Buyers Club — Wed-Thu 4:30; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Divergent — Wed-Thu 12:45; 3:45; 6:45; 9:45; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Gravity — Wed 3/26 7:25; 9:35. Need for Speed — Wed-Thu 1:30; 4:15; 7:15 10; Fri-Wed call for showtimes Non-Stop —Wed 1:25; 4:15; 7:20; 9:45; Fri-Wed call for showtimes (no Thu 7:20; 9:45) Mr. Peabody and Sherman—Wed-Thu 1:15; 4; 7; 9:30 Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Philomena — Wed-Thu 1:45; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Son of God—Wed-Thu 1; 6:50; 9:45 Fri-Wed call for showtimes. (no Thu 6:50; 9:45) Son of God in Spanish — Wed-Thu 3:55pm; Fri-Wed call for showtimes. Tyler Perry’s Single Mom’s Club — 1:30; 4; 7:30; 10; Fri-Wed call for showtimes (no Thu 7:30 or 10).
and sold into slavery in the South is easily the bestreviewed film of the year. BLOOD TIES (R; 144 min) Clive Owen, Marion Cotillard, Mila Kunis and Billy Crudup star in this ’70s-era NewYork-gangs flick that plays off the classic brother dynamic: older one tries to get younger one away from a life of crime, younger one can’t resist the pull, James Caan is their dad. Wait, James Caan is their dad? They are screwed. DIVERGENT (PG-13; 109 min) If you’re a YA author, do you even want your books adapted into films anymore? What is Veronica Roth, who wrote this series about a teen in a rigidly divided world who is branded as part of the “Divergent” class of outcasts, going to get out of this except everyone complaining once again about how no youngadult books or films can measure up to The Hunger Games? Oh, right, millions of dollars. GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL (R; 100 min) If there’s a more anticipated film among real movie lovers than this latest film by Wes Anderson, I haven’t heard about it. THE LEGO MOVIE (PG; 100 min) Everybody from Morgan Freeman to Will Ferrell to Shaq gets to voice something in this animated movie, which (spoiler alert) is not actually made out of Legos. In other news, it’s official: everything gets to have a movie. What’s next, Battleship? Oh wait… THE MONUMENTS MEN (PG-13; 118 min) There’s something creepy about the fact that this movie is flying so under the radar. It’s written and directed by George Clooney, with a great premise (a World War II platoon rescues art from the Nazis), and an all-star cast featuring Clooney, Matt Damon, Cate Blanchett, John Goodman, Bill Murray and more. It’s based on a true story, the trailer looks great. Why isn’t anyone talking about this? MR. PEABODY & SHERMAN (PG; 90 min) I loved Rocky & Bullwinkle as a kid, it was basically The Simpsons before The Simpsons. But the movies based on it so far—The Adventures of Rocky & Bullwinkle and Dudley Do-Right, were pretty bad. I have higher hopes for this animated spin-off, since time-travelling dog scientist Mr. Peabody and his pet boy Sherman were pretty much my favorites, anyway. MUPPETS MOST WANTED (PG; 112 min) I
was surprised the Muppets reboot headed up by Jason Segal didn’t make more of a splash. It was really pretty good. But perhaps the intrigue of a jewel-heist angle, which this sequel has the Muppets drawn into while on a world tour—will spark more interest. Not, by the way, a remake of The Great Muppet Caper, which was definitely the best Muppets movie. NEED FOR SPEED (PG13; 130 min) Aaron Paul plays a street racer sentenced to prison for making meth, who reunites with Heisenberg… oh wait, scratch that last part. Wishful thinking. Okay, he was actually framed, and when he gets out, he crafts a plan for revenge that involves driving really fast. NON-STOP (PG-13; 110 min) The flight is non-stop! The danger is non-stop! The feeling that Liam Neeson is in a hell of a lot of B-level thrillers lately is non-stop! SON OF GOD (PG-13; 138 min) Jesus gets a reboot! As with most franchises, this epic Biblical drama starts at the beginning with an origin story, but apparently the producers didn’t get the memo about how hot trilogies are these days, because this one goes all the way through to the end of the story. If only someone had put them in charge of The Hobbit. THE ART OF THE STEAL (R; 90 min) Kurt Russell plays a motorcycle daredevil and thief named Crunch Calhoun, because that’s awesome. Matt Dillon and Terence Stamp co-star in this crime comedy about a book heist. THE SINGLE MOM’S CLUB (PG-13; 111min) Tyler Perry wrote, directed, and starred in this Tyler Perry movie about Tyler-Perryconceived characters who find joy and friendship doing Tyler Perry things. Tyler Perry! VERONICA MARS (PG13; 107 min) Don’t even get me started on how annoying it is that Kickstarter is being used by the Hollywood super-rich to fund their projects. But hey, the fans paid for this crowdfunded big-screen version of the cult TV show. So at least if it sucks they have nobody else to blame. THE WIND RISES (PG13; 126 min) Will this really be Hayao Miyazaki’s last animated film? That’s what he says, and the guy is 73. But he will leave a hole in the art of cinema that can’t be filled. At least this is a hell of a sendoff, if advance word is any indication.
