“Our 2017 Santa Clara Valley Pinot Noir is a spicy fruit pie in a glass,” says Tim Slater, proprietor of Sarah’s Vineyard.
“Cherry and plum flavors jump to the nose and palate,” he says of his luscious Pinot ($30 and available at New Leaf). Rich Bing cherry, plum and herbs come together in an extravaganza that makes a warm glow run through your body when you take the first few sips. And note the earthy underlying savory current of mushroom and soy sauce in this fruit-forward wine. Slater suggests pairing this Pinot with grilled salmon, a simple roast chicken, or a pancetta-wrapped pork tenderloin.
As both grower and winemaker, Slater is very much hands-on with the whole process of turning out a good bottle of vino. Estate grown in their Dwarf Oak Vineyard, the grapes are whole-berry fermented in small lots–always using traditional techniques to craft their handmade wines. And with Valentine’s Day coming up, you can’t go wrong with a good bottle of Pinot.
Sarah’s is a lovely place to visit, complete with patio and outdoor areas for use by customers. Check the website for reservations.
Always wanted an outdoor pizza oven? Local Aptos-based Talmadge Construction is your go-to company to do the job. Now celebrating 35 years in business, they are aces at planning, remodeling and constructing just about anything in your home.
One of my favorite spots for taking out-of-town guests is Stagnaro’s on the Municipal Wharf. Not only do you get a dazzling view of Monterey Bay and the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, but you’re also guaranteed some fresh and tasty seafood in this historic restaurant. Stagnaro’s fish tacos are tasty and filling, not to mention their famous clam chowder. And don’t miss their classic fish and chips–they are just delicious.
If you’re missing Betty’s Noodle House, which occupied a small space in the downtown Metro station, look no further than Monster Pot.
The new spot on Front Street from restaurateur Benji Mo fulfills his vision for what he had always wanted the now-closed Betty’s Noodle House to be—a gathering spot with room to sit down and enjoy a meal. Mo opened Monster Pot in August, carrying over most of the menu items from Betty’s Noodle House with a few new twists.
What inspired you to open Monster Pot as the next iteration of Betty’s Noodle House?
BENJI MO: Hot pot has become one of the very popular restaurant types in the Bay Area. What we did at Betty’s Noodle House is noodle soup. So I thought that would be a really good idea to combine them together and transfer the soup from the bowl to the hot pot. Because the people love our soup. So I think they are looking forward to something more fancy.
What’s changed in the menu?
The hot pot is the same taste as the original soup at Betty’s Noodle House. We added some appetizers and beer and wine. We are adding more stuff to the menu, too. We are thinking to have a weekly special, like during the winter we want to give the customers a chance to try pumpkin noodle soup, and in the summer maybe we will have some cold noodles.
Do you come up with all of the ideas for new dishes?
I created most of them. My mother-in-law, she was a cook in China. Once I come up with an idea I would just tell her what I want and she would make it.
What is your personal favorite dish?
I like the black pepper fried udon.
What else should people know about Monster Pot?
Don’t be scared to try the hot pot. They taste much better than the noodle soup. The broth is the same, the tastes are the same, but it turns out much better at the end if you let it sit for a while.
Monster Pot, 431 Front St., Santa Cruz. monsterpotsc.com.
What makes a great Valentine’s Day Issue cover story? Usually they’re fun and offbeat looks at some of the best and worst of the romance world. We’ve run stories over the years that cover the gamut of a relationship’s lifetime, from best first dates to worst breakup stories to the two women who talked people into putting on a wedding dress and talking about their divorces.
This year’s is a little different. I don’t think we’ve ever done a music-oriented Valentine’s Day story before, but the story of married local songwriters Carolyn Sills and Gerard Egan was too good to pass up, especially considering that their new album is an exploration of Marty Robbins’ “El Paso,” one of the most famous love songs in country music. Now, when I say “love song,” I do realize that this is tale involving jealousy, murder and inevitable doom. However, Wallace Baine makes the case in this week’s cover story that despite all that (or because of it), this tragic ballad may be the quintessential American love story.
Certainly it’s long overdue for the revisitation that Sills and Egan have done, going beyond just covering the song, and actually building a narrative that explores the story further over the course of the songs on Return to El Paso.
But while the album is a perfect Valentine’s Day hook, the most important love story Baine writes about in his piece is the one between Sills and Egan themselves. They are nothing short of a local treasure, and if you haven’t discovered them yet, it’s time to meet two of our music’s scene biggest talents. In the meantime, have a great V-Day and try to stay out of gunfights in Rosa’s Cantina over a Mexican girl.
As a retired economic development professional, I have, for the 30 years I’ve lived in Santa Cruz, recognized the value that Cabrillo College and its wonderful programs provide to the Santa Cruz community, including its youth, employers and businesses. Cabrillo has been training our healthcare, hospitality and tech workers. With the passage of Measure R, Cabrillo will also be training our local firefighters and police, which will save taxpayer dollars by keeping training local. I have served on Cabrillo Foundation’s committees and have also learned about the programs and resources being made available to returning veterans, as well as providing students the tools to qualify them to transfer to a four-year university. With all of this in mind, I encourage voters in Santa Cruz County to invest in one of the top drivers of our local economy. Vote Yes on Measure R.
