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Katy Hamer |
Cultural Stimuli in SF Issue 199: fortitude flavor
A dark alchemy is in the air this post-Valentine's Day week, as we whip out the mirrors and examine our cultural identity. Peaches Christ puts Pee-Wee's Big Adventure in drag, while the Parlor Trick Revue sees a cavalcade of kings strut the stage to raise money for New Orleans relief.
Meanwhile, an all-Filipina cast puts the "V"
back in V-Day as a production of Eve Ensler's Monologues stops in the Bay Area to raise money for awareness about sexual violence against women. For those of you who've already sent all things pink and red happily packing, options for experiencing non-love emotions abound as JD Twitch (half of Optimo) starts a dance commotion at the Dark Room, anti-hero Neil Hamburger makes supremely uncomfortable comedy, and the Mortified crew bring their cringe-tastic confessional to town. Plus, the last full week of Black History Month promises classically conscious hip-hop from LA's Dilated Peoples as well as Hustle for Change: A Night of Progressive Hip-Hop and Politics, a blow-out event combining breakdancing, turntablism, graf, and more. Open your mind, and spread it...
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flavorpill SF is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.

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YOOX.com, the innovative style destination, delivers fashion and design in a way you've never seen before. Enjoy top designer brands like Maharishi, Marc Jacobs, Alexander McQueen, Helmut Lang, Balenciaga, and — for those passionate about the past — a one-of-a-kind vintage selection featuring Christian Dior, Yves Saint Laurent, Emilio Pucci, and many more. |
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Spotlight
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Diamond in the Rough
In ACT's sensitive production of August Wilson's Gem of the Ocean, a young African American man struggles to find hope after wrestling with the demons of slavery's past.
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| Daily Updates |

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| PERFORMANCE |
The Parlor Trick Revue
| when: |
Tue 2.21 (9pm) |
| where: |
El Rio (3158 Mission St, 415.282.3325) map |
| price: |
$7-12 sliding scale |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The Castro may be associated with the queeniest of queens, but it's in the Mission that drag kings reign supreme. Anyone who thinks androgyny isn't hot hasn't witnessed ladies suited up to their guns and dancing for a good cause. Tonight's gender-bending at the El Rio benefits queer New Orleans relief group the Blue Star Builders. Performers include Citizen Kings, members of local guerilla burlesque troupe the Diamond Daggers, the Transformers, and the Carnival Kings from New Orleans. Q-Comedy's Julia Jackson MCs, and DJs Cari Campbell and Dr. Sleep are on the decks. (JG)
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| MUSIC: Proto-Metal |
Pearls and Brass w/ Plastic Crimewave Sound
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Despite whatever countercultural cache "metal" has at the moment, Pearls and Brass' non-ironic take on hard 'n heavy boogie rock comes off as a strangely earnest attempt at proto-metal as formalist exercise. The Nazareth, Pennsylvania group keeps things interesting with tricky, curveball time signature shifts and compositional detours, while still taking cues from and nodding to Cream, Zeppelin, and their ilk. Compared to Pearls and Brass' tempered, elephantine chug-a-lug, Chicago psych-rockers Plastic Crimewave Sound is the audio equivalent of PCP — endless effects-drenched guitar lines wrestle for dominance with the other instruments before everything dissolves into acid-fried shambles. (MS)
Note: The Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound also open.
