Preview: Little Hurricane to Play Catalyst

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Anthony “Tone” Catalano and Celeste “C.C.” Spina have an unusual approach to making records. The two members of the indie-blues-rock duo Little Hurricane record everything, including their improvisational jams and band practices. That way, when inspiration strikes, or something magical happens, they can include the moment on their next record.

For some musicians, doing double-duty as artist and engineer is too muchโ€”theyโ€™d rather just focus on the music, so they have someone else engineer their recordings. But Catalanoโ€”who plays guitar, handles vocals, and does the engineeringโ€”loves it.

โ€œThatโ€™s my favorite part,โ€ he says, explaining that doing the recording himself minimizes the distance between a songโ€™s conception and how it appears on a record.

โ€œThere are a lot of links in the chain as far as getting a song out of the musicianโ€™s head and into the heads of people who listen to the music,โ€ he says. โ€œIt can be shortened by the musician actually recording their own music.โ€

Catalano lived in Scotts Valley, went to high school at Monte Vista in Watsonville, and attended Cabrillo College before relocating to San Diego with a previous band in 2004. That band didnโ€™t last long, but Catalano stayed and started doing studio work with sound engineers and other artists. After several years, he decided to โ€œfollow the musicโ€ and get back into a band. He went on Craigslist looking for a drummer and found Celeste “C.C.” Spina. A tight and creative drummer, Spina has what Catalano describes as a โ€œfresh energy about music.โ€.

โ€œShe has this really cool perspective on rhythm thatโ€™s hard to describe,โ€ he says. โ€œShe hits the drums very hard, but thereโ€™s definitely a feminine feel to it. There are subtleties in her drumming that I really like.โ€

Catalano will bring Spina a song idea, and the two work together to finish it. The duo, whose sound is driving, edgy, catchy and simple, draws comparisons to Dead Weather and the Black Keys.

Their new album Same Sun Same Moon sees Catalano and Spina building on their blues-rock roots to create a broader sound, while maintaining the gritty, musical minimalism that has made Little Hurricane a standout in Southern California.

Catalano and Spina hit it off immediately musically, in large part because they both grew up playing in jazz bandsโ€”Spina in her native Chicago, and Catalano in Santa Cruz area bands, including the Kuumbwa Jazz Band with other musicians from local high schools. Initially, the two would just jam together on blues riffs, building on their early training.

โ€œI remember having a lot of fun in jazz band,โ€ Catalano says, โ€œand being able to improvise the moods and emotions that jazz and blues have that you canโ€™t get with power chords or straight rock music or pop music.โ€

Those jam session evolved into the Little Hurricane sound, which continues to move forward as the two push themselves and each other to become better musicians and more efficient storytellers.

โ€œWe donโ€™t want to get too complex, where we need a bunch of backing musicians,โ€ says Catalano. โ€œWe still want the songs to stand with just guitar and drums and vocals. Itโ€™s a constant challenge to outdo ourselves. Our sound is the same, but weโ€™re progressing, if that makes sense.โ€

As Catalano and Spina continue to carve a musical path of their own, Catalano notes that it was that decision, made years ago, to follow where the music would lead, that brought the duo to where they are now.

โ€œYou can plan your life only so much, because it takes over at some point,โ€ he says, explaining that just days ago they were in Paris eating croissants.

โ€œI was thinking, โ€˜I would never be here,โ€™โ€ recalls Catalano, โ€œโ€˜if I didnโ€™t take a leap of faith and decide I should find a drummer.โ€™โ€


Little Hurricane will perform at 9 p.m. on Wednesday, May 31 at the Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $13/adv, $15/door. 423-1338.

Odonata Winery Releases a Wine for Alzheimer

Winemaker Denis Hoey from Odonata Winery recently released his first Zinfandel wine, made from Monterey County grapes.

Remembrance is a spice-driven Zin that calls attention to Odonataโ€™s partnership withย a big causeโ€”finding a cure for Alzheimerโ€™s disease. Hoey and his wineryโ€”the nearest tasting room is located on the Westside, at 2343 Mission St., next door to Companion Bakeshopโ€”have long partnered with local walking team โ€œItโ€™s a Zooโ€ to raise money and awareness through the Walk to End Alzheimerโ€™s. This year Hoey, a UCSC graduate who spent time working in the cellar with Jeff Emery of Santa Cruz Mountain Vineyard, has decided to take his commitment to this cause a step further. All proceeds from the sale of every bottle of Remembrance will go toward the Itโ€™s a Zoo team effort to raise $10,000 in Septemberโ€™s Walk. Odonata released the 150 cases he crafted of the special Zinfandel during Passport Weekend this past February. Itโ€™s going quickly, so you might want to head over to Odonata and grab a bottle or two of the $25 Zin to partner with your summer barbecues. odonatawines.com.


Appetizers of the Week ย 

Dinner last week in the courtyard of Laili not only gave Jack a chance to indulge in his favorite lamb kabob dishโ€”ah, those splendid chutneys, the spiced yogurt, the perfection of the kabuli riceโ€”but also produced my new favorite small dish. I wanted something un-big, yet flavor-intensive. The salad of gorgeous marinated beets seemed just right, especially since I added grilled prawns to my order. Paired with a glass of house Malbec, the beet salad was ablaze with robust flavors and textures. Big succulent slabs of beet had been dressed with a memorable honey-dijon balsamic vinaigrette. Large grilled prawns circled the plate like rosy petals. In the center was an island of piquant arugula topped with bits of goat cheese. The entire dish worked perfectly, no false notes, everything satisfying. ($21).