Ceil Cirillo | Santa Cruz
JET PLANE WRONG
At the Jan. 9 Mid-County Democratic Forum, Manu Koenig proved that he is inexperienced and not ready for the job of District 1 County Supervisor. He spoke of the jet noise procedure that is currently hammering our county. Mr. Koenig has no grasp of this issue, and no first-hand knowledge of the process. Manu incorrectly stated that the FAA no longer wants to work with Supervisor Leopold because the supervisor went too far in his communication to his constituents.
As one of the original founders of Save Our Skies Santa Cruz, I was offended that he thought he could get away with this statement. Does Manu think that the voters of District 1 are ignorant of the events in their own county?
Supervisor Leopold was instrumental in bringing the FAA to the table with our Congressional representatives. Through his leadership and commitment to our county, and his arduous work with the Select Committee, he has represented the needs of the 1st District and the county at large. Supervisor Leopold comes to the table with his research done and is well prepared to do the job.
Vicki Miller | Co-chair, Save Our Skies Santa Cruz
TOURIST TRAIN TRAP
I was in school here in Santa Cruz (go Cardinals!) back in the ’60s and ’70s when my father and other downtown business people promoted the Pacific Avenue Garden Mall to bring tourist dollars downtown and expand the county’s income base. That was a long time ago, and Santa Cruz no longer needs to expand its tourist industry; it seems clear that the community’s capacity for tourist infrastructure support—hotels, parking, restaurants, emergency services, bathrooms, trash pick-up, and the like—is now maxed out.
And yet, the current RTC commissioners seem to be proposing we spend county transportation money to upgrade the rail corridor tracks and promote a tourist train! While we desperately need relief from congestion on Highway 1 as well as on our other major thoroughfares, more bus service, and safer cross-town bicycle routes, they’re voting to spend county tax money from Measure D not for local transportation improvements, but to expand our tourist industry—without providing any of the services which will additionally be required to support more visitors. And in the meantime, we residents live with daily gridlock on our streets and highways.
This proposal for a tourist trolley will only make traffic–and parking—in Santa Cruz County worse. The RTC seems to be instigating a situation which is the opposite of its mandate as a transportation commission. I would urge our commissioners to carefully evaluate the implications of this project before getting caught up in the notion of showing the citizens “something” for all the time and money spent not providing any access to the rail corridor at all or any transportation improvements from it.
Nadene Thorne | Santa Cruz
PHOTO CONTEST WINNER
Komatsuna greens and ohitashi in Watsonville. Photograph by Bob Gómez.
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
HAPPY TRAILS
After an extensive search, the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History (MAH) has welcomed Robb Woulfe as its new Executive Director. Woulfe brings to Santa Cruz his experience in arts consulting and nonprofit management out in Colorado, Utah and Michigan. He begins work Monday, Feb. 10. The MAH’s new exhibit, Trailblazers:Uncovering the Roots of Mountain Biking in Santa Cruz County opens on First Friday, Feb. 7.
GOOD WORK
BEEN A LOVELY CRUZ
Visit Santa Cruz County has released findings from a survey of LBGTQ travelers about Santa Cruz County. Community Marketing & Insights, a San Francisco-based LGBTQ research and marketing firm, collected the data from more than 1,000 self-identified members of the LGBTQ community living in California. The findings showed Santa Cruz County being the most LGBTQ-friendly destination of the regions tested by far. The top draw was the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“I didn’t choose a word or anything. I just wrote the song until it stopped.”
“Trailblazers: Uncovering the Roots of Mountain Biking in Santa Cruz County”
From the wild experimentation of the 1970s “klunkers” to eBikes, the MAH’s newest exhibition explores the roots and evolution of mountain biking in Santa Cruz County. Thanks to a collection of early designs from the Marin Museum of Mountain Biking (home to the Mountain Biking Hall of Fame) visitors can get up close to one-of-a-kind bikes and learn about the development of the sport. Amongst the 25 bikes on display, the exhibition also features handmade frames from the 1970s and 80s. The show opens and is free to the public on First Friday. Photo: Spencer Harding.
INFO: Exhibit runs through Sept. 20. Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. santacruzmah.org. Free/$10.
Wednesday 2/5
“How warming waters and red tides affect our oceans and us”
Many of us have gone to the beach or seen the ocean when it’s that gross, red color. Red tides are caused by an overproduction of certain types of algae, some of which can produce a toxin called domoic acid. But is domoic acid dangerous? Join experts from The Marine Mammal Center, the Monterey Bay Aquarium, NOAA’s Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and UCSC in discussing how the toxin is produced and how it impacts our food webs. Experts will also discuss the implications of rising ocean temperatures on the production and persistence of this toxin. This is the first event of an Earth Day 50 Speaker Series hosted by Save Our Shores.
INFO: 6pm. The Dream Inn, 175 W Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. Free.
