Why Westside Butcher Shop El Salchichero Is A Local Fave

El Salchichero is a butcher shop on the Westside that focuses on charcuterie and the creative and unique preparation of meat.

Open Tuesday-Sunday from 11am-7pm, they also have fresh-cut options of beef, pork, chicken, duck, and rabbit, as well as house-made mustards, sauces and pickles.

“I’m lucky enough to do what I love and lucky enough to have people love what I do,” says owner Chris LaVeque, a deeply passionate charcuterie artisan who prides himself on fun, unordinary, and outside-the-box flavors and combinations. He spoke with GT about some of his shop’s most inspired offerings.

What are some of your charcuterie specialties?

CHRIS LAVEQUE: Definitely our cured meats like salami, coppa, and prosciutto. We make it all in-house, which is pretty rare. We also do a candy cap lardo, which is cured pork back fat with wild candy cap mushrooms, hibiscus and sumac. I like to have it on warm grilled bread and kind of let it melt a little. It has a rich, deep flavor and the intoxicating aroma of maple syrup, which comes from the mushroom. We also offer great seasonal sausage options. In the spring, we do a wild nettle pork sausage. In the summer, we do a peach and basil pork sausage as well as a chicken/duck sausage with blueberry and thyme. We try and offer unique flavors and seasonal pairings with our sausages, something people probably haven’t tried before.

What are a couple of your favorite marinated meats?

The Szechaun pepper skirt steak. I grill it and eat it with rice and grilled veggies. It’s super simple, delicious, and perfect. Another option is the Moroccan half-chicken. It has turmeric, sumac, grains of paradise, cardamom, basil seeds, and preserved lemon. I like to throw it in the oven and bake it, the aromas make the house smell great and feel super cozy.

What about your bacon?

They are all dry-cured and cold-smoked in house. Our house bacon is bourbon/maple syrup. That’s definitely my jam, and I eat a lot of it. We also have an apple cider bacon that’s rubbed with apple pie spice. Another unique option is our tasso bacon. It has spicy chili, garlic, oregano, cumin, and black pepper. It has a ton of distinct flavors and goes great on BLT’s. Bacon just makes you feel good; we love the joy it brings people when they eat it.

402 Ingalls St., Santa Cruz. 831-423-6328, elsalchichero.com.

Letter to the Editor: Concerns Not Addressed

I was very disappointed by Jacob Pierce’s article “Will Coastal Commission Block Affordable Housing in Santa Cruz?” Jacob focused primarily on the YIMBY response to upcoming Coastal Commission hearings on the Dream Inn expansion and other controversial SC developments. The concerns that many people who support affordable

housing have about these projects, concerns that prompted the Coastal Commission hearings, were barely addressed. Concerns like traffic impacts, building heights, wildlife impacts, and the local citizens who spent long hours and money to bring these concerns to the Commission, were not given any meaningful coverage. Why is that? Is it just poor journalism or a newspaper slant towards developer and YIMBY concerns? Perhaps readers are owed more disclosure about why such a limited perspective was taken on development issues that affect affordable housing but also deeply affect the quality of life for longtime residents.

Russell Weisz | Santa Cruz

Readers looking for further context can check out our extensive coverage of Santa Cruz’s affordable housing issues by searching for the keyword “housing crisis” at goodtimes.sc. I’d recommend in particular Jacob Pierce’s housing series from October, which goes into further depth on many of the developments referenced in the Jan. 27 article. goodtimes.sc/tag/housing-crisis/ — Editor


This letter does not necessarily reflect the views of Good Times.

To submit a letter to the editor of Good Times: Letters should be originals—not copies of letters sent to other publications. Please include your name and email address to help us verify your submission (email address will not be published). Please be brief. Letters may be edited for length, clarity and to correct factual inaccuracies known to us. Send letters to le*****@go*******.sc


Letter to the Editor: We All Pay

Given that she’s probably retired by now, presumably it doesn’t matter much, if at all, to Ms. Rosewood (Letters, 1/20) that there is no proposed county train station anywhere near the university, making the likelihood of ever taking a train there moot.

But setting that aside, I truly do appreciate her remarks about how much nicer it is to ride in a train than in a bus.  Similarly in my life, I’ve found my stays in Hilton Hotels to be much more enjoyable than my stays in Motel 6s, but like the prospect of train travel in Santa Cruz, I’ve paid a lot more at the Hiltons than at the Motel 6s.  The one significant difference is that for a train in Santa Cruz we will all pay for it whether we ride it or not—or whether we “deserve” it or not—whereas I’m the only one who pays for my choice of hotel.

Nadene Thorne | Santa Cruz


This letter does not necessarily reflect the views of Good Times.

To submit a letter to the editor of Good Times: Letters should be originals—not copies of letters sent to other publications. Please include your name and email address to help us verify your submission (email address will not be published). Please be brief. Letters may be edited for length, clarity and to correct factual inaccuracies known to us. Send letters to le*****@go*******.sc


Opinion: Santa Cruzan James Durbin Leans Into His Metal Roots

EDITOR’S NOTE

I missed the first wave of James Durbin mania in Santa Cruz, which went down just before I came back to Santa Cruz in 2012 to be editor of Santa Cruz Weekly. The one thing I did see at the time was the clip of Durbin performing Judas Priest’s “You’ve Got Another Thing Coming”—with Judas Priest—on the finale of American Idol’s 10th season. So I kind of always assumed he was a metal guy, despite the fact that his subsequent projects have covered musical ground from pop to hard rock to Americana. I was surprised that so many people were surprised to see him take over as Quiet Riot’s lead singer in 2017.

