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Fracking is Accelerating the Climate Crisis king c e r W e imat
Cl
Me
as thane G
Cornell scientists and others say the US fracked gas boom has become a leading driver of global heat records since 2014. Stopping the super-potent methane spewing – from fracked wells to power plants – is crucial to averting runaway climate chaos. Low-wealth communities and people of color are least responsible for global warming pollution but are suffering disproportionately. Duke Energy and the Koch brothers are driving the fracking boom and suppressing public debate.
Now is the time: Help slow climate change and advance clean energy! Join our campaign calling for a statewide ban on the import and use of fracked gas. 1. Get your organization, business or civic leaders to sign the Emergency Methane Action resolution to Governor Roy Cooper at ncwarn.org/ema. 2. Urge Gov. Cooper to provide national leadership by banning the use of fracked gas in NC: 919-814-2000, contactgov@nc.gov, 20301 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-0301. 3. Contact NC WARN for more ways to advance climate justice and cheaper, clean energy: ncwarn@ncwarn.org, 919-416-5077.
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inside
Sat May 13
MAY
Fr 12 PULSE: Electronic Dance Party Fr 12 GREENSKY BLUEGRASS
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Mothers Finest
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w w w.y e s w e e k l y. c o m
MAY 10-16, 2017 VOLUME 13, NUMBER 19
9p
w/Joshua Davis This Show is @ THE RITZ RALEIGH Sa 13 MOTHERS FINEST w/Doby 7p Mo 15 REAL ESTATE w/Frankie Cosmos
We 17 MAYDAY PARADE
w/Knuckle Puck / Milestones 7p
Fr 19 METAL MIKE’S 50th BASH
8p
Dirty Remnantz / Hayvyn/ Shamrock Saints Sa 20 BETTER OFF DEAD(Grateful Dead) w/Moon Water (WP tribute) Th 25 FRANZ FERDINAND w/Omni 7p Sa 27 CAPLETON w/Crucial Fiya/ 8p
Sa 3 Su 4 Fr 9 Fr 16
JUNE
DELTA RAE @ CATS CRADLE AFTON MUSIC SHOWCASE 6p MARCO BENEVENTO 8p TURNPIKE TROUBADOURS 7:30 w/Frenchie’s Blues Destroyers
Sa 17 BARCODE SILENT PARTY 2.0 Fr 23 OLD 97’s Fr 30 RED NOT CHILI PEPPERS
Real Estate
AGING OUT LOUD
Winston-Salem resident, CAROL ROAN, will turn 86 years old in August. “There seems to be an age,” she says, “when you suddenly become wise and inspirational instead of invisible. For me, that age was 84.” She was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress in a short film at Cannes, and she continued publishing her written work.
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8 - 2 MICHELLE BRANCH 8 - 4 COSMIC CHARLIE (Grateful Dead) 9 - 2 NEVERMIND w/Joe Hero
Fri May 12
Sat May 27
AUSTIN KINDLEY artdirector@yesweekly.com ADVERTISING Advertising Manager KATHARINE OSBORNE
kat@yesweekly.com
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Capleton
Fresh Starts and Full Plates marked a milestone for PROVIDENCE RESTAURANT & CATERING but the event last Sunday also marked giant leaps for hundreds of people whose lives have changed by being a part of Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina’s Triad Community Kitchen. 10 FRIDAY NIGHT MUSIC CLUB (FNMC) hit the Winston-Salem music scene in early 2017, and it’s quickly grown from one man’s passion project into a team effort that could aid many groups within the Triad, from nonprofits to students to musicians at large. 11 Among the summer blockbuster hopefuls roaring into multiplexes this summer, Disney/Pixar aims to reap a fair share of box-office bucks from CARS 3, the third (thus far) in the popular big-screen trilogy, and the studio is hitting the road nationwide to promote its latest animated extravaganza with Cars 3: Road to the Races.
Fri June 9
Greensky @The Bluegrass Ritz Adv. Tickets @Lincolntheatre.com & Schoolkids Records All Shows All Ages
St.
Contributors KRISTI MAIER JOHN ADAMIAN MARK BURGER RICH LEWIS STEVE MITCHELL BILLY INGRAM ALLISON STALBERG IAN MCDOWELL DEONNA KELLI SAYED MIA OSBORN PRODUCTION Graphic Designers ALEX ELDRIDGE designer@yesweekly.com
8P
w/The Harmony House Singers Su 30 HELLYEAH w/Kyng / Cane Hill 8p
MAY 10-16, 2017
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Franz Ferdinand
w/8-Track Minds
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EDITORIAL Editor JEFF SYKES jeff@yesweekly.com
Thu May 25
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Jack Bouboushian sometimes does a funny thing when he’s working on music with his bandmates in the psychedelic post-punk avant-blurt Chicago outfit CROWN LARKS. Bouboushian will occasionally write out parts for new material and then, when getting together with the band to rehearse, he’ll only show them portions of what he’s come up with. 19 I recently spoke with poet and fiction writer Fred Chappell about Ben Matthews and his Greensboro institution. “All bookstores should be eccentric,” said Fred, “and THE BROWSERY was the most so, particularly because of the clientele. And then you have Ben himself, the good shepherd of all us aardvarks.” 20 There are a lot of people in positions of influence and power who do not know what they are doing. Whether they are simply in over their heads or are trying to put something over on people, they are faking. In other words, there is a lot of BULLSHIT in this world masquerading as competence and authority.
Marketing BRAD MCCAULEY brad@yesweekly.com TRAVIS WAGEMAN travis@yesweekly.com CLAUDIA BURNETT claudia@yesweekly.com KAREN SCOTT karen@yesweekly.com Promotion NATALIE GARCIA
DISTRIBUTION JANICE GANTT We at YES! Weekly realize that the interest of our readers goes well beyond the boundaries of the Piedmont Triad. Therefore we are dedicated to informing and entertaining with thought-provoking, debate-spurring, in-depth investigative news stories and features of local, national and international scope, and opinion grounded in reason, as well as providing the most comprehensive entertainment and arts coverage in the Triad. YES! Weekly welcomes submissions of all kinds. Efforts will be made to return those with a self-addressed stamped envelope; however YES! Weekly assumes no responsibility for unsolicited submissions. YES! Weekly is published every Wednesday by Womack Newspapers, Inc. No portion may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. First copy is free, all additional copies are $1.00. Copyright 2017 Womack Newspapers, Inc.
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May 10-16, 2017
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5
be there
EVENTS YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS | BY AUSTIN KINDLEY
TRAVIS TRITT THURSDAY WINSTON-SALEM DASH THURSDAY
THUR 11
THUR 11
TRAVIS TRITT
WINSTON-SALEM DASH
WHAT: Travis Tritt and his full band are the first of multiple artists to visit the Winston-Salem Fairgrounds as part of the 2017 Classic Country Concert Series. More than 25 years after Travis Tritt launched his music career, the Grammy award-winning artist continues to sell-out shows, top sales charts and stay true and relevant to Country music fans across the globe. WHEN: 6 p.m. WHERE: Winston-Salem Fairgrounds Annex. 411 Deacon Blvd Winston-Salem. MORE: $20-$150 tickets.
WHAT: The Dash play at beautiful BB&T Ballpark in downtown Winston-Salem. The Dash offer the best family-friendly entertainment in the Triad! You can view Your Home Teams 2017 schedule and purchase your tickets at milb.com. WHEN: 7 p.m. WHERE: BB&T Ballpark. 951 Ballpark Way, Winston-Salem. MORE: $8-$16 tickets.
6 YES! WEEKLY
MAY 10-16, 2017
FRI 12
BOOK SIGNING FRIDAY
FRI 12
ART OF MURDER: A DARK AND MYSTERIOUS COMEDY
JOHN FRANCIS TRUMP BOOK SIGNING
WHAT: Jack Brooks, one of the most accomplished and eccentric painters of his generation, is patiently waiting for his art dealer to arrive. When the visit doesn’t go as planned, Jack lays out his intentions for retribution to his wife Annie. Will Jack carry out the plan? Will Annie help him? Or is something else going on? WHEN: 6 p.m. WHERE: The Barn Dinner Theatre. 120 Stage Coach Trail, Greensboro. MORE: $43-$63 tickets.
WHAT: Author John Francis Trump signing his new book, Still & Barrel: Craft Spirits in the Old North State. The event will also be a panel discussion about the state of craft distilling here in North Carolina, and the hardships and benefits of starting a craft distillery. Representatives from distilleries in the book will be present for the panel, along with some samples of their spirits. WHEN: 7 p.m. WHERE: Scuppernong Books. 304 South Elm St., Greensboro. MORE: Free entry.
SAT 13 MAYFEST WHAT: MayFest is a street festival sponsored yearly by the Pilot Mountain Civic Club to raise funds for local agencies, schools, fire departments, Toys for Tots, Pilot Mountain Outreach, and many others that help make our community better. Downtown is closed off to normal traffic for at least 130 spaces for arts and crafts. There are at least 20 food vendors. There is one area for the kids with inflatables. Musical bands will be playing most of the day at the Bandstand area. WHEN: All day WHERE: Downtown Pilot Mountain. MORE: Free entry.
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SATURDAY
SAT 13 PICKIN’ IN THE PARK BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL WhAT: Pickin In the Park is FREE to the public and is held in a beautiful, family friendly setting at Hagan Stone Park in Pleasant Garden, NC. Each festival features great national, regional and local bands, instrument workshops, food and craft vendors on the grounds. When: 10 a.m. WheRe: Hagan-Stone Park. 5920 Hagan-Stone Park Road, Pleasant Garden. MoRe: Free entry.
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SAT 13
ANNE-CLAIRE NIVER SATURDAY
SAT 13
DRAG QUEEN CAR WASH
HOPFEST
WhAT: It’s that time again for our annual Drag Queen Car Wash. Get your car washed, and support Pride Winston Salem $10.00 suggested donation. When: 11 a.m. WheRe: Washington Perk. 228 W Acadia Ave, Winston-Salem. MoRe: $10 suggested donation.
WhAT: At Hopfest, guests enjoy more than just beer. Born from a vision of revitalizing tired spaces in growing cities, Hopfest brings together exceptional craft beer, a solid selection of food trucks, local vendors, artisans, and makers in a pop-up flea market, and marvelous musicians. A one-of-a-kind festival right in Greensboro’s backyard. Featuring Marley Marl, Craig G, DJ JS1, Beatbox House, Meres One, Sloke One, Patch Whisky, Spud and Jerms. When: 5 p.m. WheRe: The Tracks. 302 W Gate City Blvd, Greensboro. MoRe: $10-$35 tickets.
