Rob Brezsny’s Astrology June 14—20

 

ARIES (March 21-April 19): You have to admit that salt looks like sugar and sugar resembles salt. This isn’t usually a major problem, though. Mistakenly sprinkling sugar on your food when you thought you were adding salt won’t hurt you, nor will putting salt in your coffee when you assumed you were using sugar. But errors like these are inconvenient, and they can wreck a meal. You may want to apply this lesson as a metaphor in the coming days, Aries. Be alert for things that outwardly seem to be alike but actually have different tastes and effects.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Here’s a possible plan for the next ten days: Program your smart phone to sound an alarm once every hour during the entire time you’re awake. Each time the bell or buzzer goes off, you will vividly remember your life’s main purpose. You will ask yourself whether or not the activity you’re engaged in at that specific moment is somehow serving your life’s main purpose. If it is, literally pat yourself on the back and say to yourself, “Good job!” If it’s not, say the following words: “I am resolved to get into closer alignment with my soul’s code—the blueprint of my destiny.”

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Actress Marisa Berenson offers a line of anti-aging products that contain an elixir made from the seeds of a desert fruit known as prickly pear. The manufacturing process isn’t easy. To produce a quart of the potion requires 2,000 pounds of seeds. I see you as having a metaphorically similar challenge in the coming weeks, Gemini. To create a small amount of the precious stuff you want, I’m guessing you’ll have to gather a ton of raw materials. And there may be a desert-like phenomena to deal with, as well.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): There are three kinds of habits: good, bad, and neutral. Neutral habits are neither good nor bad but use up psychic energy that might be better directed into cultivating good habits. Here are some examples: a good habit is when you’re disciplined about eating healthy food; a bad habit is watching violent TV shows before going to bed, thereby disturbing your sleep; a neutral habit might be doing Sudoku puzzles. My challenge to you, Cancerian, is to dissolve one bad habit and one neutral habit by replacing them with two new good habits. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, cosmic forces will be on your side as you make this effort.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Dear Dr. Astrology: Good fortune has been visiting me a lot lately. Many cool opportunities have come my way. Life is consistently interesting. I’ve also made two unwise moves that fortunately didn’t bring bad results. Things often work out better for me than I imagined they would! I’m grateful every day, but I feel like I should somehow show even more appreciation. Any ideas? -Lucky Leo.” Dear Lucky: The smartest response to the abundance you have enjoyed is to boost your generosity. Give out blessings. Dispense praise. Help people access their potentials. Intensify your efforts to share your wealth.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Years ago, a fan of my work named Paul emailed to ask me if I wanted to get together with him and his friend when I visited New York. “Maybe you know her?” he wrote. “She’s the artist Cindy Sherman.” Back then I had never heard of Cindy. But since Paul was smart and funny, I agreed to meet. The three of us convened in an elegant tea room for a boisterous conversation. A week later, when I was back home and mentioned the event to a colleague, her eyes got big and she shrieked, “You had tea with the Cindy Sherman.” She then educated me on how successful and influential Cindy’s photography has been. I predict you will soon have a comparable experience, Virgo: inadvertent contact with an intriguing presence. Hopefully, because I’ve given you a heads up, you’ll recognize what’s happening as it occurs, and take full advantage.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You’ll never get access to the treasure that’s buried out under the cherry tree next to the ruined barn if you stay in your command center and keep staring at the map instead of venturing out to the barn. Likewise, a symbol of truth may be helpful in experiencing deeper meaning, but it’s not the same as communing with the raw truth, and may even become a distraction from it. Let’s consider one further variation on the theme: The pictures in your mind’s eye may or may not have any connection with the world outside your brain. It’s especially important that you monitor their accuracy in the coming days.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Maybe it wasn’t such a good idea to go gallivanting so heedlessly into the labyrinth. Or maybe it was. Who knows? It’s still too early to assess the value of your experiences in that maddening but fascinating tangle. You may not yet be fully able to distinguish the smoke and mirrors from the useful revelations. Which of the riddles you’ve gathered will ultimately bring frustration and which will lead you to wisdom? Here’s one thing I do know for sure: If you want to exit the labyrinth, an opportunity will soon appear.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Over the years I’ve read numerous news reports about people who have engaged in intimate relations with clunky inanimate objects. One had sex with a bicycle. Another seduced a sidewalk, and a third tried to make sweet love to a picnic table. I hope you won’t join their ranks in the coming weeks. Your longing is likely to be extra intense, innovative, and even exotic, but I trust you will confine its expression to unions with adult human beings who know what they’re getting into and who have consented to play. Here’s an old English word you might want to add to your vocabulary: “blissom.” It means “to bleat with sexual desire”

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your life in the coming days should be low on lightweight diversions and high in top-quality content. Does that sound like fun? I hope so. I’d love to see you enjoy the hell out of yourself as you cut the fluff and focus on the pith . . . as you efficiently get to the hype-free heart of every matter and refuse to tolerate waffling or stalling. So strip away the glossy excesses, my dear Capricorn. Skip a few steps if that doesn’t cause any envy. Expose the pretty lies, but then just work around them; don’t get bogged down in indulging in negative emotions about them.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Inventor, architect, and author Buckminster Fuller lived to the age of 87. For 63 of those years, he kept a detailed scrapbook diary that documented every day of his life. It included his reflections, correspondence, drawings, newspaper clippings, grocery bills, and much other evidence of his unique story. I would love to see you express yourself with that much disciplined ferocity during the next two weeks. According to my astrological analysis, you’re in a phase when you have maximum power to create your life with vigorous ingenuity and to show everyone exactly who you are.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You have a cosmic license to enjoy almost too much sensual pleasure. In addition, you should feel free to do more of what you love to do than you normally allow yourself. Be unapologetic about surrounding yourself with flatterers and worshipers. Be sumptuously lazy. Ask others to pick up the slack for you. Got all that? It’s just the first part of your oracle. Here’s the rest: You have a cosmic license to explore the kind of spiritual growth that’s possible when you feel happy and fulfilled. As you go through each day, expect life to bring you exactly what you need to uplift you. Assume that the best service you can offer your fellow humans is to be relaxed and content.


Homework: Do a homemade ritual in which you vow to attract more blessings into your life. Report results at FreeWillAstrology.com.

Flags—the Spirit of a People

June 12-18 is National Flag Week. Wednesday is Flag Day. Flags, flapping and waving in the air, are symbols. They reflect the visions and aspirations of the state, country, nation and the people the flag flies over. Flags are art forms. Flag Day in the U.S. (not a legal holiday) is a federally-recognized day that dates back to 1870. The U.S. flag was created June 14, 1777. The California flag was also created June 14.

The study of flags is called vexillology (new vocabulary word). Flag Day prepares us for the U.S. July 4 birthday. President Woodrow Wilson said about the flag, “The flag, which we honor and under which we serve, is the emblem of our unity, our power, our thought, and our purpose as a nation. It has no character (other) than that which we give it from generation to generation. The choice is ours.”