Saturday 2/8
Green Fix
33rd Annual Migration Festival
Pack a picnic and migrate on over to Natural Bridges State Beach for a full day of activities to celebrate the migration of whales, butterflies, birds and other travelling species. The park will host migratory animal talks, active kids games, crafts, skits, live music, educational booths and displays, plus a celebratory habitat cake served at the end of the event. Picnic lunches are available for purchase for those who don’t bring their own.
INFO: 11am Saturday, Feb. 8. Natural Bridges State Beach, 2531 West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz. 423-4609, thatsmypark.org. Free/$10 parking.
Sunday 2/9
Celebrate Piano Ensemble Benefit Concert
Celebrate Piano Ensemble presents its annual concert with a concert of piano duos (two pianos, four hands) and duets (one piano, four hands). This marks 18 years of their popular concerts and fundraising for scholarships for young music students in Santa Cruz County. There will be music by Mozart, Schumann, Poulenc and more. This concert benefits the Talent Bank Scholarship Fund and the Josephine Alvarado Memorial Bach Scholarship Fund.
INFO: 2pm. UCSC Recital Hall, 402 McHenry Road, Santa Cruz. Donation. For more information, call 334-1215.
Sunday 2/9
Sunny Cove Beach Clean Up
Remember those New Year’s Resolutions? More gym, less fries, more family time, less work? How is that going, by the way? Resolution or not, it’s never too late to clear up our ocean backyard. Join Save Our Shores in keeping our beaches healthy and litter-free. Volunteers under the age of 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Volunteers should dress in layers, wear sun protection, wear closed-toe shoes and bring a filled reusable water bottle. Restrooms and drinking fountains are available onsite. Parking is limited, so plan accordingly. No RSVPs are necessary, but print and complete an online waiver beforehand to save time. Go to saveourshores.org/waiver. Meet at the end of Johan’s Beach Drive at the main entrance to the beach.
INFO: 9-11am. Sunny Cove Beach, 101 Sunny Cove Drive, Santa Cruz. al*******@sa***********.org. Free.
If the definition of a great story is one that stands up to repeated retellings, over and over again to the widest possible audience for decades, then the greatest American love story might not be a book, a movie, a TV show, a play, or an epic poem.
It might be a song.
The sprightly country waltz that famously begins “Out in the West Texas town of El Paso …” was written and recorded by Arizona-born Marty Robbins. In the first weeks of 1960, “El Paso”—a narrative song about a tragic encounter between a nameless cowboy and a dancing girl with eyes “blacker than night”—hit number one on both the country charts and the mainstream pop charts and quickly established itself as a country music classic.
The original recording of the song clocked in at 4:38, an absurdly long duration by radio standards of the time, which demanded songs no longer than a lean three minutes. Columbia Records released an abbreviated cut of the song, but audiences wanted more, not less, of “El Paso,” and disc jockeys opted for the longer take.
Considering the millions of trips around the turntable—on radio stations, jukeboxes, and home stereo sets—mixing in the soundtrack appearances and countless bar-band cover versions over the course of 60 years, if “El Paso” isn’t the greatest love story in American history, it certainly ranks as one of the most retold.
Santa Cruz songwriters Carolyn Sills and Gerard Egan have for years been as entranced with “El Paso” as anyone. In fact, the band they share, The Carolyn Sills Combo, has released a new album titled Return to El Paso, devoted to the Marty Robbins classic. But instead of doing their own cover version—which they generally avoid out of respect for the song—Return is something even more beguiling. It’s an expansion of the story, with five new original compositions by Sills and Egan that flesh out the epic love story at the center of the song.
“It’s one of those stories that has absolutely everything packed into four minutes and 38 seconds,” says Sills, the band’s lead singer and bassist. “For the amount of action that goes down, that’s a pretty short period of time.”
The Carolyn Sills Combo will perform the songs of Return to El Paso on Feb. 11 at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center, opening for the popular singing-cowboy band Riders in the Sky.
Sills has been living with “El Paso” since she was a child, exposed to it by a dad with a weakness for such songs. “My dad was a big fan of story songs,” she says, “especially those on the darker side of things: ‘Dead Man’s Curve,’ ‘Tell Laura I Love Her.’ They’re great songs that you can listen to and paint a picture in your head and think about afterwards.”
As a literary artifact, “El Paso” mixes the Wild West imagery and romanticism that Americans have loved like catnip for more than a century, with a melodramatic love story that ends badly for all involved. The narrator opens the tale lamenting his troubled love for Feleena, the beautiful Mexican maiden who dances for tips at Rosa’s Cantina in El Paso back in the days of the mythic Wild West.
The action begins when another cowboy, “wild as the West Texas wind,” comes in and begins to woo Feleena. In a rage, the narrator challenges the “handsome young stranger” and, without meaning to, shoots him dead. He then escapes out the back door of Rosa’s, steals a magnificent young horse and disappears toward “the badlands of New Mexico.”
End of song? Not by a long shot. Tormented by guilt and lovesick for Feleena, the narrator, now a fugitive murderer and horse thief, decides to return to Rosa’s even though he knows it would mean his certain death. Turns out, he’s right. He is felled by a shot from a posse raised by the local lawman. But he does get to expire in Feleena’s arms.