SAT 13 ANNE-CLAIRE NIVER QUARTET WhAT: On select Saturdays, you can enjoy vintage craft cocktails and delightful tapas garnished with an eclectic array of jazz artists performing in the styles of contemporary jazz with no cover charge! This week’s featured artist is Anne-Claire Niver Quartet. When: 6:30 p.m. WheRe: Proximity Hotel. 704 Green Valley Road, Greensboro. MoRe: Free entry.
Tue 16 HAYMARKET RIOT WhAT: Songwriters and musicians Charlotte Whitted and Jon Epstein from the band HayMarket Riot will present their experiences collaborating with people experiencing homelessness in the Triad in a an effort to raise awareness of the experiences of the homeless and contribute to local philanthropic efforts. This presentation is brought to you by the Nashville Songwriters Association Piedmont Triad North Carolina chapter. When: 6:45 p.m. WheRe: Salem Music. 601 S Broad St, Winston-Salem. MoRe: www.nashvillesongwriters.com
May 10-16, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
7
triad foodies
EAT IT!
F Kristi Maier @triadfoodies
Contributor
Fresh Starts and Full Plates with Triad Community Kitchen
resh Starts and Full Plates marked a milestone for Providence Restaurant & Catering but the event last Sunday also marked giant leaps for hundreds of people whose lives have changed by being a part of Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina’s Triad
Community Kitchen. Nearly 200 supporters, sponsors and community leaders joined the gala to celebrate Triad Community Kitchen’s ten year anniversary and Providence is an extension of that organization. It was an inaugural stand-alone fundraising event “celebrating ten years of changing lives one recipe at a time.” Triad Community Kitchen, or TCK, has always been about fresh starts. The culinary training program is designed to help unemployed and underemployed individuals reach a goal of sustainable employment, particularly through the hospitality industry. In October 2015, Providence opened as a real world training ground for TCK graduates to be a part
(Left) Alumna Chef Janis Karanthas (Right) Co-chairs Linda Sullivan, Nan Griswold, CEO Clyde Ferguson, co-chair Ginger Hauser of the “learning continuum” and earn a living wage. The fundraiser also marked another opportunity for Providence to show its interpretation of Farm to Fork regional cuisine and to celebrate over 600 alumni as well as members and supporters of the organization, along with farmers and contributors, like other local chefs, restaurants and businesses.
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TICKETS: CAROLINATHEATRE.COM . 336.333.2605 MAY 10-16, 2017
Guests enjoyed a cocktail hour with silent auction and eventually moved to a ballroom where several farm-sponsored food stations were set up for service while the Wally West Little Big Band played old standards. Emcee for the evening was former WXII anchor Cameron Kent and the guests got to hear from leaders and alumni whose lives have been made the better since graduating from TCK. Founding Director and TCK Executive Chef Jeff Bacon said it was the perfect way to celebrate how far Second Harvest Food Bank has come and how they may continue to serve. Bacon brought the TCK concept, one which he had seen run successfully in other parts of the country, to Second Harvest Food Bank of NWNC ten years ago. He knew there was a need here and said he had to make it happen. Bacon says he’s proud of the impact it has had on others. “Technical skills are only part of the equation. You can teach a person how to dice or make a sauce or roast a chicken properly, but that doesn’t mean you will be successful in life or in the workplace. There’s so much more to it than that. There’s the family element here, the life skills, being coachable in a team environment, to believe in yourself. It’s amazing when you haven’t been encouraged in so long, what a little
encouragement will do. That’s what TCK and Providence do, they give people that culture of encouragement.” Clyde Ferguson, CEO of Second Harvest Food Bank of NWNC thanked supporters for helping them celebrate these milestones. “Our food bank’s mission is to provide food and hope to our neighbors who have far too little of both. While we simultaneously work with the people we serve and other fine organizations to help people change their life circumstances so that tomorrow, they won’t need help with those needs.” More than 300,000 people across 18
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counties receive more than 40 million pounds of food from Second Harvest Food Bank of NWNC. It’s all privately funded with donations (monetary and food) and contributions from citizens and organizations. Ferguson added, “In a biblical sense, we essentially are teaching these folks in need how to fish, so they can become self-sufficient in their lives.” Bacon says there are so many success stories of people who’d practically given up hope, but who’ve now gone on to positions of Executive Chef or Employee of the Year after leaving the TCK culinary program. One example is Vanessa Lanier, one of TCK’ s first graduates, who’s now Executive Chef at Providence. And Lanier, who’s originally from Barcelona, Spain, also spoke to the guests Sunday about her journey ten years ago, suddenly finding herself in a failed marriage with no job and no hope. “I went online to find a plane ticket to go home. And by the grace of God, I saw this ad for TCK and Chef Jeff Bacon’s name and I wrote an email to him. I went through school and through my internship, and I knew I could turn this around and be an example for my girls.” Years later, after successful stints in the restaurant industry and in country clubs, Lanier returned to TCK and now holds her current position. “Who knew that little ol’ me, from another country, who couldn’t drive a car when I got here, that because of the kindness and compassion that was given to me, that I’d be able to buy my own home, purchase my own car and more importantly, became WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
an example to my young daughters.” Lanier says she strives to be an extension of what was given to her. “It is by providence that I’m here to extend that compassion and kindness and I must pay forward to the people who come to this kitchen. It has been an honor and privilege and it has changed by life.” Guests were able to view posters with the testimony of other TCK graduates from years past, like Alex Galvis, who’s now the sous chef at The Lenox Hotel in Boston, or Terrell Anistead, who’s now a line cook at Winston-Salem’s popular Willow’s Bistro. Others like, Amber Castillo, have gone on to management positions at area restaurants. Each graduate has his or her own story to tell about how their lives were transformed with the Triad Community Kitchen. As Lanier said in her comments, while quite possibly stealing a few hearts, “We have to remind ourselves that even when we lift one person, we truly, truly are lifting humanity.” ! KRISTI MAIER is a food writer, blogger and cheerleader for all things local who even enjoys cooking in her kitchen, though her kidlets seldom appreciate her efforts.
WANNA
go?
Providence Restaurant & Catering is located 5790 University Parkway. providencerestaurantws.com. Every meal purchased supports Triad Community Kitchen. For more information about Triad Community Kitchen or Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina, visit hungernwnc.org.
Matthew Troy, Music Director
presents
& The Red Violin
Matthew Troy, conductor
Thursday, June 1, 2017 at 7:30 PM Stevens Center of the UNC School of the Arts
SEE THIS EPIC FILM ACCOMPANIED BY A LIVE SYMPHONY!
Featuring Bryan Emmon Hall, violin
Purchase your tickets at
www.piedmontwindsymphony.com/tickets
MAY 10-16, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
9
visions
SEE IT!
Friday night music club shakes up Winston-Salem
F
PAIN MANAGEMENT SERVICES, PA
CHRONIC PAIN MANAGEMENT OR IN-OFFICE OPIATE DETOX (Heroin, Methadone, Oxycodone, Oxycontin, etc.)
Buprenorphine Therapy (Suboxone/Zubsolv)
Jamestown, NC
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MAY 10-16, 2017
BY MIA OSBORN
riday Night Music Club (FNMC) hit the Winston-Salem music scene in early 2017, and it’s quickly grown from one man’s passion project into a team effort that could aid many groups within the Triad, from nonprofits to students to musicians at large. Considering FNMC’s potential impact, it’s lucky that Doug Davis found time to create it. “I have way too many projects,” Davis laughed. “My music life tends to be pretty schizophrenic.” In addition to running his recording studio, Flytrap Music Productions, the Winston-Salem resident plays in at least five bands, as well as writing and performing original songs. Now Davis has added FNMC to his roster. The monthly gigs combine singers and musicians who would not otherwise get the chance to play together into wildly different shows from month to month. “My idea, from a musical standpoint, is that I don’t want to throw three bands on a bill and call it a benefit,” said Davis. “We’re trying to program something every month that people have never seen before and probably won’t see again.” Proceeds from each show’s ticket sales benefit a new local nonprofit each month. Giving back has been a constant goal of FNMC ever since Davis first envisioned it as something of a one man show. “I’ve always loved being part of that downtown bar scene, but I found myself at a point where I didn’t really have an excuse for being there,” Davis said. “I realized I wasn’t doing it for the money. So I thought, this might be something I could do for charity.” The original plan was for Davis to play these charity shows himself, but his wife encouraged him to think bigger by mining contacts from his other projects, including Doug Davis & the Solid Citizens, The Plaids, and the Vagabond Saints Society. The last group also creates one-time themed shows that Davis staffs with musicians from his Rolodex. Davis wanted FNMC to be different, so he flipped the script by asking musicians what they really wanted to play. “Friday Night Music Club is a little more guerrilla in nature,” said Davis. “So I can go to people and say, ‘I can give you six or seven songs in front of a pretty big crowd. What’s your dream project?’ Cover, original, whatever it is that makes somebody’s
strange idea of a good time, we can do that.” FNMC has so far kept a low profile, but a string of good experiences has Davis actively promoting May’s show. “Winston Covers Winston” will feature community musicians covering songs written by other community musicians, including Drat the Luck, Gulley, The Hitchcock Fugitives, Clay Howard & the Threadbare Trio, Will Jones, Corky McClellan, Ken Mickey, and Jeff Wall. Previous FNMC shows were held at Bull’s Tavern, but this month the setting will change to The Garage. Davis is eager to reach a wider audience by playing in different settings. “Danielle Bull has been very supportive of this idea,” said Davis. “We’ll continue to do lots of things there, but the goal is to move around. We don’t want to use same venue and target same demographic every time.” June’s FNMC will be performed outdoors as part of a street festival, and will feature all original music. Later in the year, FNMC will tackle something Davis has wanted to try for a while: a band lottery in which musicians of all stripes volunteer to have their names randomly selected to create a one shot band. “We throw a lot of names in a hat and that self-created band can do anything they want with their 30 minutes,” said Davis. “They could get together and write songs, they could cover a bunch of Frank Zappa songs, whatever they want to do.” Davis hopes this emphasis on new partnerships and new material will inspire
emerging local musicians and possibly generate some fresh bands, all while collecting cash to be donated to Triad charities. “Winston Covers Winston” will benefit the nonprofit Authoring Action, which empowers teens through arts and leadership workshops. Revenue from the show will go to fund a scholarship for one creative local student. “That’s the kind of thing I’m interested in getting involved with. I know we won’t be able to contribute $10,000 for an endowment, but for now, $600 or $700 can be very useful to a local nonprofit,” said Davis. As the audience grows and more people come on board to help, FNMC is developing a life of its own, which suits Davis just fine. “I would love for this to become a self sustaining thing that’s bigger than me,” he said. “Every show we do, people talk to me about getting involved on different levels, whether musically or working with nonprofits or handling administrative stuff. I love the idea that this could develop into a real community project.” ! MIA OSBORN is a Greensboro-based freelance writer who hails from Birmingham, Alabama.
