Thursday, May 21, 2009

Theater Review: "San Burguesa & The Pixie Chicks” @ El Teatro Campesino




Fresh from the lab, El Teatro Campesino associate artistic director Kinan Valdez uploads a mind tweak production that feels familiar and unfamiliar at once.
"Sam Burguesa and the Pixie Chicks," written and directed by Valdez, is a musical cabaret deeply steeped in the company's Chicano teatro tradition. It plays through May 31 at the Teatro in San Juan Bautista.
The production is part of the company's new "Teatro Lab," an experimental vehicle designed to produce new work in the now 45-year-old theater.
Under Valdez's watch, this latest work promises an updated swagger to the farmworker's theater formula.
The tale of "Sam Burguesa and the Pixie Chicks" revolves around the delusional Sam (Anahuac Valdez, charasmatic as ever), a 30-year-old malcontent crushed under the weight of his failed dotcom startup.
That was 10 years ago, when Sam had ambition and what his madre Eva (Rosa Escalante, charming and tormented) likes to call "vision."
Of course, those visions are fueled by the combination of his inability to mature beyond the fairy tales his mother baked into his head, and the drugs he takes to appease his personal demons. This lands him first in the looney bin, then in his parents garage.
Eva fights Sam's delusions of the past and his penchant for playing with dolls and the desire of her second husband Nestor (Jesus Huerta) to be rid of his stepson's neuroses for good.
It's at night, when everyone's asleep, that Sam's delusions come to life, when his Lil' Buddy (Christy Sandoval) shows up with a pack of gangsta pixies in tow.
When the struggle for Pixieland ensues, Sam's condition turns chaotic, challenging his sanity and even the love of his own mother.
The play travels into the realm of magical realism, a staple of Teatro productions dating back to artistic director Luis Valdez's "Zoot Suit."
The pixies are draped in colorful rags and vivacious transvestite wigs, a nice touch courtesy of costume designers Lupe Trujillo-Valdez and Zoa Lopez.
They sing and dance, as pixies are wont to do, but these ain't no fairy tale pixies. Under the tight musical direction of Stephanie Woehrmann, with songs written by her, Chas Croslin and Kinan Valdez, the numbers animate Pixieland like Pixar.
These pixies also have chops. Yellow pixie Fairly Brite (Jillian Mitchell) puts in a solid performance during her solo. Trixie Trickster (Michelle Valentyne) is deliciously deviant as Sam's femme fatale.
The play fancies itself as dark because the pixies cuss and sing off-color, and Sam molests his dolls, but it's all played for laughs.
Never taking itself too seriously pays off for the most part, although the family secret of why Eva never turns her son away (or, for that matter, seeks professional assistance for him) loses a bit of its bite as a result.
That goes away when the Pixies sing a song about how corporate America has commodified Pixieland.
Taking shots at the system is another Teatro standby, one that raises the stakes in any production.
When the pixies sing it, they go for the throat:
"We'll tell you 'bout society/Right now it's all anxiety/Enforcing clean sobriety
So f--k pixie propriety/You'll sense a bit of piety/It's 'cause of the economy /The fear has shifted gears in pixieland."
Valdez also has some fun with the economy, aiming at corporate hustlers and thieves. When Sam goes on Pixieland trial for his business improprieties, he defends corporate kickback allegations as "retention bonuses to keep the top talent."
Valdez's script is rife with plenty of these clever allusions, but strays when it shoehorns revolutionary rhetoric into the festivities.
Those missteps are minor, and in fact welcome in this experimental staging. While the themes are familiar, the style feels brand new in the Teatro.
Even the staging, taking full advantage of the room's parameters and stretching the stage almost into the audience, is a departure for the company.
And those small elements give the production and the company a sense of upheaval. Props go out to Kinan Valdez, his cast and crew for recognizing the need to modernize the Teatro template.
If "Sam Burugesa" is any indication, the Teatro Lab's experiments could bring new life to the aging company.

INFO BOX:

• What: Teatro Lab production of "Sam Burguesa and the Pixie Chicks"
• Where: El Teatro Campesino, 705 Fourth St., San Juan Bautista
• When: 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays, with matinees at 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through May 31
• Tickets: $20 general, $15 students and seniors, $12 children (under 12). All seats are $10 on Sundays
• Information: 623-2444 or www.elteatro campesino.com
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All contents ©2009 MONTEREY COUNTY HERALD and may not be republished without written permission.

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Karma Loop TV w/ GZA

Embed:
It's been a minute since Chelsea from Karma Loop TV holla'd @ the beat, so I got a pleasant surprise today when she dropped this nugget featuring GZA of Wu-Tang Clan. 
In my Vibe.com bracket, I got GZA over Ras Kass in the first round, something I'm sure my boy Mike J wouldn't appreciate all that much. Sorry Mike J, even though this was a tough one, I had to go with GZA just based on his solo and group album work (although Rassy is nice, no doubt). 
Anyway, enjoy for now. 

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Monday, May 18, 2009

Vibe.com's "Best Rapper Ever" reader predictions

So here are my reader predictions for the Vibe.com "Best Rapper Ever" online competition:

Bracket I: Eminem, Will Smith, Juvenile, Redman, Melle Mel, Nelly, Heavy D, Cam'ron, Too$hort, Trick Daddy, Snoop Dogg, Missy Elliot, 50 Cent, The Game, Prodigy, LL Cool J.

Bracket II: 2Pac, DJ Quik, Raekwon, Ludacris, Lauryn Hill, Treach, Scarface, Xzibit, Kool G. Rap, Mac Dre, KRS-ONE, Kool Moe Dee, Rev Run, Posdnous, Young Jeezy, Lil' Wayne.

Bracket III: Notorious B.I.G., Lil' Kim, Eazy E, Eve, Big Pun, Bun B, Chuck D, KMC, Q-Tip, Kool Keith, Nas, Jadakiss, T.I. Big Boi, Cee-Lo, Ice Cube.

Bracket IV: Rakim, Mos Def, Ice-T, Method Man, Ghostface Killah, GZA, Chamillionaire, Bizzy Bone, Busta Rhymes, ODB, Andre 3000, Black Thought, Kanye West, Common, Beanie Sigel, Jay-Z

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Vibe.com "Best Rapper Ever" by bracket -personal favorites

I'm breaking down the Vibe.com "Best Rapper Ever" online competition, bracket by bracket, and I'm going a little nerdcore on it.

I'm breaking it down into two areas: personal favorites and reader predictions. The personal favorites is my own analysis based on the field of who should win the competition.

The reader predictions is based on who I believe the readers will pick, kind of a bookie handle on the contest.

Here's the first breakdown, personal favorites. These are the guys I believe should advance to the second round based on my own personal opinion:

Bracket I: Eminem, Will Smith, Juvenile, Redman, Melle Mel, Ma$e, Big Daddy Kane, Cam'ron, Too $hort, 8-Ball, Snoop Dogg, Missy Elliott, 50 Cent, DMX, Prodigy, LL Cool J.

Bracket II: 2Pac, MC Eiht, Raekwon, Kurtis Blow, Lauryn Hill, Treach, Scarface, Kurupt, Kool G. Rap, E-40, KRS-ONE, Kool Moe Dee, Run, Posdnous, Fabolous, Lil Wayne.

Bracket III: Notorious B.I.G., Queen Latifah, Eazy-E, MC Lyte, Big Pun, Bun B, Chuck D, Guru, Q-Tip, Del, Nas, Jadakiss, T.I., Big Boi, Cee-Lo, Ice Cube.

Bracket IV: Rakim, Mos Def, Ice-T, Method Man, Ghostface Killah, GZA, Slick Rick, Bizzy Bone, Busta Rhymes, ODB, Andre 3000, Black Thought, RZA, Talib Kweli, Masta Ace, Jay-Z.

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Vibe's "Best Rapper Ever" online competition


So Vibe.com is hosting it's second online fan voting competion, this one for the title of “Best Rappeer" They previously hosted a "Best Rapper Alive" reader competition, which went to Eminem. (Click on the pic above to get a larger shot of the brackets).