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BAD WORDS (R; 89 min) Jason Bateman plays a big jerk who uses a technicality in the rules to enter a gradeschool spelling bee. But it’s Jason Bateman, so you know he has to be a hilarious big jerk with a heart of gold. (Opens Fri at the Del Mar) CESAR CHAVEZ (PG-13; 101 min) Michael Pena plays the United Farm Workers legend in this, the only major
release from any studio this year to feature a Latino cast. Rosario Dawson plays Dolores Huerta (!!!) and Mexican director Diego Luna oversees what seems like a long-overdue biopic. (Opens Fri at Del Mar, Green Valley)
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Epicure
Send tips about food, wine and dining discoveries to Christina Waters at xtina@cruzio.com. Read her blog at christinawaters.com. Chip Scheuer
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Movie package. For $50, you get a
special menu for two, including shared appetizer and choice of entrees. You dine, and then you head over to The Nick, Del Mar or Aptos Twin theaters. You buy popcorn, sit in the dark and hold hands (etc.) and enjoy a film worth watching. Classic all-American date night fun, for such bargain prices that you and your sweetie decide to do it again the next week. Next time you might opt for Gabriella, where your package gets you $50 toward whatever you want on the menu. See? That way you have the fun of designing your own package. Or at Chocolate, where there's a prix fixe menu for two specially created for this promotion. And now—drum roll please—nine more restaurants have joined the existing stable, which now includes Cafe Sparrow, 515 Kitchen, Hoffman's, Laili, Louie's Cajun Grill, Soif, Au Midi, Kauboi, Cafe Rio, Hindquarter and Assembly. Yes, this is the smartest
MOUNTAIN BREWING GOES TO THE MOUNTAINS Santa Cruz Mountain Brewing’s Emily Thomas will bring craft brews to the historic Cremer House.
New Brew Spot in Felton BY CHRISTINA WATERS
A
vintage 19th-century hotel in Felton will soon find a new batch of patrons thanks to Santa Cruz Mountain Brewing's Emily Thomas, who is teaming with SLV New Leaf entrepreneur Bob Locatelli on The Cremer House project. The partners plan to transform the former 1880s lumberjack boardinghouse into a purveyor of craft brews wrapped around a restaurant featuring seasonal, local, organic wares. My Aunt Virlyne, a lifelong Feltonian, remembers that space as a once-upon-a-time beauty parlor and then Heavenly Hamburgers
lunch spot in the 1950s. Thomas is deep into menu development for recipes designed to pair brilliantly with some of the inventive new brews Cremer House will offer. For many San Lorenzo Valley residents and visitors, the autumn opening date can't come too soon. Stay tuned for more details, and congratulations to Thomas and Locatelli (didn't I go to first grade with your sister Judy?) for this welcome revival of Felton's rustic past. DATE NIGHT HEATS UP AND EXPANDS: The Nickelodeon Theatres Director of Marketing Ike
Jablon knows how to hustle up some date night excitement. In fact his "dinner and a movie" special concept has proven so successful that it has grown beyond its initial downtown Santa Cruz arena. Collaborating with the Downtown Association, the Nick has rounded up even more delicious partners for filmgoers who want to maximize their evening options. The concept is effortless. You choose a dining spot, let's say Hula's. And a date night, for example Wednesday night. Then you purchase the Date Night Santa Cruz Dinner & a
gift idea on the planet. You can stop by any one of the three box offices or any of the partner restaurants to purchase your package tix, and make your reservations! ANOTHER EXCUSE FOR ART NOSHING: Painter Tom Maderos
will replay his gala opening reception at Iveta with, you guessed it, a closing reception at Iveta on March 30 from 2-4pm. Don't miss this celebratory send-off for Maderos' figurative, neoDiebenkornesque oil paintings. And for those of you who either missed the First Friday opening a few weeks ago, or have yet to make your first visit to the new Westside cafe hot spot, you're in for a treat. Arm yourself with a bracing espresso drink, one of the sumptuous scones for which the house is famous or even something more substantial from Iveta's daily special sandwich creations. Feeling reckless, you might just grab a glass of wine and head upstairs for some serious schmoozing before this prolific artist's show comes down on April 1. Iveta @ 2125 Delaware Ave., Ste. F; (831) 713-0320. 0