It’s that grand romantic gesture—his willingness to pay with his life for one more chance to see his beloved—that gives the song its tragic soul. For contemporary listeners who never have to face such a circumstance or make such a choice, the fantasy that they (or the person they love) would act in the same heroic manner lends the song its power.
In fact, Robbins himself revisited the tale of “El Paso” twice after the original became a hit single. In “Feleena (From El Paso)” and “El Paso City,” written and recorded on subsequent albums 10 years apart, Robbins fills in many of the colors of the characters he first introduced in the original. In the former, he reveals (spoiler alert) that beautiful Feleena, moments after the hero dies in her arms, takes his gun and shoots herself.
It was from this rich material that Sills and Egan—bandmates on stage and spouses off stage—began to piece together five more songs to give backstory to the martyred narrator, the handsome young stranger, Feleena, the stolen horse, and the ranger assigned the duty of tracking down the fugitive.
“The idea was to get a little bit more background and flush out some of the motivations of the characters, all without changing Marty’s original intention,” says Egan, the band’s guitarist.
Return to El Paso did not, however, begin with Marty Robbins in mind. It began with a food-preparation accident in the kitchen of the home Egan and Sills share.
“Carolyn has literally rubbed jalapeños in her eyes dozens of times in our kitchen in the last 10 years,” laughed Egan. “We’ve joked about it a bunch of times. At some point, she figured that was a great song lyric.”
Thus was born a nascent song title: “I’m Not Crying; I’ve Just Rubbed Jalapeños in My Eyes.”
“So, I thought, who would say that line?” says Sills. “Who would be so strong that they would never admit that they were that upset? My first thought was maybe Superman breaking up with Lois Lane at a Mexican restaurant. But no, that’s stupid. Then, my next thought was Feleena, because she’s always been one of the strongest female characters in these Western story songs.
“She’s obviously wicked, and Marty paints this beautiful picture of her as a femme fatale. So I started thinking about her saying this phrase to someone in the bar. Should she be crying over the handsome young stranger? And, as I started to unravel this whole context, I thought it would be pretty fun to write songs based on those characters.”
The result of that brainstorm is the five-song suite on Return to El Paso. The songs are presented in chronological order beginning with “Feleena,” in which the lovesick narrator begs Feleena not to dance at Rosa’s that night. That’s followed by “The Handsome Young Stranger,” following the doomed cowboy in his trip across the desert to his rendezvous with Feleena. “I’m Not Crying; I’ve Just Rubbed Jalapeños in My Eyes” is Feleena’s chance to express her anguish at being jilted by the handsome young stranger. “Hold Your Horses” focuses on the narrator’s stolen steed and, the album’s final song, “The Ranger,” tells the story from the point of view of the lawman who ultimately killed the narrator. It’s this song that reveals the Romeo and Juliet twist on the “El Paso” saga with Feleena’s own death.
“It shows a bit of her human element,” says Sills. “She knew she did something wrong and caused the death of these young men.”
The Carolyn Sills Combo—which also features steel guitarist Charlie Joe Wallace, vocalist Sunshine Jackson, and drummer Jimmy Norris—has released two full-length albums before Return to El Paso. The band describes its own sound as “spaghetti Western swing,” mixing three-part vocal harmonies with spirited, Western-flavored swing and atmospheric, reverb-laden guitar.
The members of the Carolyn Sills Combo describe their sound as ‘spaghetti Western swing.’ PHOTO: RR JONES
The album does not sound anything like Marty Robbins, nor is it meant to. The five songs deftly dance among styles from Tex-Mex flavored waltz rhythms to blues balladry to moody, reverb-laden atmospherics.
“We wanted to be true to ourselves,” says Egan. “For instance, we have Charlie Wallace on steel guitar. There was no steel guitar on the Marty Robbins stuff. We try to do our own thing in terms of the actual music and in creating the sonic backdrop, to make it sound like a Carolyn Sills album with a Marty Robbins influence.”
To enhance the spell the album is designed to create, the band got out of Santa Cruz and relocated to the high-desert community of Joshua Tree to record the songs. It was important, says Sills, to be in an environment where the aesthetics of “El Paso” made sense.
“Before we walked into the studio every day, when we would come out and take breaks, we were just surrounded by vastness,” she says, “which felt like nothing and everything at the same time. I lived in Arizona for a brief time and we’ve taken a lot of road trips through the Southwest. It’s glorious and inspiring. I don’t know if we could have written and recorded this record just sitting in some urban environment somewhere.”
Sills and Egan moved to Santa Cruz in 2010 from Brooklyn, where they had played together in various bands. Egan signed on as a guitar maker at Santa Cruz Guitar Company and his wife, by happenstance, began working there as well. Today, she’s the head of operations at the celebrated guitar company, often splitting her time between managing the company and touring across the country with her band.
Once arriving in Santa Cruz, the spouses decided to reboot their musical projects, creating a new band and a new sound with a distinctive take on Western swing.