The brackets are interesting, for the most part well-thought out and likely to incite ire amongst rap nerds. I'll be filling out my bracket and releasing it later today. To participate, visit www.vibe.com and click on the "Best Rapper Ever" link.

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Friday, May 15, 2009

“Sam Burguesa & The Pixie Chicks” @ El Teatro Campesino


Playing @ El Teatro Campesino through May 31, "Sam Burguesa & The Pixie Chicks” is the latest offering from the good folx in San Juan Bautista.

I'm reviewing the play this weekend, going in with high expectations. Director Kinan Valdez and co. always put in good work. Press release below:


SAM BURGUESA AND THE PIXIE CHICKS is a hilarious, provocative, and original new musical now on the stage at EL TEATRO CAMPESINO. Set in the place where so much of the 21st century has been invented – the family garage! At the heart of it all is the touching story of a Mom trying to save her “genius” son from losing his ball bearings. Meanwhile, Sam plays with dolls, outrageously flirting and cavorting with the Pixies in his mind. A tale of boom and bust, with a happy ending!

So if you have ever had an adult child move back home into the garage, or if you have ever been a rebounding genius yourself (white, black, Asian, Latino or what-have-you), this is the show for you!

Come see the sexy Pixie Chicks dance and sing in living colors. Running weekends until May 31st at El Teatro Campesino Playhouse, 705 4th Street, in historic San Juan Bautista. Thursdays thru Saturday nights at 8pm, Sunday Matinee at 2pm.

¡Se Habla EspaƱol but the show is ALL IN ENGLISH!

For tickets, special discounts and more information call 831.623.2444 or visit www.elteatrocampesino.com.

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"Kidney Now" from 30 Rock, featuring a cast of 1000's


This is my new joint. I'm gonna have to get an mp3 of this for the iPod. Kweli and Beasties come correct. Only thing I was waiting for was Adam Levine to punch Elvis Costello in the back of the neck. I really love 30 Rock and Tina Fey is my geek momma.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

As if I needed another reason to watch the season finale of 30 Rock


Kweli on 30 Rock? For real? This is my favorite show of all time.

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Got more music than time...


The roll call for new albums on my list this week looks like this: "Wilco The Album," by Wilco, "Crime Pays" by Cam'ron, "Relapse" by Em, "Are You In Nike + Original Run" by De La Soul, "Brooklynati" by Tanya Morgan. That's not counting other recent stuff from P.O.S., Zion I, Asher Roth and G&E.
So basically, i gotta get my review game back up, but there's no way i'mma get through all of these. Anyone wanna do a guest review? No pay, but you get your words read by a couple hundred readers a day. Gotta be worth something, right? Holla back.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Delirio coming to Monterey Live



Those strappin' lads from Delirio are coming back to the Monterey Peninsula next week. Looks like they got a new publicity shot too! Strappin' indeed. Info is on the flyer (I'm a bit lazy today and fishing for content with nothing coming back to shore).

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Monday, May 11, 2009

Tech N9NE Tweets on Salinas, signs Brotha Lynch Hung to his label


Tech N9ne Tweeted briefly about his Salinas experience,calling it a “cool first show.” Apparently Glasses Malone and Seaside Stretch of Thizz Entertainment came through. Very cool to hear.
But the more exciting news was Tech's announcement that Brotha Lynch Hung was now signed to his Strange Music imprint. That's a good look right there. Brotha Lynch is one of the most original and influential Northern Cali rap artists out there, and linking up with Tech at this point in his career makes sense for both parties. Here's hoping a new Brotha Lynch project surfaces soon. Locc'd to the brain!

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MURS Tweets on Salinas


Wow. That was exciting.

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Friday, May 08, 2009

Mi Otro Yo (Whoa)



My fellow-fellow Teresa Annas hipped me to my other self. Apparently, I'm huge in Alaska. Who knew (besides Sarah Palin, of course).
The book review is for an actual book by an Alaskan poet named Marcos A. Cabrera.
To clear up any confusion, I'm known professionally as Marc Cabrera, but my government name is actually Marcos A. Cabrera. So this dude in Alaska is an impostor!
Actually, it's pretty funny and semi-thrilling to think there's another Marcos Cabrera out there spitting poetry.
I love the part where they say I, er, he, is “a student of the human condition.” So true.
I might even have to buy his — er, my — book to check it out. Stay tuned.

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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Happy Birthday Bo-Pah!!!

She's barely 1/3 the legal drinking age, but she will knock out most drummers three-times her age.
Little Bo-Pah Sledge is 7 years old today, and "The Beat" would like to extend a hearty Happy Birthday to the best 7-year-old all-girls rock/funk band drummer in Monterey County! And we can't wait to see and her your growth on stage and record.
Oh, and Bo-Pah will celebrate with a big birthday bash Saturday at Giovanni's in Salinas. I'll be posting up my weekend roundup tomorrow with all the deets.

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Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Just wrapped my interview with Tech N9NE


All I gotta say is that it was one of the most intense and heartfelt interviews I've ever conducted. Tech really puts everything out there and was absolutely fearless talking about everything - his success, the aftermath of Mac Dre's murder in Kansas City (where Tech is from), his ailing mother, his drug addictions, etc.

I've got to trim down the 40+ minutes I got, but I may just throw it all up there for the heck of it. It's that good an interview.

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Video: MC Cambio featuring PLG, "Who I Am"


For reals, this is my joint right here. Cambio really brings it on this song, and the video is just absolute greatness. Big up to Javier Goin for directing this great piece.
PLG plays The Planet in Monterey on Friday night. More info on that to come.
Vamos.

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Monday, May 04, 2009

Coming Soon to Salinas: Tech N9NE & MURS, Baby Bash, and Cypress Hill

Got a lot of stuff coming through Salas-town, starting this week.
Sunday, Tech N9NE and MURS swing through town. Show starts at 3 p.m. at the Fox Theater in Salinas. I should have an interview up with Tech later this week, stay tuned.
On May 16, Baby Bash will headline "The Bash," a community youth festival that will also include local youth musicians and talent. That will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Sherwood Hall in Salinas.
Finally, no confirmation on this, but I was at the boy-boy Young POME's MySpace page, and he was promoting a June 11 Fox Theater show with Cypress Hill and Mellow Man Ace. Nothing firm on the time or anything else, but stay tuned.

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"The Beat @ Wave St." w/ Ricochet of Euthnasia


"The Beat @ Wave St." returns to center stage with a new installment featuring local affiliated MC Ricochet of Euthnasia.
In this ep, Ricochet talks about his music, his work in Brazil, and breaking through as a backpack rapper trying to enter the mainstream. We've also got some clips of his Wave Street Studio performance. Click in the media player to the right to check out the full interview.

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Thursday, April 30, 2009

Graf Exhibit in Salinas, Joint Venture in Monterey, tomorrow

So there's a bunch of cool stuff going on tomorrow in MoCo, just to let you know.

First off, the folks at @risK Gallery in Chinatown, Salinas, are hosting the "Wild Style" exhibit, where they will break down graf art and show some of their latest creations. @risK is hosting the exhibit, which was designed by students in the Urban Art Youth Program, a function of the Franciscan Workers outreach group, and their after-school program is designed to help young people get in touch with the arts. Program starts at 4 p.m. @risk is located on 10 Soledad St. in Salinas.

Second, Joint Venture, the hip-hop crew you known and love reppin' for Pacific Grove, is performing at 9 p.m. at East Village Coffee Lounge in Monterey. $5 at the door. I'll probably drop in to check it out and perhaps get up and spit a verse. More info at their myspace, www.myspace.com/thajointventure.

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Black Lips + GZA = Slow descent into death (but that's a good thing)

Black Lips and GZA collabo alert! Looks like the blues-rock Georgia boys and Staten Island's finest are making some noise together in the studio, on this remix to the title track for the Black Lips new EP, "Drop I Hold."
This sounds like what would happen if the 'Lips covered an obscure RZA track, and a very good cover at that. Lead singer Cole Alexander drops a gem "BlackLips.com/In Islam" and GZA is patched in for a closing spoken word verse. Getting his avant garde on. Click the link below to hear a stream:
http://www.viceland.com/vicerecords/download/black_lips-drop_i_hold_feat_gza.mp3

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Theatre Review - "Lydia" at The Mark Taper Forum

Editor's Note: "The Beat" blogger Marc Cabrera recently completed the 2009 National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Arts Journalism Institute in Theatre and Musical Theatre. As part of his fellowship, he was assigned to review several plays. Below is his review of "Lydia" performed at The Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles


Octavio Solis's "Lydia" is a big, ugly bully of a play, ripping scabs off the wounds of both its characters and audience, and leaving everyone in the theater feeling battered and betrayed.