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FO O D IE FIL E Chip Scheuer
Sentinel Café Lauren Bates-Rodriguez, barista
L
auren Bates-Rodriguez likes shopping at the farmers market to buy salad and soup ingredients for the Sentinel Café, where she’s worked for over a year. Located in the Cruzioworks building, the coffee shop also has pastries from Kelly’s Bakery, bagels from the Bagelry and coffee from Verve. SCW: What kinds of people come by here? LAUREN BATESRODRIGUEZ: At least 80 percent of our customer base are regulars, and
they work in the building. But we have such a range. Our tea list used to be five—a green, a white, a red, a couple black teas, a mint. Now we have probably 20 on our list, purely from customer feedback and people being able to say, “Hey, I really like this tea. Could you carry something like it?” When I first started, we just had mainly pastries, and we had the salad menu, but it wasn’t very extensive. We’ve implemented a happy hour—2pm to close, which we write on the board is 3:30-ish. Espressos are just a dollar, and cappuccinos are just two dollars. What time is 3:30-ish? If it’s a slow day, these walls will be closed by 3:35.
If it’s a busy day, I’ve stayed open almost until 4:30. I don’t like turning away people. I don’t like saying no unless we’re sold out of something, and then I have to. If someone comes by at 4, and I’m just about to close, and all they want is an iced tea or a cappuccino, I’m happy to do it. We used to close at 2, and I found we were turning away a lot of customers. Do people from other parts of town ever stumble on this place?
Word of mouth is what we rely on, and it’s worked really well. We sell out of things now. Before we were having to put things out for a dollar or 50 cents just to not throw it away, or I would walk out with a bag of bagels and try to hand one to people on the streets. I miss the $1 leftover treats days. There were a few today. And they were
swiped up as soon as I put them out there! We don’t want our food to go to waste at all, and our prices are pretty darn reasonable for the fact that you’re getting a salad of fresh greens that were grown not too far away. There’s a lot of love that goes into everything here. A lot of nerdy energy, too. —Jacob Pierce
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SECRET’S OUT ‘There’s a lot of love that goes into everything here,’ says Lauren Bates-Rodriguez of the Sentinel Café, the increasingly popular spot inside the Cruzioworks building.
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AQ
Astrology As A sttrrro ology g Free F Fr r e Will ree Will
By
Rob Brezsny Breezsny
31
For F or th thee w week eek o off M March arch 26 2
TAURUS (A (April pril 20-May 20): In Somalia, there’s there’s a law that fforbids orbids you fr om putting you from yourr used chewing gum on your nose and walking ar ound in public. Fortunately y, around Fortunately, you don ’t live ther e, so it y want to do that. In ’s fine if you don’t there, it’s ffact, act, I encour age you to go right ahead. a TToo do so would encourage be right in alignment with the cos smic omens. APRIL cosmic FOOL! I lied. YYou ou o should definitely not take yourself too seriously this week; you should lo ok ffor or opportunities look to playfully lose your dignity and rrazz azz the status quo. But ther aftier ways to do that t than by sticking theree ar aree cr craftier gum on your nose. GEMINI (May 21-June 21-June 20): TTata aataa Massage is a salon i SSan FFr in ancisco i th thatt pr ovides id an unusuall beauty b t Francisco provides tr eatment: fface-slapping. ace-slapping. The Tha ai masseuse named treatment: Thai TTata aata claims to be impr oving your complexion c improving as she smack oreheadd with