Who provided the artwork for Plastic Crimewave Sound's split LP with Oneida? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| ALSO ON TUE |
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READING
Bitch Magazine Tenth Anniversary Party Tue 2.21 (7pm) City Lights (261 Columbus Ave, 415.362.8193) map 
Event Info |
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Come wish Bitch magazine a happy tenth birthday as special guests Rachel Fudge, Beth Bernstein, Andi Zeisler, and Lisa Jervis pay homage to a decade of smart, saucy commentary on everything from drag kings to The Golden Girls. (CH)
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MUSIC: Jazz
Marcus Shelby Jazz Orchestra Tue 2.21 & Wed 2.22 (8 & 10pm) Yoshi's (510 Embarcadero W, Oakland, 510.238.9200) map $10-14
Event Info |
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Marcus Shelby plays selections from Port Chicago, a musical interpretation of nights at the swing clubs and the injustices of segregated life as experienced by black sailors in 1940s Oakland. (JLG)
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| MUSIC: Indie Pop |
Mice Parade
| when: |
Wed 2.22 (9pm) |
| where: |
Bottom of the Hill (1233 17th St, 415.621.4455) map |
| price: |
$10 / $8 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | Mice Parade |
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Originally a solo project of experimentalist Adam Pierce — who's drummed for the Swirlies, HiM, and Múm — Mice Parade blossomed into an instrumental ensemble that's lately remade itself into a dependable dispensary of charmingly naïve indie pop. The band's latest album, Bem-Vinda Votande, is far more accessible than its predecessors, with fellow Múm-ster Kristín Anna Valtýsdóttir chiming in with wisps of breathy, spine-tingling vocals. By fortifying occasionally saccharine tunes with restless, polyrhythmic drumming and several guitars in intricate, acoustic conversation, the Mice wear their musicianship on their sleeves in a way most bands won't (or can't). (TW)
Note: Tom Brosseau and the Life on Earth open.
Come up with an original band name with the words "mouse," "parade," and/or "wolf," and tell us what the band would sound like. The two most creative responses of 50 words or less each win a pair of tickets to this show.
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| LAUNCH |
Commotion: CD Release, Community Arts Expo, and Launch of KSW Store.
| when: |
Thur 2.23 (6:30-11:30pm) |
| where: |
Space180 (180 Capp St, 415.503.0520) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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APAture, SF's premiere Asian-Pacific-American arts organization rings in the new lunar year by celebrating the launch of their store and the release of their 7 Years of APAture compilation CD with a showcase of local musicians, artists, writers, and craftsters. Their expo includes live sets by folky singer/songwriter Goh Nakamura, dreamy popsters EE, and the perky rockers Golda Supernova. The event also features jewelry and silk-screened goodies from Mai Le, Wendy Fong, and other local designers. Amorous ladies can grab one of Cat Huang's sexy (yet utilitarian) "booty bags" on the way out. (CH)
What do you hope not to find in your booty bag? The two most cringe-inducing responses each win an APAture compilation CD.
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| FILM |
The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
| when: |
Thur 2.23 (8pm) |
| where: |
Artists' Television Access (992 Valencia St, 415.824.3890) map |
| price: |
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| links: |
Event Info |
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The face of Parisian stage actress Renee Maria Falconetti gave Carl Theodor Dreyer the perfect focal point for his beautiful and unsettling cinematic experiment, The Passion of Joan of Arc. Dreyer shot nearly the entire film in closeup, creating a suffocating world of emotional and physical duress. As the camera stays tightly locked on Falconetti's face, the viewer feels her anguish, yet cannot possibly look away. Falconetti never appeared in another film, but it didn't matter: few performances have ever approached this level of emotional intimacy. Tonight the silent classic is presented with live music, scored and performed by Lester "Tombstone" Raww. (JK)
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| MUSIC: Hip-Hop |
Hustle for Change: A Night of Progressive Hip-Hop and Politics
| when: |
Thur 2.23 (9:30pm) |
| where: |
DNA Lounge (375 11th St, 415.626.1409) map |
| price: |
$10 minimum donation |
| links: |
Event Info |
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The League of Pissed Off Voters, the Onion, and Quality of Life, the new shot-in-the-Mission graffiti movie showing at the Red Vic in March, team up to bring you Hustle for Change, a night celebrating each of the four elements of hip-hop: breakdancing (Baysic), live graf (Dramaone.De), deejaying, and emceeing (Lush One, DJ Mr Roper and Old E, Kiwi and DJ Phatrick, and Unified School District). Catch these Bay Area up-and-comers at a jump-off dedicated to keeping it both crunk and political (no easy task). (HMT)
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| ALSO ON THUR |
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ART: Opening
Conversation 2: Marcel Dzama & Alice Shaw Thur 2.23 (6-8pm) San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery (401 Van Ness, 415.554.6080) map 
Event Info |
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Marcel Dzama's wickedly surreal and humorous ink drawings enter into a dialogue with photographer Alice Shaw's candid snapshots at the opening for the second installment of SFAC's Conversation exhibition series. (MS)
Note: This exhibition runs through Sat 4.8 (Tue-Sat: 11am-5:30pm).