Flag Day, celebrated June 14, observes and memorializes the adoption of the U.S. flag, June 14, 1777, one year after the Declaration of Independence (1776). Flag Day celebrations include: Quincy, Massachusetts, with the longest running flag parade and Troy, New York with the largest parade. Flag Day is a three-day event in Three Oaks, Michigan. They have the largest and oldest flag in the nation. June 14 is also the birthday of the U.S. Army.

A flag represents a nations’ freedom and ideals, loyalty to the nation, a belief in liberty, justice and unity. Our U.S. flag is called “Old Glory” or the “star-spangled banner.” Colors, emblems, shapes on a flag are deeply symbolic. Vigilance, perseverance, justice, prosperity, peace, revolution, determination, valor, freedom. Flags represent the art and spirit of a people.


ARIES: You are known for individuality and freedom of expression. Only Aquarius rivals you in this. In times to come, the urge for individual creativity and freedom becomes extreme. Because you must initiate changes in the present culture, the planet Uranus will radicalize and revolutionize you. Expect unexpected changes—part of the Divine Plan to “make all things new,” for which you’re partially responsible.

TAURUS: You need to be out and about most of the time because you often feel a certain claustrophobia. Sometimes you find you must be and work alone so your intuitive and investigative gifts can be fully accessed. As usual you avoid anything that feels like an opposition, attempting instead to flow with the accepted reality. Something or someone shatters this calmness. It is not comfortable, yet it’s needed. Keep going.

GEMINI: Everything you say has importance. All that you do has importance. Your hopes, dreams, wishes, friends, groups and associates are important. Your life goals and ambitions, always changing, unplanned, unpredictable are important. Your mind, even unsettled, is important. As your life twists and turns, and as you search for the Soul of yourself, you becoming liberated and forward thinking. You thought that could never happen.

CANCER: Flashes of intuition and insight occur. It’s good to create a new Insight journal. So many journals for an esoteric student. Retrograde journal, New and Full Moon journal. Now an Insight journal. Insights help us to see behind fogs, miasmas, glamours and illusions. People will see that you have changed. Begin to explain your thoughts and actions to others so they can understand step by step the source of your knowledge. You will teach them.

LEO: In the coming weeks and months, notice a new and different philosophy of life emerging. You may consider a utopian view of how to live your life, perhaps in community with others. Living with like-minded people, realizing ideas from the past need updating in order to build the new culture and civilization. To be successful in the future one must know and live the new Aquarian Laws and Principles. Unanimity, Goodwill, and Right Human Relations are a few of them.

VIRGO: It’s important to review money, finances, banking, insurance and investments. Make sure they are safe and secure. The economy may behave erratically, with sudden ups and downs in the future. Attempt to stabilize all resources. Consider investing in gold and silver even when the market shifts and changes. Maintain the precious metals in safekeeping (special safes). You are intuitive enough to understand these things.

LIBRA: Careful with relationships, marriage, partnerships, close intimate connections. They may either be disrupted by sudden change or they may feel wounded. The outcomes can last far into the future. Develop more stability through truthful and caring listening, asking questions, communicating more. These will absorb unexpected upsets when everything turns upside down. Health wise, careful with the liver and pancreas. Eat accordingly.

SCORPIO: Nothing routine will occur in your daily life, concerning work or health or communication. The disruptions will prove to be creative for you, helping to develop new abilities that express new and original ideas. Instead focus your energy into inventing things. As you upset the apple carts wherever you are, you become the change maker—greatly needed everywhere. Tend to your health with the utmost care.

SAGITTARIUS: Within your great level of creativity you find the need for more self-control, which would also provide you with more self-knowledge. This is interesting. Through discipline you come to know yourself more, your needs and then a new level of creativity arises. Speculation is costly. Instead focus on independent thinking and how to break with all that is old. You are crying for liberation.

CAPRICORN: As you attempt each day of your life to bring constancy and calmness to your home, know that sudden upsets may occur there. Moments of unexpected freedom occur too. And a sense of life for you as a state of constant transformation. You assess present needs with past needs and see how much has changed. As life proceeds into states of breakdown, new opportunities arise. Look for these changes, write and communicate about them. You will be creating a new tradition.

AQUARIUS: Be aware that your thinking, communicating, processing information and interacting with others is significant and that it changes people. Careful, therefore in the thoughts you think, which become the ways you speak. You consider striking out in different directions, going here and there. A rebelliousness erupts, an aspect of advanced and new thinking. You become interested in sources of light. And will begin to think more and more about community. It’s where you belong.

PISCES: Often you experience daily life as not steady and stable. During Earth lives, vicissitudes continually occur. We must hold ourselves with poise no matter what occurs. Material things come and go, unforeseen events upset plans. This is not due to anything you have created. All conditions in our world are changing. The new world is being created. It’s not quite here yet. It’s built through our creative visualizations. For now, remain near a pine tree and rest a while.

Megan Bell’s New Margins Wine

Megan Bell greeted me outside the Holy Cross Parish Hall in Santa Cruz. I was on my way to a function there, and it seemed like a good central spot to meet up. Smiling broadly, bottle of wine in hand, Bell had emailed me about her new endeavor, Margins Wine.

She named it Margins, explains Bell, because she is crafting wines using grapes from “as many underrepresented regions, vineyards and varietals as possible.” Right now, her first production consists of Chenin Blanc 2016 with grapes harvested from Wilson Vineyards in Clarksburg, Yolo County.

Opening the wine the very next day to enjoy with dinner, I was impressed with its aromas of flowers, honey and apples, and flavorful acidic punch. And as you won’t find an abundance of Chenin Blanc on most liquor store shelves, kudos go to Bell for making this varietal.

“Much like people living on the margins of society,” says Bell, vineyards can be outcasts, too. Margins draws attention to grape varietals, regions and vineyards throughout northern and central California that find themselves on the margins without the recognition they deserve,” she says. It looks like Bell is about to change all that.

The Chenin Blanc 2016 sells for $24, and you can contact Bell is you want to try some. Visit marginswine.com for more info.


Sparkling Wine at Cantine

I met with a friend for a glass of wine at one of my favorite places, Cantine Winepub in Aptos, and she urged me to try a sparkling wine called 3B Rosé Extra Bruto. The 3B is from Portugal and it’s a blend of Baga and Bical, two native grape varieties. Pink and sassy, it’s a fun drop of bubbly that sells for around $25. We ordered one of Cantine’s delicious small plates of food to pair with the bubbly, and then polished off the rest of the bottle. Cantine is a cozy spot for a glass of wine in a casual and welcoming atmosphere. Cantine Winepub, 8050 Soquel Drive, Aptos, 612-6191. cantinewinepub.com.

Burn Hot Sauce Westside Farmers Market Breakfasts

Since I discovered Burn’s vibrantly hued fermented hot sauce last year, it’s become a staple in my kitchen, boosting everything I drizzle it on with dynamic spiciness. Then, their escabeche earned a permanent spot in my pantry—the pickled jalapenos, carrots, garlic and spicy brine are a flavor-packed powerhouse that takes soups, quesadillas and salsa to the next level. Now, Burn has started making breakfast on Saturday mornings at the Westside Farmers Market, and they’ve hooked me again.