her hands. She smackss your cheek cheekss and fforehead also does ““massage massage boxing,”” in wh hich she administers which heal th-giving punches to your body body with her fists. health-giving Is ther able ser vice ava ilable wher theree a compar comparable service available wheree you live? I highly recommend recommend it. APRILL FOOL! I lied. Here’s Here’s the truth: YYou oou should be absolutel absolutelyy firm that you won ’t toler ate whack ps—including the won’t tolerate whackss and wallop wallops—including psychological kind—even if they are are supposedly good ffor or you. CANCER CA NCER R (June 2121-July July 22): Now w would be an tradition a excellent time to launch a new tradition or instigate a fresh trend trend or make a beautiful thing thhing that will last for for a fresh marvel or thousand years. I’m talking about an amazing marvel creation that will improve improve useful innovation or unique creation for the the lives of countless humans all over the planet for generations. APRIL FOOL!! I was exaggerating exaggerating next 40 generations. Producing something that will w last a thousand a bit. Producing about if you simply launch years is too ambitious. How about tradition or instigate a fresh fresh trend trend or create create a a new tradition for the thhe rest rest of your long beautiful thing that will last for life—an amazing marvel marvel or useful usefuul innovation or life—an creation that will continuee to teach and amuse unique creation you all along the way? LEO (July 23-Aug. 23-Aug. 22): YYour our o patr patron o saint ffor on or the next three surrealistic Regardd three months is sur realistic artist Salvador Dali. Regar ole model act, you might him as your muse and rrole model.. In ffact, amouss declar ations as want to spout some of his ffamous declarations tart with these: t 1. “The only if they wer weree your own. SStart difference between me and a mad dman is that I am not difference madman mad.”” 2. “I do not take drugs; I am drugs.”” 3. “Mistakes are almost always of a sacr ed nat ture.”” 4. “Have no ffear ear are sacred nature.” perfection. YYou’ll oou’ll never rreach each it .”” APRIL FOOL! I lied. of perfection. it.” on saint, rrole ole model, and muse Salvador Dali is your patr patron for only the next 14 days, not thr ee months. for three VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 23-Sept. 22): YYou oou know k how Jesus could supposedly turn water into wine? W ell, SSt. t. Brigit, Well, a sixth-century Irish nun, was lege endary ffor or an even legendary gr eater mir acle. When visitors cam me to her monastery greater miracle. came in Kildar e, she changed her old ba athwater into beer Kildare, bathwater ffor or them to drink. I think there’s there’s a good chance you will develop that pr ecise talent so ometime soon. APRIL precise sometime FOOL! I kind of lied. YYou ou o won ’t rreally eally possess SSt. t. Brigit ’s won’t Brigit’s supernatural power supernatural power.. However However,r, youu will have an uncanny ability to make tr ansmutations th hat ar transmutations that aree almost as dr amatic as changing bathwater to beer dramatic beer.. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23-Oct. 22): The ba band and Rush was inducted into the Rock and Roll H all of Fame last May Hall May.. Guitarist Alex Lif eson deliver ed ann unusual acceptance Lifeson delivered epeated speech. For the two minutes he sp poke, he rrepeated spoke, one wor -blah-blah,”” he began. wordd endlessly: “blah.”” “Blah“Blah-blah-blah,” “Blah-blah-blah blah-blah blah-b blah.”” Many hand blah-blah.” gestur es and shifting vocal inflect tions accompanied his gestures inflections rrap, ap, always in support of variation ns on “blah-blah.” This variations is the spirit you should bring to al alll of your important conversations in the coming week k. APRIL FOOL! I lied. week. In ffact, act, the opposite is true. It’s It’s crucial cru ucial for for you to speak
very pr ecisely an nd articulately in the coming week. precisely and Say exactly whatt you mean. Don’t Don’t rrely ely on meaningless bullshit like “bla h-blah.” “blah-blah.”