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MUSIC: Hip-Hop
Planet Asia w/ Casual (of the Hieroglyphics), Rasco, Flii Stylz, and DJ E-Rock Thur 2.23 (9pm) Slim's (333 11th St, 415.255.0333) map $20
Event Info |
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The Gold Chain Music Tour brings talented West Coast MCs Planet Asia, Casual (of the Hieroglyphics), Flii Stylz (who provided the soundtrack for Rize), and Rasco together under one roof. (SD)
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MUSIC: Hip-Hop
Dilated Peoples w/ Little Brother and Defari Thur 2.23 (9:30pm) Mezzanine (444 Jessie St, 415.625.8880) map $18
Event Info |
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The LA-based trio of Rakaa, Evidence, and DJ Babu drop their hip-hop social commentary tonight as they celebrate the release of their new album. So listen up, aight? (JC)
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| MUSIC: Britpop |
The Wedding Present
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Were the Wedding Present an actual gift, they'd be a broken heart inside a dented box caked with northern English mud, and the card a page of angsty scribbles from lead singer David Gedge's diary. And yes, you would be psyched to receive it. Making big waves across the pond with contemporaries the Smiths, the Wedding Present never really managed to break stateside and disbanded after several critically acclaimed but commercially disappointing albums. Having briefly recorded as the poppier, calmer, more "mature" Cinerama, Gedge recently reformed the Wedding Present and re-gifted the pathos, stirring guitars, and bitter lyrics. And that beats another gravy boat, any day. (LT)
Note: Tim Fite opens.
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| MUSIC: Classic Punk |
X
| when: |
Fri 2.24 (9pm) |
| where: |
Great American Music Hall (859 O'Farrell St, 415.885.0750) map |
| price: |
$30 |
| links: |
Event Info | X |
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Exene Cervenka, John Doe, Billy Zoom, and DJ Bonebrake were poster children for the malaise of the late '70s LA underground: "Coca-Cola and a Motorola kitchen/Naugahyde and a tie-dye t-shirt/Last night everything broke" go the lyrics to "We're Desperate." With a style equal parts DIY cowpunk and New Wave preening, X were punk, yet tidily pop, appreciated by high school kids and hardcore scenesters alike. Their 1982 album Under the Big Black Sun foreshadowed the band's rise to major label glory, but tonight's show is about witnessing original, independent punk attitude from a band as well-known for its femme fatale lead singer as its prolific, influential output. (JMS)
Note: The Johns open.
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| ALSO ON FRI |
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COMEDY
Club Chuckles Two-Year Anniversary feat. Neil Hamburger, Poontang Wranglers, and Brent Weinbach Fri 2.24 (9 & 11:30pm) Hemlock Tavern (1131 Polk St, 415.923.0923) map $10
Event Info |
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The last time we saw Neil Hamburger, a furious listener leapt up onto the stage and tried to deck him. We can't really say the person didn't know how to take a joke, since Hamburger's gloriously awful anti-humor goes down like sandpaper. (TW)
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| DANCE |
Amrit Dhara: Pouring Nectar
| when: |
Sat 2.25 (7pm) |
| where: |
Julia Morgan Center for the Arts (2640 College Ave, Berkeley, 510.845.8542) map |
| price: |
$18 / $15 advance |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Originating 2,000 years ago in Orissa in East India, the Odissi style of dance nearly died out when the mores of British colonizers turned dancing into a pastime of ill repute. The last century brought an Odissi resurgence, however, and the dance, which uses three distinct parts of the body (head, bust, and torso) to create movements that honor traditional Krishna beliefs, became one of India's most popular classical art forms. Berkeley-based Odissi Guru Jyoti Rout leads this performance, which includes pieces of her own choreography. (JK)
Besides boasting a master's in Odissi dance, what are Rout's two other degrees in? The first three correct responses each win a pair of tickets to tonight's performance.