Still, I have to say that even I am taken aback by how hard Durbin has leaned into his love of metal on his new solo album—and I love it. In his cover story on Durbin this week, Aaron Carnes explains just how thoroughly that love comes through on the new album—right down to the fantasy tropes that are the hallmark of classic ’70s heavy metal. I got a genuine sense of glee looking through the photos for this story, too, as Durbin has committed to the part visually. This is the first heavy metal cover I remember GT doing since I’ve been here, and it’s long overdue. As Tenacious D sang, you can’t kill the metal—the metal will live on.

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

ONLINE COMMENTS

 Re: Pandemic Running

Running is the most misunderstood exercise, so I am incredibly grateful for this article. As a collegiate swimmer, I always HATED running, and I had all the excuses to support that resistance. But as I got older, and pools were so hard to come by, I laced up. In the decade and a half since then, I see running more as a skill, a type of moving mediation, to keep me sharp, healthy, and stress-free (ish). Running has really shown it’s quality during this pandemic. While my business and income still suffer much, but my attitude and focus are as sharp as ever. My goal every week is to put in 20miles, which seems to do the trick. My sleep is better, I eat healthier I am a more patient person to my loved ones. See you out there.

— Alex

 

Re: Coastal Commission

I want to know what authority or legislation gives Coastal Commission staff the power to stop already agendized council items from being considered. How can one person in a regional Coastal Commission office have this authority? I asked this question of Coastal Commission staff located in Santa Cruz via an email and never received a response back. I know of no other circumstance where one individual on staff with a state commission can exert such power. 

— Richelle Noroyan

 


PHOTO CONTEST WINNER

Oxalis in bloom along the bluffs between Bonny Doon Beach and Shark Fin Cove. Photograph by Pamela Coz-Hill.

Submit to ph****@go*******.sc. Include information (location, etc.) and your name. Photos may be cropped. Preferably, photos should be 4 inches by 4 inches and minimum 250dpi.


GOOD IDEA

POP D’ART

The weird and wonderful await in the lobby of the Rio Theatre. Every Sunday for the month of February, the Rio Theatre will be selling uncommon objects to help pay the bills and fund performances. Pop D’Art (pronounced like “pop-tart”) will feature lighting fixtures, old film, CDs, and contributions by local artists. For more information about the sale or to donate objects, contact un*************@ri********.com.


GOOD WORK

POP-TART SPARK

Pop-Tarts and United Way have selected 21-year old Kristina Bullington to be one of the 20 recipients of a $2,500 grant as part of the Unwrap the Future Challenge, intended to help young people improve their communities. Bullington, an anthropology student at UCSC and Everett Fellow, intends to use the money to fund digital workplace development skills and emotional intelligence classes for incarcerated students with the aim to reduce recidivism in Santa Cruz. 


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

Heavy metal is a universal energy–it’s the sound of a volcano. It’s rock, it’s earth-shattering. Somewhere in our primal being we understand.

-Billy Corgan

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology: Feb. 3-9

Free will astrology for the week of Feb. 3 

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Herman Hesse’s novel Siddartha is a story about a spiritual seeker who goes in search of illumination. Near the end of the quest, when Siddartha is purified and enlightened, he tells his friend, “I greatly needed sin, lust, vanity, the striving for goods, and the most shameful despair, to learn how to love the world, to stop comparing the world with any world that I wish for, with any perfection that I think up; I learned to let the world be as it is, and to love it and to belong to it gladly.” While I trust you won’t overdo the sinful stuff in the coming months, Aries, I hope you will reach a conclusion like Siddartha’s. The astrological omens suggest that 2021 is the best year ever for you to learn how to love your life and the world just as they are.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Taurus physicist Richard Feynman said, “If we want to solve a problem we have never solved before, we must leave the door to the unknown ajar.” That’s always good advice, but it’s especially apropos for you in the coming weeks. You are being given the interesting and fun opportunity to solve a problem you have never solved before! Be sure to leave the door to the unknown ajar. Clues and answers may come from unexpected sources.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): When we want to get a distinct look at a faint star, we must avert our eyes away from it just a little. If we look at it directly, it fades into invisibility. (There’s a scientific explanation for this phenomenon, which I won’t go into.) I propose that we make this your metaphor of power for the coming weeks. Proceed on the hypothesis that if you want to get glimpses of what’s in the distance or in the future, don’t gaze at it directly. Use the psychological version of your peripheral vision. And yes, now is a favorable time to seek those glimpses.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): If the apocalypse happens and you’re the last human left on Earth, don’t worry about getting enough to eat. Just find an intact grocery store and make your new home there. It’s stocked with enough non-perishable food to feed you for 55 years—or 63 years if you’re willing to dine on pet food. I am joking! Just kidding! In fact, the apocalypse won’t happen for another 503 million years. My purpose in imagining such a loopy scenario is to nudge you to dissolve your scarcity thinking. Here’s the ironic fact of the matter for us Cancerians: If we indulge in fearful fantasies about running out of stuff—money, resources, love or time—we undermine our efforts to have enough of what we need. The time is now right for you to stop worrying and instead take robust action to ensure you’re well-supplied for a long time.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Judge a moth by the beauty of its candle,” writes Coleman Barks in his rendering of a poem by Rumi. In accordance with astrological omens, I am invoking that thought as a useful metaphor for your life right now. How lovely and noble are the goals you’re pursuing? How exalted and bighearted are the dreams you’re focused on? If you find there are any less-than-beautiful aspects to your motivating symbols and ideals, now is a good time to make adjustments.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I invite you to try the following experiment. Select two situations in your world that really need to be reinvented, and let every other glitch and annoyance just slide for now. Then meditate with tender ferocity on how best to get the transformations done. Summoning intense focus will generate what amounts to magic! P.S.: Maybe the desired reinventions would require other people to alter their behavior. But it’s also possible that your own behavior may need altering.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Author Marguerite Duras wrote these words: “That she had so completely recovered her sanity was a source of sadness to her. One should never be cured of one’s passion.” I am spiritually allergic to that idea. It implies that our deepest passions are unavailable unless we’re insane, or at least disturbed. But in the world I aspire to live in, the opposite is true: Our passions thrive if we’re mentally healthy. We are best able to harness our most inspiring motivations if we’re feeling poised and stable. So I’m here to urge you to reject Duras’ perspective and embrace mine. The time has arrived for you to explore the mysteries of relaxing passion.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Author Karen Barad writes, “The past is never finished. It cannot be wrapped up like a package, or a scrapbook; we never leave it and it never leaves us behind.” I agree. That’s why I can’t understand New Age teachers who advise us to “live in the now.” That’s impossible! We are always embedded in our histories. Everything we do is conditioned by our life story. I acknowledge that there’s value in trying to see the world afresh in each new moment. I’m a hearty advocate of adopting a “beginner’s mind.” But to pretend we can completely shut off or escape the past is delusional and foolish. Thank you for listening to my rant, Scorpio. Now please spend quality time upgrading your love and appreciation for your own past. It’s time to celebrate where you have come from—and meditate on how your history affects who you are now.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Luisah Teish is a writer and priestess in the Yoruban Lucumi tradition. She wrote a book called Jump Up: Seasonal Celebrations from the World’s Deep Traditions. “Jump up” is a Caribbean phrase that refers to festive rituals and parties that feature “joyous music, laughter, food and dancing.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, you’re due for a phase infused with the “jump up” spirit. As Teish would say, it’s a time for “jumping, jamming, swinging, hopping, and kicking it.” I realize that in order to do this, you will have to work around the very necessary limitations imposed on us all by the pandemic. Do the best you can. Maybe make it a virtual or fantasy jump up. Maybe dance alone in the dark.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Perhaps we should know better,” wrote poet Tony Hoagland, “but we keep on looking, thinking, and listening, hunting that singular book, theory, perception, or tonality that will unlock and liberate us.” It’s my duty to report, Capricorn, that there will most likely be no such singular magnificence for you in 2021. However, I’m happy to tell you that an accumulation of smaller treasures could ultimately lead to a substantial unlocking and liberation. For that to happen, you must be alert for and appreciate the small treasures, and patiently gather them in. (P.S.: Author Rebecca Solnit says, “We devour heaven in bites too small to be measured.” I say: The small bites of heaven you devour in the coming months will ultimately add up to being dramatically measurable.)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Aquarian author Alice Walker writes, “In nature, nothing is perfect and everything is perfect. Trees can be contorted, bent in weird ways, and they’re still beautiful.” In the coming weeks, I hope you’ll adopt that way of thinking and apply it to every aspect of your perfectly imperfect body and mind and soul. I hope you’ll give the same generous blessing to the rest of the world, as well. This attitude is always wise to cultivate, of course, but it will be especially transformative for you in the coming weeks. It’s time to celebrate your gorgeous idiosyncrasies and eccentricities.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Though the bamboo forest is dense, water flows through it freely.” I offer that Zen saying just in time for you to adopt it as your metaphor of power. No matter how thick and complicated and impassable the terrain might appear to be in the coming weeks, I swear you’ll have a flair for finding a graceful path through it. All you have to do is imitate the consistency and flow of water.

