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Arts & Life

Stereo Bounce to play at the Soper Reese Aug. 16

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Written by: Editor
Published: 02 August 2014

stereobounce

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The well-known San Francisco band, Stereo Bounce, brings its energetic and funky style to Lakeport's Soper Reese Theatre on Saturday, Aug. 16, starting at 7 p.m.

The performance brings band members Jay Johnson, John Golden and Bill Leach back to their roots.

The three men grew up in Lakeport, attending the local high school and playing with the Lake County Symphony.

They each left home to pursue music careers that took them all over the world, performing with such greats as Aerosmith, Kiss, The Doobie Brothers, Counting Crows and the Beach Boys.

Stereo Bounce embraces many styles, ranging from current pop hits to R&B and Motown, disco, classic rock, jazz and swing.

But it’s their fresh, hip approach – featuring four lead vocalists and a hot rhythm section – that turns a concert into a rocking dance party.

Johnson sings and plays guitar and trumpet. Golden is on keyboard and guitar, and also sings. Leach, aka Bleach, sings and plays the drums.

The group includes Catt John and Rosey Abrams, lead singers, as well as Paul Barrister on bass.

They play hits from over the decades including favorites by Aretha Franklin, The Rolling Stones, Def Leppard, Spice Girls, Lady Gaga and Adele.

Tickets are $15 and can be purchased at www.soperreesetheatre.com ; The Travel Center, 1265 S. Main St., Lakeport, Monday through Friday, 9 am to 5 pm; and the Soper Reese Theatre Box Office at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, on Fridays from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

First Sunday Fiddlers Return to Ely Stage Stop Aug. 3

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Written by: Linda Drake
Published: 28 July 2014

060114fiddlersjam

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The Ely Stage Stop and Country Museum in Kelseyville will host the next First Sunday Fiddlers’ Jam in the barn on Aug. 3.

What a great way to relax after all of the great events in and around Lake County during June and July.

Enjoy great Americana music and all of the latest museum acquisitions and displays. You can’t miss the museum now that they have our beautiful sign on the property.

The fun begins at the museum at 11 a.m. with the fiddlers playing in the barn from noon through 2 p.m.

Donations benefit the Ely Stage Stop and the Old Time Fiddlers Association.

This free, family friendly event can be enjoyed by all, young and old alike.  

Bring a picnic lunch to enjoy on one of our beautiful picnic tables.  

Buy tickets for the next table to be raffled off and for a surprise basket to be raffled during the fiddling that day.

Enjoy the music with beverages and tasty treats provided by the docents. Bring your own wine and sip it in Ely Stage Stop wine glasses that are available for purchase.

Come ready to clap your hands, tap your toes, and get up and dance.

The stage stop, operated by the Lake County Historical Society, is located at 9921 Soda Bay Road (Highway 281) in Kelseyville.

Current hours of operation are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. each Saturday and Sunday.

Visit www.elystagestop.com or www.lakecountyhistory.org , check out the stage stop on Facebook at www.facebook.com/elystagestop or call the museum at 707-533-9990.

American Life in Poetry: Creek-Song

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Written by: Ted Kooser
Published: 27 July 2014

tedkooserbarn

Here’s a poem by an Indiana poet, Shari Wagner, that has a delightful time describing the many sounds of running water.

Creek-Song

It begins in a cow lane
with bees and white clover,
courses along corn, rushes
accelerando against rocks.
It rises to a teetering pitch
as I cross a shaky tree-bridge,
syncopates a riff
over the dissonance
of trash—derelict icebox
with a missing door,
mohair loveseat sinking
into thistle. It winds through green
adder’s mouth, faint as the bells
of Holsteins heading home.
Blue shadows lengthen,
but the undertow
of a harmony pulls me on
through raspy Joe-pye-weed
and staccato-barbed fence.
It hums in a culvert
beneath cars, then empties
into a river that flows oboe-deep
past Indian dance ground, waterwheel
and town, past the bleached
stones in the churchyard,
the darkening hill.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2010 by The Christian Century. Shari Wagner’s most recent book of poetry is The Harmonist at Nightfall, Bottom Dog Press, 2013. Poem reprinted by permission of The Christian Century and the poet. Introduction copyright © 2014 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

El Rey Network takes stab at 'Matador' spy thriller

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Written by: Tim Riley
Published: 26 July 2014

Maverick filmmaker Robert Rodriguez famously got his big start in show business over twenty years ago putting together a successful indie film on a shoestring budget.