WANNA
go?
The next Friday Night Music Club will take place on May 19 at The Garage, 110 W. 7th St., WinstonSalem. The show starts at 9 p.m. Tickets are $7 at the door.
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Cars 3 promo rolls into Greensboro 101 West Fifth Street WSNC 27101 336.723.3700 Tickets Sold on ETIX & Local 27101
Mark Burger
Contributing columnist
Among the summer blockbuster hopefuls roaring into multiplexes this summer, Disney/Pixar aims to reap a fair share of box-office bucks from Cars 3, the third (thus far) in the popular bigscreen trilogy, and the studio is hitting the road nationwide to promote its latest animated extravaganza with Cars 3:
Road to the Races. This special event, which is free and open to the public (of all ages), will come to the Mack Trucks Brand & Product Line track in Greensboro on May 18. There will be free giveaways, special activities, a sneak peak at the upcoming film, and likely a few surprises along the way. There will be life-sized models of the most popular Cars (including principal speedster Lightning McQueen) that you can pose for pictures with. Alamo Rent A Car will present a street art booth featuring a giant coloring mural featuring the stars of Cars 3 and offer a collectible color pencil-pack souvenir, Coppertone is sponsoring a racing pit crew encouraging fans to participate in tire-changing activities and photo-sharing opportunities, Crest Toothpaste and Oral-B offer fans the chance to create a digital Cars 3 postcard and get Cars-themed oral products, Dole will supply delicious fruit and vegetable smoothies and recipes inspired by the WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
film, Mattel Toys has designed a special interactive play area with new play sets featuring animated locations from the film, as well as a display of die-cast model racers from the sport’s illustrious history. Attendees will also be treated to a special preview of Cars 3 in the “Cinetransformer” Mobile Movie Theater. Additionally, the sports national youth program NASCAR Acceleration Nation will reveal the science behind NASCAR racing, and elements from the NASCAR Hall of Fame offer a fun and informative glimpse into the history of NASCAR racing. The original Cars (released in 2006), which marked Paul Newman’s final screen performance (and his biggest box-office hit), earned Oscar nominations for Best Animated Feature and Best Song (“Our Town”), won the first Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film, and grossed over $450 million worldwide. The inevitable sequel, released in 2011, was the first Pixar film not to receive a single Oscar nomination, but grossed over $560 million worldwide. Then came the animated Disney Channel series “CarToons.” On June 16, Cars 3 opens in theaters nationwide. Once again, Owen Wilson provides the voice of veteran race-car Light-
ning McQueen, whose reign as champ comes to an end at the hands – and wheels – of a hot-shot new rival, Jackson Storm (voiced by Armie Hammer). Clearly, a high-speed comeback is in order! Cars 3 reunites much of the voice-over talent from the earlier installments, including Bonnie Hunt, Richard “Cheech” Marin, Larry the Cable Guy, Jenifer Lewis, Paul Dooley, Tony Shalhoub, Katherine Helmond and Pixar perennial John Ratzenberger, joined this time by Nathan Fillion, Kerry Washington, Cristina Alonzo, Margo Martindale and Chris Cooper. A veritable “Who’s Who” of professional racers also contribute: Darrell Waltrip, Jeff Gordon, Chase Elliott, Kyle Petty and reallife dad Richard … and, you just might hear Paul Newman, too. The films marks the feature directorial debut of Brian Fee, who’d been a storyboard artist on the earlier two films. Thus far, the Cars 3: Road to the Races tour has visited such cities as Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston, New York, Miami Dallas, Denver, Charlotte and Los Angeles, and will conclude in California at Sonoma Raceway June 24-25. The life-size character cars will also be prominent on the red carpet for the film’s world premiere Saturday, June 10. !
WANNA
6/11 Doors at 7:00 PM Show at 8:00 PM Advance $22 Door $27
6/30-7/2 Show at 5:00 PM Tickets $40-$90
go?
The Disney/Pixar Cars 3: Road to the Races event will take place 12 pm-5 pm Thursday, May 18 at Mack Trucks Brand & Product Line, 7900 National Service Road, Greensboro. Admission is free. For more information, visit the official website: http:// movies.disney.com/cars-3-tour.
6/30 Show at 8:00 PM MAY 10-16, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
11
tunes
The fruitful anarchy of Crown Larks
BY JOHN ADAMIAN
PHOTOS BY GREG STEPHEN REIGH
ack Bouboushian sometimes does a funny thing when he’s working on music with his bandmates in the psychedelic post-punk avant-blurt Chicago outfit Crown Larks. Bouboushian will occasionally write out parts for new material and then, when getting together with the band to rehearse, he’ll only show them portions of what he’s come up with. He has a taste for flying blind. It’s a little like the Surrealist parlor game known as Exquisite Corpse, where one person draws a portion of a figure -- a head or a torso, say -- and then, with the paper folded so that the first part can’t be seen, someone else draws the next portion, making for a sort of disjointed composition, where one part fits together with the next, but maybe in a jarring way. With the Crown Larks songs, Bouboushian’s bandmates get to hear a part of what the vocalist and guitarist came up with, but maybe he’ll leave out the bass groove or the beat, in hopes that bass player
“Controlled chaos” is a big part of the aesthetic. Listening to Population, the band’s new full-length, which just came out at the start of this month, one can hear the control and one can hear the chaos.
Matt Puhr or drummer Bill Miller will think of something more interesting. “We’re trying to generate ideas,” says Bouboushian of the process. It’s less about meticulously realizing some vision that he or any one member of the band has, and more about group creativity.
“Our music lives or dies on having five or six ideas happening at once,” says Bouboushian. That gives you an indication of the vibe. If you don’t like the thought of five or six -- possibly competing -- things happening at the same time in music, you might find Crown Larks to be a little dense, spastic and off-putting. But if a tangled mesh presents intriguing textures and possibilities to your mind and ears, then Crown Larks will keep you occupied. (Crown Larks play The Garage in Winston-Salem on Wednesday, May 17 at 9 p.m., with Dark Prophet Tongueless Monk and Knives of Spain.) This is a band that can pivot from freak-folk to krautrock to free jazz to psychedelic trippiness and lurching post-punk funk. Crown Larks released their debut EP, Catalytic Conversion, in 2013 and a full-length, Blood Dancer, in 2015. Odd meters, jagged
GEARS & GUITARS MUSIC FESTIVAL May 26–29 COLLECTIVE SOUL
COREY SMITH
TONIC THE BLUE STONES
May 26, gates open at 6 p.m.
May 27, gates open at 5 p.m.
Photo: Joseph Guay
MUSCADINE BLOODLINE ERIC DODD
FREE MEMORIAL DAY CONCERTS Food Trucks, Family Activities, and Walk & Roll
BARENAKED LADIES
MIPSO
EDWIN MCCAIN SUSTO
May 28, gates open at 6 p.m.
CLAY HOWARD AND THE SILVER ALERTS THE PLAIDS Photo: Sasha Israel
J
HEAR IT!
HANK, PATTIE & THE CURRENT
May 29, 1 – 7 p.m.
All Performances are at Bailey Park · Rain or Shine · Food and Beverages Available for Purchase
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metrical fragments that displace one’s sense of where a phrase starts or stops, overlapping patterns of differing length that only line up after a prolonged stretch, thick clouds of echo, Morse Code organ signals, braided guitar lines, hypnotic drones, chime-like harmonics, hissing circuitry. Sonic Youth, Sun Ra, Saccharine Trust, Can and the Doors all come to mind at different times when listening to Crown Larks. The idea of music-making as a community-based activity with revolutionary potential is built into the philosophy of Crown Larks. Bouboushian, 31, and his bandmates cite the fertile history of DIY music in Chicago as an ongoing source of inspiration. In the ‘60s, ‘70s and beyond, the jazz-leaning Association for the Advancement of Creative Music (AACM) tied together radical politics, radical music and community. The city is also home to many notable small, independent labels, like Touch & Go, that helped foster the alternative and indie rock scene that helped bands like Nirvana emerge on the national radar in the ‘90s. Bouboushian and fellow Crown Larks partner Lorraine Bailey, a multi-instrumentalist, started the band after returning to Chicago, where they had met during college, and living in a space that allowed for music-making that was uninhibited by concerns about volume. “It was one of the first times in my life when I was able to play as loud as I want whenever I wanted to,” says Bouboushian. The freedom to make noise is related to the freedom to work with other musicians and artists in an open setting, to see what comes of it. “From the start, that was sort of the idea, to play with as many people as possible,” says Bouboushian. Music scenes can feel a little selfselecting, even within a big vibrant city, so that one sometimes gets the sense of working with the same set of like-minded people. As a way of adding more randomWWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
ness to the equation, Bouboushian says he and Bailey have sought out collaborators through online spaces like Craigslist, which is how they teamed up with Miller, the band’s drummer. Bouboushian speaks of “having a vague purpose in mind, but being open to chance,” both in terms of the actual music, and with regard to the organizing principles of how the band collaborates. “The music is part of a larger cultural scene that’s trying to develop, that’s trying to be free of commercial constraints,” he says. An exciting sense of potential can emerge as a project gets started, and one wants to nurture that spark for as long as possible. “A lot of the time, the most fun and the most positive energy you feel is right when an idea develops,” says Bouboushian. “I tried to maintain that kind of energy and anarchy.” He refers to it as “positive chaos,” of trying not to be constrained by “preconceived notions.” The end result might be a simmering broth with agonized vocals in spots, with bass and drums punching out pointed accents of tumbling triplets and abrupt stops, like on “Circus Luvv” from the new record. It’s a kind of musical freedom that can be unsettling. “We’re not gonna be weirdos because we’re just committed to that idea,” says Bouboushian. “We’re just gonna be ourselves, but it turns out it is pretty weird to just be yourself.” ! JOHN ADAMIAN lives in Winston-Salem, and his writing has appeared in Wired, The Believer, Relix, Arthur, Modern Farmer, the Hartford Courant and numerous other publications.