Before she and partner Chase Atkins started Burn at the end of 2015, Amanda Pargh worked with such top-tier chefs as Suzanne Goin at Lucques, Thomas Keller at Ad Hoc and David Kinch at Michelin-starred Manresa before moving to Santa Cruz. Deeply inspired by the incredible produce available at the farmers markets where she and Atkins vend their sauce, she creates her breakfast menu each week to showcase the best produce the local farms have to offer.

What I love about the way Pargh cooks is that she respects her ingredients too much to disguise them. Rather, she deftly combines them to be greater than the sum of their parts, each ingredient becoming even more vibrant. Last Saturday, Pargh’s menu included avocado toast with an herb salad of mint, cilantro, basil and radish topped with a crispy fried egg with a molten center and Burn fermented jalapenos; fried potatoes with broccolini, asparagus, a fried egg and dill-cream sauce; a farmers market bowl with cow’s milk yogurt, toasted buckwheat-coconut-quinoa granola topped with strawberries and plump olallieberries; a snap pea slaw with raw zucchini, green onion, purple cabbage and lemon; and cornbread with honey butter. Of course, you’re welcome to spice it up with their range of single-variety hot sauces.

“Everything we’re serving is from the area and organically grown. It’s feel-good food,” says Pargh.  “Breakfast is the most fun meal of the day. It’s my favorite meal and it makes me happy to serve it. I love starting people’s day off with something fun and vibrant because hopefully they’ll feel like that for the rest of the day.”

Daniel Stewart Makes a Statement with ‘Yuja II’

The Santa Cruz Symphony operates within what local musicians jokingly call the Freeway Philharmonic. The term refers to any orchestra in Northern California that isn’t the San Francisco Symphony or the San Francisco Opera.

“If you’re not in those two groups, you need to play in a variety of these things just to make a little bit—and then you have your day job,” says Daniel Stewart, conductor and artistic director of the Santa Cruz Symphony. “These are heroes, these musicians, because they are driving hundreds of miles all over the place just to do what they love and believe in, even though it pays squat. I know what it’s about, I’ve been in the trenches in that world. They’re heroes, and I love them.”

At the other end of the classical music hierarchy are the soloist stars—or in the case of Yuja Wang, superstars. The 30-year-old Chinese classical pianist began studying at Beijing’s Central Conservatory of Music at age seven, and winning international music competitions around the globe by 11. At age 15, shortly before she made her European debut with the Tonhalle-Orchester Zurich, she began studying at Philadelphia’s prestigious Curtis Institute of Music. She debuted with the New York Philharmonic in 2006, and some consider her breakthrough to have come a year later, when she played Tchaikovsky with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Since then, she has been on a seemingly nonstop tour of performing with orchestras around the world. Meanwhile, Wang’s charisma and star power have earned her the oft-used description “the Beyonce of the classical world.”

So it was understandably a surprise when Wang traveled to Santa Cruz in February to perform concertos by Brahms and Prokofiev at two shows that were hailed as the biggest thing ever to happen to the Santa Cruz Symphony. The only thing more outrageous would be if Wang suddenly, out of nowhere, decided to come back to Santa Cruz again—which she will do on June 24 and 25, when she’ll perform another concerto by Brahms, and one by Beethoven.

“For Yuja to do two concertos on the same program with any orchestra in the world would be a big deal,” says Stewart. “For her to just play one concerto with a regional orchestra is something she doesn’t do. She doesn’t play with regional orchestras, she plays with the Berlin Philharmonic. So we had the two concertos here, and I thought ‘wow, okay, that’s great.’ And now two more? Four concertos with Yuja Wang in four months?”

Certainly the symphony’s musicians were shocked to hear that Wang would be paying another visit to the Freeway Philharmonic.

“You should have heard the orchestra’s reaction,” says Stewart. “I said, ‘Great job at the last concert, Yuja had a good time. By the way…’ I’ve never heard an orchestra gasp like that.”

Clearly, worlds are not expected to collide like this in classical music. But the real story behind “Yuja II,” as it’s being billed, is that these worlds are not as far apart as they initially seem. First, the 35-year-old Stewart has built the Santa Cruz Symphony’s reputation into something far beyond that of a typical regional orchestra. Second, he and Wang have a lot in common. They met a decade ago as musicians, while Stewart was making his name as an in-demand violist, and they went to school together at Curtis. Their bond has arisen from a shared obsession with the power, passion and relevance of the music they play, and a bit of a rebel streak in their attitudes about the culture around it. Dedicated and driven, they are, in their own ways, both redefining the classical music world.

But maybe don’t make Wang its Beyonce.

“I was hoping I’m Rihanna,” says Wang. “She’s younger and she’s more edgy.” She laughs. “I think people used to say I was the Lady Gaga of classical music. And now it’s Beyonce. I guess I got a little curvier.”

 

The Maestro

Like Wang, Stewart began playing at a young age; his mom signed him up for violin lessons at age 4. Growing up in San Francisco’s Potrero Hill and then the North Bay’s Rohnert Park, it was just one of many interests he threw himself into.

“It wasn’t until I was 10 or 11, when I started playing in ensembles, that I said ‘wow, there’s this incredible chemistry and complexity and really rewarding fun social aspect to all this.’ Then I started paying more attention to getting better, and I developed,” he says. “I was playing more viola. I was bewitched by the timbre, the deeper sound. There’s some intoxicating draw to certain sounds, and I love that bass resonance.”

Daniel Stewart conducting the Santa Cruz Symphony in 2016.
FRONT AND CENTERED Stewart conducting the Santa Cruz Symphony in 2016. Under his leadership, the symphony has consistently won acclaim for achieving far beyond its classification as a regional orchestra.

He played in some youth symphonies, and got his first professional job at 17 with the Santa Rosa Symphony. His reputation as a violist grew steadily, and in addition to scoring a major-label deal to record with Israeli conductor and violinist Maxim Vengerov, he saw a lot of the world at a young age.

“Music has been a passport. It took me to over 40 countries as a violist by the time I was 25,” he says.

After finishing his grad work at Curtis in conducting, he served as a “cover conductor” for a number of orchestras—Atlanta, St. Louis, L.A., New York—which meant that if the conductor got sick or couldn’t perform for some other reason, he was literally passed the baton.

In 2010, Stewart won the Aspen Music Festival’s James Conlon Conducting Prize, and in 2012, he was hired to be the first conductor of the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program.

But 2012 was also the year that former music director and conductor John Larry Granger announced he was retiring from the Santa Cruz Symphony. That season, five conductors were invited to perform with the symphony by a search committee looking for his replacement. Stewart won the gig.