Over at Soif, I shared with my companion the eveningโ€™s special appetizer of asparagus with smoked trout mousse, and a glass of minerally, faintly salty Zudugarai Txakolina ($10). Here is a white wine so refreshing you want to drink two glasses, one right after the other! The mildly-flavored mousse arrived thin and viscous, and never stood up to the vibrant asparagus, tiny clementines and infant radish sprouts ($14). But another starter of chicken liver mousse turned out to be brilliant. Served in a tiny ceramic pot ร  la provenรงal, the thick mousse (more of a pรขtรฉ) was frosted with a fig and Padrรณn pepper honey jam, and came with slices of grilled sourdough. $11 and fabulous.


On the Birichino front, Iโ€™ve heard from co-proprietor John Locke with an update about the wineryโ€™s tasting-room-in-progress. Infrastructure has met with approval from the various city agencies, and that means that a summer opening date for the Birichino showcase looks highly likely. Locke had hoped for an opening date last month, but next month seems possible. Iโ€™ll keep you posted on this, since we all know that time frames in the food and drink world tend to expand and expand.

Outstanding in the Field, the wildly successful brainchild of former Gabriella chef Jim Denevan, has invited Birichino to pour at the Besson Family old vine Grenache vineyard off Hecker Pass in Gilroy. The participating restaurant is Montereyโ€™s 1833, and the date is Thursday, June 29. If youโ€™ve got a few nickels to spare, you will definitely enjoy some splendid al fresco vibes, food, and wonderful Birichino wines (I am passionate about their Grenache). To reserve for the Birichino Winery dinner, head to outstandinginthefield.com/event.

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology May 31โ€”June 6

 

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Life is in the mood to communicate with you rather lyrically. Here are just a few of the signs and portents you may encounter, along with theories about their meaning. If you overhear a lullaby, itโ€™s time to seek the influence of a tender, nurturing source. If you see a type of fruit or flower you donโ€™t recognize, it means you have a buried potential you donโ€™t know much about, and youโ€™re ready to explore it further. If you spy a playing card in an unexpected place, trust serendipity to bring you what you need. If a loud noise arrives near a moment of decision? Traditionally it signifies caution, but these days it suggests you should be bold.

 

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Your body is holy and magic and precious. I advise you not to sell it or rent it or compromise it in any wayโ€”especially now, when you have an opening to upgrade your relationship with it. Yes, Taurus, itโ€™s time to attend to your sweet flesh and blood with consummate care. Find out exactly what your amazing organism needs to feel its best. Lavish it with pleasure and healing. Treat it as you would a beloved child or animal. I also hope you will have intimate conversations with the cells that compose your body. Let them know you love and appreciate them. Tell them youโ€™re ready to collaborate on a higher level.

 

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): โ€œThe most intense moments the universe has ever known are the next 15 seconds,โ€ said philosopher Terence McKenna. He was naming a central principle of reality: every new now is a harvest of everything that has ever happened; every fresh moment is a blast of novelty that arises in response to the sum total of all historyโ€™s adventures. This is always true, of course. But I suspect the phenomenon will be especially pronounced for you in the near future. More than usual, you may find that every day is packed with interesting feelings and poignant fun and epic realizations. This could be pleasurable, but also overwhelming. Luckily, you have the personal power necessary to make good use of the intensity.

 

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Nobody likes to be scrutinized or critiqued or judged. But we Crabs (yes, Iโ€™m one of you) are probably touchier about that treatment than any other sign of the zodiac. (Hypersensitivity is a trait that many astrologers ascribe to Cancerians.) However, many of us do allow one particular faultfinder to deride us: the nagging voice in the back of our heads. Sometimes we even give free rein to its barbs. But I would like to propose a transformation of this situation. Maybe we could scold ourselves less, and be a bit more open to constructive feedback coming from other people. Starting now.

 

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The lionโ€™s potency, boldness, and majesty are qualities you have a mandate to cultivate in the next three weeks. To get in the righteous mood, I suggest you gaze upon images and videos of lions. Come up with your own version of a lionโ€™s roarโ€”I mean actually make that soundโ€”and unleash it regularly. You might also want to try the yoga posture known as the lion pose. If youโ€™re unfamiliar with it, go here for tips: tinyurl.com/lionpose. What else might help you invoke and express the unfettered leonine spirit?

 

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): โ€œWhat does it matter how many lovers you have if none of them gives you the universe?โ€ French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan posed that question. I invite you to put it at the top of your list of hot topics to meditate on. In doing so, I trust you wonโ€™t use it as an excuse to disparage your companions for their inadequacies. Rather, I hope it will mobilize you to supercharge your intimate alliances; to deepen your awareness of the synergistic beauty you could create together; to heighten your ability to be given the universe by those whose fates are interwoven with yours.