Homework: What’s the important thing you forgot about that you really do need to remember sometime soon? freewillastrology.com.


Santa Cruz’s James Durbin Returns to His Metal Roots on Solo Album

In August 2016, local singer-songwriter, American Idol fourth-place finisher and all-around Santa Cruz icon James Durbin was living in Las Vegas and rehearsing for the upcoming classic rock/illusionist variety show “One Epic Night” at the Plaza. He got an email from Frankie Banali, drummer of classic ’80s metal band Quiet Riot, saying that they were interested in him becoming their new lead singer. Durbin was stunned and excited.

The only problem was that Durbin was already committed to “One Epic Night,” which opened in September of that year. He tried to figure out a way to do both, but it wasn’t going to happen. However, Quiet Riot guitarist Alex Grossi came to the opening night of the show. During Durbin’s performance of “Sweet Child o’ Mine,” Grossi hopped on stage and took over for the onstage guitarist Brent Muscat from Faster Pussycat. It was, as the title suggested, epic. After the show’s run ended in October, and Durbin moved back to Santa Cruz, Grossi and Durbin kept in contact and sent song ideas back and forth. They eventually recorded an EP, Volume 1, under the name Maps To The Hollywood Scars the next year.

But during that recording session, Durbin got another surprise email from Banali. He sent an unused Quiet Riot track that they could maybe use for their project. It was odd because of the timing, and because it didn’t sound like the music he and Grossi were already recording. That night at dinner, Durbin wrote lyrics and a melody. Twenty minutes later, Durbin recorded his vocals, and Grossi recorded a solo, each in one take. The engineer gave it a quick mix and sent it back to Banali to show him.

“It wasn’t like we were there to just write and record random songs. We knew what we were doing there,” Durbin says. “I think it was somewhat of an audition. Had I known that, I would’ve written something a little easier to sing.”  

The band members were impressed with Durbin and asked him—again—to join the band. In March 2017, he was announced as the new lead singer of Quiet Riot. The “audition” track they recorded ended up being the fun, bluesy-rocker “Can’t Get Enough,” and was on Quiet Riot’s Road Rage album. The band shot a music video for it—their first in 29 years.

Durbin joining Quiet Riot was an exciting moment for his fans. In 2011, he’d made American Idol history by bringing metal to the pop-dominated reality show with a riveting performance of Judas Priest’s “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’,” with sublime high notes and devil horns. Even though he was immediately signed to Wind-Up Records, he hadn’t released a record of intense heavy metal. But with this new Quiet Riot gig, he would be able to show America that he was born to front a metal band.

“I always made a point to play the shit out of those songs like they owed me money, and really to play them like Kevin DuBrow,” Durbin says. “Just being associated with them [Quiet Riot] doesn’t automatically do anything for anyone. That goes for anything. It’s what you do. I made a point to never hold back in the live performances; balls to the wall.”