And it is a good play, but one that will leave you punch drunk and running toward the exit in the end.

Playing now at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, the play focuses on La Familia Flores de San Antonio, Texas, a working-class clan in the early 1970s struggling with the aftermath of a family tragedy.

Seenteen-year-old Cecilia, referred to throughout as Celi, is our narrator. Speaking with impeded speech, washed in angelic light, Celi first comes to us seeming in a dream, reciting a rigid spoken word of flying with glass wings.

Introducing tired mom Rosa (Catalina Maynard), bookish younger brother Misha (Carlo Alban), brooding older carnal Rene (Tony Sancho) and hardened papa Claudio (Daniel Zacapa), Celi ghostly wanders through the messy family home backdrop. In a beat, it's revealed that Celi is really a bed-ridden car wreck victim and the family has been forced to care for her.

As Celi, Onahoua Rodriguez is a gift, able to pull the audience in with floating prose before reverting to a brain damaged state.

The family copes with the world in a victimized glaze of indifference, until Lydia, a squeaky-voiced, English-impaired Mexican migrante. Instantly, she's able to communicate with the stammering Celi, and the two are connected through words and experiences.

Like a south of the border Lucille Ball, Stephanie Beatriz plays Lydia with enough whimsy to give you hope for the scarred Flores family.

The good will is part of Solis's trick of luring the audience into a complicated, far-reaching world of incestuous deciet and, ultimately, betrayal. The appearance of a long-lost primo, Alvaro (Max Arciniega) further murks up the situation, when the truth of what happened the night of Ceci's accident is slowly unveiled.

Solis's script goes there again and again, to haunting, tortured rests of reckoning. That he dresses it up with 70s pop culture references, from the Mod Squad and Santana's "Abraxas," Budweiser pop cans and S&H Green Stamps, only furthers the emotional heist he is playing out.

The Chicano-family study also is worth noting because it is used to lull the audience into a sense of impending redemption. Surely, such a close cultural examination would be used to celebrate universal differences, one might suspect. Solis grants no such wishes with this one.

And that is what makes this merely a good play, becasue although it's told through a specific cultural lens and shaded with glimmers of brilliant performances, particularly from Zacapa and Maynard, the story is too brutal to endure. The audience is subjected to painful scenes of infidelity and incest. These are the get out of the theatre as fast as you can moments.

"The way you want things and the way things go are different," Claudio laments right before committing the ultimate maritial sin that ends the first act. It certainly applies to "Lydia" a technically good play that screws with the audience too much to keep it from being great.

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Next Generation Jazz Orchestra announced

The 2008 Next Generation Jazz Orchestra, directed by Paul Contos, was announced today. They are:

Saxophones

Andrew Olson - alto, American Music Program / Tualatin High School, Tualatin, Oregon; Patrick Sargent - alto; American Music Program, Portland, Oregon, Paul-Eirik Melhus - tenor, Ironwood High School, Glendale, Ari.; Maximillian Zooi - tenor, Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Los Angeles; Nicole Glover - baritone, American Music Program, Portland, Oregon.

Trombones

Jon Hatamiya, Davis Senior High School, Davis; John Egizi **, Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Los Angeles; Kyle Molitor, American Music Program / Tigard High School, Tigard, Oregon; Christopher Kennedy, Catalina Foothills High School, Tucson, Ari.; Emmanuel Rojas (bass) **, Warren High School, Downey.

Trumpets

Joshua Gawel, Daniel Boone Area High School, Birdsboro, Penn.; Nick Frenay ***, Manlius Pebble Hill School, DeWitt, NY; Cody Rowlands, Deer Valley High School, Glendale, Ari.; Ben Benack III, Upper St. Claire High School, Pittsburgh, Penn.; Zachary Gillespie, Ironwood High School, Glendale, Ari.

Rhythm

Gregory Chen - piano
Valley Christian High School, San Jose; Mike Gurrola - bass ** Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Los Angeles; Adam Moezinia - guitar Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Los Angeles; Jimmy Macbride – drums **, Hall High School, West Hartford, Conn.; Sam Miller - drums Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, Los Angeles; Ben Lusher - vocals, the Masters School, Dobbs Ferry, NY.

** 2-time member of NGJO
*** 3-time member of NGJO

The Next Generation Jazz Orchestra (formerly known as the MJF High School All-Star Big Band from 1971-2004) nurtures the future generation of jazz stars through a program that selects the best and brightest high school jazz musicians in the country. In 2009, the twenty-two member jazz orchestra features musicians selected from thirteen high schools from Western States and the East Coast, including Arizona, California, Connecticut, New York, Oregon, and Pennsylvania. Six states have contributed members this year in a cross-section of the best high school jazz programs in the country.

Under the direction renowned saxophonist and flautist Paul Contos, who serves as the director of the Orchestra, the ensemble is dedicated to the study and performance of the most challenging big band literature available.

The Next Generation Jazz Orchestra will embark on its annual summer tour on July 5, appearing in clubs, at music conventions, academic institutions in the Heartland of the United States, with gigs in Kansas City, Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, and Washington D.C.; the tour is being dubbed the KC/DC Tour. With a final tour appearance on the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage, their tenure in the band will culminate at the 52nd Annual Monterey Jazz Festival Presented by Verizon on September 20th on the Arena/Jimmy Lyons Stage, where they will appear with trumpeter and 2009 MJF Artist-In-Residence, Wynton Marsalis.

In 2009, there are five returning members of the Next Generation Jazz Orchestra: trombonists John Egizi and Emmanuel Rojas; bassist Mike Gurrola, drummer Jimmy Macbride, and trumpeter Nick Frenay. Nick Frenay of the Manlius Pebble Hill School in Dewitt, New York, is the only three-time member of the NGJO this year, and has previously performed with the band at the Hilton in Paris, France; New York City’s Jazz at Lincoln Center, the North Sea Jazz Festival in Rotterdam, The Netherlands; as well as on the Arena/Jimmy Lyons stage of Monterey’s 50th, 51st, and 52nd Festivals.

The Monterey Jazz Festival is also proud to announce the winner of the Next Generation Festival's prestigious Big Band Composition Competition, Andy Clausen. Mr. Clausen a trombonist and junior at Roosevelt High School in Seattle, Washington, won the Competition with “Fly,” which will be performed by the Next Generation Jazz Orchestra on the Arena / Jimmy Lyons Stage on September 20th, 2009. He will receive the 2nd Annual Gerald Wilson Award and a cash prize.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Theatre Review: "Louise & Keely Live at the Sahara" @ The Geffen Playhouse

Editor's Note: "The Beat" blogger Marc Cabrera recently completed the 2009 NEA Arts Journalism Institute in Theatre and Musical Theatre, hosted by the USC Annenberg School of Journalism. During the fellowship, Cabrera reviewed several plays as writing assignments. The following is his review of "Louis & Keely Live at the Sahara" performed at The Geffen Playhouse in Westwood.

The pulse of "Louis & Keely Live at the Sahara" dips and bops with an irresistibly non-stop rhythm, even though it begins and ends on life support.

"Louis & Keely..." now playing in the Audrey Skirball Kenis Theater at the geffen Playhouse in Westood, is both a raucous musical and rock-star biopic brought to the stage. Directed by Taylor Hackford ("Ray," "An Officer and a Gentleman") the long-time film director dives into his first stage show with a sharp, skilled vision.

With compelling subjects and the joyously gifted pairing of co-writers Jake Broder and Vanessa Claire Smith as Louis & Keely, the play shifts gears without ever missing a beat.