 

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): From my study of the lost prophecies of Nostradamus, the hidden chambers beneath the Great Pyramid of Cheops, and the current astrological omens, I have determined that now is a favorable time for you to sing liberation songs with cheeky authority … to kiss the sky and dance with the wind on a beach or hilltop … to gather your most imaginative allies, and brainstorm about what you really want to do in the next five years. Do you dare to slip away from business as usual so you can play in the enchanted land of what-if? If youโ€™re smart, you will escape the grind and grime of the daily rhythm so you can expand your mind to the next largest size.

 

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): โ€œOn some hill of despair,โ€ wrote poet Galway Kinnell, โ€œthe bonfire you kindle can light the great skyโ€”though itโ€™s true, of course, to make it burn you have to throw yourself in.โ€ You may not exactly feel despair, Scorpio. But I suspect you are in the throes of an acute questioning that makes you feel close to the edge of forever. Please consider the possibility that itโ€™s a favorable time to find out just how much light and heat are hidden inside you. Your ache for primal fun and your longing to accelerate your soulโ€™s education are converging with your quest to summon a deeper, wilder brilliance.

 

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Youโ€™re in a phase when you have the power to find answers to questions that have stumped you for a while. Why? Because youโ€™re more open-minded and curious than usual. Youโ€™re also ready to be brazenly honest with yourself. Congrats! In light of the fact that you’ll be lucky at solving riddles, Iโ€™ve got three good ones for you to wrestle with. 1. Which of your anxieties may actually be cover-ups for a lazy refusal to change a bad habit? 2. What resource will you use more efficiently when you stop trying to make it do things itโ€™s not designed to do? 3. What blessing will you receive as soon as you give a clear signal that you are ready for it?

 

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A typical Capricorn cultivates fervent passions, even to the point of obsession. Almost no one knows their magnitude, though, because the members of your tribe often pursue their fulfillment with methodical, business-like focus. But I wonder if maybe itโ€™s a good time to reveal more of the raw force of this driving energy than you usually do. It might humanize you in the eyes of potential helpers who see you as too strong to need help. And it could motivate your allies to provide the extra support and understanding youโ€™ll need in the coming weeks.

 

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In accordance with the astrological omens, I invite you to carry out a flashy flirtation with the color red. I dare you to wear red clothes and red jewelry. Buy yourself red roses. Sip red wine and savor strawberries under red lights. Sing Elvis Costello’s โ€œThe Angels Want to Wear My Red Shoesโ€ and Prince’s โ€œLittle Red Corvette.โ€ Tell everyone why 2017 is a red-letter year for you. For extra credit, murmur the following motto whenever a splash of red teases and pleases your imagination: โ€œMy red-hot passion is my version of high fashion.โ€

 

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): โ€œIf you want a puppy, start by asking for a pony,โ€ read the bumper sticker on the Lexus SUV I saw. That confused me. Would the owner of a Lexus SUV be the type of person who didnโ€™t expect to get what she really wanted? In any case, Pisces, Iโ€™m conveying a version of this bumper-sticker wisdom to you. If you want your domestic scene to thrive even more than it already does, ask for a feng shui master to redesign your environment so it has a perfect flow of energy. If you want a community that activates the best in you, ask for a utopian village full of emotionally intelligent activists. If you want to be animated by a focused goal that motivates you to wake up excited each morning, ask for a glorious assignment that will help save the world.


Your imagination is the single most important asset you possess. Listen to the podcast: http://bit.ly/YourProphecy

Destiny, Longing, the Pathโ€”More on the Dragon Points

Last week I wrote about the North and South nodesโ€”the points in space that show us where the Moon (our past) and the Sun (our present future) meet. The North Node depicting our present/future dharma (work to develop). And the South node shows us where we have already cultivated gifts and talents. We find these are easy for us in this lifetime. Thus, we are often in a state of recapitulation as we gather gifts, talents and abilities developed in previous lifetimes. As we engage with already known talents, we re-encounter ourselves and this allows us to build stepping stones with our re-encountered gifts from the South Node (karmic inheritances, things to complete, to gather) to the North Node (destiny, soulโ€™s longing, evolutionary path).

Each lifetime is always a higher level than previous lifetimes. We never slide backward. And, always, in each lifetime, we are moving from the South Node (the past, the Moon) to the North Node (present/future, the Sun), walking toward our lifeโ€™s purpose (seen in the rising sign). Eventually, midlife, there is something that occurs that is very important to know. As we near the North Node, as the doors to the North Node open to us, the South Nodeโ€™s doors begin to close. Over time, we find that we cannot turn back. We cannot return to the South Node. This can be quite difficult. The areas of life, the place, the people we have been comfortable with for so long, has closed. We can feel unmoored, unsettled, bereft. Very gradually, we realize a new life rhythm has begun. And we step upon that last stone of the North Node and look ahead. In the world for everyone, the North Node has entered Leo, the South Node Aquarius, influencing each sign for the next 18 months. The North Node is our Guiding Light.


ARIES: In the next 18 months, you will find opportunities to develop new levels of creativity, talents, gifts, abilities and be able to recognize them. You will see what your contribution is to the world. Children, playfulness, fun and game games may become very important, along with learning how to love more, having a bit of romance, giving birth to something while radiating and shining a light in the world.