Metal Cred

Durbin earned his metal credentials before he ever auditioned for Idol. He did musical theater as a kid and took music lessons from prolific local rocker Dale Ockerman, best known for his time with the Doobie Brothers. It turned into a rock ’n’ roll mentorship—Ockerman taught Durbin which cool classic rock bands to listen to, and in 2008 enlisted Durbin to perform in his Beatles cover project the White Album Ensemble.

“It was spell-binding, just hitting those notes during ‘My Guitar Gently Weeps.’ He always got a standing ovation in the middle of the song,” Ockerman says of Durbin. “When he’s singing anything, he’s 100% into that word at that moment. He’s a natural.”

As a teen, most of Durbin’s pre-Idol Santa Cruz bands were hard rock or metal, including Leviathan/The Taken, Whatever Fits, and Hollywood Scars, so fronting Quiet Riot wasn’t a huge leap, aside from the number of people in the crowd watching him. But his time in Riot didn’t last long. In 2019, he announced that he was parting ways with the band to focus on his own music. Fortunately, the music he left to focus on turned out to be his most metal record he’s ever done. The Beast Awakens, which will be released Feb. 12, is pure uncut classic metal with prominent Dio, Judas Priest and Iron Maiden influences—and absolutely no consideration of what’s popular in the mainstream right now. It’s an album for metal fans.

Two days after Durbin’s departure from Quiet Riot, he received an email from Frontiers Records, the hard rock Italian label that put out Riot’s last few releases. They told him that he was a great frontman and an amazing talent and wanted to discuss the possibility of a James Durbin solo career. On Sept. 20, they had a conference call. They asked what kind of album he wanted to make. He’d been thinking about diving headfirst into classic ’70s/’80s metal. Frontiers couldn’t have been more delighted at this answer.

“We were on the same page,” Durbin says.

Two and a half months later, they signed a contract.

Excited to get to work on the album, he reached out to several musician friends to see if they wanted to co-write some songs. His mind also wandered while doing other tasks and driving around. Melodies would pop in his head, and he would immediately record them on his phone. One of these half-formed ideas came to him after listening to Swedish hard rock Ghost. He rushed home to get to his guitar. While he was in the elevator going to his apartment, he recorded himself singing into his phone. He realized that as evil sounding as Ghost was, the singer was a crooner—his buddy aptly called them the Satanic Bee Gees. He picked apart and tweaked these elements and came up with an early version of “The Beast Awakens.” Dark, unholy metal music with a mean groove, and ear-splitting falsetto vocals. In other words, the kind of song that will inspire you to immediately throw up the sign of the horns and bang your head till your neck is sore.

In late January, he sent Frontiers five demo tracks. They were all co-writes, except for “The Beast Awakens.” But that was the song that felt truest to his vision. He figured maybe he was better off just writing it himself.  

“I decided to continue down that lonesome road and take the task of writing the album head-on,” Durbin says.

His metal album wasn’t getting his full attention. He had a really busy live schedule between doing solo gigs and shows with his rock ’n’ roll cover band the Lost Boys. Gigs were up and down California, and he had a ton coming up in 2020. They were booked all the time, including two on the Fourth of July. The Lost Boys were booked for a party in Aptos in the afternoon, and Scotts Valley later that evening.

“We were pushing for 2020 to be the year of the Lost Boys,” Durbin says.

This kind of multi-task juggling wasn’t unusual for Durbin. A few years earlier, he wrote much of his singer-songwriter style album Homeland while on the road, between shows. However, after submitting those five demos to Frontiers, he was struggling with writer’s block. When riffs and raw melodies trickled into his head, he recorded them to use later.  

Write Mind

As these ideas started to come together, and he was figuring out how to juggle writing his metal album and regular gigs, Covid-19 shut down live music and sent everyone home indefinitely. This changed the writing process for Durbin—but then, it has been evolving from the start.

In 2011, after Durbin placed fourth in the 10th season of American Idol, he was immediately signed to Wind-Up Records, who’ve also worked with Creed, Evanescence, and the Darkness. On his first album, 2011’s Memories of a Beautiful Disaster, he co-wrote three songs. On 2014’s Celebrate, he co-wrote every song but one. On 2016’s  Riot on Sunset, he wrote seven of the 12 songs himself. And then on Homeland, he wrote every song, except for a live rendition of the standard “House of the Rising Sun.”

He started Homeland while singing with Quiet Riot, an interesting change of pace to the metal they were doing. He worked with “Father” Rick Vierra at Rocker Studios in Santa Cruz. Ockerman added some piano, and Danny Cobo contributed violin parts.

But in April 2018, Durbin moved to Nashville, because he was touring in that part of the country so much. He met with a producer who had a nice studio south of the city, but Durbin decided instead to record the whole Homeland album himself, even if that meant forgoing studio quality and an experienced engineer.

Homeland, which was released in late 2018, was a new step for Durbin. Not only did he write it all himself, but he released it on a record label he and his wife started called Wild Vine Records. It was the first time he’d written an entire record all on his own.

“I chose to figure it out on my own—on the job training, if you will—engineer, produce, record, mix and master it myself. To me, it was a badge of being an independent artist,” Durbin says. “Homeland taught me how to tell stories. And so I knew with this album [The Beast Awakens], what I wanted to do was tell a longer story.”

Recording Homeland in Nashville was an adventure that set him up for what was to come with The Beast Awakens, but he missed Santa Cruz, and returned in the summer of 2019.

The writer’s block that Durbin had been struggling with in early 2020 seemingly went away when the lockdown began. He spent a lot of time sitting at his desk or in his living room, banging out riffs and seeing what stuck. Durbin was devoting himself entirely to songwriting in a new way. He got into it, too, playing and singing at full volume, to see what riffs would hit all the metal buttons.