“I was at the Met, that’s a dream job. But then this opportunity came up,” he says. “So I asked my Met boss, James Levine, the music director, and he said ‘I absolutely support it.’ So I’d fly out here once a month, have a week of concerts, then fly back to New York. I would take the red eye on Sunday night, and be at rehearsal on Monday morning after the Sunday matinee here. I was just so happy to have a little thing in this gorgeous, wonderful town, with a scene, with a people and a vibe that I relate to so well. I know it, I love it, I get it.”

 

The Belief System

Stewart says he went after the job as conductor and artistic director of the Santa Cruz Symphony because he wanted to prove he could get world-class results from a small regional orchestra. But when he talks about his work there, it becomes obvious that he’s motivated by something even bigger than that: he wants to fill a void in both the players around him, and the audiences that come to see them perform. He wants to give people something to believe in. The word comes up a lot; for example, when he talks about the symphony’s musicians.

“‘Freeway Philharmonic’ is a useful term,” he says. “The sobering statistic that I like to give is that our guys make as much in a year with us as a San Francisco Symphony member makes in a week. The conditions are far from ideal, and it’s hard to get a result that you can really feel proud of or really believe in, that you want to invite all your friends to and say ‘this is something special.’ So that’s what my real goal was.”

He feels what he calls “an incredible cohesion, a unity and an accuracy” within the symphony now—despite the fact that members rotate around as their other jobs demand. As much as 30 percent of the ensemble may be different from week to week, which means long, tightly executed rehearsals to achieve the performances Stewart seeks.

“I want to bring out results from people that they didn’t even think were possible,” he says. “That’s one of the things I’m most proud of, is that we’ve taken folks who don’t have a lot of experience or fancy conservatory training, but through really intelligent planning and rehearsal process, you can encourage them and bring out a result that is something so much more professional and committed than even they had expected of themselves.”

The idea of belief comes up when Stewart speaks about the symphony audiences, as well, and the experiences he hopes to give them.

“Something I’m acutely aware of is that in any concert experience, the majority of the audience is going to be hearing this piece, whatever it is, for the first or the last time. Think of how vast the repertoire is,” he says. “So if you believe in it as passionately as we do, you want to give a performance that makes this lasting impression on somebody who’s going to hear it for the first time, and maybe it touches them in some way. Maybe it’s the last time someone’s going to hear it, and you want to give a piece its due. Because these pieces are so deep in their potential.”

Deep enough for their meaning to stretch across centuries, he says.

“It’s why people believe so passionately in a Beethoven symphony, which can seem to some to be so far removed from what life in 2017 is about,” says Stewart. “We feel this sense of emotion that shines through all the technical barriers. It means a lot to us. It’s as meaningful as it was 250 years ago.”

In the end, belief is the key to what the symphony has accomplished since he took over as music director in the fall of 2012: “Belief in the process. Belief in their ability,” he says. He credits Granger, who led the symphony for two decades prior to Stewart’s tenure, with drastically expanding the scope and ambition of an organization that began as an all-volunteer orchestra in 1958. Taking over in 1990, Granger earned the Santa Cruz Symphony a “4” rating from the California Arts Council, the highest rating for an orchestra of its size. He drew on his connections within the classical music community to bring in some acclaimed guests, announcing his intentions with a debut concert that featured Leonard Pennario, one of the best-selling classical pianists of the 20th century. Stewart is carrying on that tradition.

“My predecessor did amazing things, taking it over 20 years from a volunteer thing to a regional level,” says Stewart. “What I wanted to do was take it from there, from kind of ‘OK, kind of a pleasant week in Santa Cruz, we’ll play there’ to a thing where we get everyone else in Northern California to say ‘oh, they’re very serious about results here. I want to play here. I’ll forgo a higher-paying gig, because I know that this is going to be a serious week of music here.’ But you have to prove that it’s worth that.”

 

The Joie de Vivre

Considering Stewart’s intensity and focus, one would be forgiven for expecting him to be a harsh taskmaster. But in fact, he’s the exact opposite—in not only his conducting style, but also his general demeanor, it’s hard to imagine anyone with more joie de vivre. He brings a disarmingly empathetic warmth to every conversation, and when he smiles—which is often—it seems to take over his whole face.

Nothing seems to bring out this delight more than music. Not just classical music—he’s also a self-described “hip-hop head” who was known for his scratching ability in college, and still likes to DJ. But what he likes to do even more is conduct, and he doesn’t require an audience of hundreds at the Santa Cruz Civic. He’ll do it just about anywhere: at Burning Man; at a San Francisco nightclub; in the middle of a design studio; at juvenile hall, for incarcerated kids; in someone’s living room. He organized a flash mob on Pacific Avenue set to Beethoven’s Ninth. He’s arranged music by Radiohead and Verdi, the Beatles and Brahms.

“I don’t know, it all just seems to be so much the same thing,” he says. “It’s all part of this bigger musical picture.”

In symphony rehearsals, what comes across—even as he briskly battles the clock to get everything into a session—is his appreciation for the musicians, and his desire to explore beyond what’s on the music sheet. Before they play a passage, he’ll sometimes say something like “Let’s see what we can find in this song” or “let’s see what else we can discover.” And when he hears something new that he likes, he’ll say, “Let’s keep that,” or simply “Yes! Yes, yes!”

“He brings this friendly energy to rehearsal,” says Nigel Armstrong, who last fall came on as the symphony’s concertmaster—sort of Stewart’s right-hand man—and also leads the violin section. “He has this passion, this dedication. He knows what he wants to get from the orchestra.”

Modern classical music is continually moving toward Stewart’s style, says Armstrong, away from the classic image of the grim, authoritarian conductor.

“There’s much more appreciation now, it’s more collaborative,” says Armstrong. “But I think Danny is unique in his joyful exuberance.”

Stewart’s wife, In Sung Jang, can often be found sitting in on the Santa Cruz Symphony’s rehearsals. She is a first violinist in the San Francisco Symphony, and though they were married just last year, they dated for a decade before that, having met as musicians in Miami’s New World Symphony. In that time, she has watched Stewart evolve as a conductor.

“He’s a really energetic player to begin with, so he’s bringing that to the conducting,” she says. “It’s an extension of that exuberant playing.”

It’s not as easy as you might think for musicians to move into a conducting role; in fact, the two worlds are often quite separate. Musicians generally don’t have a larger vision for the orchestra, while conductors are not often known for their playing.

“Maybe they might play an instrument—but not well,” says Jang. “It’s hard for a really good instrumentalist to naturally become a conductor. They don’t have a lot of understanding of how an orchestra works. But it emerged naturally for Danny, from leading the section to leading the orchestra. He had so much experience with different conductors in different places, touring all around Europe.”

Yuja Wang, who has worked with Stewart many times since their days together at Curtis, says there’s a joke among classical musicians that “violists are always the ones who say yes to everything.” But with his subtle style, Stewart has flipped that on its head.

“He’s not up there demanding you do this,” says Wang. “He has this way—and not just in rehearsals, I’m telling you—of letting other people say yes to him. They realize, ‘Did I just … oh my god, I just totally succumbed to what he wanted me to do.’ He has a very charming way of doing that.”