 

TAURUS: ย Over the next months you realize help from others is needed. Usually you accomplish everything alone. Youโ€™re confident, assured and strong. However, there comes a time when one must realize that others can more effectively help and nurture us. Your heart needs a bit more warmth, empathy and care from others. Events occur that support this.

 

GEMINI: You will shine brightly in ways you didnโ€™t expect. Your communication skills will increase, and your conversations will be more lively and more understood. What are you curious about these days? What calls to you, what is of interest? This is a time to read more, study deeply and perhaps consider writing about your life, sharing it. Tolerance will be needed toward others different than you. Gemini is connected with Sirius, where love comes from.

 

CANCER: There are virtues to be established in the coming months. That of patience and determination. These will allow for a new creativity to come about. Gardening is a most important skill and task for Cancer who seeks to nurture the world. A rose garden is especially valuable. All of nature calls to you. Nature is the most balanced of kingdoms. Create an arbor, plant climbing roses, the fragrant kind. The devas will help you.

 

LEO: It is good to consider your image. Youโ€™re a leader and are becoming a pioneer of all things new. You become quite unusual in the next months to a year. A new self-image will emerge that initiates a fire within others, a Vesta fire. You become a forerunner for groups seeking to understand how to communicate. Perhaps with other species or kingdoms. Travel takes you far away.

 

VIRGO: You will move along new pathways. Familiar life patterns change. Veils will hide the old ways of being. Challenges will be met through intuition, prayer, mantrams and silent contemplative walks. You will seek to practice random kindness and realize that although sometimes solitary, you are never alone. You cultivate a deeper spiritual awareness. Talk with the devas.

 

LIBRA: You might find yourself joining with others, everyone sharing common goals, creating new endeavors together. The efforts are humanitarian, a bit radical, with the purpose of social change. You will learn a deeper level of cooperation as you blend your personal will with the great harmonious Will. Right Relations with everyone calls to you. All of this beneficence is filled with new opportunities for you.

 

SCORPIO: When considering your career, maintain the highest standards. You may encounter public recognition in your chosen field. Powerful energies drop into your mind, encouraging you to bring forth new leadership. Over the next 18 months, opportunities occur to establish cooperative leadership. Maintain boundaries and see yourself as an expert with a sterling reputation.

 

SAGITTARIUS: Travel. Journeys. On a boat or plane. Over mountains and plains. Across countries, over rivers and oceans. New cultures, exotic foods, higher learning, various philosophies, unusual clothing, personal growth, goals, justice, new belief systems, new spiritual systems and dimension. Starting points and ending points. Bow and arrows. White Horse. Pilgrimage. God. All of these, over time, encountered, lead you to Wisdom.

 

CAPRICORN: Cultivate a deeper intimacy between yourself and the one you love. A highly developed level of love is available to you at this time. Consider ways to regenerate and ways to rejuvenate. All things outworn simply fall away. You become more intuitive. Keeping a dream, vision, aspiration and astrology journal is helpful for when you look back on this time. To understand.

 

AQUARIUS: You will be given the opportunity to develop Right Human Relations with everyone, bringing forth poise and stability in all relationships, personal and impersonal. Especially personal at first. You will experience a give and take in all interactions which creates a harmony between you and others. Diplomacy will be called forth and more acceptance so all separations become unified. You become a greater person.

 

PISCES: ย You will consider over the next months all interactions with co-workers. Even if you live a solitary life, there are kingdoms (mineral, plant, animal, human, spiritual) around all of us that we interact and work within. it will be important to improve all environments and tend to the personal self in ways that bring about personal healing. Include alternative methods (see a Functional doctor). Spend time each day in the direct golden light of the Sun.

Food & Drink Magazine 2017

Food & Drink Magazine 2017 coverIn this issue of Food & Drink magazine, we’re on a spicy kick. First, Christina Waters looks at how Mexican specialties are all the rage at upscale restaurants locally. It’s interesting not only in the way it expands the definition of Mexican cuisine in a taqueria-rich dining scene, but also because, in some cases, chef talents like Gema Cruz of Gabriella Cafe are getting an outlet to explore their heritage. Cruz grew up cooking with her grandmother in Oaxaca, and now Gabriella is hosting a special night each week that features dishes from the region.

Nicely complementing Christina’s piece is Maria Grusauskas’ exploration of spice, and how it affects our dining experience. The O.G. Santa Cruz spice meister, Jozseph Schultz, offers the kind of insight on the subject that we’ve come to expect from him over his many years running India Joze.

Lest ye think that we are only living up to half of our name, check out our stories on the best new wine releases, and the age-old question of whether beer belongs in a can. Cheers!

IN THIS ISSUE…

Opinion May 24, 2017

EDITOR’S NOTE

Whenever I think about Santa Cruzโ€™s lack of public space, I think about what GT writer Cat Johnson once said: โ€œThereโ€™s nowhere to take your lunch in this town.โ€ Back when Abbott Square was in the planning stages, she predicted it could be a big first step toward solving the problem.