“I put my wife, kids, cats and neighbors through a lot of high, loud screams,” Durbin says. “It was perfect timing because any other year would have had its own distractions and tours and shows. It was really nice to be able to sit back. Time stopped for everybody. I was able to just create this—create a realm and a world and characters and circumstance for them.”

When he realized that “The Beast Awakens” was the right direction for the record, it dawned on him that he wanted to go all-in on the mystical side of classic metal, where the lyrics of the album send you on a journey. He rewatched the Lord of the Rings trilogy and wrote arena rocker “Into the Flames,” inspired by Sam’s journey in the films. Full octane metal rocker “The Prince of Metal” tapped into the medieval-expedition side of metal. Sludgy metal ballad “The Sacred Mountain” was partially inspired after looking at Mt. Madonna and letting his imagination flow on its hidden spirituality.

During the writing process, he thought a lot about the hero’s journey, and read the basic structure of how it plays out in film and literature, seeing that he’d already covered several points in a typical arc on his album. Each song has a personal story behind it, while also tapping into the fantasy realm and larger story on the album.

“The album is happening to the prince himself, and I knew I wanted him to go fight this amazing battle, and then I knew I wanted him to die, and then to be resurrected, and come back as the king,” Durbin says. “Some of it’s true—I can’t be like, you know, back in 2007 I died and came back with a beard and a shaved head, but there’s fact in the fiction.”

After four months of intense songwriting and demoing, with only occasional side projects to take his attention away from this mystical heavy metal world his brain lived in, he was ready to get it recorded. But Covid-19 was still a problem. So, he had to figure out the best way to get the album he wanted.

No Faire

Even though Durbin had decided to write The Beast Awakens by himself, he wanted the final album to sound perfect, so he enlisted a ton of musicians, like Mike Vanderhule of Y&T on drums and Barry Sparks of Dokken on bass, not to mention one song featuring pro-wrestler Chris Jericho and Phil Demmel of Machine Head. He also enlisted several friends and other musicians he knows to play on the record. For the role of producer, he reached out to longtime local friend Ellison, who does tech work at Starving Musician and records bands on the second floor of the building.

Recording at Starving Musician had its advantages. If they needed a new amp or wanted to experiment with pedals, all they had to do was wander downstairs and grab it, assuming they put it back when they were done. Starving Musician staff might wander upstairs and add some texture to a track as well.

They worked on the album in July and August of 2020. Even with the limited time, Ellison was inspired to make a great album, and show that Durbin’s voice was made to sing metal.

“I wanted to make sure James’ vocals sounded like they were the key factor of this album. A lot of people are listening because James is singing,” Ellison says. “I wanted to keep it organic, have James show off his vocals, like a stripped classic metal album. This was his roots. This is what he listened to growing up. I think this is the album he’s been the most excited to produce. That excitement definitely comes through on the album.”

Juggling all the different players during a pandemic, when everyone has recorded their parts in their own home studio, posed its own challenges. Everyone was working off of Durbin’s demos, which were well organized and detailed. Durbin even kept a few of these vocal takes and guitar licks in the final recording. Since everyone was working at the same time, Ellison piecemealed songs together as tracks were coming in.

“It was honestly a free-for-all. They were still recording drums, bass parts, guitar leads,” Ellison says. “It was probably triple the amount of time just organizing tracks. But everyone got their parts done and everything was solid. It was nuts. I was putting in 12-15 hours a day, strictly in front of the computer screen.”

The final product clearly has lots of work and details put into it. Even as they rushed it to meet that month-long deadline, the mix ended up not being right. Frontiers came back with notes. It had to be remixed and then mastered a second time, but the results were worth it.

Durbin is excited about the finished record. In some ways, it’s his most James Durbin album yet, one that shows off his roots and his incredible voice in the context it best fits—classic, head-banging, operatic, emotive heavy metal.

It’s sort of strange though to be releasing this larger-than-life classic metal album at a time when he can’t even perform a release show. While he was writing the album last year, and it seemed possible that everything could reopen by the summer of 2020, he imagined a huge theatrical event to celebrate this grand metal album.

“I wanted Covid to lift and there to be a Renaissance Faire. I’m gonna write all these songs. I’m gonna get super deep into this shit. And then we go to the Renaissance Faire, and we’re drinking mead and eating giant turkey legs and hail the queen. That didn’t happen. So I had to further create that world myself,” Durbin says.

The Beast Awakens is Durbin’s best record, and it’s his least pop-conscious album, going all-in on metal, without making any effort whatsoever to be relevant to the 2021 market. Durbin couldn’t be happier about that.

“I don’t think anybody gets into metal to make money,” Durbin says, recalling a comment one fan wrote on a promo video for the album. “‘You know, maybe he really does like this kind of music, and this is who he is.’ I had a blast writing these songs, and I look forward to playing them live. Whenever, wherever.”   

While he plans a release event for ‘The Beast Awakens,’ James Durbin’s rock cover band the Lost Boys will play an acoustic show at Michaels on Main. For more information, go to jamesdurbinofficial.com.

Beauty-Industry Workers Sue State for Handling of Pandemic Shutdowns

If you ask beauty salon owners in Santa Cruz County, they’ll tell you the on-and-off lockdowns during the Covid-19 pandemic have been downright backward when it comes to their industry. 

Deborah Riley, owner of Lavish Salon in Santa Cruz, says salons are cleaner and more sanitary than many of the grocery and retail stores that were allowed to remain open. 

“How can you open a place like Walmart where they don’t do temperature checks and employees aren’t trained in sanitation?” she asks. “Even at a limited capacity, we were not allowed to open our doors time and time again.”

It’s a feeling shared by Vanessa Love, owner of Heads Up in Felton. 

“We are fined a huge amount of money if inspectors find a single hair on a brush,” Love says. “Anyone can be a stylist, but we go to school to learn sanitation.” 