That because Smith and Broder are smart enough to know when to pause for a moment's reflection, then snap back into the music, which is always guided by Louis DePrima. The Sicilian jazz man who, among other distinctions wrote the Benny Goodman hit "Sing, Sing,Sing" is introduced in a present time period, on a hospital bed, unconscious. This, it seemed, was the only time he would sit still, as the midnight hour approaches and suddenly, our leader jolts back to life ready for a good time.

As Louis, Broder is a super bounce ball of abundant energy and style, always eager to put on a show for you. Backed by trumpeter/band leader Paul Litteral and his gang of jazz cats, Broder's Louis is at times beguiling, but always likable, with enough charm to please all the women in his life, from his wife to his goombah to his mom (oh those Sicilian boys).

With the band on the road playing dive after dive, Louis is pressed to find a new sound. Big Band Jazz ain't hip no more. Desperate for something that'll stick, Louis gets talked into letting a teenage girl on stage. Enter Keely Smith, all 16 years of church home values and endless talent.

Smith's Keely begins as the most innocent of teens thrust into a very adult, very male environment. Her demeanor is always classy, but true to her values. As she grows up before the audience's eyes, she never strays from that, until, ultimately, her hand is forced.

When she shines in a one-shot audition, Louis figures he's found it - a new sound, a new energy, and, unwittingly, a new girl to manage in his life.

From there, it's off to the desert and Las Vegas, where the act slowly finds an audience. Louis struggles to keep things together both on stage and on the home front, while Keely works to find herself. LIke any good rock biopic, their struggle's eventually intertwine, and true love is shaped from the heavens.

And then it's time to sing and dance and watch Keely grow into a force. Sharing a natural chemistry, Broder and Smith bring Louis & Keely to life in song after song. "Them There Eyes," "Hey Boy, Hey Girl" "I'm In The Mood for Love," all the hits keep coming, as the band swings, Louis bops, and Keely classes up the joint in perfect synch.

When the chairman of the board himself, Frank Sinatra, gives his blessing, you feel as if that will be the tipping point, but it turns in the wrong direction.

That's because like all good rock biopics, the stars have to shine too bright. When Keely's name is hoisted above Louis' on the marquee, that old Sicilian jealousy settles in. Not even the music can help bring our lovers back together.

By the time Keely's turned into a heartbroken starlet, and the audience has turned on Louis, we are left with only the saddest of love songs, ones that are sung from experience.

Which is what makes "Louis & Keely" so special: that it tells the story through song is not as remarkable as how the tone of the music is turned up as we get to know and fall in love with the main characters. Las Vegas's first couple were one-of-a-kind, and as we witness their joy and pain channeled through their music, we want their love to last.

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Theater Review: "Mauritius" @ The Pasadena Playhouse

Editor's Note: "The Beat" blogger Marc Cabrera recently completed the 2009 NEA Arts Journalism Institute in Theatre and Musical Theatre, hosted by the USC Annenberg School of Journalism. During the fellowship, Cabrera reviewed several plays as writing assignments. The following is his review of "Mauritius" performed at The Pasadena Playhouse.

Theresa Rebeck's "Mauritius" is a con within a con within a con, revolving around the geeked-out world of rare stamp collecting, the geeked-out thugs who secretly run the hobby's peculiar black market, and the women who love them.

At its core, however, is a story of redemption, on five fronts, led by Jackie, a young, seeming naive abuse survivor desperate for self-respect and a way to rid herself of a rotten family history.

Rebeck's script is given the royal treatment in the hands of director Jessica Kubzansky and her talented cast, led by Kristen Kollender as Jackie. The subtleties of the characters are what propel the story and bring it to life on stage. The Pasadena Playhouse production fleshes out several things that transcend the script's written word.

Beginning with the characters, in particular the intense back and forth between stamp shop owner Phillip (John Billingsley) and collector/gun runner Sterling (Ray Abruzzo, aka "LIttle Carmine" from "The Sopranos"). Their exchanges on stage capture the painful choreography of familiar, mismatched foes, of predator and prey.

When Sterling shows up at Phillip's shop to confront him about the mysterious sighting of the "crown jewel of philately," watching Sterling control the situation and Phillip turn to mush is something that can only be appreciated on stage. The way Abruzzo struts around stage like a jungle cat sizing up its next victim, ready to pounce, and the poor, helpless Phillip standing frozen in its sights is a great example of two experienced actors working every angle of the scene.

Later on, when Phil gets a small measure of revenge on Sterling, the way he tries to throw it in his face, only to have it thrown back with interest, is another instance of the performance transcending the page, something you could only see in the theater.

For that matter, Abruzzo's delivery and comfort zone playing Sterling also merits mention as an only in the theater moment. Playing Sterling as a principled business man who isn't afraid to reveal some vulnerability when it comes to his passion for stamps, Abruzzo gives the character more weight than the script outlines.

When talking about his passion for the hobby, he marvels at the perfection rather than the errors that collectors pine for. When he says a line like "It wasn't shit, but it wasn't good" to describe the Royal Philatelic Society museum collection, he's using every bit of the character's measure - respect, intimidation, attitude.

Kubzansky's direction deserves credit on a needs to be seen basis. The pacing the play, with its winding dialogue and character fleshing, was handled considerably well under Kubzansky's watch. The scenes unfold with ease, and the second act, which takes place entirely in the stamp shop, never drags. Kubzansky knows how to use all of her actors on stage at once, giving them enough space to even out the scene.

The impressive revolving set was also a very nice touch. Rotating between the stamp shop, a coffee shop and Jackie's home, the set design and backdrop put you right in each scene. There is now doubt of place or time, another credit both the the director and stage crew.

Finally, the accompanying sound backdrop gave the production the added flavor that the script might not catch. Using spare tones to trumpet some of the more intense scenes, the score brought out the different moods from scene to scene that you might not have caught in the script.

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I Survived the 2009 NEA Arts Journalism Institute in Theatre and Musical Theatre

I've been off my blogging game the past two weeks, but for good reason. I recently completed my first professional fellowship with the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Arts Journalism Institute in Theatre and Musical Theatre, hosted by USC's Annenberg School of Journalism.
I can't really put into words what the experience was like, and I don't have time to shoot a quick interpretive dance film. All I can say for now is that in 10 days, we packed in 9 shows, four writing assignments, one group digital media project, more than a dozen master classes and lectures, a reading of my first-ever one-act play, and the joy of meeting and sharing ideas with 22 of the brightest arts journalism minds in the country. Serious.
I'll be posting some theatre reviews and various recaps as the week drudges on, but for now, I'm content to get back into the newsroom swing and try to return to normal everyday life. It will be a tough call after the time I spent down in So-Cal, but I can safely say it's good to be home.

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Thursday, April 09, 2009

Soldiers performing at the Rubber Chicken Poetry Slam is a great thing



Working as co-producer of the Rubber Chicken Poetry Slam, I've had the chance to work with and watch a bunch of talented poets, musicians, comedians, and other performance artists. The variety of styles has been matched by the different backgrounds of people who come to the slam — high school and college students, retirees, teachers, homeless, and soldiers.
The Defense Language Institute and Naval Postgraduate School has given us a lot of talent, in waves, since most are stationed for a period of time before being shipped off to their next stop.
Wednesday, one of our most recent talents, Britton Miller, performed his last show before being shipped off on assignment to Afghanistan.
Miller is a local guy, having grown up in the East Bay in Pleasant Hill, where he attended College Park High School with Herald copy editor Ryan Panlilio. Stout yet unassuming, Miller carries the debonair presence of a young college professor, but his everpresent backward cap gives him the youthful charm of a So-Cal frat boy.
For the past 10 months, he's dutifully attended the slam, guitar always at hand, eager to share a song.
That's the attitude a lot of the soldiers come in with, just happy to be in an environment where their talent is appreciated. Working with these guys who may have to answer a call of duty I'm not prepared to take has been a great learning experience.

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Tech N9NE, MURS coming to Salinas


Can't say I'm a big fan, but it's definitely worth noting that KC's own Tech N9NE is heading our way next month. He'll play May 10 at Fox Theater in Salinas, part of his Sickology 101 Tour.

Whether you like his stuff or not, you absolutely have to respect Tech N9NE's hustle. He's been doing it DIY style for a long time now, and is in that range of troubadour MC's like Andre Nickatina and Atmosphere, artists who have gained a strong following through relentless touring. His style is grimy and full of hardcore imagery, sometimes violent, sometimes derogatory, but unique and energized.