Now that Abbott Square is set to open, with First Friday next week serving as the publicโ€™s first chance to get a sneak peek of what it will be, and the MAH building up to the opening throughout the whole month of June, I invited Johnson to revisit the public space issue in this weekโ€™s cover story. Itโ€™s clear from her story how much Santa Cruz has riding on the success of Abbott Square, and that everyone around here has their own hopes to project onto it. Mat Weir also provides a brief history of how Abbott Square got here, starting with the Cooper House, which has provided a sort of spiritual model for the public square project. Finally, Christina Waters weighs in on how Abbott Square, with its marketplace-style hub of restaurants, will impact the local dining scene. I think the sum total of these stories give a nicely rounded view of just what Abbott Square is going to mean for downtown.

Lastly, I just wanted to remind everyone that the American Music Festival is this weekend in Aptos Village Park. Hopefully you read our coverage last week, in which we said probably everything there is to say about it. Now all thatโ€™s left to do is get out there and enjoy the return of the Devil Makes Three, as well as Melissa Etheridge, Mavis Staples and many other artists whoโ€™ll be there Saturday and Sunday. Happy Memorial Day!

STEVE PALOPOLI | EDITOR-IN-CHIEF


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Read the latest letters to the editor here.

So Nice, Gotta Readย It Twice

Such a heartfelt eulogy, Steve Kettmannโ€™s piece on Peter McLaughlin, Pete the Poet (GT, 5/10). Our own local, very hip Vincent Van Gogh, an artist whose muse is as well his torturer, bringing an end too soon. It has been a long time since I have read a long piece word-for-word all the way through, some of it twice. Thanks for making this beautiful work the centerpiece of last weekโ€™s GT.

John D. Roevekamp

Scotts Valley

On the Curse ofย Santa Cruz

Re: May 10 GT: Good issue. ย Steve, I especially appreciate your comments on the Santa Cruz artistic curse. I lived in Santa Cruz throughout the โ€™70s, part of the time as the first full-time housing coordinator at College 5 of UCSC (about which I shall never write a book). But I did complete a book here, tracing the effect of the biblical Eve myth on Western civilization, but I had moved to Amherst, Massachusetts, by that time and although I mentioned a dozen or so much appreciated Santa Cruz helpers along the way in my acknowledgements, I think it went unnoticed by the local communityโ€”even when the New York Times gave me a two-page review and named it one of their 250 Notable Books of 1984.

Iโ€™d also like to comment on Gigo Desilvaโ€™s Hawaii letter. I was born in Honolulu 83 years ago; an army kid. I was there three months, and have never been back. In the meantime, I have been using a hospital record as my โ€œbirth certificateโ€ each time it was asked for, even though it has nothing on it that identifies it as a birth certificate. No problem; ย although my retirement application for Social Security several years ago produced the usual chuckles over the inked baby footprints, nobody ever questioned its authenticityโ€”until we returned to Santa Cruz and I applied for a state driverโ€™s license. I was given the โ€œWhere were you really born, Mister Obama, if that is your real name?โ€ treatment, and had to have the state of Hawaii email me a birth certificate (which was finally, grudgingly accepted, even though Hawaii was a territory when I was born). On my 85th birthday, I intend to go back and show it to our (much-missed) former president for a group laugh. Sorry. I could not resist that story.

John A. โ€œTonyโ€ Phillips

Aptos

Broken Traffic Laws

I have noticed the increased frequency of traffic violations which have threatened my safety. Drivers seem to take more chances now. Iโ€™ve been counting the number of occurrences that I am almost hit by another vehicle to be at least two to three times every day. I have witnessed many vehicles drive through red stop lights, or cross over double yellow lines into oncoming traffic, or be in a left turn lane and suddenly make a right turn cutting another driver off, or drive through a crosswalk with pedestrians jumping out of the way. When I see one of these dangerous maneuvers happen, there are never any cops around to catch the violator. All of these instances are inexcusable, reckless and selfish.

Many years ago, when I first learned how to drive, my instructor said, โ€œNever insist on right of way, because people are unpredictable and can change their minds at the last second.โ€ How true this is. I find it very difficult to live in a society where I follow what I was taught in the DMV Driver Handbook, but it seems like everyone else can do whatever they want! I am beginning to not feel safe anymore driving around my hometown, for fear that I will be injured in an accident.

I believe the cause of this is that as more people move into Santa Cruz County and more vehicles are on the road, we become more agitated and competitive. Even if you are in a hurry, please donโ€™t think you are the only person on the road. We still need to be respectful of each other!

Ernest Amos-Jackson | Santa Cruz

Is Health Care Efficiency Good?

Dr. Wells Shoemaker in your Wellness column (GT, 4/26) states that Santa Cruz County โ€œis one of the top three or four counties in the nation in terms of health care efficiency.โ€ ย But what does that mean?

Nowhere in this article is there a mention of the out-of-control costs of the health care system in the U.S. As a low-income senior (but not low enough for Medicaid eligibility) on Medicare it is quite evident to me. Medicare is not free by any means, thanks to all the accommodations to the insurance companies and their need for profits. A senior in Santa Cruz County must pay the Medicare monthly fee out of Social Security, buy a drug plan or face a penalty, and buy supplemental insurance or face 20 percent co-pays on any possible serious healthcare need. This adds up to around $300+ as a monthly expense (can be less if youโ€™re willing to pay high deductibles) before going to the doctor.