The most recent lockdown in early December hit the beauty industry hard again, slashing earnings for hairstylists, manicurists, aestheticians, massage therapists, plastic surgeons, barbers, herbalists and massage therapists.

Last week’s announcement that Gov. Gavin Newsom was relaxing pandemic-related business restrictions—effective immediately—brought some relief. But this was a trying year for Love. 

She had only recently opened Heads Up in November 2019, a mere four months before the first shutdown. Along with the other two subsequent industry shutdowns she had to make, she also had to close her business and evacuate her home during last summer’s CZU Lightning Complex fire. Through it all, she considers herself lucky. She tells GT she has no employees, her landlord has been understanding, and many of her clients, family and friends would pay her advances for future appointments to make sure she could stay afloat.

Still, she says the lack of help from the government on the federal and state levels was astonishing, and she was finally approved to receive unemployment only recently.  

“I was only approved for a loan, which I didn’t take because why would I want to owe the government more money?” she asks. 

Split Ends

In a lawsuit filed Jan. 21 against Newsom and other state officials, the Professional Beauty Federation of California (PBFC) argues California singled out the industry because of its lack of lobbying power.

“The personal services sectors are the quintessential small business sectors,” PBFC attorney Fred Jones says, “and yet, because we don’t have the same clout as Hollywood or big business, we have become the sacrificial lambs to the Covid gods.”

It’s a sacrifice borne disproportionately by minorities, he points out.

The state’s assiduous focus on salons and cosmetic services has hammered an industry composed overwhelmingly of women, immigrants and members of the LGBTQ community. Of PBFC’s 621,000 dues-paying licensees, Jones says, more than 80% are female and 75% are first-generation immigrants.

“This is the profession that this governor has sacrificed,” he says. “That’s not very politically correct, is it?”

In Jones’ telling, the industry’s financial woes began when Newsom blamed a Northern California nail salon for the first known case of community spread of the novel coronavirus. PBFC, reporters and other industry groups demanded data to support the assertion. State officials never provided that.

Newsom’s claim proved baseless. But the damage was done.

“What he didn’t realize was that he was throwing all this shade at our industry in the minds of Californians,” Jones says. “As a result, we’ve had a cumulative seven months of lockdowns. This is our third reopening after our third closure since March, and every time we reopen there are less clients coming back, because they’re picking up the message that this industry is unsafe.”

Rules for Thee

The PBFC lawsuit, which includes restaurant owners as plaintiffs, argues that lobbying money influenced the state’s double standard for certain industries. 

When California initially defined what work it considered essential enough to continue at the start of the pandemic, it excluded Hollywood studios. A month later, the lawsuit points out, a new state order deemed “the entertainment industries, studios, and other related establishments” to be essential “provided they follow Covid-19 public health guidance around physical distancing.”

In November, Newsom carved out another exemption from his pre-Thanksgiving shelter-in-place order for TV and film production companies, allowing them to operate throughout the night instead of having to abide by the 10pm-to-5am curfew. 

In early December, Los Angeles temporarily shut down a major coronavirus testing site to accommodate film crews shooting a remake of She’s All That starring a TikTok star named Addison Rae. Roughly 500 testing appointments were canceled. Public scrutiny over the decision prompted the L.A. mayor to intervene and reopen the testing station. 

Meanwhile, the lawsuit goes on to state, Angela Marsden—owner of Pineapple Hill, one of the restaurant plaintiffs named in the case—posted a video of a film production setup allowed to stay open when her own outdoor dining patio was ordered to close. 

“Ms. Marsden’s video went viral,” the lawsuit states. “In her video, Ms. Marsden displays the hypocrisy, lunacy and total disparity between her own socially distanced outdoor setup at her establishment juxtaposed by a similarly situated setup containing outdoor tents and chairs associated with the NBC Universal production set for the series ‘Good Girls,’ which was allowed to proceed as essential work. In addition, hairstylists and makeup artists are explicitly allowed to perform their State Board of Barbering and Cosmetology licensed services in these Hollywood studios, while those same licensed professionals are prevented from doing the same services in a non-Hollywood studio salon.”

PBFC’s lawsuit calls the disparate treatment a direct result of the entertainment industry’s political influence. 

“The disparity in exemptions … is causally related to state officials, such as Newsom, supporting their campaign donors at the expense of small businesses and has nothing to do with science and data,” the complaint reads.

Of course, the lawsuit mentions Newsom’s infamous French Laundry fête, in which the governor was caught hobnobbing with influence peddlers for Netflix lobbyist Jason Kinney’s swanky birthday bash. Netflix, the complaint notes, has been allowed to operate during the latest round of closures—even as intensive care units filled to the brink and hospital capacity dwindled throughout the state. 

“It is no secret,” the lawsuit reads, “that Hollywood lobbyists and insiders have leveraged their industry’s economic and political contributions to the state’s political powerbrokers and Democratic machine in order to insulate it from Covid-19 related regulations.”

Newsom’s office has yet to respond to a request for comment on the case. 

Proof Positive

While state officials and their local counterparts repeated the narrative of the dangers inherent to salons, research by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggested otherwise. The study published last summer found face masks may have prevented a pair of Covid-positive Missouri hairstylists from spreading the virus to as many as 140 clients.

Missouri’s Springfield-Greene County Health Department, which led the investigation, determined that policies requiring people to cover mouths and noses and the salon’s strict sanitation policies played a substantial role in curbing what could have been a huge outbreak.

Jen Erickson, founder and CEO of Silicon Valley Apprenticeship Barbering/Cosmetology and a 25-year industry veteran, says clients should rest assured that salons are safe to patronize. Passing the California Board of Barbering and Cosmetology test requires 1,600 class-hours—about 1,000 more than needed to become a cop—and fluency in sterilization and cross-contamination.

“With the pandemic,” she says, “a lot of us even went above and beyond, retrofitting salons to make things safe, spending money even though we weren’t making any.”