 

The Undiva

At her upcoming Santa Cruz concerts—the first on June 24 at the Santa Cruz Civic, followed by June 25 at the Mello Center in Watsonville—Wang will perform Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 1 and Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 1 with the symphony. For Stewart, this has an important link to Wang’s last concerts in Santa Cruz.

“Last time, we did the last concertos of Prokofiev and Brahms. This time, we’re going to do the first concertos of Beethoven and Brahms,” he says, his hand moving, conductor-like, to indicate a circular quality. Of course, whatever connection he’s referring to is probably lost on most people. This is one of the things Wang loves about Stewart.

“We’re both such musical nerds,” she says.

While audiences here may be dazzled by her star power, the upcoming shows are important to Wang for entirely different reasons. She is going to play-conduct the five Beethoven concertos in Europe in the fall, and “Beethoven One” is the only one of those she’s never played. Learning such a piece in a short time is daunting enough that “people are like, ‘oh, you’re crazy,’” she says. “But for us, it’s like we have to get this. It’s this determination. We have to get rid of all the fears, and nothing else matters.”

Stewart and Wang could have set these shows up basically anywhere—in Europe, or a major U.S. city. For Stewart, doing it here was about continuing to build momentum for a program for which he is all in. For Wang, it was about … well, surfing, for one thing.

“Danny’s going to take me surfing, which I’ve also never done. I’m really, really looking forward to that,” she says. “Hopefully I don’t run into a shark or something.”

It’s no joke—the impact Santa Cruz’s natural beauty had on her in February was a big part of why she wanted to come back.

“Santa Cruz is such a beautiful place. The beaches are so lovely. Same reason I go to Santa Barbara a lot. Being close to nature is such a special part of being a musician, and we have less and less of that,” she says.

Wang can certainly pick where she wants to play. Before her Santa Cruz concerts, she played Brahms in London, and before that she did an acclaimed program of Bartok in L.A.—a run that epitomized the unheard-of-in-classical level of crossover success she’s reached.

“This week, there are just so many kids coming to my concert. I mean kids like 12, 13, little boys, girls. At one of the concerts, two little girls ran to the front row and asked me to give them an autograph while I was on stage. I didn’t know what to do, you know? That never happened to me while I was playing. I was bowing, about to play an encore. I was like, ‘Should I call security?” she says, with a big laugh.

Instead, she gave the autographs, sending the girls off deliriously happy.

Gustavo Dudamel, conductor and artistic director of the L.A. Philharmonic was on the stage, too, and later expressed amazement that such a thing would happen at a Bartok concert, of all places.

“Bartok is known for being really thorny and kind of unpopular,” Wang says.

Just as she was flying high from that experience, though, she got a reality check about the way pop culture works.

“I was feeling happy about having this sold-out concert. And then yesterday I went to Bjork’s concert. Same hall, the Disney Hall. And the audience was just so different. I mean, they jump up before she even started. I go there and nobody knew who I was. One person who did know was like ‘She’s a pianist.’ And it was like ‘Oh, is she a student from Colburn?’”

When she talks about Bjork’s show, she seems to be already planning how she can take her own performance even further out from the typical bounds of classical music.

“People will talk about my dress and stuff, but the way she dressed was this huge thing. Like, she has a mask! And lighting and everything. There’s just so much production behind the music,” says Wang. “Compared to that, a dress is nothing.”

And this is one of the things Stewart loves about Wang. “She’s so disarmingly candid,” he says. “She speaks what’s on her mind, and she has such clarity. The extent to which she’s developed the insane talent that she has? That’s why she’s so well regarded across the board in this profession. Her commitment to this freakish talent is extraordinary.”

Over the years, he’s seen how success affects and changes people, he says. But not her.

“She’s such a down-to-earth, fun, kind, sweet person. It’s amazing how unpretentious she is, despite being arguably the most renowned pianist working today. She’s just the same Yuja I knew 10 years ago.”

Both of them want to bring that same quality of groundedness and accessibility to the music they perform, to delight and surprise audiences. Stewart literally shudders at some of the stuffy clichés classical music has been saddled with, like someone getting glared at for clapping at the wrong time.

“Ugh, it’s terrible,” he says. “We don’t need any of that. That’s not what it’s about. It’s not what Mozart was about. It’s not what Verdi was about.”

Similarly, Wang hates the notion of classical music as some kind of “ivory tower where you can never get up to the sublime idea. It’s not that. The music is down-to-earth,” she says. “It’s written by people who are made of blood and meat just as we are—and probably enjoy surfing, as well.”

In fact, she may have stumbled upon the real reason Beethoven was so famously grumpy: “Because he couldn’t go surfing in Vienna.”

So if that’s what it takes for the world at large to notice their musical insurgency, then fine, go ahead and call Wang the Beyonce of classical music.

“As long as I haven’t turned into the Eminem,” she says, “it’s okay.”


The Santa Cruz Symphony’s ‘Yuja II’ shows featuring Yuja Wang are on Saturday, June 24 at 7:30 p.m. at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium and Sunday, June 25 at 2 p.m. at the Mello Center for the Performing Arts in Watsonville. Tickets are $29-$85; go to santacruzsymphony.com.

Growers Apprehensive About Pending Pot Rules

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Brenda, a medical cannabis grower, is in the process of showing me to her garage when she pauses and turns to discuss the evolving weed rules. “I appreciate where we are now,” she says. “But we won’t get to where we need to be unless we keep working.”

Brenda, who asked us to withhold her last name, has been networking locally and pushing for regulations that won’t punish small cultivators like herself, ever since the Cannabis Choice Cultivations Committee began meeting in 2015.

Inside Brenda’s garage, 50 small cannabis plants—all from hybrid strains she crossed herself—sit in plastic pots. Their leaves fidget and shimmy in a lush, aromatic breeze that blows around the room—from a fan up above, an air conditioning unit to the side and a cooling system in all four corners. “I’ve walled myself up in here because I don’t want anyone to smell it,” she says. “I don’t want it to bother anyone. I want it to be clean.”

Brenda grows for her own personal medical use to soothe her arthritis, but also sells to dispensaries. She says she does her best to follow every rule, but that’s a difficult challenge, given the sometimes conflicting positions from government officials. In a perfect world, she says, last year’s Proposition 64, which legalized cannabis for recreational use in California, might have taken some of the pressure off.

Instead, she worries that the resulting county regulations will have the opposite effect, barring her and hundreds of other local cultivators from legally growing for sale.

A draft county ordinance would ban grows from properties under five acres, as well as in traditional residential zones, regulating cannabis in a way similar to agricultural crops.

In an effort to bring growers to the table and legitimize themselves in a new system, county supervisors asked established growers to register last year, while a Santa Barbara group began work on an environmental impact report, which is expected to be released in mid-August.

Brenda signed up to enter into the county’s registry, paying her $500 fee, as did more than 750 other people.