“One of the reasons we refer to our music as ‘spaghetti Western swing’ is—yes, we’re influenced a lot by all that spaghetti Western soundtrack stuff—but there’s something about that expression,” Egan says. “There are all these weird influences from old country, blues, Western swing, jazz, even some surf stuff. And in a sense, that’s what the original Western swing groups were all about back in the ’40s and ’50s. They were listening to everything that was popular on the radio: Hawaiian steel-guitar stuff, polka, old cowboy songs, big-city jazz bands. And it all became Western swing, because they just threw all these influences in the same big American melting pot of music.”
Sills often comes at her music from the literary side, drawing from well-known sources in her songs. Her husband points to a song from an older album called “Tinkers to Evers to Chance,” a tribute to a famous turn-of-the-century double-play combo for the Chicago Cubs. Sills herself mentioned a new song based on the Robert Service poem “The Cremation of Sam McGee.”
Among the many shared musical touchstones between the two was the Marty Robbins album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs, which includes “El Paso.”
“We’ve always been really into that album,” Egan says. “It’s something that Carolyn and I have shared for the 20 years or so that we’ve known each other.”
As for Return to El Paso, the album has already gotten lots of attention in Western swing circles. The Carolyn Sills Combo received two nominations in the 24th annual Academy of Western Artists Awards (to be announced April 9) for Best Western Swing Duo/Group and for Western Swing Album.
Sills says that, despite the album’s embrace, she probably will not hunt out other famous country songs for new material. “I don’t want to become known as that girl who writes those songs from different people’s perspective about things that have already happened. But it’s a fun way to look at things.”
Both Egan and Sills referenced “El Paso” as country music’s “Stairway to Heaven,” that one famous recording that defies anyone’s efforts to improve on it. But, Egan says, the approach on Return to El Paso is something that fits nicely in today’s musical environment.
“I see it much like other things going on in pop culture these days,” he says. “There’s a lot of movies out there, for instance, that are origin story films of superheroes. I don’t know if we have our finger on the pulse for this kind of thing, but once they find something they love, people seem to be kind of curious about what happened before the original. They always want a little bit more information.”
The Carolyn Sills Combo, opening for Riders in the Sky. Tuesday, Feb. 11, 7:30pm. General, $30; Gold Circle, $40. Kuumbwa Jazz Center, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. snazzyproductions.com
A few weeks ago, Santa Cruz City Councilmember Drew Glover was speaking to the UCSC College Democrats up on campus.
One student asked Glover about one of the recent investigations into his conduct at City Hall.
Glover responded by accusing Mayor Martine Watkins, who had complained about his behavior, of “playing the woman card.” Estrada says Glover’s comment, which resulted in a tense 20-minute exchange with the group, was one of several that offended the College Dems, as highlighted in arecent post on the club’s Facebook page.
Glover says, in an email to Good Times, that the uncomfortable exchange started because of misguided questions from students who were confused about some of the underlying facts behind the allegations.
Last week, the College Dems held an endorsement meeting on the potential recalls of Glover and fellow Councilmember Chris Krohn—both of which will appear on the March 3 ballot. Glover Skyped in. The call also included Carol Polhamus, representing the pro-recall group Santa Cruz United, and another representative, calling in on behalf of Krohn.
When Glover was asked about his “woman card” statement from a couple weeks prior, he initially denied ever making the comment, according to both Estrada and Polhamus.
“We definitely went in there with an open mind, and it shifted our perspective a lot,” Estrada says of the club’s two meetings with Glover.
Later that night, after the second meeting, the College Dems—a club that endorsed Glover’s run in 2018—voted to officially endorse his removal from office. Under the club’s rules for endorsements, all decisions must meet the threshold of a two-thirds vote in order for the club to make an endorsement, and the vote on Glover did so. Club members voted by a slimmer majority in favor of removing Krohn. That resulted in no endorsement on the question of Krohn’s recall.
In its Facebook post, the club later posted that the decision had nothing to do with Glover’s “progressive politics,” but was instead “based in his conduct towards our club.”
Glover tells GT that he’s “of course disappointed.”
“But I think that this is a fantastic example of how emotions play a strong role in politics and the influence these accusations (true or not) have had on this recall process,” he writes.
Keli Gabinelli, who represented Krohn at the meeting, believes the group missed the bigger picture. The recall, she writes in an email to GT, amounts to a landlord-funded power grab. In a separate email, Krohn says the current council majority, which includes Glover and himself, has been doing good work on labor agreements, drug decriminalization and funding the Warming Center homeless service.
This past summer, a report came out detailing allegations of workplace conduct violations by Glover and Krohn. Each councilmember had one complaint against him substantiated. Their supporters brushed off the violations as minor, ticky-tack infractions, but shortly after the report came out, Glover had a heated exchange with a city staffer that resulted in a memo from the city manager and new rules for whom Glover was allowed to talk to.
In December, Glover had another substantiated complaint against him. This violation was for a retaliatory Facebook post directed at Kevin Grossman, former chair of the Commission for the Prevention of Violence Against Women. A letter obtained by GT from the investigator to Glover noted that he had already been told to change his behavior, and also not to retaliate against anyone. “Nonetheless, it is evident that your conduct is still giving rise to new complaints,” investigator Timothy L. Davis wrote.