For the first time, Erickson says, she took out a business loan—a 30-year mortgage to sustain her training program.  

“I’m not making any money right now,” she says. “I’m trying to work with students to find them other places to work, but it’s tough. Salons have shut down. I’ve lost apprentices—almost a third of them got pregnant and quit. And me, myself, I’m at a standstill.”

If public health officials produced data that showed salons as high-risk for coronavirus outbreaks, that would be one thing, Jones says. But he has yet to see any from the state or local governments. What few numbers are available seem to back his suspicions about the shutdowns being less science-and-data-based than Newsom lets on.

Statistics released last month by the New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s office show that 74% of Covid-19 cases for which there’s contact-tracing data available were attributed to household gatherings. Bars and restaurants accounted for just 1.43% of the spread. Salons and personal care services, just 0.14%.

Jones wants to see similar California data.

Riley—a PBFC member but not part of the lawsuit—says prior to March 2020, Lavish was “riding high,” with a full-time dedicated staff, a long waitlist of clients and a Good Times Best of 2019 award. All that quickly changed after the first shutdown.

“When we came back I was devastated,” she says, recalling five of her employees didn’t return.  

“It was a financial blow to us and many more clients were too scared to come in.” 

Like Love, Riley says her landlord was “very gracious and understanding” during this time. However, she was able to receive the PPP grant to pay employees and spent over $4,000 of her own money remodeling the salon to be compliant with new, Covid-friendly regulations. She also had to take out a $14,000 Small Business Administration loan. 

As the shutdowns continued, more and more employees left—either Santa Cruz, the industry, or both. This forced Lavish to transition from a formerly full-service salon to exclusively hair services when it reopened this week. 

Riley says that at times it felt like law-abiding salons were often being punished while so many stylists in the county continued their business illegally. Riley says “probably a third” of the salons in Santa Cruz remained opened, covering their windows with butcher paper or drawing the curtains to detract attention. 

“We all found out the police weren’t really enforcing it, but I couldn’t do that,” she adds. “I felt that by doing it in hiding, that was me telling the world, ‘I don’t care if people get sick and die,’ and I couldn’t do that.”

While Riley and Love are excited to be back behind the clippers, both are also hesitant to see what happens next, and don’t know what they will do if another shutdown is enacted. 

“What are they preventing? Obviously the numbers still went up despite shutdowns,” says Love. “The data’s not improving.” 

Quarantine Cook Off Group Grows Into Global Community

In the gamut of human experience, there’s nothing that whisks us together like food. We eat it, we cook it, and we gather around it. It’s there for us during the good and the bad. The break-ups and the weddings. The funerals and the birthday celebrations. The in-between snacks and family dinners. 

It’s food that unified us, keeping the grocery stores open, even when Covid-19 brought the rest of the world to a grinding halt. But how are people supposed to commune with one another when social gatherings are on a temporary pause?

Look no further than the Quarantine Cook Off group on Facebook.

“That’s what I love the most about it,” says group founder Kimberley Beer. “The one thing we can’t do right now is entertain, so this allows us to do it virtually.” 

The Quarantine Cook Off is just that: a virtual dinner table. 

Over the last year it has grown from a small community of mostly Santa Cruzans to an international smorgasbord boasting over 6,000 members hailing from every part of the globe, from Taiwan, to Israel, Greece, South Africa and more. 

Beyond tasty meals, when people share their cuisines they are sharing their cultures. That’s one aspect not wasted on Beer.

“They are sharing their family,” she says. “A lot of the things our people cook are often from their great-great-grandmother.” 

But the mirepoix of this worldwide hit is actually much more humble—and organic—than its current status will lead aspiring chefs to believe. 

It all started at the beginning of the first quarantine back in March 2020, when nobody knew what was happening, what to expect and what the grocery stores would have in stock. Beer says the idea came to her—like so many good ideas—while joking with a friend. 

“I said, ‘You know, we could make a contest. Create a Facebook page, invite a bunch of people, and see who can come up with the best stuff from their freezer and pantry,” Beer says.  

Its members’ love has proved to be the yeast of the page, rising it to so much more. Apart from just another social media group, the Quarantine Cook Off is about helping people cope during an unprecedented time through their love of food.

Every day there is a new post of someone sharing their family recipes, asking for advice on troublesome meals or what to do with new ingredients, even swapping new techniques and tricks. Timid newcomers are encouraged by the community instead of shunned or laughed at. Just as food ties a community together, the Quarantine Cook Off has a way of trussing its members. 

“There’s one member who drank a Pepsi with every meal and he finally got off the soda,” remembers Tabitha Stroup, one of the page’s five admins. “You would think there were a thousand people who knew him for twenty years congratulating him.” 

A good chef knows the first step to make a great meal is to start with its mise en place, or prepped organization, and the Quarantine Cook Off is no different. 

Every post must be original in content, which means no links to other sites or recipes. That means no blogs, no YouTube videos and no articles. While some of the members are professional chefs or have businesses selling prepared treats, self-promotion is not allowed. 

“We wanted to create a model that we didn’t see on Facebook,” Stroup says. “We want people to use their words and actually communicate with each other instead of lazily popping in a link that—odds are—they didn’t even look at themselves.” 

With its one year anniversary around the corner, the Quarantine Cook Off is far from finishing its courses. Beer and Stroup both tell Good Times they have no plans to end the page and, quite the opposite, many of its members are now discussing regional get-togethers and barbecues when such gatherings are safe once more.

And for dessert, they have even discussed the idea of a quarantine cookbook with some of their members’ favorite recipes. 

As Beer tastefully summarizes, “I see no reason to stop gathering at that table.” 

Tabitha Stroup Talks Product Discovery and Highlighting Local Foods

Ever the flavor sorceress with local harvests and eccentric seasonings, Friend in Cheeses Jam Co. chef and founder Tabitha Stroup recently scored another Good Food Award for her latest must-have condiment, the outrageous Smokin’ Padron Jam. 