WANNA
go?
Crown Larks play The Garage, 110 W. 7th St., Winston-Salem, Wednesday, May 17, 9 p.m., with Dark Prophet Tongueless Monk, and Knives of Spain. www.the-garage.ws Pub: YES! Weekly
MAY 10-16, 2017 YES! WEEKLY Client: Crystal Coast TD
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Submissions should be sent to artdirector@yesweekly.com by Friday at 5 p.m., prior to the week’s publication. Visit yesweekly.com and click on calendar to list your event online. home grown muSic Scene | compiled by Austin Kindley
ASHEBORO
FOUR SAINTS BREWING
218 South Fayetteville St. | 336.610.3722 foursaintsbrewing.com May 12: Josh Marlowe May 13: Delta Son May 17: Irish/Celtic Music Session May 19: Shiloh Hill May 20: Reed Turchi Jun 2: Wolfie Calhoun Jun 3: Ziggy Pockets Jun 7: Irish/Celtic Music Session
clEmmOnS
RIvER RIDGE TAPHOUSE 1480 River Ridge Dr | 336.712.1883 riverridgetaphouse.com May 10: Karaoke w/ DJ Tyler May 12: Pop Guns! May 19: Exit 180 May 24: Karaoke w/ DJ Tyler May 26: Landon Wall May 30: Karaoke w/ DJ Tyler Jun 2: Honkey Tonk Outlaw Jun 16: Morgan Keene Band Jun 23: Big Daddy Mojo Jun 30: Brothers Pearl
vILLAGE SQUARE TAP HOUSE
6000 Meadowbrook Mall Ct | 336.448.5330 May 13: Exit 180 May 20: Southern Eyes Jun 3: Shmack Daniels Jun 10: Lasater Union
dAnBuRy
GREEN HERON ALE HOUSE
1110 Flinchum Rd | 336.593.4733 greenheronclub.com May 12: Dell Guthrie Blues Extraction
gREEnSBORO
ARIZONA PETE’S
2900 Patterson St #A | 336.632.9889 arizonapetes.com May 12: 1-2-3 Friday May 14: Animals As Leaders May 20: Suffocation Jun 4: P-Lo Jun 15: Reel Big Fish
ARTISTIKA NIGHT CLUB 523 S Elm St | 336.271.2686 artistikanightclub.com May 12: DJ Dan the Player May 13: DJ Paco and DJ Dan the Player
BIG PURPLE
812 Olive St. | 336.302.3728 May 13: Colleen Raney Trio May 25: Dave Cecil Band Jun 23: Lacy Green
THE BLIND TIGER
1819 Spring Garden St | 336.272.9888 theblindtiger.com May 12: Brandy Clark & Charlie Worsham May 13: Robert Randolph & The Family Band
SATURDAY, MAY 13
PURCHASE TICKETS ONLINE IN ADVANCE | PACKAGE DEALS AVAILABLE ADMISSION AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
WWW.CAROLINABREWSFEST.COM MAY 10-16, 2017
BUCKHEAD SALOON
1720 Battleground Ave | 336.272.9884 buckheadsaloongreensboro.com
BURKE STREET PIZZA 2223 Fleming Road | 336.500.8781 burkestreetpizza.com
CHURCHILL’S ON ELM
213 S Elm St | 336.275.6367 churchillscigarlounge.com May 13: Sahara Reggae Band May 20: Jack Long Old School Jam Jun 2: DJ Precise Jun 10: Sahara Reggae Band Jun 17: Jack Long Old School Jam
THE CORNER BAR
1700 Spring Garden St | 336.272.5559 corner-bar.com May 11: Live Thursdays May 18: Live Thursdays
COMEDY ZONE
1126 S Holden Rd | 336.333.1034 thecomedyzone.com May 11: Julie Scoggins May 12: Jerry Farber with Cyrus Steele May 13: Jerry Farber with Cyrus Steele May 19: Spanky Brown May 20: Spanky Brown May 26: Monte Allen May 27: Monte Allen June 2: Chris Wiles June 3: Chris Wiles June 9: Michael Mack June 10: Michael Mack June 16: Julie Scoggins June 17: Julie Scoggins June 23: Darren “DS” Sanders June 24: Darren “DS” Sanders June 30: Sid Davis July 1: Sid Davis
HIGH POINT ALL NC CRAFT BEERS & CIDERS FOOD TRUCK RODEO LIVE MUSIC FROM THE ENDS ARTISANS & VENDORS ACTIVITIES & PET ZONE
14 YES! WEEKLY
May 17: Fat Catz & Disco Risque May 20: Create ft. Buku w/ Devious, Scales B2B Malfunctron, violinix, Firekeys May 23: Alteras & varsity May 24: Electric Soul Pandemic & Duk Tan May 25: PNB Rock May 26: The Billy Folks CD Release Show May 27: Get Rude Reunion show with ASRG & Resist Jun 1: Of Tyrants & Footage Of A Yeti, Guatama, Sidelines, Hollow Eyes Jun 2: Hail The Sun, Caspize, Eidola, Limbs, Hopesick Jun 3: Maxo Kream Jun 4: Jahman Brahman & Elusive Groove Jun 6: Beach Casino & North11 Jun 9: A Boogie wit da Hoodie Jun 10: Create. Ft. Megalodon, Midnight T w/ Crowell, & more Jun 15: Perpetual Groove with Brocolli Samurai Jun 16: Miss May I - Upon A Burning Body, Kublai Khan, Currents, Peacekeepers Jun 19: Fit For An Autopsy, Tombs, Moon Tooth, Daedalvs
MEET & GREET W/ BILLY ZABKA OF KARATE KID FAME
SATURDAY, MAY 13, 7-10PM $25 per person for Autograph Signing! Photos with Billy for anyone after!
534 N. Liberty St., Winston-Salem NC 27101 • 336-893-6697 www.rebootarcadebar.com • TUE-FRI 4pm-2am • SAT-SUN 12pm-2am ALL AGES WELCOME SAT-SUN 12pm-6pm
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common groundS 11602 S Elm Ave | 336.698.3888 may 26: Andrew Kasab
conE dEnIm
117 S Elm St | 336.378.9646 cdecgreensboro.com may 12: chase rice may 19: nF Jun 2: Biz markie Jun 16: John mulaney Jun 18: J cole Jun 22: Thunder from down under Jun 24: Blackbear Jul 13: Tom Segura Jul 14: Kehlani
ThE grEEn BEAn
341 S. Elm St | 336.691.9990 thegreenbeancoffeehouse.blogspot.com
grEEnE STrEET cluB
113 N Greene St | 336.273.4111 may 12: The last Stand Jun 15: open mic Showcase & grad Party
hAm’S gATE cITY
3017 Gate City Blvd | 336.851.4800 hamsrestaurants.com may 12: Signature Soundz may 19: michael Bennett may 26: Sahara
hAm’S nEw gArdEn
1635 New Garden Rd | 336.288.4544 hamsrestaurants.com may 12: Tyler millard Band may 19: Freddy Atkins Trio may 26: J Timber/Joel henry
SomEwhErE ElSE TAvErn
5713 W Friendly Ave | 336.292.5464 facebook.com/thesomewhereelsetavern may 12: 8 vacant graves, Bleedseason may 19: The culturalist may 20: mirada, headfirst For halos, reason|define, Fall river massacre may 27: Sixth Sense, Education in reverse, Antenora, discoveries, days To Break, deep hollow Jun 3: The norm Jun 10: mirada, Breathing Serenity, visions of Beauty Jun 17: The culturalist, Key of Betrayal, lunacy rain
SPEAKEASY TAvErn
1706 Battleground Ave | 336.378.0006 may 12: Julian Sizemore may 19: Southern Fiction may 26: Pay rock & david mclaughin
ThE IdIoT Box comEdY cluB
2134 Lawndale Dr | 336.274.2699 www.idiotboxers.com Jun 23: Sean Patton
world oF BEEr
1210 Westover Terrace | 336.897.0031 worldofbeer.com/Locations/Greensboro
high point
AFTEr hourS TAvErn
1614 N Main St | 336.883.4113 afterhourstavern.net may 27: louder, Kwik Fixx, dog daze Jun 10: mightier Than me
FIND OUT MORE AT ORANGETHEORYFITNESS.COM Jamestown Location | 5710 W Gate City Blvd., Suite T | Greensboro, NC 27407 | 336.663.1056 Or join our flagship Triad location currently open at 1410 Westover Terr | Suite 100 B, Greensboro, NC 27408 | 336.246.2977 Orangetheory®, OTF® and other Orangetheory® marks are registered trademarks of Ultimated Fitness Group LLC. ©Copyright 2017 Ultimate Fitness Group LLC and/or its affiliates. First-time visitors and local residents only. Certain restrictions apply. *Visit orangetheoryfitness/termsofuse for additional information.