He was announced as one of the artists on the Rock The Bells tour, where he'll share a stage with the likes of Sage Francis and Eydea & Abilities. Somehow he fits right in with them.

Also coming along for the ride is none other than MURS, which is definitely a trip. I don't know how these guys came together on a tour, but it'll be cool to see MURS in town. Well have to hook something up for an interview. Stay tuned.

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Rock The Bells Lineup Announced


Nas and Jr. Gong will headline Rock The Bells this year, it was announced on Tuesday.

Also on the bill are The Roots, Common, Big Boi, KRS-ONE, Reflection Eternal (Talib Kweli & Hi-Tek), Slaughterhouse (Royce Da 5'9", Crooked I, Joell Ortiz and Joe Buddens) and a House of Pain reunion (!).

This year's bill is definitely solid, with the return of The Roots a nice touch. Also Slaughterhouse will be dope, and House of Pain is also a classy nod (I wonder if Everlast will do any of his solo, post-H.O.P. material).

As far as headliners go, Nas and Jr. Gong falls a bit short of the Tribe Called Quest reunion from a year ago, but given they''ll have a new album of material to perform together, plus the combination of their respective catalogs should make for a great set (although personally, I would have preferred The Roots as the top bill).

My only sorta gripe is that they couldn't get Atmosphere on there. I think Slug and Co. deserve a slot on that lineup, given their success over the past year. Oh well, there's always next year. Regardless, this show will rock. I can't hardly wait.

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Monday, April 06, 2009

SalinasRadio.com


SalinasRadio.com is a pretty dope streaming radio station that I discovered over the weekend. They got some great Salinas-area bands in rotation. As soon as I started streaming it yesterday, Rum & Rebellion came on. Classic dope.

I should have more on the station this week. I've contacted the man in charge, Michael Rodriguez, and I hope to have some more news to come. In the meantime, check them out by clicking here.

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"The Beat @ Wave St." w/MC Lars


The latest episode of "The Beat @ Wave St." brings us the mad man himself, MC Lars. Fresh off the release of his latest CD, "This Gigantic Robob Kills," Lars is really putting it out there this go-round, with guest shots from the likes of Weird Al Yankovic (on accordion!) to members of The Aquabats. Check the video in the media player to the right, as well as Lars recent video for the single "Guitar Hero Hero."

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

Restoring the glory: Herald wins Good Ol' Days Hoops Tourney

The champs are here! Just got word that The Herald team took home the grand prize in the PG Good Ol' Days Media Hoops Challenge. It's been three years since we last took the title. The win was a clean sweep, including a wins over the MC Weakly, Spammin' 97.9, the Califorfeitin, and KSBW Fraction News 8.

Now, not only do we got the best news team in town, but we'll ball all over you too. What!?!

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Thursday, April 02, 2009

MC Lars speaks on Christopher Marlowe vs. Kanye West



Longtime friend of "The Beat" MC Lars gave a presentation on the history of hip-hop music and culture, as part of the 2009 Stevenson Symposium "The Power of Words" at Stevenson School. During the presentation, he broke down the stylistic similarities between Christopher Marlowe's classic "Come With Me and Be My Love," and Kanyeezy's "Stronger." Both adhere to the 4/4 rhyme pattern that constitute iambic tetrameter. Interesting stuff.

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Why do famous people get clothing lines?

Can't really pinpoint what brought up this topic — probably the rerun of "Chelsea Lately" where the one girl from "The Hills" was trying to plug Lauren's (or Audrina's?) clothing line. Chelsea informed her the line had been discontinued, which in Spanish translates to "canceled."

That got me to thinking — celebrities have been pasting their names on marginally trendy fabrics that wind up in the dollar racks at Marshall's for some time now. But why does this continue to happen? And why do people who don't really know how to dress themselves continue to get clothing lines?

Cases in point: Andre 3000 and Kanye West. Both those guys have unique styles that suit them, but if you're a parent, do you really want your kid dressing like them?

Do you really want your kid dressing like a circa 1905 white racist gentleman in knickers and a newboy hat like Mr. 3-Stacks?

Do you really want your kid sporting a Full Force-style afro-mullet and neon-colored sports blazers like 'Yeezy?

And if you are that "cool" parent who is willing to buy your kids these designer threads, are you willing to be the parent of that kid who continually gets his butt kicked at school for dressing weird?

Just a thought.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Tuesday Flashback: "Low" by Cracker


"Alt-Rock" was my ish back in high school. I cannot front.
Looking back now, it's easy to see how it was another corporate brand, but some of the music still endures. Like "Low" by Cracker.
I went internets digging for this joint last year, on one of my usual nostalgic turns. This song still works. And watching the video with Sandra Bernhard is still pretty funny, in an un-ironic way even.
I mention all of this because I interviewed Johnny Hickman of Cracker last week. He and lead singer David Lowery (the shirtless guy in the vide0) are coming to Monterey Live Friday night, to perform an acoustic set.
Hickman was a really great interview and had a lot of fond recollections of the old days. Looking back to that era, it's funny to see what bands are still left (Radiohead, Flaming Lips, Weezer to name a few) and see where Cracker fit in. They're in there somewhere, sort of.
Doesn't matter anyway. "Low" is and always will be a great song.

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Monday, March 30, 2009

"The Beat @ Wave St." w/ Sledge Grits Band


New ep of "The Beat @ Wave St." with local heroes The Sledge Grits Band. These girls are really something special, and I wish them all the luck in the world.

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Video: California Poetry Out Loud finals featuring PG High's Kylie Batlin

Two very long but stellar videos have emerged from the California Poetry Out Loud finals. Pacific Grove High senior Kylie Batlin took second place in the state competition, a huge honor.
Also, the entire program will be re-broadcast on local Comcast channel 21. The first re-broadcast will be at 7 p.m. Friday, April 3, and again at midnight and 6 p.m. April 4.
Below are the videos of the competition in their entirety, which run a good three hours each.


CA. Poetry Out Loud Finals pt. 1


CA. Poetry Out Loud Finals pt. 2


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Friday, March 27, 2009

Re-broadcast of PG High's Kylie Batlin on Ca. Poetry Out Loud

A re-broadcast of the 2009 California Poetry Out Loud, featuring Pacific Grove High School senior Kylie Tressa Gael Batlin, will air at 6:30 a.m. Saturday, March 28 on Comcast channel 21.

Yeah, that's really early, but if you can set your DVR, it would be worth watching. Kylie will be performing @ The Rubber Chicken Poetry Slam April 8. Your girl deserves all the props in the world for taking second at the Statewide event.

You can link to the California Arts Council page with news on the 2009 California Poetry Out Loud here.

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Congrats to Ralph Ward @ Alvarez High

This is out of our lane @ "The Beat," but I want to send out a special congrats to my old friend Ralph Ward, who was recently named head coach of the Everett Alvarez High School varsity football team.
Ralph was nice on the field during his high school/college years, and he comes from a great football lineage. If anyone can help turn things around @ Alvarez, it's that man. Even though I'll be rooting against him once a year when my Alisal Trojans face the Eagles, I'll be cheering for his success.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Mos Def really, really likes MF Doom


An old friend of mine used to have used to have this theory that any good rapper knows the lyrics to their favorite hip-hop songs. I agree. I've always had a good hold on my favorite lyrics. Something I pride myself on.
Mos Def appears to subscribe to this line of reasoning. In this video, he recites a whole bunch of DOOM lyrics. He also says out loud what a lot of us have been thinking - Wayne ain't all that.
Videos like this are the reason why I love the internets.

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Jacob Tsypkin @ The Rubber Chicken Poetry Slam 3.25.09


My boy Jacob Tsypkin performing his latest piece @ The Rubber Chicken Poetry Slam.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Photo: 50-ft. tall George Thorogood smashes through Old Town Salinas, threatens to destroy locals with giant guitar



Your boy George is coming to Salinas in June. You have been warned.