Glover disagrees with the finding, and denies doing anything wrong.
Davis, a San Jose-based lawyer, recommended that the City Council be appraised of the violation. The finding was reported on Santa Cruz Local last year, and in GT, but the city never made any announcements about it.
CHECKING ACCOUNT
Former Santa Cruz Mayor Katherine Beiers is one of two candidates running for Krohn’s seat on the City Council in the event that he gets recalled.
Her true hope, though, is that she does not end up on the council. That’s because she wants to see both Krohn and Glover hold on to their seats. Beiers—who has Krohn’s endorsement—says she’s been opposed to the recall, ever since she heard that people first started getting signatures more than six months ago. She even received a call about a year ago from someone shortly after Glover took office. The person asked if she wanted to take part in a possible effort to recall Glover. She was not interested.
“I wish I’d remember who it was who called me,” Beiers, 87, says, still feeling indignant at the idea. “Someone gets fairly elected, and they want to remove him. That told me a lot. It was about searching for whatever reason they could find.”
In some ways, the story behind the recall goes back to 2018, when Measure M, a local rent control measure, met well-funded, significant opposition and lost at the ballot box.
Santa Cruz Together, the landlord-led group spearheading the opposition, continued to raise money after successfully defeating the measure, partly because a new City Council majority was discussing rent control-type tenant protections.
Peter Cook, a member of Santa Cruz Together, says the group kept fundraising because of issues like neighborhood safety, the local economy and civility at City Hall. “We have grown reserves to support future campaigns such as Yes on Recall,” Cook tells GT via email. All told, the political committee raised more than $156,000 between the start of 2019 and Jan. 17, 2020—with a lot of the money coming from landlords and property management companies, public records show.
The committee has funneled much of that funding into Santa Cruz United’s anti-recall campaign. Now Santa Cruz United—which operates separately from Santa Cruz Together— has taken in $109,000 for its effort to recall Glover and Krohn. That includes more than $67,000 from Santa Cruz Together, which paid for expense items like “petition circulating,” “petition copies,” and “recall literature.”
Many landlords also gave directly to Santa Cruz United, according to financial reporting forms listed on the city’s website, and a Phoenix-based construction company called ASMC Inc. gave $3,000. Not counting the additional money in Santa Cruz Together’s reserves, Santa Cruz United has taken in more than five times the money that the Stop the Recalls group has.
Polhamus says Santa Cruz United is a loosely affiliated coalition of neighborhood groups—with additional from members of Santa Cruz Together and public safety groups like Take Back Santa Cruz.
When Stop the Recall leaders like UCSC Professor Emeritus John Hall started going over the financials, one item that caught their eye was the amount of money—more than $65,000—spent by Santa Cruz Together on the cost of “petition circulating.” Late in the signature-gathering period, Polhamus and fellow Santa Cruz United leader Dan Coughlin both stressed that 90% of the signatures were gathered by volunteers. Assuming that was true, it looked like Santa Cruz Together paid canvassers more than $25 per signature for that other 10% of signatures on behalf of Santa Cruz United. And if not, opponents said that recall leaders were dramatically underrepresenting the number of paid signature gatherers who took part.
Coughlin now says that by the campaign’s end, the share of signatures gathered by paid workers was higher. He also believes the “petition circulating” cost probably included tables, banners and other costs. He adds that he plans to go back and look at the financials, and that he doesn’t fault Stop the Recalls for looking at the numbers the way they did. “I can see where they’re doing, and I can respect that, actually,” he says.
Former Mayor Bruce Van Allen, who opposes the recall, notes that, in general, the money being spent dwarfs the cash that would flow through a typical City Council campaign race, where candidates typically follow voluntary spending limits.
“It’s very hard to counter the kind of money that the pro-recall groups are raising,” he says.
SPEED RACE
All the candidates in the recall race say that, if elected, they hope to heal the wounds incurred from years of divisive politics.
Former Santa Cruz Mayor Tim Fitzmaurice is running as a replacement candidate for Glover. Like Beiers, he supports Glover and Krohn first and foremost and would like to see them finish out their terms.
He’s running in case Glover loses. Fitzmaurice says the current majority has accomplished good things and he doesn’t want to see them go away. Fitzmaurice says that, if elected, his main focus would be on rebuilding relationships between the City Council and the community. In particular, he says groups that are down on their luck have learned to distrust the city more than anyone.
“We’ve got to work on rebuilding trust,” Fitzmaurice says. “When you’re an addict or you have other struggles—you’re poor or homeless—that’s when you have the most issues trusting the council, trusting the police, trusting the community, trusting the police. We need to rebuild that trust.”
First-time candidate Renée Golder is also running for the Glover seat, and she was the first one to jump into either race. If elected, she says she hopes to focus on housing, homelessness and protecting the environment. Golder says she probably would not have jumped in, had she known Fitzmaurice was going to enter the race. Golder had already been planning a run for the council this upcoming November, and that’s still on the table if she doesn’t win this time. “If the recall doesn’t pass, I’ve already bought my campaign signs,” she says.