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MAY 10-16, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
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bluE bourbon jack’S
1310 N Main St | 336.882.2583 reverbnation.com/venue/bluebourbonjacks jun 9: Southern Eyes jun 23: Southbound 49 Sep 23: Southern Eyes oct 6: jukebox revolver
claddagh rEStaurant & Pub
130 E Parris Ave | 336.841.0521 thecladdaghrestaurantandpub.com
ham’S Palladium 5840 Samet Dr | 336.887.2434 hamsrestaurants.com may 12: bak at Ya may 19: radio revolver may 26: brothers Pearl
libErtY brEwErY
914 Mall Loop Rd | 336.882.4677 hghosp.com
jamestown
thE dEck
118 E Main St | 336.207.1999 thedeckatrivertwist.com may 12: jill goodson band may 13: Soul central may 19: norlina may 20: tba may 26: jukebox revolver may 27: jaxon jill
kernersville
dancE hall dazE
612 Edgewood St | 336.558.7204 dancehalldaze.com may 12: the delmonicos may 13: time bandits may 19: cheyenne may 20: crimson rose may 26: the delmonicos may 27: Silverhawk
thE EmPourium
734 E. Mountain St. | 336.671.9159
lewisville
old nick’S Pub
191 Lowes Foods Dr | 336.747.3059 OldNicksPubNC.com may 11: holly manus may 12: karaoke w/ dj tyler Perkins may 13: Prom night w/ dj don mcclain may 19: Soul jam may 20: karaoke w/ dj tyler Perkins may 25: acoustic music
oak ridge
jP loonEY’S
2213 E Oak Ridge Rd | 336.643.1570 facebook.com/JPLooneys may 11: trivia
randleman
ridEr’S in thE countrY 5701 Randleman Rd | 336.674.5111 ridersinthecountry.net may 12: damfino band may 13: rare Form may 19: brothers Pearl may 20: doc holliday may 26: Fair warning may 27: Fair warning
winston-salem
2nd and grEEn
207 N Green St | 336.631.3143 2ngtavern.com
bull’S tavErn
408 West 4th St | 336.331.3431 facebook.com/bulls-tavern may 12: Elusive groove may 13: the Plaids may 16: jim moody & Friends may 20: Stereo doll may 27: Savi Fernandez band
cb’S tavErn
3870 Bethania Station Rd | 336.815.1664 may 12: confuzion may 19: jack of clubs may 26: dustin York jun 16: dom mcmanus
Finnigan’S wakE
620 Trade St | 336.723.0322 facebook.com/FinnigansWake may 13: cc3 may 17: Patrick rock may 27: abe reid and the Spike drivers jun 3: the mulligans jun 10: jukebox revolvers jun 30: dana & Evan
FoothillS brEwing
638 W 4th St | 336.777.3348 foothillsbrewing.com may 10: the Eversole brothers may 13: lizzy ross may 14: Sunday jazz may 17: greg wilson and the Second wind may 20: the Pop guns may 21: Sunday jazz may 24: the ruckus may 28: Sunday jazz
thE garagE
110 W 7th St | 336.777.1127 the-garage.ws may 17: dark Prophet tongueless monk, crown larks, knives of Spain may 18: Stellar circuits, lemon Sky may 20: cuzco, jet black alley cat may 25: Sofia talvik may 26: 1970’s Film Stock “birds” album release party w/ the bronzed chorus, transport 77 may 27: taylor bays and the laser rays, drat the luck, Pinche gringo
hickorY tavErn
206 Harvey St | 336.760.0362 thehickorytavern.com may 11: mike bustin acoustic may 18: mike bustin acoustic
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johnnY & junE’S Saloon
2105 Peters Creek Pkwy | 336.724.0546 johnnynjunes.com May 17: Wayland jun 24: The lacs, Crucifix, and Southern Eyes jun 27: otherwise, Righteous Vendetta, Through Fire, a light Divided
laughing gaS CoMEDY Club
2105 Peters Creek Pkwy laughingas.net May 12: jason benci May 13: jason benci May 19: becky Robinson May 20: becky Robinson jun 10: Smokey Suarez
MaC & nElli’S
4926 Country Club Rd | 336.529.6230 macandnellisws.com May 10: Karaoke w/ Dj Chris May 11: Chad & Dom May 12: Stephen henson, later jon & David May 13: Double Down May 14: johnny The one Man band May 15: Mike bustin May 18: Dom & Chad May 19: Stephen henson, Michael lewis May 20: Morgan Keene band May 22: Mike bustin May 25: Megan Doss May 26: Stephen henson
MillEnniuM CEnTER
101 West 5th Street | 336.723.3700 MCenterevents.com jun 11: Shovels and Rope jun 30: heavy Rebel Weekender
MilnER’S
May 27: usual Suspects May 28: Rob Price jun 1: open Mic w/ Country Dan Collins jun 2: Russell lapinski jun 3: Ryan newcomb jun 4: Phillip Craft jun 9: Chief’s Choice jun 10: not Ready band jun 24: usual Suspects
MuDDY CREEK MuSiC hall
5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 May 13: urban Soil May 14: Dan River girls - CD Release May 18: Front Country May 19: Christy Snow May 20: Kevin Maines and The Volts May 21: Curley, hyde, & o’Meachair May 26: Chelsea Sorrell with Taylor Vaden May 27: Suzy McCalley, abigail Dowd, Clay howard May 28: across the blue Ridge w/ Paul brown ft. The onlies jun 3: aaron burdett CD Release Show jun 4: billy Strings with Presley baker jun 7: braiden Sunshine from The Voice jun 9: RKiii jun 15: justin Cody Fox jun 17: banna jun 18: Mean Mary jun 21: jon Stickley Trio jun 23: Riverbend Reunion jun 24: amanda Cook and Kennesaw Ridge jun 27: Marbin jun 30: Christiane & The Strays
PiEDMonT MuSiC CEnTER 212 N Broad St
630 S Stratford Rd | 336.768.2221 milnerfood.com May 14: live jazz May 21: live jazz
QualiTY inn
MuDDY CREEK CaFE
1420 W 1st St | 336.893.6881 thequietpint.com
5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 May 11: open Mic w/ Country Dan Collins May 12: Rush and Max bloomquist May 13: The hitchcock Fugitives May 14: Rob Price May 18: open Mic w/ Country Dan Collins May 19: Chad barnard May 20: Chris nelson & The alternate Roots May 21: Rob Price May 25: open Mic w/ Country Dan Collins May 26: Sam Foster
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2008 S. Hawthorne Rd | 336-765-6670
ThE QuiET PinT
TEE TiME SPoRTS & SPiRiTS
3040 Healy Dr | 336.760.4010 May 13: big Daddy Mojo jun 3: honky Tonk outlaws jul 15: jaxon jill aug 19: Fuhnetik union
MAY 10-16, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
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[CONCERTS] Compiled by Alex Eldridge
CARY
1642 Spring Garden St., GSO (corner of Warren St.)
BOOTH AMPHITHEATRE
Phone: 336.274.1000 Hours: Mon-Sat 11 am-2am / Sun noon-2 am
8003 Regency Pkwy | 919.462.2025 www.boothamphitheatre.com May 10: Yolanda Rabun Jun 7: Paul Simon
Open grill till 2am every night!
Best Daily Drink Specials
CHARLOTTE
BOJANGLES COLISEUM
Greensboro’s home for the Washington Redskins!
2700 E Independence Blvd | 704.372.3600 www.bojanglescoliseum.com May 14: Charlie Wilson & Johnny Gill
EVERYDAY: $2 domestic bottles & $3 import bottles & well drinks
CMCU AMPHITHEATRE former Uptown Amphitheatre 820 Hamilton St | 704.549.5555 www.livenation.com May 12: Weezer Jun 6: Paul Simon
TUE: $1.50 domestics & $1 off liquor WED: $3.50 well drinks & $2.50 import bottles
Great Food Prices!
1000 NC Music Factory Blvd | 704.916.8970 www.fillmorecharlottenc.com May 14: Sylvan Esso w/ Lucy Dacus May 18: Rüfüs Du Sol May 19: Brandy May 20: Zoso - Tribute to Led Zeppelin
$2 domestics
come in and check out our new menu
PNC MUSIC PAVILION 707 Pavilion Blvd | 704.549.1292 www.livenation.com May 13: Chris Stapleton May 14: Future Jun 3: Train
TWC ARENA
THE FILLMORE
Sunday Special:
May 21: Ninja Sex Party May 21: Sabaton May 23: Franz Ferdinand May 26: Adrian Uribe May 26: Capleton & The Prophecy Band May 27: Real Friends May 27: Tour De Fat Afterparty May 28: Kehlani May 31: Miky Chance Jun 2: Delta Rae Jun 2: City and Colour Jun 3: Biz Markie
333 E Trade St | 704.688.9000 www.timewarnercablearena.com May 17: The Weeknd
CHECK IT OUT!
309 W Morgan St | 919.560.3030 www.carolinatheatre.org May 16: Robert Randolph & The Family Band May 23: George Thorogood and The Destroyers Jun 5: Joe Jackson Jun 6: Toto
DPAC
123 Vivian St | 919.680.2787 www.dpacnc.com May 11: Pixies May 17: The Tenors
GREENSBORO
CAROLINA THEATRE 310 S Greene St | 336.333.2605 www.carolinatheatre.com May 19: Chad Eby Quintet May 25: NC Brass Band Jun 6: Joe Jackson Jun 8: Rhiannon Giddens
GREENSBORO COLISEUM
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1921 W Gate City Blvd | 336.373.7400 www.greensborocoliseum.com May 20: Eric Church Jun 7: Chance the Rapper Jun 12: Journey
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3801 Rock Quarry Rd | 919.831.6400 www.livenation.com May 12: Chris Stapleton May 13: Future May 17: Kings of Leon May 20: Brad Paisley Jun 4: Train
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500 S McDowell St | 919.996.8800 www.redhatamphitheater.com May 12: Bastille May 14: The XX May 26: Maxwell w/ Ledisi & Leela James Jun 6: Glass Animals Jun 14: Dirty Heads & Soja
PNC ARENA
1400 Edwards Mill Rd | 919.861.2300 www.thepncarena.com May 24: The Chainsmokers
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18 YES! WEEKLY
MAY 10-16, 2017
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spotlight
The Browsery: A beloved bookstore’s final chapter
I
BY IAN MCDOWELL
recently spoke with poet and fiction writer Fred Chappell about Ben Matthews and his Greensboro institution. “All bookstores should be eccentric,” said Fred, “and the Browsery was the most so, particularly because of the clientele. And then you have Ben himself, the good shepherd of all us aardvarks.” Soon, probably in July, the crown prince of caustic bibliophilia will be closing his doors, although he intends to sell as many used books as he can before then. When I posted about Ben’s sale on Facebook, some expressed surprise he’s still open. Ben attributes that misconception to his 2003 move from his old location at 504 Elm Street to his present space at 516 Elm. “The Greensboro paper had a big headline on the first page of the local sections, The Browsery Turns a Page, and folks thought we were closing rather than moving. We’ve never had the traffic we had at the old place. Every so often over the past fourteen years, somebody wanders in and acts surprised we’re still here. Soon we won’t be. Once the payment is made, we’ll have sixty days to vacate. It’s been a good run.” It has indeed. Ben was born in Fort Valley, Georgia, and came to UNCG in 1967, two years after they first admitted men. “I wanted to study with Dr. Joseph Bryant, the Chairman of the English Department, with whom I’d taken Freshman English at Sewanee. But he left for Syracuse, and then my father was murdered and I had to drop out. I always kept thinking I would get back to school but somehow I never did. A shame I didn’t -- it would have only been two or three more years and thousands of dollars wasted.” Before Greensboro, Ben had managed a retail bookstand and newsstand in Georgia. In April of 1976, he opened the first Browsery at 547 South Mendenhall, where Firehouse Grocery is now. “I came here and couldn’t find a damn bookstore, not for miles around. Finally found the Book Corner in Durham. They arranged by publisher. Used books. By publisher. I cussed that man out and never went back. His name was Marley. I’ve always said that if I wrote my memoirs of bookselling, I’d paraphrase Dickens and say ‘To begin with: Marley was still alive.’” Greensboro was different in those days. “Adult bookstores were a big thing. I used to have people call and say, do you have adult books? I would reply, but of course! It took a while to realize they were making an inquiry I wasn’t answering. Many times
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late in the evening I would have squirrely fellows in coats and ties and hats browse the shelves, looking like they thought they might get contaminated if they touched anything. That was the vice squad looking for pornography.” A few years later, he had a second location downtown. “By about 1984, I opened on 504-506 Elm. The Mendenhall location closed around 2000. Maybe earlier. It got to the point where I couldn’t operate everything. But I’ve never sold as many books or had as much fun as when I was in College Hill. There was friendliness and a casualness about that that was just perfect.” Ben seems disinclined to name the most valuable collectibles that have passed through his stores over the years. “I’ve not sought treasures, but I’ve found a few. One was a book called Tactics of Calvary, a 1793 NC imprint with folding charts showing the movements of military horse corps.” I ask him if he still has it. “Lordy no, it paid for many, many lunches. One of the things I most enjoyed finding was a true first edition of Catcher in the Rye, which I sold when it was worth about a thousand.” Now he reckons it would go for twenty times that. “The treasures to me are not the things that are monetarily valuable, but that meant something personally, like finding a signed Robert Frost first printing, or a Robert Penn Warren or Randall Jarrell. Those just went to my house and never came out.” Ben has thought of retirement before. “I dreamed of turning sixty and doing a limited printing of the Benjy sections of The Sound in the Fury with differently colored text to indicate different time levels, as Faulkner had talked about doing,
instead of italics. But a few years ago, the Folio Society did that and it’s $350 and I can’t even afford the damned thing. I’m 77, so I’ve gone 12 years beyond what would have been retirement age, and Jill Faulkner Summers, whose permission I would have needed, has died. And Cleanth Brooks
whom I wanted to write a preface for it, he’s died, too.” So what does the future hold? “The obvious,” says Ben, with a typically mordant chuckle. “But before then, I’m not going to beg on the street. I will do some selling, I guess, on the internet. And I have a booth at Golden Antiques and Treasures on 341 Ram Loop off 220 North in Stokesdale. When I was young, I wanted to become a bookseller, and now it looks like I’ve become a bookkeeper. One of the great joys of having been in business is that college kids used to come in on dates. Over the years I’ve seen them come in and marry and become parents and seen what joys they can bring forth in the way of wonderfully educated children. There is no business you can go into in which you will meet a finer caliber of client.” Prove Ben right. Before he closes for good, and whether to take advantage of his sale or just say hi, come visit the Browsery at 516 North Elm Street in Greensboro from 11:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday (336-274-3231). !