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Art Song Festival 09 Commercial



Salinas's Art Song Festival takes place Saturday, March 28, all day long in Old Town Salinas. Lots of live music, dancing, graffiti demonstrations, and free family fun. Above is one of the web commercials for Art Song. Support local artists!

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George Lopez talk show = it's about time!

Some television suits finally got it right and gave local homeboy George Lopez his own talk show. Bout dag time!
I can't think of anyone better suited to diversify the late (white?) night stratosphere. Late night TV has long been a boys club —Arsenio was the last to try and spice up the late night with any success. But the world should be ready for Lopez, who has paid his dues and earned the respect of his peers.
Of course, we can expect no less than 100,000 commercial ads promoting the show during the baseball playoffs on TBS (where the show will air), but that'll be a good thing. Latinos love baseball, and we should be pretty determined to make this a success.
Only bad thing I can think of — the show airs @ 11 p.m., opposite "Chelsea Lately" which is appointment TV in my house. Sounds like a late night war for the remote! AP story below:

George Lopez to host late-night talk show on TBS
|By DAVID BAUDER|
|AP Television Writer|
NEW YORK (AP) — Comic George Lopez will start a new talk show on TBS next fall, saying he wanted to reach a diverse audience that generally isn’t spoken to in late-night television.
The hourlong show, which doesn’t have a title yet, will air Monday through Thursday at 11 p.m.
TBS is moving to establish a new talk show at a time of change in the genre. Jay Leno is moving to prime-time at NBC, Conan O’Brien takes over the ‘‘Tonight’’ show in June and Jimmy Fallon recently started in O’Brien’s ‘‘Late Night’’ time slot.
‘‘I’m a pretty visible Mexican-American guy who has managed to cross over,’’ said Lopez, who had a six-year run with his own ABC sitcom. ‘‘I’m not a singer. I’m not Antonio Banderas. I’m a guy who came up the hard way on the street, and I speak to people who have the same life story.’’
Late-night television, and TV entertainment in general, ‘‘is a place where everything is geared toward Caucasians,’’ Lopez said.
He said he wants to be inclusive, not divisive, in much the same way as Arsenio Hall’s early-1990s talk show.
Lopez and his producers approached TBS with a pilot episode filmed on an outdoor soundstage, with Eva Longoria, Dane Cook and Samuel L. Jackson as guests. Lopez sat audience members close to the stage, let them ask questions and didn’t sit behind a desk.
‘‘The music was from salsa to Led Zeppelin,’’ he said. ‘‘Look, you can either go to Nieman Marcus or you can go to a flea market. When you go to a swap meet, there’s just a ground-level feel that you can find anything there. At Nieman Marcus, you’re not going to find tube socks and pliers. This will be a flea market feel.’’
TBS was sold by the pilot, said Michael Wright, the cable network’s programming chief.
‘‘They took George Lopez and his style and his spirit and this is the best way to do this,’’ Wright said. ‘‘Rather than jamming him into a show, they built a show around his personality. They basically made it a street party.’’
Besides sensing that the time may be right to introduce a late-night talk show, TBS was looking into an uncertain future for its typical late-night fare. The network has done well then with reruns of ‘‘Seinfeld’’ and ‘‘Sex and the City,’’ but when viewers eventually tire of those, there are few network sitcoms that eventually will hit the syndication market to replace them.
TBS also has a relatively diverse audience. It is basic cable’s top-rated network among young Hispanic adults, in large part because of its coverage of major league baseball playoffs. And TBS’ ‘‘House of Payne’’ was the top series last fall among young black adults, according to Nielsen Media Research.
Lopez’s show, which will be produced in Los Angeles, will premiere in November to take advantage of promotion during the playoffs and because that month usually brings a bumper crop of celebrities available to talk shows to pitch new projects, Wright said.
Lopez said he had already received a message from Longoria asking to be a guest on his first show.
‘‘I told her that if she managed to get pregnant and announce it on my show she’d be in the pole position to be my first guest,’’ he said.

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Monday, March 23, 2009

Kanye, Com, Badu performing @ SXSW



I read about this show on Pitchfork.com, now this video surfaces and I wish I could have been there. SXSW 2009 is over, and by most reports it was a good look for the music industry and fans of music.

One of these days, I hope I can get out there. This just looks like fun stuff.

EDIT: Watching this video, it occurred to me that it must be strange for Com to rock a stage with his ex, after a) she just had a baby with a lesser-known rapper (Jay Electronica) only one month ago and b) this is the biggest song of his career, presumably written for her. In any event, they look great rocking together and that song is still one of my all time favorite hip-hop love songs. Don't know why I bother sweating that small stuff.

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Jokes, People

Editor's Note: I recently submitted some jokes to a local comedian. He didn't use any of them, but it's definitely a working relationship in progress. I'll post the stuff he doesn't use on my blog from time to time. This is just fun exercise for me.

Chris Brown and Rihanna are in the news everyday, are they together, are they split up. I'm not here to talk about guilt or innocence, because anyone who's been in a real relationship knows that things can get out of hand. But if anything, this should be a lesson to every guy out there.

Men, we have only two options, either be true to your girl, don't ever lie to her, and just be honest, or if you're gonna just be a nasty, low, trifling, two-timing dog, don't own a cell phone. Plain and simple.

Cause think about it, Chris got caught with a 3-page text from his lover, and that's what set Rihanna off. Now first of all, who has the time and the hand eye coordination to type out a 3-page text? Was she texting him a love letter or a book report?

And guys, learn a quick lesson. If you're gonna be tricking, that cell phone is like a portable incriminating evidence device. Girls can use the GPS to figure out where you were, track numbers and messages to figure out who you're with, and if you got a video camera, that can be used as surveilance footage. Your girl be flipping through your pictures like
—"who is this b---- you're hugging up on?"
—“Baby, that's me and your momma at the Christmas party. Why you trippin?"
—“I'm gettin suspicious.”

Guys, if you're drunk dialing your booty call on your own cell phone, that's on record somewhere. When you're done, you might as well mass text everyone saying “I'm a douch. I'm drunk dialing and when my girl sneaks through my phone records at the end of the month, you'll be getting this same text message from her phone.”

Girls ain't playing. My girl keeps a tight grip on my cell phone, like it was a crack pipe. She grabs it as soon as I walk in the door like "Lemme see that thing!” Checks every text and questions it like "Who is this Denise b---- texting you at 10:30 at night?"
—"Baby that's my sister you know that"
—“Well, tell her not to be texting so late. I'm gettin' suspicious."

Those are my three least favorite words these days, "I'm gettin' suspicious." My girl always uses that one.

Because girls know that phone should be on your hip, and if it's not, it's because your pants are off. So they know you better pick up by that fourth ring. Otherwise they're saying "I'm getting' suspicious."

But back to Chris Brown, it's like dude needs to pay attention to his elders. That's the problem with the new R&B artists, they don't take enough lessons from the old school, man.

I guarantee you, that would not have happened to Smokey Robinson. Smokey woulda laid it down all smooth like "Mistakes, I know I've made a few/ but I'm only human, you've made mistakes too."

Chris was singing to Rihanna like "She want that slappy-slappy, that fist-fist/How many times I gotta tell ya stop (in a high pitched voice) playin with me.”

And when the cops was coming, he's singing "Let me see if If run it, run it/I better just run it, run it."

That wouldn't have happened to the old school artists, well except for Al Green. Chris is just lucky he didn't end up with a bucket of hot grits on his back.

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Friday, March 20, 2009

El P vs. Tren Reznor/NIN = Whoa

Over on El-P's Twitter account (twitter.com/therealelp), he just dropped a few remixes produced by none other than Trent Reznor.
A link to three tracks is up on his twitter account right now. No telling how long they will stay up.
Of the three tracks, "Up All Night (survivalism mix)" has resonated the most with me so far. With throbbing, synthetic kick drums and scorching riffs, El's cutthroat verbiage bleeds into Reznor's chaotic web of guitars and computer bleeps. El's verses reach a crescendo leading into Reznor's panicked chorus that blends seamlessly into "Vesseltology."
I interviewed El about two years ago when his first collaboration with Reznor was released, on the album "Ill Sleep When You're Dead." El was really proud of the work and sounded pleased to have the relationship he had with Reznor. Glad to see that relationship has lasted and led to more dope music.