Candidate Don Lane, a three-time former mayor running against Beiers for the possible Krohn seat, has criticized the recall at times. In general, he feels it may be too blunt of an instrument. He still doesn’t know how he’ll vote on the question next month.
Five months ago during the recall’s signature-gathering phase, Lane wrote a blog post titled “I remember—but do I recall?” about his ambivalence toward the process and also reflecting on a recall effort he himself faced 30 years prior.
Lane realizes that many of his anti-recall friends are disappointed that he hasn’t come out against the recall altogether.
“That’s really difficult, because the folks against the recall don’t like it. They want me to be on their side,” Lane says. “I’m trying to make the point that, if I’m going to be a bridge builder, I can’t be seen as firmly entrenched in one side or the other. It’s tricky, but I feel like it’s the right thing for me to do.”
Update Feb. 25, 10:30am: A previous version of this story over-reported some of the fundraising totals from pro-recall groups.
When Santa Cruz-based documentary filmmaker Erik Nelson was invited on to KSQD (90.7 FM) to chat about his latest project last May, he knew nothing about the newly established community radio station. But by the time he left the station’s Harvey West-area studio that evening, he had become consumed with a crazy idea: why couldn’t he do a show on K-Squid too?
Today, despite a demanding day job that finds him on the road more often than not, Nelson is the host of Creative Bandwidth, a weekly music show that makes the best use of his skills as a historian, researcher and unapologetic music obsessive. He calls the show “an annotated deep dive into music from great artists and about how that art came to be.”
The show is both erudite and adventurous, held together by connections of music both obscure and popular that casual fans might not be aware of.
It is also an indication of the serendipity of KSQD’s first year on the air. When the station threw the switch on its first broadcast signal on Feb. 15, 2019, no one could have predicted someone like Nelson showing up, lending his considerable talents and enthusiasms, hours of work in preparation and execution, all on a volunteer basis. (Nelson plans to be on hand when KSQD celebrates its first anniversary on Feb. 15).
However much he enjoys programming his weekly show (Saturdays at noon), Nelson is just as much entranced by KSQD as a whole. When he first heard of a show on dreams (The Dream Journal, hosted by Katherine Bell), “my first reaction was, ‘Oh, brother. Give me a huge break,’” he says. “But then I listened to the show and I was captivated. I loved it. It’s a great show. It was interesting and heartfelt and homespun, and spoke to the community and to a wider audience. And that’s what KSQD affords, due to the unique alchemy of the structure of the station and the community that contains it.”
KSQD—which has embraced its K-Squid nickname with a life-size squid sculpture christened “Squidmore”—presents a kind of crazy-quilt block of programming, 24 hours a day, balancing news/talk/public affairs and musical entertainment. It features a limited number of satellite programs such as Democracy Now, The Thom Hartman Show and The California Report. But mostly, KSQD shows are the creation of local programmers, many holdovers from Santa Cruz’s now defunct KUSP, but many newcomers as well. Full disclosure: I host my own show, The Golden, on KSQD, Thursdays at 6:30pm.
“What I love about it,” says Nelson, “is that it’s what radio used to be. It’s not polemical like some of the Pacifica stations, though there is a lot of politics. It’s the radio station that Santa Cruz deserves.”
Rachel Anne Goodman, the chair of the station’s board of directors, said that reflecting Santa Cruz’s inherent diversity of viewpoint and talent has always been the station’s ideal (the station features 126 on-air volunteers). In a time when it seems that the tide is ebbing on many forms of traditional media, including radio, Goodman and the board made a bet that locals needed a broadcast channel that reflected their distinctive tastes and interests.
“When we first put out the call for proposals,” she says, “we got some really amazing ones. But you never know what you’re going to get. We had some gems left over from KUSP, but also new people like Erik who found a niche and just slid right in there.”
Another new programmer to KSQD, Jill Cody, is symbolic of the other role the station has taken on in the community: a forum for social and political engagement. Cody is the author of two books about the threat to participatory democracy. She had no radio experience when she decided to translate her activism to the airwaves. The result is her show Be Bold America (every other Sunday at 5 p.m.), in which she interviews activists both local and national on such subjects as political tribalism, authoritarianism, and corporate control of politics.
She says her goals as an activist are “perfectly aligned with KSQD’s values.”
“Community radio is the air of democracy, and we can use the airwaves of community radio to talk about things that corporate radio would never talk about,” she explains.
Goodman says that the station requires about $100,000 a year to stay on the air, and that fundraising the first year has exceeded expectations.
“Once people find us,” she says. “they like us.”
She says that one of KSQD’s goals in 2020 is to “have more fun, celebrate the things that are working in this world.” At the same time, though, election-year concerns will continue to be front and center. She hopes that KSQD will be a go-to media stop for locals trying to make sense of a chaotic world.
“We’ve already had those moments when you tune in and you hear someone say something so profound, you think, ‘That is exactly what we had in mind [when we started KSQD].’ We’re going through an amazingly tumultuous and turbulent time right now. And we need to figure this stuff out together. We as a culture are at a tipping point where a lot of things are being challenged and changed. To have some way to discuss that together is really important, to feel more solid as a community.”