Speakeasy
the tavern SPRING & SUMMER MUSIC SERIES JOIN US EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT FROM 8PM - 11PM FOR LIVE MUSIC ON THE PATIO NO COVER!
MAY 12 - Julian Sizemore & Keith Allen MAY 19 - Southern Fiction MAY 26 - Pat Rock & David McLaughlin 1708 Battleground Ave Greensboro, NC 27408 336-378-0006 MAY 10-16, 2017
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Learn to recognize phonies BY ROCH SMITH JR. There is something that took me a while to notice and even longer to believe. There are a lot of people in positions of influence and power who do not know what they are doing. Whether they are in over their heads or are trying to put something over on people, they are faking. In other words, there is a lot of bullshit in this world masquerading as competence and authority. The better you can distinguish between phonies and competent people, the better you can avoid demoralizing letdowns. Here are some of the ways I’ve noticed that pretenders and fakers control people. Fear Some things should be feared. The consequences of harming another person; the consequences of smoking cigarettes. Some fears are legitimate primal warnings against real harm to your body or psyche. But one of the favorite tactics of bullshitters is to stoke needless fear. It diverts attention from their shortcomings. The chance of you being attacked by a terrorist is truly small. You have a far greater chance of being killed by a heart attack. So if you live in fear of terrorism while you ignore your doctor’s warning to stop eating corn-dogs, you have your fear response backward. You have been manipulated. Fakers will often play upon intangible fears too. Fear of being ostracized and fear of ‘failure’ are the kinds of intangible fears fakers love to stoke to keep people from acting on their own thoughts and
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motives. Fear of these kinds of things is hardly ever a good reason for an autonomous person to make a decision about anything. “Credentials” Someone who graduates from medical school can put M.D. after her name. Someone who tacks an abbreviation on to her name after attending a one-day seminar is an overcompensating bullshitter. Don’t assume a string of letters after someone’s name makes her an authority on anything unless you know it represents real accomplishment. If your local TV news introduces an “expert” as having a “background in psychology,” you should wonder why she was not described as a psychologist. Is it because her “background in psychology” really only means that she took a psychology class in college and she is no more of an expert than you are? Pay attention. Think. Hype Superlatives are words that describe something as extreme or unsurpassed. They can describe things that can be measured, like “tallest” or “fastest”, or they can describe subjective intangibles, like “first-rate” and “supreme”. Fakers like to hype things with superlatives because they sound fantastic but usually are void of real meaning. Greensboro City Council member Justin Outling is fond of saying that the city’s now-defunct policy on public access to police body camera video was the “first in the state.” It was a terrible policy of secrecy. It betrayed the promises made
by the chief of police that these cameras would be for “transparency and increased public accountability.” With no benefits to tout, the only way to say something positive about the city’s policy is with an irrelevant superlative: “It was the first.” That sounds impressive— first is good, right?—but it is meaningless in describing the substance of the bad policy itself. It is like bragging about being the first to hit yourself in the head with a hammer. President Trump is a master at this linguistic trickery. He promises things that will be “beautiful,” “fabulous,” “superb” and so on (believe him). But when it comes to substance, he avoids it. That is because he is faking. What succeeds for the Huckster in Chief is to use inspiring but frivolous hyperbole to avoid the facts, whether or not he even grasps them. If you are shopping for a truck and all you are interested in is outward appearances, then ambiguous descriptions like “fabulous” and “gorgeous” may influence you. On the other hand, if you are looking for a truck that can get something done, then you need to look under the hood. You want to know about real things like horsepower, torque and payload. You want measurable meaty details. You want meaning, not hype. A salesman who avoids providing meaningful information by telling you instead how his truck is “marvelous,” “top-of-the-line” and “superior” is full of it. If someone is laying a bunch of hype on you, ask yourself why he is not giving you meaningful information instead—better yet, ask him. This applies if someone is selling you a truck or health care reform. If he will not describe for you the substance of the thing, you are being played for a sucker.
like the Dalai Lama on Xanax. Someone who is void of any emotion is as untrustworthy as the maniac. Trust your gut. If someone’s demeanor seems unusual, ask yourself if their behavior is a genuine attempt to help you understand their thinking or if they are trying to evoke some kind of response in you instead.
Contrived temperament Competent and wise people tend to have a certain steady demeanor—a grounding in confidence. Their behavior helps people understand their ideas. Fakers contrive exaggerated behavior in order to provoke a response. It is as if the more bombastic they are, the less people will notice what they are lacking. It is easy to be loud instead of competent. A bullying and boisterous demeanor is a facade used to get a reaction and hide shortcomings. Some fakers, especially those groomed by a climb through bureaucracies, where rowdy behavior stands out, will go in the opposite direction. They hide incompetence by putting on an air of superiority, exuding extreme calm and coming across
The upshot You might ask, isn’t this advice a prescription for permanent cynicism? Not at all. Being disillusioned over and over again by misplaced trust is a path to crushed optimism. A healthy skepticism allows one to quickly dispatch time-wasters and avoid the muck and mire of charlatans. It is the best way to keep optimism alive. None of this is to suggest one should have a blanket mistrust of authorities either. Trusting competent people can be enriching, allowing you to reap the rewards of knowledge and guidance from qualified mentors, teachers, experts and respectable leaders. Just learn to separate them from the bullshit artists. !
Appropriating Society has it signs, symbols and ceremonies that are shortcuts to convey quick meaning. The handshake: trust. The suit and tie: seriousness. A robe: piety. One of the easiest ways for fakers to fool people is to adopt popular symbols and rituals. No construction contract has been awarded for the downtown Greensboro Tanger Performing Arts Center. That did not stop backers who went ahead with a “groundbreaking” ceremony a couple of weeks ago anyway. People in power suits and armed with gilded shovels turned over store-bought dirt in a specially constructed sandbox. It was not to commemorate the beginning of construction. It was a photo-op to persuade nervous patrons not to abandon their pledges of financial support. Brian Clarey of Triad City Beat hit the nail on the head when he wrote that the charade “Symbolized nothing so much as the participants’ willingness to commit a farce.” Symbols and ceremonies, whether they are lapel pins or groundbreakings, carry only the meaning we are willing to read into them. They are not guarantees of the competence of the person deploying them. Don’t put your trust in someone just because he wears the right symbol or observes the right rituals without some other evidence of his capabilities. It is too easy for charlatans to exploit these.