Medicare is considered a โ€œsingle-payerโ€ system, but itโ€™s not able to control what the big corporate hospital-medical complexes are doing. We hear about fraud in terms of individuals, not these big organizations like Sutter Health, PAMFโ€™s for-profit parent. We need single-payer health insurance for all and more regulation to curb this kind of crazy โ€œefficiency.โ€

Sara Cloud |ย Santa Cruz


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GOOD IDEA

SPOKE UP
A local Climate Ride event is happening June 9-13, stretching all the way from San Francisco to San Luis Obispo on bicycles. Visit climateride.org for more information, including how to register and how to support local participants like Tawn Kennedy, youth programs director for Bike Santa Cruz County, or Amelia Conlen, transportation coordinator for the City of Santa Cruz.


GOOD WORK

SHEรขโ‚ฌโ„ขS A STAR
UCSCรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs Sandra Faber won the 2017 Gruber Cosmology Prize, which comes with $500,000, for being an all-around astronomy badass. The professor emeritaรขโ‚ฌโ„ขs groundbreaking studies of galaxies helped establish many of the foundational principles of modern cosmology. Faber also received the National Medal of Science in 2013 and is renowned for her contributions to the understanding of dark matter and galaxy formation.


QUOTE OF THE WEEK

รขโ‚ฌล“A square is also an organism, not just a work of art and architecture.รขโ‚ฌย

-Michael Kimmelman

5 Things to Do in Santa Cruz This Week

Event highlights for the week of May 24, 2017

Green Fix

Redwood Grove Loop Guided Walk

Redwood forestThe grand coast redwood trees are an icon of Northern California. They exceed storybook imaginations and exemplify the grandeur of nature. This Monday, May 29, learn a smidge of history, some ecology, and meet some local legends on an easy half-mile walk through an old-growth grove in Big Basin Redwoods State Park. The trail is wheelchair accessible and mostly flat. This event takes place every Saturday and Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Info: 11 a.m. & 2 p.m. Big Basin Redwoods State Park, 21600 Big Basin Way, Boulder Creek. Free.

 

Art Seen

Music and Art Festival

Enjoy Memorial Day weekend at Junction Park with the Boulder Creek community. This free event will feature activities for children and local art vendors presenting their works, along with live music from Mofongo, JnJ Dynamite, Dead Men Rocking, and Isaac and the Haze. There will also be beer by Uncommon Brewers, wine and barbecue from BC Brewery available for purchase, with proceeds benefiting the Boulder Creek Recreation and Parks Department.

Info: 11:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Sunday, May 28. Junction Park, 13264 Middleton Ave., Santa Cruz. Free.

 

Thursday 5/25

โ€˜I am Jane Doeโ€™ Screening

I Am Jane DoeIt happens every day in Americaโ€”children are sold into sexual slavery. I Am Jane Doe is the story of the mothers who are fighting back and reclaiming their childrensโ€™ futures. Narrated by Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain and directed by Mary Mazzio, the film is presented by local nonprofit Rising International, which is fighting human trafficking on the Central Coast with the Coalition to End Human Trafficking in Santa Cruz and Monterey counties.

Info: 6 p.m. Rio Theater, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. risinginternational.org. $10.

 

Friday 5/26 – Sunday 6/4

โ€˜Zoot Suitโ€™ at UCSC

popouts1721-zootsuitLuis Valdezโ€™s iconic Zoot Suit tells the 1942 story of the Sleepy Lagoon murder and the reaction of the Los Angeles Police Department, a case which ended in the arrest, trial and imprisonment of a group of Mexican-American men, without evidence, because they were โ€œMexican and dangerous.โ€ Violence against Latinos and other minorities spread through Los Angeles and other American cities in the wake of the court decision, becoming known as the Zoot Suit Riots because of the extravagant long-cut โ€œzootโ€ suits worn by those who were targeted. This year, Valdez, a key figure in the Chicano Rights Movement, created a new version of the play. UCSC will be the first academic theater to produce the new script, directed by Valdezโ€™s son, Kinan Valdez.

Info: 3 & 7:30 p.m. UCSC Mainstage, 1156 High St., Santa Cruz. UCSCtickets.com. $12-$18.

 

Saturday 5/27 – Sunday 5/28

Music in May

popouts1721-MusicinMayFor 10 years, Music in May has brought world-renowned musicians to Santa Cruz. To celebrate its 10th anniversary, the festival will head to local classrooms and a county youth detention facility, and include a world premiere, a final tribute to the festivalโ€™s longtime friend David Arben, and a collaboration with San Francisco Ballet Corps member Kimberly Braylock-Olivier. Saturdayโ€™s program will feature Santa Cruz Symphonyโ€™s conductor Daniel Stewart and Braylock-Olivier performing original choreography to Spiegel im Spiegel. Sunday afternoonโ€™s program will unveil the newest music written for chamber ensemble and TJ Coleโ€™s world premiere, plus 5 Pieces for 2 Violins.

Info: 7 & 2 p.m. Samper Recital Hall, Cabrillo College, 6500 Soquel Drive, Aptos. musicinmay.org.

What question would you ask if you did Local Talk for a week?