Now she’s hoping that $500 doesn’t go to waste.

 

Don’t Get Burned

Many established growers who registered for cultivation licenses did so with assurances that they would be better off getting in line—even if their current location doesn’t meet zoning requirements right now. But as they await new information, the situation is creating a blazed-up version of musical chairs, with business owners like Brenda trying to figure out where they’re going to grow next year.

Cultivators are hoping to convince county officials to let them partner up and split parcels, sharing grows with multiple licenses per property. It’s something that’s allowed in Monterey County and in Oakland, but it isn’t in Santa Cruz County’s draft ordinance yet, and officials can’t yet say—as they await environmental documents—how keen they’ll be on such a setup.

But activists say the ordinance will need some adjustments if it’s going to accommodate everyone.

“As we all know, there’s a limited resource in Santa Cruz called land,” says Pat Malo, co-founder of Green Trade, a new association representing Santa Cruzans in the cannabis industry. “And there’s also an issue with the price of land. … Buying land is not really possible for most people, even in cannabis, where people think that owners have lots of money, but usually they’re just getting by like every other business.”

A recent Green Trade meeting gathered to discuss the murky regulatory framework for local cannabis. Jim Coffis, the group’s other co-founder, took a hand count to see how many people had registered for licenses with the county. “That’s pretty good,” he told the crowd, as about 30 hands slowly went up in the air at the May 31 gathering.

He followed up: “How many people own or lease land in the county that you believe to be compliant with the county’s ordinance?” Only about 10 hands went up.

Local cannabis attorney Ben Rice has been sending messages back and forth with subscribers to his email list, looking for cultivators who wouldn’t be allowed to grow under the county’s new ordinance, as well as people who have land they can share, and he’s organizing all of the information on a spreadsheet to try to connect them. So far, he’s heard from about 75 people looking for land, and only five with some to spare. He concedes his methods aren’t perfect, and says he’s started trying to reach out to possible interested landowners in other ways.

Malo’s running joke is that Green Trade should set up a “speed dating” night to make connections among weed entrepreneurs and landowners.

The County Board of Supervisors did ask staff to consider allowing multiple licenses per parcel, but only on properties 40 acres or more in size. Rice would additionally like to see Daniel Peterson, the county’s new pot licensing official, have some discretion to hear appeals from growers that nearly meet the requirements and have a case to make.

In some ways, the task at hand is a little bit like trying to settle the Wild West within a few short months—especially given the confusion that’s surrounded cannabis for years.

“There will be both an adjustment period and a paradigm shift for members of the cannabis community to transition into a regulated environment,” Peterson says via email.

Obviously, the challenge of a cannabis cultivator is greater than simply running one’s own business. He or she must also navigate an increasingly complex landscape of licenses, taxes, building permits, water permits, ag rules, and fire code standards.

For now, Malo urges weed entrepreneurs not to embark on any big business decisions. They probably shouldn’t buy or build anything yet, he says, because no one knows what the ordinance will or won’t allow.

Malo and Coffis worry that if the county passes overly stringent regulations, it will just send people to the black market, making the local pot supply unsafe for customers, and creating a mess for law enforcement. It would also leave a hole in potential tax revenue for both the county and state.

At the same time, District 1 County Supervisor John Leopold says the county can’t just turn a blind eye to environmental considerations or the concerns of neighbors. “This is pretty complicated stuff, because it’s a new area of land use,” he says. “And we’re going to do a really good environmental review, because if we’re not careful and someone doesn’t like it, they could sue us, and that isn’t in the best interest of cultivators or the community.”

The state’s Bureau of Medical Cannabis Regulation plans to start handing out state licenses to recreational growers in 2018, when recreational weed sale is supposed to begin. And regulators will prioritize cultivators who are in “good standing” with local officials. That would be straightforward if the county could finalize its ordinance by the end of the year, but things don’t look to be on that timeline.

Malo wants the county to promise “letters of good standing” to established cultivators following the rules—an idea to which planning staffers and the Board of Supervisors have been generally warm.

 

Cash Stash

Only nine months old, Green Trade is already having money problems.

Its members have been paying their dues, but Malo and Coffis haven’t been able to deposit any of their checks, because their chamber-type organization keeps getting kicked out of banks, asked to close their account, or turned away at the door.

Banks are federally insured, after all, and the feds still view weed as a Schedule 1 narcotic.

“Just the mention of cannabis scares people in banks right now,” says Malo, who believes it’s partly Green Trade’s fault for being so open about being a cannabis organization. If he and Coffis were more vague about it, they might get accepted, he says, but that isn’t how they want to do business.

The two men hope to open an account in the next few weeks. A growing field of legalization may bring a greater air of legitimacy to the business, but Rice says there isn’t a clear solution, and that many pot businesses in Colorado are struggling with the same issues and dealing in cash as a result. That creates headaches, and not just because the idea of having tens of thousands of dollars in cash lying around feels like an unsettling liability for a business owner. Cash also makes it harder for investigators to track unlawful activity, and makes it difficult for honest entrepreneurs to prove that they aren’t doing anything wrong. Rice says he’s had had roughly $200,000 returned to his clients by law enforcement this year after deputies confiscated it.

“If we had a system that would have been in place where those guys could have put it in banks, it would have been in banks,” Rice says. “But they didn’t feel it was safe. They didn’t trust that it would be left alone. And the fact that this cash is in the home—that’s symbolic in the police’s mind of unlawful activity. And in these cases, there wasn’t any signage evidence of anything, except there was a lot of cash there and cannabis. But these guys had relationships with dispensaries and all the other things that are the earmarks for the legal stuff. But law enforcement, that’s their training: if you see a lot of cash, that’s probably evidence of bad stuff.”

 

Local Artists Support Robbie Schoen with Benefit at the MAH

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The first time I walked into the sculpture garden at the Felix Kulpa seven years ago, I was in awe. The Steve Jobs memorial and phone booth fountain, the iconic, fully functioning found-item guitars—like the one made out of a toilet seat and the one made out of a Millennium Falcon model—I’d never seen anything like it. “This is Santa Cruz,” I remember thinking. Even more so, though, this is Robbie Schoen. As the director of the Kulpa since 2002, and an exhibition coordinator at the Museum of Art and History (MAH), Schoen has become a catalyzing force in the local art scene.

Which is why I was pretty nervous last week when I rushed out of our downtown office to visit him in Capitola, where he is recovering from a massive stroke. When I arrived at Pacific Coast Manor, he was sitting in his wheelchair, a sizable chunk of his skull noticeably absent from the right side of his head. But his sense of humor remained intact—he was joking with the nurse administering his electrical stimulation, singing a little tune: “Christina, the village queen-a,” and chuckling.

“It’s just that smile that Robbie greets you with, it’s filled with light,” says Rose Sellery, one of the organizers of Art for Robbie, an art sale fundraiser at the MAH on June 17 to benefit Shoen’s recovery.