SCORPIO (Oc (Oct. ct. 23-Nov. 23-Nov. 21): When a human embryo develoop in the womb, the very first body part begins to develop is— —can you guess?—the anus. This that appears is—can fact ledd the witty commentators at QI.com scientific fact declare that “Every “Every human being starts out as an to declare w e making a joke, of course, hinting wer asshole.” They were of us has an unattr active quality or two that every one of unattractive That’s the bad that make us at least a little bit of a jerk. That’s Thhe good news is that you now have news, Scorpio. The unprecedenteed chance to transform transform the asshole an unprecedented p personality . APRIL FOOL! I lied. You’re You’r o e aspects of your personality. n even a little bit. But it is true that not an asshole, not weeks will be an excellent time to try to fix the coming weeks attractive qualities. moduulate your least attractive or at least modulate SAGITTARIIUS (Nov SAGITTARIUS (Nov.. 22 22-Dec. -Dec. 21): TToo be in strict compliancee with cosmic necessity y, you should necessity, attend a party ev very day in the coming week. Dance every ecstatically y, mak ke love abundantly y, and expose yourself ecstatically, make abundantly, to pr eviously unk known pleasur es. Feast on a wide previously unknown pleasures. variety of ffood ood aand nd drink that intr oduces you to novel introduces tastes. Make sur re you experience rrecord ecord levels of sure sensual enjoyme ent, nonstop excitement, and dynamic enjoyment, ating, al though APRIL FOOL! I’m exagger socializing. APRIL exaggerating, although just a little. TTry ry r ddoing oing a 70-per cent version of what I 70-percent advised. CAPRICORN N (Dec. 22 22-Jan. -Jan. 19): Lif Lifehacker.com ehacker.com has a step-by-step gu uide to set up your home as a command guide center wher u can pursue your plans ffor or world wheree yo you domination. The article pr ovides advice on how to build provides a sur veillance sy ystem, encrypt your computer files, surveillance system, and pr epare ffor or black-outs and weather emer gencies. prepare emergencies. Do it, CCapricorn! //bit.ly/ / apricorn! Get the lowdown at http:/ secr etlair. APRIL FOOL! I lied. You You o don’t don’t rreally eally need to secretlair. cr eate a high-te ch ffortress. ortress. But you would be wise to create high-tech make your homee into more more of an ultra-comfortable, ultra-comfortable, super-inspiring sanctuary—a s feel so place wher wheree you feel saf ong and smart that you will always have safee and str strong total power overr yourself, yourselff, and never feel feel driven to fulfill anyone else’s else’s sta andards of success but your own. standards AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The planetary omens suggest that youu need to experience all possible flavors of Doritos Doritos corn chips. Here’s Here’s the pr oblem: The problem: place wher ers only a limited rrange. ange. That ’s wheree you live off offers That’s why I ur ge you too dr op everything and tr avel to Japan, urge drop travel which is the wor rld leader in Dorito variety world variety.. Ther Theree you can sample coco onut cur ry-flavored Doritos, along coconut curry-flavored with fried chicke en, corn soup, smoked bacon, tuna and chicken, mayonnaise, andd many others. Buy your plane ticket now! APRIL FOO OL! I lied. The truth is, you will benefit FOOL! fr om communin from communingg with a wide variety of sensations and experiences andd ideas in many ar eas of your lif e, not areas life, just Doritos. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 19-March 20): A According ccordingg to a sur survey veyy by Public P olicy P olling, ffour our per cent of the population Policy Polling, percent believes that ““shape-shifting shhape-shifting rreptilian eptilian people contr ol control our world by tak ing on human fform orm and gaining taking political power ttoo manipulate our societies.”” My own rresearch esearch sugges sts that 62 per cent of those believers suggests percent ar aree Pisceans. Ar Aree you one? If so, now is a good time to intensify your fig ght against the shape-shifting rreptilian eptilian fight people. APRIL FO OOL! I lied. In ffact, act, I str ongly encour age FOOL! strongly encourage you NO eed your par anoid delusions and ffearful earful NOTT to ffeed paranoid rreveries. everies. This sho ould be a time when you bolster your should positive ffantasies, antasiees, constructive visions, and inspiring dr eams. dreams.
Homework: D Describe e escribe what you’d be like if weree the opposite of yourself yourself.. Write you wer Write Freewillastrology.com. Fr eewillastrollogyy..com. Visit RE Visit REALASTROLOGY.COM A L ASTROLOGY.COM ffor or R Rob’s ob’s Expanded E Weekly Weekly Audio Audio Hor oscope es and Daily Text Text Message Message Horoscopes Hor oscope es. The The audio horoscopes horoscopes Horoscopes. ar e also available available by by phone at at are 1.877.873.4888 1.877.873 3.4888 or 1.900.950.7700 1.900.950.7700
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ARIES (Mar (March ch 21-April 19): I hav have ve coined a new wor wordd just ffor or your hor oscope this week ’s “zex,” short for for horoscope week.. It It’s “zen sex.”” Zex is a kind of sex in which w your mind is at rrest, est, empty of all thoughts. YYou oou br eathe slowly and breathe calmly y, move slowly and calmly y, gr runt and moan slowly calmly, calmly, grunt and calmly y. YYou ou o ar etached fr om the calmly. aree completely de detached from sensual pleasur ncing. YYou oou have no pleasuree you ar aree experien experiencing. goals other than the intention to be free free of all goals. Zex is the ONL LY variety of sex I rrecommend eccommend ffor or you ONLY right now w, Aries. APRIL FOOL! I lie d. Zex may be fine now, lied. to pr actice at any other time, but not these days. The practice berant, unbridled, style of sex you need most is exub exuberant, expansive, and even zany zany..
A unique pet supply store experience with: All-natural pet foods. Grooming for all breeds of dogs and cats. Pet events on weekends.
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