“When does gentrification stop being positive and start being destructive?”

Kevin Kaproff

Santa Cruz
Barista

“If you could only listen to one album for the rest of your life, what would it be?”

Melanie Guther

Santa Cruz
Student

“What turns you on? ”

Yarah Sutra

Traveler
Pleasure Priestess

“How long do you think the housing bubble will last here?”

Doug Polhamius

Soquel
Web Designer

“How do you define yourself in the world you live in?”

Miriam Elizabeth Araya

San Jose
Graduate Student

Music Picks May 24โ€”30

 

THURSDAY 5/25

PSYCH-ROCK

SLEEPY SUN

โ€œFormed in a Santa Cruz garageโ€ is the origin story for many a band that takes the Catalyst stage. In the case of Sleepy Sun, who began its career in this familiar way in 2005 with five UCSC students, itโ€™s taken them all over the world. The group is set to release its fifth album this June. The sound started off in familiar garage rock territory, but as the years progress, the members have developed a sound thatโ€™s more spiritual, esoteric, and swirling into the farther reaches of twisted anti-pop psych rock. AARON CARNES

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $15/adv, $18/door. 429-4135.

THURSDAY 5/25

JAZZ

JOEY DeFRANCESCO & THE PEOPLE

Even since Miles Davis recruited the teenager organist to tour with his band in the late 1980s, Philadelphia-raised Joey DeFrancesco has been universally hailed as the most prodigious B-3 master of his generation, a virtuoso who almost singlehandedly revived interest in his instrument. His latest release, Project Freedom, focuses on the liberatory power of jazz, with imaginative covers of era-defining songs such as John Lennonโ€™s โ€œImagineโ€ and Sam Cookeโ€™s โ€œA Change is Gonna Come.โ€ Heโ€™s joined by stellar drummer Jason Brown, Australian-born saxophonist Troy Roberts (whoโ€™s made a powerful impression on recent Jeff โ€œTainโ€ Watts recordings) and guitarist Dan Wilson, a member of Christian McBrideโ€™s new trio, Tip City. ANDREW GILBERT

INFO: 7 p.m. Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $30/adv, $35/door. 427-2227.

FRIDAY 5/26

TRIBUTE

SANTA CRUZโ€™S DEAD

The Grateful Dead had its roots in acoustic music, but it could trip electric with the best of them. In the 1980s, the band played a series of unforgettable acoustic/electric shows at Radio City Music Hall in New York City and the Warfield in San Francisco. On Friday, local outfit Santa Cruzโ€™s Deadโ€”Matt Hartle, Jerry Brown, Arindam Krishna das, Roger Sideman and Mark Corsoliniโ€”pays homage to Dead and that era of the bandโ€™s double-duty explorations of acoustic and electric music. CJ

INFO: 8:30 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $15. 335-2800.

FRIDAY 5/26

INDIE-JAZZ

MATTSON 2

Identical twins Jared and Jonathan Mattson, who formed the guitar-drums based jazz-indie duo Mattson 2, are in a weird predicament. The music is a bit too weird for traditional jazz audiences, and too jazz for weird audiences. So theyโ€™ve carved out their own audience. The duo has also taken to collaborating with creative individuals like Cornelius and Ray Barbee. Their latest is a collaborative album with Toro y Moiโ€™s Chaz Bundick, a surreal psych jazz-folk-rock record. Catch the duoโ€”just as a duoโ€”as they get down to their oddball jazz tunes on Friday. AC

INFO: 9 p.m. Crepe Place, 1134 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $15. 429-6994.

SATURDAY 5/27

ROCK

MCCOY TYLER

McCoy Tyler is a curious beast. The Northern Californian is a self-taught lyricist and guitar player whoโ€™s known for combining mixed-matched genres such as heavy metal, bluegrass, folk and everything inbetween. After years of playing with his band, the McCoy Tyler Trio, the prolific musician decided to switch things up for his latest EP, 26, and recorded it with Santa Cruzโ€™s own Coffis Brothers as his backing band. This Saturday, he will be joined by the Ben Lomond folkers in honor of the EPโ€™s upcoming, June 1 release, along with Bay Area trio Scary Little Friends. MAT WEIR

INFO: 8 p.m. Don Quixoteโ€™s, 6275 Hwy. 9, Felton. $8/adv, $10/door. 335-2800.

SATURDAY 5/27

COUNTRY

RODNEY CROWELL

On his new album, Close Ties, Americana singer-songwriter Rodney Crowell looks back on his musical career, including his early success with the Grammy-winning album Diamonds & Dirt. As Crowell explained to Rolling Stone, โ€œI was a good guy; I was trying to make good art. That doesnโ€™t mean that I wasnโ€™t an insecure little shit.โ€ Crowell, who is now 66, experiences life differently now, and it shows in his lyrics. Close Ties is full of insights into life well-lived, and the heartache of losing friends and contemporaries, including in the tune, โ€œLife without Susanna,โ€ a tribute to Susanna Clark, wife of the late, great singer-songwriter Guy Clark. On Saturday, Crowell hits the Rio Theatre. CJ

INFO: 7:30 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., Santa Cruz. $25/gen, $40/gold. 423-8209.