On February 10, a blood clot shot through Schoen’s carotid artery, into his brain, and started to hemorrhage. He was airlifted to Stanford where they removed a portion of his skull to allow the brain’s swelling to subside (the surgery to replace it was on June 6).

When he first came to in the hospital, Schoen was confused, he remembers.

“I was coming to grips with the reality of my condition: ‘Oh, my left hand doesn’t work right now, oh. I won’t be hanging art for a while.’ And then time is going by and going by and piling up, and you’re laying in bed more than you ever have in your entire life, with a diaper on,” says Schoen. “And then I have obsessions, and I’m impulsive, so I’m trying to do stuff from the bed, like my taxes. I exhaust the people who are helping me, because I’m like a rocket.”

The right side of Shoen’s brain was the most impacted by his stroke, so it’s his left extremities that were rendered immobile. He can’t use his left side, and can’t read the first two words of a sentence. At the MAH, where Schoen started in 2006, he was constantly climbing 12-foot ladders, hanging projectors, mounting art and informational panels.

Still, he finds things to keep his spirits up.

“I watched all three Hannibal Lecter movies the other day, and now I just look at people and think, ‘How can I eat their face?’” Schoen says with a smirk and a laugh.

That’s Robbie, says Marla Nova, who’s worked alongside Schoen at the MAH for more than a decade.

“He gets away with it because he smiles and goes ‘ahahah.’ He always makes things fun,” says Novo. “It’s a really great thing to work with people that you enjoy.”

On Feb. 10, Novo had a haircut appointment behind the MAH at noon. On her way, she saw Schoen setting up for the museum’s annual Red Ball.

“Every time I’ve ever seen Robbie throughout the years we acknowledge each other, and I was late for my appointment so I saw him and he didn’t say anything. Then I went to my hair appointment and about 10 minutes later he had the stroke. It always haunted me that I didn’t get to say hi to him.”

Thankfully, says Novo, Schoen happened to be in the second-floor Solari gallery at the MAH where visitors saw him collapse and called 911.

“That was a hard day. It still seems unreal when someone’s life is changed so drastically,” she says. “But then you look for the happy moments and see that he has such loving support around him. He wants to get better and is getting better, that’s a beautiful thing.”

So far, 130 local artists have rallied around Schoen by donating their works for the Art for Robbie event—which is the day after Schoen’s 59th birthday, and will serve as an extra big birthday celebration for the guest of honor.

They’ve had to start turning artists away, says Sellery, because the MAH won’t be able to hold all the art donated for the event, which will offer all pieces for $200, in addition to a live auction featuring the works of Thomas Campbell, Glenn Carter, Tobin Keller, Tim Craighead, Coeleen Kiebert, Daniella Woolf, and Schoen.

There’ll be mixed media, sculptures, paintings, prints, a little bit of everything from the community’s best-known artists, says Sellery, program director for the Cabrillo Gallery.

“What we realized is he needs more care than what his subsidized insurance can give, and there is such a long road to recovery,” says Sellery.

That’s why all proceeds from the event benefit Schoen’s recovery, says Sellery, in addition to the youcaring.com page, set up for direct donations by his daughter, Nikita.

“More than 1,000 people have shared on Facebook about [the page]. People are donating and sending cards,” says Sellery. “When you see someone who’s that beloved in the community it’s really amazing and inspiring. I want to be like Robbie.”

Weeks ago, Schoen told his partner, Jet—who has MS, and for whom Schoen was previously the primary caretaker—that he dreamt his MAH coworkers had come to the hospital with protest signs to get him out.

So, that’s precisely what they did.

“He’s touched so many people and they’re here and rallying for him. He’s always so thankful to everybody helping,” says Novo. “The last time we talked I said ‘It’s going to be a great summer,’ and he said, ‘Yeah it is, I survived.”


Info: 4 p.m., Saturday, June 17. Museum of Art and History, 705 Front St., Santa Cruz. felixkulpa.com. Free.

Preview: Lee Fields to Play the Catalyst

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Lee Fields considers himself a Southern gentleman. Born and raised in North Carolina, he grew up listening to Motown, soul, and what he refers to—with old-time flair—as “country-western.” Even though Fields “moved north” when he was 17, this combination of soul and country still defines his music, which includes elements of everything he heard as a youngster, both on the radio and in his everyday life.

“I have a deep appreciation for country-western music because of my upbringing,” he says. “Instead of just being introduced to one kind of music, I was introduced to a whole host of music. In school, they would teach us the classics, like Beethoven, Bach, Chopin and the rest of ’em. My musical appetite, at a young age, was satisfied.”

Fields, who is now in his mid-60s, is part of a soul revival wave that’s introducing young people to the sounds and styles of classic soul. Fields and his band, the Expressions, garner comparisons to the Delfonics, the Stylistics and James Brown’s groups. They’re frequently mentioned in the same breath as Charles Bradley and the late, extraordinarily great Sharon Jones—soul artists who, despite a generation gap or two, attract young audiences.

When asked why he thinks young people are drawn to his music and message, Fields explains that they can feel the “warmness of human beings.” Fields admits to using “a little technology now and then,” but says nothing can top real musicians.

“Technology is a beautiful thing, and I embrace technology,” he says. “But I don’t believe human beings can be left out of the equation. Back in the day, there were tons and tons of young musicians learning to play different instruments. Nowadays, it’s teetering off. You don’t see as many young musicians as you used to. I’m all for technology,” he adds, “and I’m also all for mankind. It’s a happy medium.”

Fields takes an everyperson approach to songwriting. His goal, when crafting a new tune, is to write about things normal people do and think about—“just general life.” His songs include stories of going to work, dealing with family problems, enjoying simple pleasures and even going to counseling.

“I try to write songs about things that people actually do, and that people will automatically identify with—the basic things in life,” he says. “I sort of veered off and got into a Southern soul sound at one point in the ’90s that was more or less blues. I was singing about love and somebody-did-me-wrong songs and that kind of stuff. Now, I try to get as close as I can to getting on-point with what people are thinking and doing at this very moment.”

On his latest album, 2016’s Special Night, Fields makes a call for environmentalism and global compassion with the tune, “Make the World.” The song was inspired by a dream he had where trees were bare, water polluted, and there were “indications of pain everywhere.” When Fields woke from the dream, he was gasping because “it was so bad.” When he went back to sleep he recalls that he was taken back into the dream, down that same road to the future—but with a different view.

“I saw the trees with beautiful foliage, the water was clear, people were getting along with each other,” he says. “It was more perfect than I could ever imagine. By having that nightmare and having that good dream about the future, it dawned on me that it hasn’t happened.”

Fields wrote the lyrics to the song to try to convey to listeners that it doesn’t have to.

“We have time,” he says. “I’m not going to say we have plenty of time, but we have time to act now and show concern about each other and show concern about the planet and not be so selfish and act like this whole world is just about us.”

Fields’ warmth, concern and humanness shine through in his music, his lyrics and in conversation. As he explains, his big-picture perspective is an appreciation of life and a love of humanity.

