![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/200409173953-ab4825f1116ca24b4d779a47a6e48ff4/v1/405cf84bda7fb36abd2cf8db3dab9be4.jpg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
3 minute read
On Entertainment
Persevering Through the Pandemic with Performances by Steven Libowitz
Steven Libowitz has reported on the arts and entertainment for more than 30 years; he has contributed to the Montecito Journal for more than 10 years.
The stated purpose of the Lois & Walter Capps Project is “Connecting our community through authentic and essential dialogue,” but its mission comes down to an even simpler three-word mantra, said president and executive director Todd Capps: “Bringing Us Together.”
That encompasses all of the project’s enterprises from Common Table – which began a few months after the Montecito debris flow with an event
Toad the Wet Sprocket’s Glen Phillips is one of the performers for the Lois & Walter Capps Project’s online music festival April 9 & 10
at MUS that drew more than 400 people to share food and words with their neighbors – to Coffee Conversations, a series of inclusive community conversations, beginning last winter, that was inspired by “Voices Of The Stranger,” a UCSB course taught by Todd Capps’ father, the late Walter Capps. United By Art applied the same concept to music, having the community congregate around the commonality of creativity, which so far has offered three public events starting last fall with a massive gathering on the 500 block of State Street.
Now, of course, all of those endeavors have been shelved in deference to protecting people via social distancing during the pandemic. But the desire to bring people together as a means for hope and healing, albeit only virtually, has only increased, Capps said.
That’s how “The Art of Community: Apart Together – A Home-Cooked Live Music Festival Online for the 805” was born. The two-day fest features lots of music, performed and shared live from the living rooms and studios of local artists, rock stars, pop acts, solo singer-songwriters, and more. The individual performances will stream live on UBA’s Facebook page (www.facebook.com/unitedbyart805) from 4-8 pm on both Thursday and Friday, April 9 & 10.
“Just as we came up with the loose and organic mission to create antidotes to the chronic feelings of divisiveness and opposition in our political and cultural climate over the last two years – ones that are inviting, inclusive, and enjoyable – we wanted to do the same thing during the current (COVID-19 crisis),” Capps said. “We have to distance ourselves physically, but it’s important to stay connected in community.”
Just because we’re all stuck at home social distancing, it doesn’t quiet the talented voices in our community, Capps said, noting that dozen of musicians have been spontaneously sharing their songs and thoughts online over any number of platforms. “We thought, ‘Why not create a virtual music festival?’”
So now we’ll sit down at the virtual common table for both music and words from musicians all over the area. Each of the 16 artists will perform 20-25-minute sets with just a five-minute break, a quicker set change than would be possible in person, and “as close as we can get to a music festival,” Capps said.
“Artists were posting things individually, and people were missing it because Facebook and other sites can be hard to navigate,” he said. “So we’re not reinventing the wheel, just curating the local extended Santa Barbara community and coalescing it into one space over one weekend
ENTERTAINMENT Page 334
WHEN BIG BANKS SAY NO, WE SAY YES! - TIM TAYLOR - YOUR LOCAL MORTGAGE LENDER
THE TAYLOR TEAM CLOSED $182 MILLION IN VOLUME IN 2019 TRADITIONAL PRODUCTS: ✓ JUMBO AND SUPER JUMBO ✓ LOW DOWN PAYMENT OPTIONS ✓ CONVENTIONAL NICHE PRODUCTS: ✓ BRIDGE LOANS ✓ REVERSE EXCHANGE FINANCING ✓ LOT & CONSTRUCTION LOANS AND PERMANENT FINANCING ✓ 12 MONTH BANK STATEMENT FOR THE SELF-EMPLOYED