With her new venture Terroir in a Jar, Stroup is building alliances with growers to transform regional fruit and excess harvests into money-making specialties. Last year Stroup started reaching out to her Pajaro Valley farm partners to create unique, “sense of place” shelf-stable products the farmers could legally sell to the public through community supported agriculture, farmers’ markets, and local stores, with exciting results.

At what point did you realize that Friend in Cheeses could provide financial security?

TABITHA STROUP: I’m not sure. I didn’t get into this to make a fortune. I got into it because it was needed. By my fifth year it was somewhat sustainable. 

How does product discovery happen?

I get wacky ideas and go with it. I might look for a food underserved and in abundance, for example the otuna fruit or cactus pear. That became Prickly Purple Heart Jam with bergamot and cardamom. 

What is the greatest satisfaction you get from your work? Doing what you want?

It’s all I know at this point after a great career running restaurants, wine brokerage, caterer, educator—balled it all up into Friend in Cheeses Jam Co., which in turn got me prepared for Terroir in a Jar, my true passion. Greatest satisfaction is providing products that ring so true to our terroir or sense of place. 

Do you ever think about expansion? Or handing things over to an employee? Ever get weary of such a labor-intensive biz?  

Ha. Yes, no. Yes, sometimes. Never. I have a great lead cook who is my kitchen wizard, a great shipping handling manager and a crew of dedicated humans. Yes, we are bursting at the seams and are looking for a new facility to handle both companies. Weary? Every day. I’m running the company now, not wearing every hat every day. Finally working smarter not harder. 

How did your latest award-winner the Smokin’ Padron Jam come into existence? (Luck? Inspiration?)

Trial and error, many incarnations and looking for a product that would be a shape shifter amongst the cheese world and recipe boosters. Padrons grow so beautifully in our growing zone, and there wasn’t a product in the market that represented this gorgeous pepper. So I made one.

Is this latest award a big deal?

It’s always a blessing to be recognized. I just try not to let it define me. Sales get a nice bump for sure.

How does your latest baby, Terroir in a Jar, expand your interests?

Terroir in a Jar already is beyond Friend in Cheeses. Terroir in a Jar can save a community by helping the small farmer maximize profits with a year round, shelf-stable pantry while diversifying offerings and keeping food waste out of landfill and in the mouths of the community. 

Finally, talk a bit about the Quarantine Cook Off idea that’s buzzing among Facebook fans.

It was started by Kimberley Beer, a former Santa Cruzan living back East who was looking for a way to work out Covid stress. I came in soon after and shaped the group by having rules to keep the group earnest and pure—no politics ever, never lazy links, YouTubes, web addresses; only your own words and pictures, working out stress through food.  Now, almost 7,000 members later, it has become a very supportive group helping each other with recipes, techniques, support and genuine care—a place where a pro is on the same plane as a home cook, since it’s only about cooking at home, not business advertising.

Visit friendincheeses.com and terroirinajar.com to learn more. 

Photography Exhibit Reflects on How Nature Soothed and Scarred in 2020

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As executive director Felicia Van Stolk sorted through the hundreds of nature shots submitted to the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History in 2020, she reflected back on a difficult year.  

“I teared up going through this process multiple times,” she says. “Even without looking at the captions, you can see that a lot has happened.”

Now, some of those pictures are on display in a new virtual exhibit hosted by the Santa Cruz Museum of Natural History. 2020 Vision is a curated collection of nature photography taken by Santa Cruz photographers last year. The exhibit, available for free on the museum’s website, offers Santa Cruz residents the opportunity to reflect on how the natural world both soothed and scarred us during a year defined by stay-at-home orders and natural disasters.

“2020 was a remarkable year,” Van Stolk says. “Not only because of the pandemic and fires—a lot of natural phenomena really caught people’s attention.”

The idea to create a virtual photography exhibit was first proposed when the museum received dozens of nightmare images of Santa Cruz bathed in orange light, one of the side-effects of the CZU Lightning Complex fire and other wildfires in the area. For a museum that usually collects specimens, these pictures revealed the power of photography to capture natural events. 

It also offered the museum an opportunity to see what natural moments really stood out to the community as a whole. All of the nearly 100 images on display are submissions by local amateur, professional, and youth photographers. The final collection includes a motley assortment of crabs, nebulas, lightning storms, bioluminescence, and wildfires.

What connects these pictures is the way these natural moments touched people during 2020. Many photographers saw their own experience of the pandemic in the behavior of animals. A picture of two birds in a nest is captioned “sheltering-in-place.” Another photographer is reminded of the panic that gripped shoppers in the early days of the pandemic in a shot of pelicans and seagulls fighting over a fish.

And center-stage are the devastating wildfires that destroyed homes and painted the world in shades of orange last summer. Visitors follow along as breathtaking pictures of the lightning storm that lit the CZU Lightning Complex fire morph into shots of the wildfires themselves.

“I hope we can take a moment and look back and see what we survived,” says Shmuel Thaler, the staff photographer at the Santa Cruz Sentinel who helped judge the best pictures in the collection. Of the four photographs selected to win, all but one are about wildfires.

But, as Van Stolk points out, nature also offered people in Santa Cruz an opportunity to escape from the darker moments of 2020. The exhibit is full of small, beautiful moments, a reminder that the cycles of nature kept moving even as the county shut down. 

“This year makes it really clear that nature has value, not just as something to extract, but as something good for our emotional health,” Van Stolk says.

The museum is planning on creating a physical display as soon as the stay-at-home orders are lifted. They are also considering displaying some of the pictures in the location where they were photographed.

In the meantime, Van Stolk hopes that 2020 Vision will remind people how the beauty of the natural world helped them face a challenging year, and the importance of safeguarding nature for future generations.

View the exhibit at santacruzmuseum.org/2020-vision.

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