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Thursday, March 19, 2009

New Mos Def album "The Ecstatic" commercial

Mos Def - Words - The Ecstatic - in stores Spring 2009


Just got this from Okayplayer.com. Looks like The Mighty Mos Def could be dropping his album on schedule, June 9. Can't wait for "The Ecstatic."

It's been a minute since "Tru3 Magic" dropped, which I think was very underrated. Of course, the man's been busy piecing together a serviceable (if not altogether underwhelming) acting career, but I'm not really checking for his name up on a movie poster. Hopefully, he's going IN on this one.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

New Abstract Rude song = Very good



One of my favorite MC's from the Good Life/Project Blowed circle, Abstract Rude, has a new album coming out through Rhymesayers Entertainment.
"Rejuvenation" is Ab's solo debut with Rhymesayers. Honestly, it's been way too long since this guy released something. And the press release says Vitamin D is producing the entire thing! Good news (although I'm only sorta bummed that Ant isn't getting in on this).
The title track is also the album's first single. Sample the goodness below.

http://www.rhymesayers.com/radio/audio/Rejuvenation.mp3

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The Beat Video Blog w/Ghambit and August Sky

Now playing in the media player to the right are the following interviews with local artists.


Ghambit is a member of Ineffable Music Group, a Santa Cruz/Bay Area based music camp fronted by talent manager Igor Katz. Ghambit reps Watsonville and recently released his first solo project, "Putitinthaair Vol. 1." He was a member of the Warlordz with fellow SC-area MC Sincere and the late Almighty Aziz. Ghambit is a candid, boisterous and overall pleasant dude, and he opens up a lot on the passing of his homie Aziz. I gotta take this time also to correct myself, as I misspelled his stage name in the print edition of The Beat (my bad).



August Sky is a three-piece kids rock/blues band. Members are from Salinas and they play classic rock (Zepplin, Hendrix) mixed with the blues (Muddy Waters, BB King). These kids are some of the most talented yet humble musicians in the area. They have a few shows coming up,and you can check out all the info @ www.myspace.com/augustsky.

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"American Gangster" w/Mac Dre & Romper Room Gang


Late pass. This has been floating around for a minute, but it's definitely worth a look.
I interviewed J-Diggs last year (you can read the interview here) and he talked about this. Interesting to see it come to life. As we all know, Mac Dre was murdered more than four years ago, and his legacy looms larger than ever.
This "AG" piece is fascinating for a number of reasons, but Peninsula residents might be intrigued by the inclusion of our very own Seaside Stretch, C.O.O. of Thizz Entertainment. Stretch is a local hero of sorts, having come up with the entire Thizz crew and now working as Mista F.A.B.'s manager (Fabby is also featured prominently in the doc).

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Monday, March 16, 2009

Sledge Grits Band doesn't make Round 2 - What were voters thinking?


The Sledge Grits Band on the set of the CBS Early Show


Major bummer, but the girls from Sledge Grits Band did not make it to the second round of CBS Early Show's "Singing Family Face-Off." They were topped by J4 of Tennessee in online voting.
Personally, if it was based on performance alone, Sledge Grits killed it. It was over from the moment MiMi Sledge slid over to the judges panel and belted out "Reach Out and Touch (Somebody's Hand)" with a voice stronger than her deceitful 8 years of age. It was OVER!
Alas, it wasn't meant to be. The girls are home now, exhausted, but still proud of their achievement.
"When we were performing I was so excited,” said Keiko Sledge, the 14-year-old bassist. “You have these three judges in front of you who were expecting us to bring it. I just looked at my three sisters and said let's do it!”
It was done, but sadly, they deserved better.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Sledge Grits Band in NYC - Day 3

Editors Note: Special guest blogger Wendy Sledge, band mother for the Sledge Grits band, gives a quick report on the band's Wednesday morning performance on the "CBS Early Show."

When we got off the stage, we got a pretty amazing response. The girls are just so excited and happy. You couldn't see it on camera, but the whole studio enjoyed it.

At first the girls were nervous watching the other band, because they had choreography in their set. But I think we did alright.

We didn't expect (Kathy Sledge, a member of Sister Sledge and one of the panel judges) to be there, but we knew she has been one of the judges. It was exciting to see her there.

MiMi made (Kathy Sledge) cry. You know how she walked to the judges station during the performance? She started to cry. The cameras tried not to show that too much. Afterward, (Kathy Sledge) came up to us and gave the girls all hugs and said we did great.

I have to go now, we're at the airport. It's been a crazy day!

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Sledge Grits Band perform on CBS Early Show - WOW!



Speechless. I am without speech.

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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Sledge Grits Band in NYC - Day 2

Editors note: Today is day two of the Sledge Grits Band of Salinas's trip to New York City, where they are gearing up to perform on CBS Early Show. Band member Keiko Sledge and mom Wendy Sledge give us this special blog report:

Keiko:

Today we woke up early and we went and had breakfast with the producers of the show and the band we are competing against. That was really fun meeting with everybody.

We went over to the place where we would be rehearsing, CBS studios. We rehearsed there, we watched the other band. They were really good.

We got to hear how it sounded on actual TV. It was pretty cool in the studio.

After that, we went out into the city. We went into FAO Schwartz. We looked around, went window shopping. Then we came home and relaxed and rehearsed.

In the recording studio, at first, we rehearsed on the actual stage that you would see in the segment. It was on the revolving stage they set up. I didn't expect so many people to be around. They had lots of producers and lots of people helping. There was lighting and sound people and it was so cool. We got to experience how the microphones work and how the studio works.

I was expecting to have to set up my own stuff, but we didn't. They did it for us.

Meeting the other band was really fun. They're all right around our ages. It goes from age 6 to 7 8 t 9, then there's a gap. Then it goes from age 12-13, 14-15.

We were amongst the kids. There wasn't any real competition amongst the kids. We got to listen to each other, they were really supportive of our stuff and we were really supportive of their stuff.

All I can say is the songs we are both performing are pretty different. They are both gospel of course, but besides that they're pretty different.

We are in for the night. I think we're going to order in again. We are just rehearsing what we can. We're trying to talk momma into letting us walk around, but she wants us in bed early. We have to be in the studio by 5 am., so we'll be up really early about 3 a.m.

We're going to be really excited tonight. We're going to turn off all the lights and I'm sure momma is going to tell us be quiet, be quiet. Besides that, it's been a long couple of days with the time changes and everything, so I'm sure we'll be able to get some sleep before tomorrow.

Wendy

We got up early and went to have b fast. it was nice to put a face to the names of some of the people we've been speaking to the last month.

The other band were really nice people.

We went to the studio. It's just amazing. They have amazing sound people over there. We got the girls all situated.

In the studio they practiced their song. It was actually quite quick that they got the stage down and everything. I think people are going to like the performance tomorrow. They've changed it a little bit, it worked out really well.

From there, they had taken the kids earlier in the day to Central Park. It was just a trip that right in the middle of this big old city was this big old park.

Just taking the kids to the toy store, that was really fun. They had the best time.

The other band's song is a little more different than the girls. They chose more of an upbeat song. We have more of a vocally driven song.

The other band goes second. We go first. We flipped a coin and I lost.

At first I thought it was going to put us at a disadvantage, but I think it's going to be to our advantage going second. As long as the girls hit the song, i think they'll have a little bit of an edge.

It's time to settle in and maybe just watch some TV for a little bit. It's about 7 p.m. right now

It's so funny. Last night, the alarm clock in the hotel room wasn't set right. It started up at 12 a.m. My husband and I were on edge, so we both jumped up out of bed. It feels like every time we close our eyes the alarm clock goes off. That kind of goes to show the kind of week we're having.

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Monday, March 09, 2009

The Sledge Grits Band in New York City - Day 1


Photo by Orville Myers/The Herald


Editors Note: Special guest blogger Keiko Sledge of the Sledge Grits Band of Salinas is reporting live on the scene from the band's trip to New York City. The band will perform Wednesday on the CBS Early Show as part of the "Singing Family Face-Off" competition. Keiko will blog throughout the week as the band prepares for its national TV performance debut.