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Thick-skinned river critters Women’s soft hats of old Crouches, as a catcher Dream up Turkey’s landmass Career-track type British hero sandwich? Cut in half Aunts, e.g. Maglie of the old Giants Be sickly Give off Certain tennis edge “America” contraction Person born to be an apartment manager? Car made in an Alabama port? Schoolyard rejoinder Gap Small brawl “Drop — line” Place for petri dishes Hold tightly Syringe causing a bad skin reaction? Gmail rival World finance org. Holiday quaff Thin, white mushroom CBS drama Advil rival “Yipes!” Printer resolution stat Kids’ author Silverstein Very busy checkout area? “— to You” (2009 Lady Antebellum hit)
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[KING Crossword] 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 24 30 32 34 36 37 38 39 40 41 43 44 48 49 50 51 52 53 DOWN 1 “October Sky” memoirist 55 56 Homer 57 2 Eager volunteer’s 60 repetitive response 3 Ballpoint tip 61 4 Butter unit 77 78 79 82 83 85 86 87 88 92 94 95 96 99 100 102 106 110 111 112 113 115 117 118 122 127 128 129 130 131 132
Lamprey lookalike Pepsi or RC Easily duped sort Body filled with eau Old TV’s Desi The, to Jules Pitchfork-shaped letter Trim grass Put-down during a visit with the doc? John of plows Takes as one’s own Tar’s “Help!” Doofus Any of three English rivers Pets that purr Gregarious protester? Beloved big rig? Pal, to Jules Big name in faucets Process part “As I see it,” online Ending for percent Harass Like rabbis and shuls PC shortcut used by inflation calculators? Broad road Celestial body circlers Let the wind freshen Not as bold Deluge Vagabonds
Big name in elevators State political bodies GQ target Take — loan Brief mental glitch Arum lily Equine beast More, to a maestro Duel tools 1976 Sally Field title role Packs it in FedEx rival Kong, e.g. Small jerk TV unit Koteas of “Crash” China’s — Zedong Future lice 1973 novel by Toni Morrison Theater level Data plan datum “Whoops!” Multicolored Tick by Bring past a simmer again Ida of old films Early online protocol Units of a million watts per ampere Skimpy swimsuits Here, to Jules Gun, in slang Senator Blunt Very versatile Rationale Inner: Prefix Like bit-free orange juice Folks not living in the past Spoken with ease
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Suffix with northeast Struck out in editing Realize Quahog or geoduck Spot for slots Big small-screen star Sgt. Friday catchphrase Get from a pitcher anew —’easter She-sheep British islet Gives relish Big oil gp. Muzzle part “The Bicycle Thief” director Vittorio De — Dutch cheese Act like Denounces Stage signal Angle Playwright de Beauvoir PFC, e.g. Rip to shreds Bullion bars Time release Alternate Underage Arab country Arab bigwig Gridlock Day before Really little Sign Cote sound Rink great Bobby Banjo finale? Coaching great Parseghian
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AGING
OUT LOUD
BY DEONNA KELLI SAYED
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inston-Salem resident, Carol Roan, will turn 86 years old in August. “There seems to be an age,” she says, “when you suddenly become wise and inspirational instead of invisible. For me, that age was 84.” She was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress in a short film at Cannes, and she continued publishing her written work. May is Older Americans Month. This year, the theme is Age Out Loud. Carol is doing exactly that in hopes that older adults will be a lot louder when it comes to living. She demonstrates that aging doesn’t equate to erasure. If anything, getting older offers freedom to tell new stories. Carol, by the way, has a lifetime of stories. For one, she should be dead by now.
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She was supposed to die thirty years ago. In her mid 50s, Carol was diagnosed with primary biliary cirrhosis, a rare and incurable autoimmune liver disorder. The doctor told her that she had seven years to live. He explained how each remaining year would become more debilitating. Carol experienced two weeks of shock where she “couldn’t read street signs and directional signals.” She told her three adult children. She got her papers in order. Carol mentally prepared to die. An experimental medical trial saved her life. Every day, she takes a pill that has bought her more time. A lot more time. If you ask Carol about her reclamation, she might not mention the pill at all. She will tell you that creativity -- singing, writing, and later, dancing – saved her more than once. She will explain that if more old people
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had the chance to be creative, they would feel less old. Not arts-and-crafts creative. “I don’t appreciate attempts to give old people crafty things to do and call that creative. I don’t like to see the arts used that way. It makes both the people and the art too small,” she says. “Old people” are her words. Not mine. At her age, she’s earned the right to have strong opinions. That’s one of the benefits of being in your 80s, she shares. You can say whatever the hell you want. At that point, “you’ve already met a bunch of assholes,” she reminds me.
Carol’s voice booms around the room. She’s standing in her doorway to show me just how loud her voice becomes when she unleashes.
She became a professional singer at age 18. Carol won a full post-grad scholarship to the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. She was the second woman ever to sing at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. She holds a B.M. in vocal pedagogy and a M.M. in vocal performance. Singing empowered her to eventually leave a two-decade long abusive marriage. She started over in her 40s, and as a single mother, teaching voice lessons. There was a time Carol was the go-to voice coach for Philadelphia rock bands. Carol shifted gears and received a M.S. in Business Policy from Columbia University Graduate School of Business (at 50, she was the oldest woman in the class). She helped establish a software company. Carol worked as an independent consultant for a while. Then, she was supposed to die, but
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didn’t. Carol didn’t want to wait around any longer. She started writing. In 2006, she received a fellowship to summer writing program in Russia where she studied with author Gina Ochsner. Carol was in her early seventies at the time. She wasn’t a MFA student, yet author Margaret Atwood, the fellowship judge, had read her work and deemed her worthy of the course. Carol felt guilty for taking a slot from a younger writer. “I would go around telling everyone I was 72 years old, whether they wanted to hear it or not,” she remembers. Carol realized that she was internalizing ageism by assuming that she had no right to be there. Yet, her stories mattered. Carol’s age gave her an advantage: with so much life on her bones, she had a lot to say. She returned with an idea about an anthology featuring aged writers. With most literary journals from university programs with young MFA students on staff, there weren’t many publications giving space to older voices. Carol served as the President of Winston Salem Writers. Before that, she was the President of Poets and Writers in New Jersey. Her work includes co-editing Out In Silence, a publication for child-abuse survivors, as well as several published short stories, and non-fiction books. When Last on the Mountain: The View from Writers Over 50 came out in 2011. The anthology, dreamt up in Russia and edited by Carol and Vicky Lettmann, was met with praise and became required reading in a graduate course at California State University, Long Beach. Carol has done a few things during her life. She still teaches voice and public speaking out of her West End apartment. She continues to write, to sing, and to thrive. At 84 years old, she started something completely unexpected.
In 2016, Wake Forest University hosted the first Aging Re-imagined Symposium (2017’s symposium was held last week). Carol had submitted an abstract for a paper on how we can all sing, no matter the age. “I wasn’t an academic. I wasn’t anyone important,” she says. Carol was surprised when her paper was accepted. She was now in an unexpected conversation with researchers, including neuroscientists, to speak about how creativity has kept her healthy. That is where Carol met Wake Forest University’s Director of Dance, Christina Tsoules Soriano. WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
Christina had helped with pilot studies regarding dance classes for aging adults with Parkinson’s. Through the experience, she realized that participants responded better to improvisation rather than memorization of movement. She now works with Dr. Christina Hugenschmidt, a neuroscientist at WFU’s School of Medicine’s Sticht Center on Aging, on a Blue Cross Blue Shield funded study. The eight-week program looked at improvisational movement intervention for aging adults with mild cognitive impairment. After her experiences with the pilot studies, Christina had the idea of bringing multidisciplinary researchers together, as well as others in the community, to talk about aging. “I started to spend time with older adults in an artistic practice, and you realize that scientists aren’t talking to artists as much as we should be around these ideas,” she shares. The symposium created space to bring demographers, academics, artists, and community members together because “we want to be living longer better. We want to have more people who can address some of the issues where resources aren’t all there. It’s not all up to government people, or scientists, to address some of these challenges around aging.” She explains that one of the biggest stigmas around getting older is that people believe that they stop learning once they reach a certain age. Research, Christina says, proves otherwise. “What I love about dance, and specifically improvisational dance, is that assumptions gets turned upside down. Everyone is capable of generating movement. Everyone is capable of creatively responding to a prompt that asks you to respond with your body.” Christina says this work has impacted her in unexpected ways. “I learn so much from older adults in terms of what is the essence and core of movement. It is so raw and so clear in older adult communities.” Carol’s presentation at the symposium offered another type of clarity: she spoke about the scientific evidence that humans sang before we spoke. “Our vocal mechanism is set up to sing,” Carol insists. Therefore, there’s no reason why people should stop singing at any age. Carol is adamant when she says this: “There is no physical reason for creativity to end.” She is living proof. In 2016, Carol made her acting debut as a blind grandmother in a short independent film emerged out of Greensboro’s 48 Hour Film Project. Wake Up Cannes is from HP Masters of
PHOTO BY BO GRAY
Carol Roan has translated creative writing and now dance into an active lifestyle that includes a Best Supporting Actress nomination at the Cannes Film Festival. MAY 10-16, 2017
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PHOTO BY BO GRAY
“I don’t appreciate attempts to give old people crafty things to do and call that creative. I don’t like to see the arts used that way. It makes both the people and the art too small.”
Roan is involved in a program at Wake Forest University that studies improvisational movement intervention for aging adults with mild cognitive impairment.
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Short Film Project. The piece made it to the actual Cannes Film Festival where Carol received a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Other things started happening, too. Christina invited Carol to join a community dance class that had developed out of the Parkinson’s project. The class, held once a week, is free and open for older adults, including healthy agers. “I’m a klutz,” Carol warned her, sharing decades old jokes about her well-documented clumsiness. However, Carol had recently began to feel off-balance when she walked, and had started to use a cane. This scared her. A sidewalk stumble for someone her age could break a hip. Carol needed a way to “convene with the body,” as Christina refers to the dance class experience. “What is so beautiful about people like Carol, and there are other similar spirited people in the class, that she often goes to a different place in the class. She closes her eyes and she will move,” Christina says. “Carol isn’t looking to see if it looks like me. She’s not looking to see if she looks like the people around her or how it measures up. She is having an authentic movement experience and it becomes contagious. I really believe someone like Carol relies on this in her week in a way to feel authentically human.” A few weeks after Carol started the dance classes, she realized she wasn’t using the walking cane anymore. Christina approached Carol to partici-
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pate in a public dance performance, the Goldberg Project, based on the Goldberg Variations by Bach. The dance would be performed at Wake Forest University. The dancers would be intergenerational and professional, and some would come from Christina’s community classes. “I can’t,” Carol thought. Christina insisted. “I was really interested in having an intergenerational dance experience,” Christina said. “One, as a choreographer, I really wanted to move into that space as a creative challenge. Also, because part of combating some of the stigma around aging is having younger generations spend more time with older people. If you do that in a dance studio, then that becomes a really ripe and generous space to have a meaningful exchange.” Carol was not going to be part of that meaningful exchange. She was insecure. She was afraid that she wouldn’t be able to remember the choreography. She was, most certainly, not a dancer. “I felt that I had no right to be there,” Carol reveals. But, she decided to do it. She showed up for rehearsals. She remembered the moves. She got on stage and performed with professional dancers, with children, including Christina’s daughter. Last August, Carol took the stage with fellow dancers at Wake Forest University. Salem College later hosted a performance. She was paid for her work. “Imagine, at 84 years old, to become a professional dancer!” Carol says.
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“You are not at the beginning of the end,” Roan said. “You can be at the beginning.” The possibilities are endless, she reminds me.