For more information on KSQD, its first anniversary celebration, or to listen live online, go to ksqd.org.
The New Music Works’ 23rd annual mystery tour through chamber music and song by not-yet-departed composers is about to lift off. And there’s a reason the composer anthology of short works took its name from George Romero’s groundbreaking 1968 zombie film.
“The name is a cue that what’s coming will flirt with whimsy and weird,” says New Music Works’ artistic director/composer Phil Collins. “Though composers headline, the extraordinary caliber of our performers and their dedication to giving their utmost is definitely high among the program’s primary allures.”
Collins says this annual exploratory showcase is always a kick for the performers. “There’s something titillating, even revelatory on occasion, about playing new stuff,” he admits. “It’s also just gratifying to assist fellow composers in getting their music out.”
Usually crunching deadlines, Collins had a longer lead time to assemble this year’s concert. “I enjoyed an extra few months to really sort out the possibilities and ultimately decide on a program that is a sure-fire wow,” he says.
That wow factor should be on full display thanks to mezzo Lori Rivera and pianist Sarah Cahill. Programming new chamber works means that the format of NLC is never formulaic, says Collins.
“A great deal of thought and many listenings, readings, conversations go into selecting the repertoire,” he says. “Contrasts in a wide vista of parameters are considered. The magical chemistries of sound enact transformational changes of circumstance like no other media.”
He’s got that right. Nobody leaves the always-intriguing NLC without some fresh mind sparkle. Like consuming exotic foods or sipping a provocative cocktail, new music can take your senses for a ride often unavailable to the tried-and-true masters of the genre.
Another secret to the lasting appeal of this annual fiesta for music lovers and music geeks is that the pieces are all different and almost always short.
“I think the inherent NLC format guarantees conspicuous variety in relatively brief doses,” Collins contends. “With pieces lasting anywhere from 5 to 25 minutes, audiences know that if a piece doesn’t strike one as a personal pick, that it won’t take long before another work of completely different style, instrumentation, mood starts vibrating.”
In Saturday’s evening of the unexpected, you’ll find a salute to Harriet Tubman, I Like to Think of Harriet Tubman, by Christian Wolff, a street-wise adaptation of Susan Griffin’s poem, Harriet Tubman. Vivacious vocalist Lori Rivera will perform a rhythmic spoken part, accompanied by an instrumental trio of violin, piano and double bass.
There will be world premieres, including two from local composers. The new quintet by Santa Cruz’s Scott Stobbe, Circadian Melodies—a NMW commission—takes listeners through a richly imagined day of bio-rhythmic changes. And Collins’ piano solo Pleasant Dreaming will be performed in a newly revised version by Bay Area virtuosa Sarah Cahill.
The evening also features two Paul Simon song arrangements that have toured nationally. “Both are extraordinary cross-over collaborations,” says Collins. “The music of Bryce Dessner—the arranger of Simon’s “Can’t Run But”—will also be featured on our April 4 concert. Dessner’s Murder Ballads—commissioned, recorded, and toured by Eighth Blackbird—showcases deft textural and melodic sensibilities. And despite the notoriety he has received for his music and the score for the newly-released film The Two Popes, Dessner’s name remains obscure.” No printed score was available for the NLC selections, so Collins and Michael McGushin cobbled one together themselves.
David Behrman is another new name in the Living Composers roster. His sound and multimedia installations, including collaborations with John Cage, David Tudor and countless others, have been experienced around the globe. Behrman’s Mills Open Space is scored for open instrumentation so the audience can feast on another stylish performance from the seasoned warriors of the NMW performance ensemble. Carleton Macy from Monterey provides another NMW premiere for bass clarinet, vibraphone, marimba and piano, Spiral, which promises to bring the evening to an electrifying climax.
A live sampler of unexpected words, sounds, and music, Night of the Living Composers is bound to haunt your imagination for a long time to come. Don’t miss it.
Night of the Living Composers will be presented at 7:30pm on Saturday Feb. 8, at Samper Recital Hall, Cabrillo College. Tickets at Cabrillo College Box Office, 479-6154, and cabrillovapa.com/tickets.
“On my 40th birthday, I was volunteering on the Thai/Burmese border at a refugee camp. I woke up with the sun rising, and I realized how incredibly lucky I was to be born the way and the place that I was.”
Joe Sieder
Mexico City
Photographer/Writer
“When my girlfriend orchestrated a surprise party with 15 of my friends behind my back.”
Horatio Alger
Wordsmith
Reno
“Me and several friends kidnapped a friend and took him to the Giants/A’s game. We threw a bag over his head and grabbed him. ”
Matt Andrada
Santa Cruz
Plumber
“My daughter got tickets for all of us, her friends and my friends, to go to see Moe live in concert.”
Linda Butler
Santa Cruz
Building Designer
“For my 50th birthday, I bought myself a set of Cornishware teapot and mugs that reminded me of a set we had as kids.”
“On my 40th birthday, I was volunteering on the Thai/Burmese border at a refugee camp. I woke up with the sun rising, and I realized how incredibly lucky I was to be born the way and the place that I was.”
Joe Sieder
Mexico City
Photographer/Writer
“When...