We're at the hotel right now. It's called the Hensley Park Lane Hotel. It's across the street from Central Park. It's really, really pretty. If you look out the window, you can see all the beautiful buildings, but (the park is) on the other side of the building. Right now it's night time, so it's so beautiful.

Our day started off when we woke up at about 3 a.m. and we got out the door. Our friend drove us to the Monterey Airport. We got to check in really early just in case there were any delays. We got there about 4:30 a.m. The plane left at 6 a.m. From there, we went to the Denver Airport in Colorado. That one left at 10:50 a.m , from there, we left and headed straight to New York City

When we got here, it was so amazing. Someone came and picked us up and brought us here and the hotel is just beautiful. It's been so much fun so far. We're just getting settled in.

For dinner, we ordered in and we used room service because the babies (younger sisters MiMi and BoPah) were real excited to have room service. We're just relaxing right now because it's been a real long day. We're going to rest for tomorrow. We're going to meet with the producers tommorrow.

Tomorrow, early in the morning, were going to have breakfast with the producers and meet with the other band we're competing with. Then there's a rehearsal. We're going to make sure the settings are right and do a sound check. Then there's lunch. After that, we have the rest of the day and see what's out here.

We don't have any ideas (where we're going sight seeing). We're looking at that right now. I know there's some zoos and parks and huge buildings. We're still trying to figure out what we want to see because we're only here for a limited time.

The weather is actually pretty cold. It's really cool, a little cloudy, but it's not raining and that's good. It's pretty tolerable.

I was so excited when we were flying here. I was just thinking ”Oh my goodness! I cannot believe we are on our way to New York and we're going there to perform.” I was feeling a whole bunch of feelings. I was proud. I was anxious. It's exciting.

I'm pretty tired right now. I'm really too excited from getting her to be too tired, and I got to sleep a lot on the plane. We all got to sleep a lot on the plane. But I am excited.

I just want to say that I hope that everybody who ends up seeing our song likes it and we've been working really hard.

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Thursday, March 05, 2009

So anyone heard anything new about this Chris Brown/Rihanna thing?

So, we finally have some details on the whole Chris Brown/Rihanna situation, painting a picture that is likely to stay up for a little bit longer.

Me and my girl have been going back and forth on the subject the past few weeks now. She's squarely in Brown's corner, arguing that she probably did something to provoke his behavior. I've been on Rihanna's side, reasoning that regardless of the circumstance, right or wrong, you just can't leave your girl bleeding and unconscious on the side of the road for police to find her. Just don't do it homie!

We now have some more details on the incident: she found a text from another woman, flipped out, he apparently went berzerker and started hitting her while driving, an odd site to consider if you were to somehow be walking by and witness it ("hey, is that chris brown and rihanna beating each other up in a Lamborghini?"). The whole thing is just sad because human emotion is such a fragile thing.

I won't pass judgment on the boy because we are all innocent until proven guilty. Likewise, I won't drown myself in sympathy for Rihanna because in all relationships, there are right ways and wrong ways to deal with things. I'm merely a (rather distant) observer, awed by the sparks of this celebrity supernova.

I really just hope some sort of positive outcome reveals itself from all this, although I can't imagine what that could be right now. Sometimes the best thing is for everything to just go away on its own and let people heal. Given the colossal attention this thing is getting, that's the least likely scenario.

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"Hoodie" and other reasons I can no longer stand hip-hop slang in the American cultural lexicon

So, I'm reading a police report on a recent bank robbery in North Salinas. Serious stuff, with the robbers pulling an old fashion "put your hands in the air" (minus the wave them like you just don't care) type of heist.
I was drawn into the report right up to the point where the story said “The robbers, both wearing hoodie sweatshirts...”
Hoodie sweatshirts? Really?
I've read enough news wire stories on the "hip-hopification" of the American lexicon to understand and not be shocked by such word usage. And maybe hoodie itself isn't the most egregious usage of slang, but here, it just struck me.
Maybe it's because hoodie rhymes with woodie, and both words just seem silly/borderline juvenile to me.
I think the first time I ever even heard the word "hoodie" I'm pretty sure was in a Das Efx song, and they were using it just so it could rhyme with "Sam Goodie," which sounds even more silly if you connect the dots.
Like, if hoodie makes it into the Oxford dictionary (and who's to say it hasn't already? I'm too lazy to look it up) will the origins be rooted back to one of the Das Efx , figgety-wiggety guys?
Maybe I should call for a moratorium on all unnecessary hip-hop slang, beginning with hoodie and it's root ('hood is no longer acceptable)and extending to bling, whole sale phrases like back in the day, and any story reference either to Chuck D calling rap music "The Black CNN" or identifying 50 Cent as "Fiddy."
Enough is enough, people.

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My first professional fellowship

I'm not one to trumpet my own arrival anywhere, but I'm pretty pleased with one recent career development: my first professional journalism fellowship.
Yours truly was chosen to participate in the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Arts Journalism Institute in Theater and Musical Theater.
Applause everyone.
For 10 days in April, I'll be working at the USC Annenberg's School of Journalism. Going to plays, attending writing workshops, and working one-on-one with prominent journalists in a master class are all part of the package.
My initial reaction was excitement. That has been doubled up as I learn more about the NEA and their mission to bring arts to everyone, from the big city to the small town barrio.
Corny as it may sound, I really believe the arts can have a positive effect on communities dealing with gang violence and other social ills. I'm honored to now be involved with an organization that seems to recognize this as well.
April's going to be an exciting month.

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Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Sledge Grits Band to sing gospel on CBS Early Show


Watch CBS Videos Online
The four young girls sat anxiously in the KION television studios, dressed to impress, even though it was three in the morning.
Making their national television studio debut, the Sledge Grits Band of Salinas were up at 3 a.m. to learn they would be singing gospel music next week in front of a nationwide audience.
The girls appeared this morning on the CBS Early Show, the nationally televised morning news and variety program. Their spot was broadcast via satellite from the local CBS affiliate studios in Salinas.
All four members, Keiko, 14, Kariel, 12, "MiMi" 8 and Kelly Jo, 6, were up well past their bed time (or well before their alarm clock settings)to find out what genre of music they would perform on the show. Show hosts Harry Smith and Julie Chen spoke to the girls and their opponents, J4, a band of siblings from Tennessee.
Chen spun a wheel to pick which genre both bands would be performing. When it landed on gospel, both bands were jolted with excitement.
Sledge Grits Band has performed gospel music before.
“We love gospel music and it's been around our house since we were little,” said young Keiko, without the slightest hint of irony.
Their opponents are also pretty familiar with the style — their father is a pastor and a traveling gospel singer.
“Divine intervention,” cracked Smith.
The band will have five days to rehearse their song before heading out to New York City next week. On March 11, they will make their national television performance debut and vie for a shot at a recording contract with CBS.
Despite the early morning rise and seeming opponent disadvantage, the girls carried themselves with grace.
“We're confident,” said Keiko.
Without question.

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Tuesday, March 03, 2009

"The Beat @ Wave St." w/ Young Pome


Now streaming in the media player to your right is the latest episode of "The Beat @ Wave St." This week, we chop it up with Young Pome, season 3 winner of Jammin' 97.9's Open Mic competition.

Pome talked about winning the competition as well as his hustle trying to make name for himself as a young artist in the 831. Clips of his performance are also cut between the interview. Enjoy.

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The Roots on Jimmy Fallon — quite good, actually



Stayed up for the opening monologue of "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" last night (couldn't make it past the intro, too tired).

I mainly watched to check out The Roots, my favorite band of all-time. Lots of critics and bloggers etc. have been questioning their move to a late-night talk show, but I think it's great. The band is actually fit for such a gig, given their versatility (not just hip-hop, these guys can do jazz, funk, even hardcore). Plus, Dave Chappell's ex-writing partner, Neal Brennan, helped get them on the show, so that's a plus-plus.

The band sounded good, dare I say great, but really showed their potential during the closing bit in the monologue called "Slow Jamming The News." Dropping a thick love jam, Fallon gave a faux-R&B treatment to a joke on the stimulus package, while Black Thought crooned/testified ala Teddy Pendergrass in the background. It may take a few more tries, but that could become a fun running bit.

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