Carol was born in 1931 in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She will tell you that she has metaphorically died many times. There were years of childhood abuse by her parents. Later came the gaslighting husband who diminished Carol to the point that she lost her voice, literally, until she reclaimed it and saved her life. Then, the actual death sentence arrived during her 50s. She admits that her younger self was “in no emotional condition to be talked to.” But if 20-year-old Carol would have listened, 85-year-old Carol would have said not to worry about being perfect. She would have told her 70-year-old self: there’s more ahead than you can imagine. Carol now knows a few things for sure. She knows there are no absolutes. The really important stuff in life turns out to be a paradox. Some truths, like creativity, are often inexplicable but always accessible. “We think of creativity as a gift,” Carol points out. “I’ve heard people complain about not having a creative bone in their body. Well, duh, you do because creativity is inherent.” She says that the language around aging equates getting old with losing brain cells. That’s just wrong. She insists “every experience that you have either creates a new pathway or strengthens new pathways in the brain.” WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
Christina’s research suggests this to be true, and she hopes current and future studies will yield significant data that dancing is essential to healthy aging. By the year 2040, almost a quarter of Americans will be 65+. This will influence everything from retirement planning, health care, to local social services. It will impact how cities are redesigned to function, and will change the language we use to talk about getting older. There is no reason for that to mean a cessation of joy, of experience. For Carol, joy is to write, sing, dance, and create a way through the aging process. She knows that becoming an old person isn’t a final chapter in a life story. It isn’t a reason to give up. “You are not at the beginning of the end,” she offers. “You can be at the beginning.”
To learn more about Carol Roan and her vast work, visit carolroan.com Christina Soriano will offer an improvisational dance class this summer through Wake Forest University Lifelong Learner’s Program. http://lifelongwake.wfu.edu/ terms/summer-2017/. For more info about her community classes in Winston, email sorianct@wfu.edu !
DEONNA KELLI SAYED is a writer and storyteller. To learn more about her, visit dksayed.com. Email deonnasayed@gmail.com
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photos [FACES & PLACES] by Natalie Garcia
AROUND THE TRIAD YES! Weekly’s Photographer
Greensboro Food Truck Festival 5.7.17
presents
hot pour BARTENDERS OF THE WEEK | BY NATALIE GARCIA Check out videos on our Facebook!
BARTENDER: Courtney Renee Young BAR: Mac & Nelli’s AGE: 27
promoted to bartender. Q: What’s your favorite drink to make? A: Boston Zoo
BARTENDING: 6 Years
Q: What’s your favorite drink to drink? A: Crown Apple and cranberry juice with a splace of Red Bull
Q: How did you become a bartender? A: I started out as a server at TGI Friday’s then was
Q: What’s the craziest thing you’ve seen while bartending? A: I’ve seen so many crazy
HOMETOWN: High Point
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things while bartending. It’s hard to pick just one. Q: What’s the best tip you’ve ever gotten? A: $150 Q: How do you deal with difficult customers? A: I smile and try to make them happy and have a better day. Q: Single? A: Engaged
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Mac & Nelli’s Kentucky Derby Party 5.6.17 | Winston-Salem
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Art & Vine at Tessa Farm To Fork 5.1.17 | Greensboro
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last call
[THE ADVICE GODDESS] love • sex • dating • marriage • questions
CAVEHEART
Amy Alkon
Advice Goddess Party Girl
I’m a woman in my 30s. I love parties and talking to people, and thank God, because I attend networking events for work. My boyfriend, on the other hand, is an introvert, hates talking to strangers, and loathes “shindigs.” How do we balance my longing to go to parties with his desire to stay home? —
Taking an introvert to a party can be a challenge. On the other hand, if it’s a Fourth of July party, you know where to find him: hiding in the bathtub with the dogs. I actually have personal experience in this area. Like you, I’m an extrovert — which is to say, a party host’s worry isn’t that I won’t have anyone to talk to; it’s that I’ll tackle three people and waterboard them with sangria till they tell me their life story. Also like you, I have a boyfriend who’s an introvert. For him, attending a party is like being shoved into an open grave teeming with live cockroaches — though, compassionately, it also includes an open bar. This isn’t to say introverts are dys-
[LEO (July 23 to August 22) You are in a reasonably good place with yourself at this time. Your heart and mind are flowing together. You have no conflict between your feelings and your thoughts about those feelings. This is a time for reflection on important subjects. You can make good decisions now. [VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Finally! The details fall into place that allow you to integrate old traditions with new technology or ideas. There is even agreement with family members to try the fresh slant to long standing habits. Maybe there will be a shift in plans for the traditional family reunion this summer. [LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Activities involving the law, the internet, contracts, people from a distance, and travel are favored. You have the opportunity to act as the conduit to help others find their paths now. Use your intuition and spiritual values for best results. [SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) A lover’s words or behavior may be confusing. Ask questions before you leap to conclusions. Keep track of valuables. A theft is possible. If you are in need of assistance, it would be wise to ask the
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MAY 10-16, 2017
functional. They’re not. They’re differently functional. Brain imaging research by cognitive scientist Debra L. Johnson and her colleagues found that in introverts, sensory input from experience led to more blood flow in the brain (amounting to more stimulation). The path it took was longer and twistier than in extroverts and had a different destination: frontal areas we use for inward thinking like planning, remembering, and problem-solving. So, introverts live it up, too; they just do it on the inside. Extroverts’ brain scans revealed a more direct path for stimuli — with blood flowing straight to rear areas of the brain used for sensory processing, like listening and touching. They also have less overall blood flow — translating (in combination with a different neurochemical response) to a need for more social hoo-ha to feel “fed.” Sometimes, you’ll really want your boyfriend there with you at a party — for support, because you enjoy his company, or maybe just to show him off (kind of like a Louis Vuitton handbag with a penis). But understanding that “shindigs” give his brain a beating, consider whether you could sometimes take a friend. When he accompanies you, maybe set a time limit and be understanding if he and the dog retreat to the den. Sure, mingling makes you feel better, but pushing an introvert to do it is akin to forcing an extrovert to spend an entire week
with only the cat and a fern. Before long, they’re on with the cable company. Tech support: “What seems to be the problem?” Extrovert: “I’m lonely! Talk to me! Have you ever been arrested? And do you think I should go gluten-free?”
RUBBIN HOOD
I grabbed my boyfriend’s phone to look something up, and I found a Google search for local massage places that offer “happy endings.” He says that he and his friends were just goofing off. Am I an idiot to believe him? — Disturbed His “goofing off” is reminiscent of the “but I was just curious!” web searches that juries hear about — stuff like “Does arsenic have a flavor?” “How much antifreeze does it take to kill a 226.5-pound man?” and “Who’s got the lowest prices on shovels and tarps?” Sure, it’s POSSIBLE that your boyfriend is telling the truth — that he and his buddies were searching out massage parlors RIGHT NEARBY! just for a giggle. To determine how likely it actually is, consider that people don’t behave randomly. We’re each driven by a varying combo of personality traits — habitual patterns of thinking, emotion, and behavior that are relatively consistent over time and across situations. For example, an introvert will not suddenly become a party animal (unless we’re talk-
[HOROSCOPES] right person for help. Even if no one is available, you have an open path to your sense of the spirit. Call upon it with positive results. [SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) You may be seeing the daylight of success in a long-term project of self-definition. Details and information fall together to show you the truth of your path. This is a time in which many things go your way. Relationships of all types are favored. If high-tech solutions can help you, go for it! [CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) You are likely to happen into a solution soon that will fill in the puzzle and offer you a solution to nagging problems. Although you have been somewhat isolated, events of the next couple of weeks will help you understand the purpose for it. You have been waiting for a “right” time and situation to develop. [AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) This is an excellent time to pursue any activity that requires your mental concentration. Contracts and written communi-
cations, along with short distance travel, have go signals. There may be a new vehicle in your future, particularly if you have been watching for the right one. [PISCES (February 19 to March 20) This is a powerful time to consider your spiritual purposes. It is all too easy for the maya, the things of the world, to overwhelm every waking minute, leaving no time for the higher goals. If you notice fatigue, disappointment, or depression at this time, stop. Any of these represent a message to be still and listen for the Voice deep within your soul. [ARIES (March 21 to April 19) This is a week in which your physical cycle is “off”. Don’t press your body beyond what it wants to do, just because it could do the same thing last week. Pay special attention to your temporary boundaries right now and by next week things will return to your personal normal. [TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A wound, whether emotional or physical, is due for healing now. Be alert for spiritual messages that may come through any
ing the taxidermied kind that’s stuck into the “fall leaves” centerpiece). Research by evolutionary psychologists David Buss and Todd Shackelford found three personality traits that are strong “predictors of susceptibility to infidelity.” One is narcissism — being self-absorbed, admiration-seeking, empathy-deficient, and prone to scheming userhoood. Being low on “conscientiousness” is another — reflected in being disorganized, unreliable, and lazy, and lacking self-control. Last, there’s “psychoticism,” which, despite its Bates Motel-like moniker, reflects a con artist-like exploitativeness, impulsivity, and lack of inhibition — not necessarily exhibiting those things while going all stabby on some lady enjoying a shower. Consider whether your boyfriend’s “just Googling for kicks!” claim is odd and uncharacteristic or whether it’s part of a pattern reflecting one or more of the lovely cocktail of traits above. Patterns of behavior predict future patterns of behavior — for example, trying to get you to believe that he only goes to strip clubs for the music and that he really was just working late with his boss, Mr. Camerino, who seems to have developed quite a thing for body glitter. GOT A problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (www.advicegoddess.com) © 2017 Amy Alkon Distributed by Creators.Com. source. Give attention to dreams, or unusual messages from strangers or others in your life. Journaling could be helpful. Therapy may bring healing insight. [GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Information about your career or life direction may seem blurry or confusing. Don’t respond negatively to that yet. Wait for verification. What you hear may never happen. See the lead paragraph because it is especially prominent for you this week. You likely will find the key to mix new technology or ideas with the norm in your life. [CANCER (June 21 to July 22) You have probably been dealing with a decision concerning property or family issues. You have spent a few weeks in this process and now you have arrived at a conclusion. If it is a purchase or a sale, you have the cosmic green light. Whatever the decision, you have made a good choice for everyone concerned. Are you interested in a personal horoscope? Vivian Carol may be reached at (704) 366-3777 for private psychotherapy or astrology appointments. There is a fee for services. Website: http//www.horoscopesbyvivian.com
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