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| READING |
Mortified San Fran
| when: |
Sat 2.25 & Mon 2.27 (8pm) |
| where: |
The Make-Out Room (3225 22nd St, 415.647.2888) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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We've all experienced it in some form: standing in front of the crowd, proverbially naked and flushed with shame. The organizers of Mortified want to give you the chance to relive that moment. Only this time around you're in control as you share your hormone-ravaged teen diary entries, regretful emails, and other bits of "literary" dirty laundry with a bar full of rapt strangers. As critic Eve Sedgwick has noted, shame painfully singles us out but also forcibly joins those around us to us, setting the stage for...empathy? Catharsis? Heckling? Just make sure everyone is laughing with you. (MS)
What's the most embarassing line you've ever written in a poem, letter, or drunken email? The three most emabarrassing responses each win a pair of tickets to this event.
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| MUSIC: Indie Rock |
Robert Pollard
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At the age of 36, Robert Pollard quit his day job as an elementary school teacher in Dayton, Ohio and formed Guided by Voices. Nearly 20 years and as many albums later, Pollard retired GBV, after cementing his legacy as a master of the short, blistering indie-rock anthem. Studio sessions, until now, have failed to capture the raucous atmosphere Pollard creates live (he encourages his faithful to drink beers, get stoned, and mimic his signature high leg kicks). While his latest release, From a Compound Eye, comes close to capturing this energy, you've still gotta see him to believe him. (SNS)
What's the craziest thing you've ever seen a live performer do? Our favorite response of 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this show.
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| DJ |
JD Twitch and Tim Sweeney
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A new pandemic of dance fever has hit America. Pitchfork is crushing on Mylo's Destroy Rock & Roll, and new club nights are popping up all over, including the intriguingly named Gun Club, providing "music for outlaws." They're kicking things off right with two A-list DJs: JD Twitch of Glasgow's Optimo and Tim Sweeney of DFA. This electronic evening of auditory delights definitely pleasures both mind and body, as the beats tap toes right out of their artfully worn Converse. Expect remixes and lots of new-to-you tunes that will be obsessively discussed in Myspace comments for days. (LE)
Which Scottish band released a song chronicling a particularly crazy night at Optimo? The fifth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
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| ALSO ON SAT |
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READING
Ryan Gattis: Kung Fu High School and Craig Clevenger: Dermaphoria Sat 2.25 (8pm) Edinburgh Castle Pub (950 Geary St, 415.885.4074) map 
Event Info |
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Ryan Gattis' terrifically entertaining novel of nunchuks and teen angst is every bit as kitschy as its title indicates. The film rights have already been snapped up by the Weinsteins, putting the book on a fast track to be the next Fight Club. (TW)
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FILM
Peaches Christ presents Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985) Sat 2.25 (midnight) Landmark Act 1 & 2 (2128 Center St, Berkeley, 510.464.5980) map $10
Event Info |
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Peaches Christ brings Midnight Mass to the East Bay for the first time, with the trashily delicious drag revue Peaches' Playhouse setting the stage for Tim Burton's masterpiece. (KE)
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| COMMEMORATION |
Bay Area Day of Remembrance
| when: |
Sun 2.26 (2pm) |
| where: |
AMC Kabuki Theatre (1881 Post St, 415.921.5007) map |
| price: |
$20 / $15 advance |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Though the '80s were a bit late for the US government to address its great injustices towards Japanese Americans during World War II, the importance of the official apology for the Japanese internment camps should not be underestimated. Commemorating the 25th anniversary of the hearings that led to the reparations, the Bay Area Day of Remembrance Consortium presents Day of Remembrance 2006: Carrying the Light for Justice! San Francisco public defender Jeff Adachi emcees the event, which features films, musical performances, a candlelight vigil, and a keynote address from US Senator Daniel K. Inouye. (JK)
Of the 120,000 people placed in Japanese internment camps to prevent "enemy espionage," approximately how many were children? The first correct answer wins a pair of tickets to the commemoration service.