SUNDAY 5/28

REGGAE

ALBOROSIE & YELLOWMAN

What do you get when you combine one of Jamaicaโ€™s famous dancehall originators with one of the islandโ€™s biggest current artists? Find out this Sunday at the Catalyst, as two reggae titans share the stage for one irie night. In the 1980s, Yellowman ushered in the new era of dancehall reggae with his rap-like delivery, recording genre classics like โ€œNobody Move, Nobody Get Hurtโ€ and โ€œZungguzungguguzungguzeng,โ€ both of which have been sampled numerous times throughout hip-hop history. Alborosie might have only hit the scene in 2008 with his debut album, Soul Pirate, but he quickly solidified his place in reggae with his revival of dancehall music for the modern era. MW

INFO: 9 p.m. Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave., Santa Cruz. $30. 429-4135.

SUNDAY 5/28

FOLK-ROCK

PETER HARPER

Peter Harper was born into a musical familyโ€”his grandparents opened the world-renowned Claremont Folk Music Center in Claremont, California; his mom is a multi-instrumentalist; and his brother is folk-rocker Ben Harperโ€”but Harper avoided pursuing music seriously until a few years ago, and became a celebrated bronze sculptor instead. When he did take up music, he emerged as a thoughtful lyricist and talented guitarist in his own right. Harperโ€™s performance at Moeโ€™s Alley on Sunday is a release party for his new album, Break the Cycle. CJ

INFO: 8:30 p.m. Moeโ€™s Alley, 1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz. $9/adv, $12/door. 479-1854.

TUESDAY 5/30

GOTH

POPTONE

Daniel Ash and Kevin Haskins are two names that might not register on anyoneโ€™s radar who wasnโ€™t a hardcore goth back in the day, but they were a part of the legendary Bauhaus and Love and Rockets. Lesser known was their early โ€™80s Bauhaus side project Tones on Tail. Poptone is the duoโ€™s new project. They will be playing songs from all three projects at this show, but will be focusing a little extra on obscure Tones on Tail tunes. AC

INFO: 7 p.m. Rio Theatre, 1205 Soquel Ave., $30. 423-8209.


IN THE QUEUE

ROBIN TROWER

Legendary rock guitarist. Wednesday at Catalyst

IAN SWEET

Indie-rock out of Brooklyn. Wednesday at Crepe Place

BROKEN ENGLISH & FLOR DE CAร‘A

Latin dance party. Friday at Moeโ€™s Alley

JURASSIC 5

Los Angeles-based hip-hop. Saturday at Catalyst

DOOBIE DECIMAL SYSTEM

All-star band led by Melvin Seals. Saturday at Moeโ€™s Alley

Giveaway: Django Festival All-Stars

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The name Django Reinhardt is synonymous with gypsy jazz. The Belgian-born French guitarist of Romani ethnicity is considered one of the greatest guitar players of all time, and a key European contributor to jazz. The Django Festival All-Starsโ€”comprising guitarist Dorado Schmitt, Doradoโ€™s son Samson on lead guitar, Ludovic Beier on accordion and accordina, Pierre Blanchard on violin, Doudou Cuillerier on rhythm guitar and vocals, and Antonio Licusati on bassโ€”pays tribute to Reinhardt and French gypsy jazz with its own arrangements, interpretations and original compositions.


INFO: 7 & 9 p.m. Monday, June 12 at Kuumbwa Jazz, 320-2 Cedar St., Santa Cruz. $30/adv, $35/door. 427-2227. WANT TO GO? Go to santacruz.com/giveaways before 11 a.m. on Monday, June 5 to find out how you could win a pair of tickets to the show.

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Odonata Winery releases Remembrance, with proceeds funding a cure for Alzheimerโ€™s

Rob Brezsny’s Astrology May 31โ€”June 6

Astrology, Horoscope, Stars, Zodiac Signs
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Destiny, Longing, the Pathโ€”More on the Dragon Points

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Esoteric Astrology as news for week of May 31, 2017

Food & Drink Magazine 2017

Food & Drink Magazine 2017
In this issue of Food & Drink magazine, we're on a spicy kick. First, Christina Waters looks at how Mexican specialties are all the rage at upscale restaurants locally. It's interesting not only in the way it expands the definition of Mexican cuisine in a taqueria-rich dining scene, but also because, in some cases, chef talents like Gema Cruz...

Opinion May 24, 2017

Plus Letters to the Editor

5 Things to Do in Santa Cruz This Week

Memorial Day BBQ
Event highlights for the week of May 24, 2017

What question would you ask if you did Local Talk for a week?

Local Talk for the week of May 24, 2017

Music Picks May 24โ€”30

Mattson
Live music for the week of May 24, 2017

Giveaway: Django Festival All-Stars

Django Festival All-Stars
  The name Django Reinhardt is synonymous with gypsy jazz. The Belgian-born French guitarist of Romani ethnicity is considered one of the greatest guitar players of all time, and a key European contributor to jazz. The Django Festival All-Starsโ€”comprising guitarist Dorado Schmitt, Doradoโ€™s son Samson on lead guitar, Ludovic Beier on accordion and accordina, Pierre Blanchard on violin, Doudou Cuillerier...
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