“Love is the answer,” he says. “That’s what I try to put in my music.”


Lee Fields & the Expressions will perform at 9 p.m. on Friday, June 16, at the Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $20/adv, $25/door. 423-1338.

Alex Krause and John Locke to Open Birichino Tasting Room

The mid-century building at 204 Church St. offers plenty of creamy natural light and a vintage footprint for what will be downtown’s newest wine tasting location. Before its current transformation into Birichino Tasting Room—in progress—the long, high-ceilinged space was home to Blodgett Travel, and more recently housed Pure Pleasure. Surely both a sense of journey as well as pleasure will be channeled into the new home of wines made by partners Alex Krause and John Locke, who first joined playful intelligences working with Randall Grahm at Bonny Doon Vineyard. I got a preview glimpse last week of the handsome cast pewter bar—1,100 pounds of crucial ambience. Clusters of vintage photographs, old topographic maps, lithographs and other eclectic visual metaphors will adorn the new tasting room. A saloon-sized mirror, deep sea-green silk wall treatment, and tchotchkes of prankster proportions should add chic to the space that will include wine storage, tasting accoutrements and retail inventory.

The partners are admittedly stoked about just how cool and welcoming the downtown tasting room will be upon completion. “We are very much the exception,” Locke admits, noting that Birichino first established national and international visibility and distribution, before opening a tasting room. “You cannot really duplicate the experience of pouring for and talking to a consumer in an environment of our own creation,” he says, with a broad grin. “We might not reach a huge number of people, but we have a much better chance of creating loyal customers by lavishing attention directly upon them rather than through tech sheets and trade tastings.” Locke, as founding wine maestro at Soif, is a master of lavishing attention and wine lore in equal proportions.

Yes, there have been the usual permit-driven delays in getting the tasting room completed. But with distribution well in place, those delays weren’t fatal. Expect to see Krause and Locke in person, on site. “We will absolutely be there a significant amount of time,” Locke promises. “But harvest will be upon us in the blink of an eye.” And that means the winemakers will need to spend time in the vineyards—the huge seasonal crunch that is part of the “romance” of winemaking. 

Helping to remodel and transform the space are Greg Nolen and son Evan of Nolen Technical Services. “They also give us great ideas, and tell us when ours are lunacy,” Locke adds. “John McKelvey, an old friend of Alex’s is our architect. Stripe has helped on many design elements. The saving grace of Birichino is that Alex and I are able to develop a common vision for everything we do. He is the world’s best business partner.  With the help of these people, we have been able to put together a design we both love and agree upon.”

Locke is aware of the amount of work ahead in terms of shaping the brand and creating the wines. “We have arrived at the late-middle first step on a great Escheresque staircase.  I feel like I am just beginning to really be familiar with two of our wines—the Malvasia Bianca and the Besson Old Vine Grenache. I mean really understand. There is such a vast chasm between pretty good wine and the real thing. Anyone who thinks they have mastered a vineyard after a few years is delusional.”

The most satisfying aspect of all of this? “Standing in a beautiful vineyard on a beautiful day and wondering how you tease the most out of it. Winemaking is a great exercise in synthesis of knowledge, experience, data and aesthetic sensibility. It is not all philosophical B.S.,” he says. “I suppose the short answer is contemplating the intersection of the cerebral and the aesthetic, and then communicating my excitement about it to interested people, that’s what is most gratifying. And playing. Combining the cerebral, aesthetic and funny—that’s your trifecta.”

At the Birichino tasting room, locals will be able to sample some of the house signatures—including the Besson Vineyard Grenache, a highly approachable creation of old vine grapes loaded with character, spice, cranberries, and coastal attitude, and the sprightly Malvasia Bianca. The 2017 vintage will bring more Pinot Noirs into the Birichino stable. “And a fizzy Malvasia we call Petulant Naturel as well as our Vin Gris and our Jurassic Park Chenin Blanc,” he says. Locke also promises a methode champenoise Chenin Blanc coming online this year. “We shall have to see what the vineyard wants to do.”

Birichino (pronounced, beer-a-keeno) is Italian for “naughty.” Expect nothing less once the Birichino Tasting Room opens later this summer. birichino.com.

Visitor Guide 2017

Visitor Guide cover a Good Times publication“Alternative tourism.” “Cultural tourism.” There are a lot of names for the new style of vacationing, but they all come down to the same thing: doing as the locals do.

In Santa Cruz, for instance, the beaches and the Boardwalk will always be the top draws for tourism, but more and more visitors are slipping away from the beaten path and finding this area’s hidden gems. Do you know how to find the foodie scene in Soquel? Or what a reflexologist can do for you? Or what the most happening area of Santa Cruz is right now?

All the answers are in this issue of Visitor Guide. Whether you’d like to see some quality Shakespeare while you picnic, discover the local bodysurfing culture, find Santa Cruz’s famous Dance Church, try an Escape Room for the first time, or track down a swimming hole in the redwoods, this is the place to start. So get a tight eight hours of sleep tonight and load up on carbs. We’ve got places to go!

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR


IN THIS ISSUE…

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology June 14—20

Astrology, Horoscope, Stars, Zodiac Signs
  ARIES (March 21-April 19): You have to admit that salt looks like sugar and sugar resembles salt. This isn’t usually a major problem, though. Mistakenly sprinkling sugar on your food when you thought you were adding salt won’t hurt you, nor will putting salt in your coffee when you assumed you were using sugar. But errors like these are...

Flags—the Spirit of a People

risa d'angeles
Esoteric Astrology as news for week of June 14, 2017

Megan Bell’s New Margins Wine

Margins Wine white wine on a porch in front of mountains
Margins seeks underrepresented regions, vineyards and varietals

Burn Hot Sauce Westside Farmers Market Breakfasts

Burn Hot Sauce serve breakfast at the Westside Farmers Market in Santa Cruz
Chef Amanda Pargh spices up breakfast favorites with vibrant, local ingredients

Daniel Stewart Makes a Statement with ‘Yuja II’

Yuja Wang and Daniel Stewart
The return of classical superstar Yuja Wang underscores how conductor Daniel Stewart has transformed and elevated the Santa Cruz Symphony

Growers Apprehensive About Pending Pot Rules

Growing weed legally is difficult with conflicting regulations
The future’s still hazy for the cannabis, especially here in Santa Cruz County

Local Artists Support Robbie Schoen with Benefit at the MAH

Robbie Schoen
All proceeds from ‘Art for Robbie’ on June 17 will benefit the artist’s recovery from a massive stroke

Preview: Lee Fields to Play the Catalyst

Lee Fields
Lee Fields’ brand of human country-western is bringing in young audiences

Alex Krause and John Locke to Open Birichino Tasting Room

John Locke (left) and Alex Krause of Birichino
Birichino will offer an intimate wine tasting experience with an old-world feel

Visitor Guide 2017

Iconic surf statue on West Cliff Drive in Santa Cruz against a blue sky
Slip off the beaten path and find Santa Cruz's hidden gems
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