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| ALSO ON SUN |
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THEATRE
The Vagina Monologues Sun 2.26 (1:30 & 6:30pm) Herbst Theatre (401 Van Ness Ave, 415.392.4400) map $35-100
Event Info |
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It's all too rare that we get to discuss genitalia in a classy joint like the Herbst. This year's V-Day performance of Eve Ensler's controversial play benefits the local Filipina Women's Network, the first performance in Tagalog, and the second in English. (JG)
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| MUSIC: Ska |
The Toasters w/ Satori
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Break out those checkered Vans and skinny ties — Ska Brawl is back in town. This year's bout is headed by the Toasters, the grandaddies of the third wave and flagship band of the seminal Moon Ska label. Founder and guitarist/vocalist Rob Hingley has led an evolving lineup of drummers, bassists, and horn sections for more than 20 years, establishing ska's place in the American music scene and releasing well over a dozen albums in the process. California ska/reggae/rocksteady outfit Satori opens the evening with a Sublime-inspired set, along with Boston skankers West Bound Train. (CH)
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| MUSIC: Arty Metal |
Orthrelm w/ Zombi and SubArachnoid Space
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High-art heavy metal may seem oxymoronic or pretentious, but hey, as long as it still shreds, why complain? Shred Orthrelm certainly do, tearing through deconstructed metal riffs like cannibalistic college-radio geeks in an Adderall-fueled feeding frenzy. Zombi, on the other hand, appeal to every metalhead's love of classic horror flicks by taking up where Goblin — who made their name scoring Dario Argento films — left off (i.e. creepy, psychedelic prog arrangements). SubArachnoid Space open with a fuzzed-out instrumental tidal wave sure to make the bell-bottom set feel right at home. (GM)
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| THEATRE |
Family Alchemy: Malamud & Paley Stories on Stage
| when: |
Thur 2.23 - Sun 2.26 (schedule) |
| where: |
Traveling Jewish Theater (470 Florida St, 415.285.8080) map |
| price: |
$12-30 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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Longing for love and family are the central themes in the three short stories brought "word-for-word" to the stage, starting with Grace Paley's two shorts "Mother" and "The Story Hearer." However, the highlight of the production is "The Magic Barrel" by award-winning author Bernard Malamud, which engages the audience with a determined and passionate protagonist, a rabbinical student out to find a soul mate. Using an unusual approach by today's standards — a marriage broker — his desperation and frustration may resonate with lonely souls who use the modern day equivalent, online dating services. (EF)
Note: This production also runs at the Ashby Stage in Berkeley (Thur 3.2 - Sun 3.12).
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| THEATRE |
Gem of the Ocean
| when: |
Now through Sun 3.12 (schedule) |
| where: |
American Conservatory Theater (415 Geary Blvd, 415.749.2228) map |
| price: |
$16-76 |
| links: |
Event Info |
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In the late August Wilson's Gem of the Ocean, hope for the future relies upon dealing with the pain of the past. Set in the 1900s, Gem begins Wilson's cycle of ten plays chronicling the African-American experience, with one in each decade of the 20th century. Former slaves and their descendants are pitted against a young industrial nation reluctant to welcome them as equals. Hope exists within a young man named Citizen, who, after facing the demons of his history, hears the mantra, "So live." Wilson's work finds sympathetic and talented interpreters in this ACT production of Gem. (JK)
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| ALSO ONGOING/UPCOMING |
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FILM
C.S.A.: Confederate States of America (2004) Fri 2.24 - Thur 3.2 (7 & 9pm) Roxie Cinema (3117 16th St, 415.863.1087) map $8
Event Info |
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Kevin Willmott's mockumentary provides a clever and entertaining (and troublingly recognizable) portrait of a postbellum America in which a victorious Confederacy rebuilds the country using slave labor. (JK)
Note: There are additional matinees on Sat, Sun, & Wed (2 & 4pm).
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THE MOD SQUAD: Creatures of the Loin |
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The Creatures of the Loin are the San Francisco division of Moped Army, a nationwide collective of moped gangs that ride around in search of interesting new locales and adventures. Though SF's Creatures was founded less than a year ago, it has rapidly become one of the largest such groups in the world, with 40 to 60 members, according to Benjamin "Benji" Board, the Creatures' founder. "It's about rediscovering San Francisco," he says. "Riding around on streets no one has ever heard of, ending up on some street at two in the morning with your friends — that is beautiful." (KAE)
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CD REVIEW: Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, House Arrest |
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Paw Tracks
Released February 2006
$13.99 (Insound)
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It's easy to see how Ariel Pink's playful pastiche has rubbed some listeners
the wrong way since day one, but the mirage cast by his latest album should
change all that. Actually recorded years ago, House Arrest is
one of many home-recordings Pink has been steadily eking out. As the title suggests, it has the sound of a wide-eyed, shut-in kid falling head over
heels for pop — and deciding to be his own AM radio. While these
reconstituted nuggets are mulched from countless eras and genres, the active
ingredient is breezy, fuzzy psych-pop. Flicking from goofy balladry and
Stones-style dirges to Isley Brothers keyboards in mere minutes, Pink
assembles a haunting, heart-melting world that's at once borrowed and all
his own. (TW)
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STREAMS: Beats in Space |
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Despite extensive touring, both in support of the Juan Maclean and on several solo DJ jaunts abroad, Flavorpill favorite Tim Sweeney has still been able to man New York's WNYU studio and lay down some mixes on Beats in Space. This week, check out a smattering of new tracks, including a DFA take on Tiga and an out-of-this-world Carl Craig remix of Delia Gonzalez & Gavin Russom. Speaking of which, check Craig dropping Human League dubs amid new cuts on his own in-studio mix, assembled in support of his recent Fabric release. Finally, even though we're into 2006, be sure to tune into Sweeney's Best of 2005 show, recapping the year's notable electronic releases — there's bound to be something you missed and absolutely must hear. (CJN)
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Tim Sweeney: In-studio Mix (Electro/disco)
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Carl Craig: In-studio Mix (Techno)
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Tim Sweeney: Best of 2005 (House/disco)
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| Header Design: |
| Salpingopharyngeus | Katy Hamer |
| |
| Editors: |
| Abductor hallucis | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Diaphragm | Lisa Hix | | Obturator externus | Connie Hwong | | Erector spinae | Jonathan Knapp | | Pyramidalis | Jake Lancaster | | Supracoracoideus | Doug Levy | | Quadratus femoris | Sascha Lewis | | Gluteus minimus | Gerry Mak | | Frontalis | Mark Mangan | | Heart | Colin J. Nagy | | Gluteus maximus | Matt Sussman | | Rectus femoris | Claire Smith | | Triceps | Leah M. Taylor | | Soleus | Toby Warner |
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| ABOUT US |
| flavorpill SF is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in San Francisco. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it... |
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| FEEDBACK |
| As always, feel free to send in any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
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| EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS |
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
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MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS |
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| Contributors: |
| Zygomaticus major | Anna Balkrishna | | Thyrohyoid | Jimmy Carson | | Bulbospongiosus | Erika Christiansen | | Cremaster | Sidra Durst | | Popliteus | Kjersti Egerdahl | | Dartos | Kellie A. Ell | | Pronator teres | Lauren Epstein | | Kegel | Ellisa Feinstein | | Iliacus | Jennie Gruber | | Tongue | Joyce L. Guan | | Interspinales | Katie Kurtz | | M. uvulae | Hallie Montoya Tansey | | Supinator | Sam N. Shah | | Bicep | Jennifer M. Stais |
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Production: |
| Extensor indicis | Casey Acierno | | Gemellus inferior | Anjuli Ayer | | Longus colli | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | Infraspinatus | Chelsea Bauch | | Omohyoid | Morgan Croney | | Pyramidalis | Jules Gaffney | | Psoas minor | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Vastus medialis | David Morrow | | Anconeus | Judah Wiedre |
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A monthly review focusing on smart, readable works of fiction and nonfiction, from current titles to past gems
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Global fashion trends
A twice-monthly, insider view on fashion trends breaking in Paris, London, New York, and around the world
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