As the writer and director, Rodriguez’s “El Mariachi” became a cult hit.

A few years later, Rodriguez delivered a sequel with Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek in “Desperado.”

Shortly thereafter, in collaboration with Quentin Tarantino penning the script, Rodriguez directed the crime and horror film “From Dusk Till Dawn,” which also achieved cult status.

The significance of Rodriguez’s early career moves is evident with the recent launch of the El Rey Network, a 24-hour English language cable channel, which is culturally diverse and just might tilt to the Hispanic audience. Univision holds a minority stake in the network.

For the time being, El Rey Network, which is perhaps unfamiliar to most TV viewers, functions with a minimum of original programming.

In fact, El Rey’s first original series was “From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series,” which is now gearing up for shooting in Austin, Texas in October for its sophomore season.

Meanwhile, conveniently occurring during the time of year that the nation’s TV critics are gathered in Beverly Hills to preview new programming, the El Rey Network is launching the spy thriller series “Matador,” the story of a professional soccer player who uses the sport as a cover for his covert activities on behalf of the CIA.
   
Another expedient circumstance is that “Matador,” with its backdrop of professional soccer, debuts on Tuesday, July 15, offering the El Rey Network the good fortune of its series launch only two days after the World Cup final.

In “Matador,” Gabriel Luna stars as Tony “Matador” Bravo, the secret agent who succeeds in the tryouts for the L.A. Riot team by taking out a top player known as “The Bull,” and henceforth acquiring his “Matador” nickname and the attention of the team owner.

Alfred Molina’s Andres Galan is the owner of the Los Angeles soccer franchise and a person of interest to the CIA for his shady, corrupt international dealings.

In a cast that is heavily Latino, Nicky Whelan stands apart as Annie Mason, Bravo’s beautiful control agent who serves as the head of an obscure branch of the CIA.

Only minutes into the first episode of “Matador” the Robert Rodriguez touch is viscerally realized when a minor character takes a meat cleaver to the head, creating the instant shock value that is a trademark of grindhouse cinema in general.

Speaking to TV critics, Rodriguez, who directed the premiere episode of “Matador,” insisted that the brutally violent act “was in the script” and that the scene was “written that way.” The director said he told his writers that everyone would think that the incident was his idea.

No matter where the idea emanates, brutally violent actions that are vastly unpredictable are very much in the wheelhouse of the Rodriguez school of what could be called “good bad movies” that result from targeted exploitation.

“Matador” obviously and adroitly plans to keep the audience on edge. Rodriguez noted that the vicious feat “came in as such a shock” and to establish the violence early results in the audience not knowing what is going to happen.

Astutely, the director observed, in reference to the meat cleaver scene, that “you don’t have to do it very much because that’s in their head now.” He’s quite right about that, as the tension holds in many scenes that could have turned grisly or cruel.

Based on the intrigue and incredible action of the first episode, “Matador” looks like it could put the El Rey Network on the map.

The adventures of Agent Bravo, thrust into a clandestine world and balancing his dueling roles, will certainly prove dangerous and provocative.

The business model for the cable channel will be heavily focused on movies that fit the Rodriguez paradigm. Let’s just say you won’t be seeing “The Sound of Music” or anything resembling a musical, unless it’s a gangster carrying a guitar case.

Coming this fall, El Rey seeks to expand its commitment to original content with a second night of programming anchored by two new unscripted series.

“Lucha: Uprising” (a working title) features the high-flying antics and colorful world of freestyle Mexican wrestling.

Mexican wrestling is fun to watch. I am not sure what to make of “Cutting Crew,” which explores the edgy artistry of a dynamic team of barbers who have made a name for themselves at a Philadelphia barbershop by thinking outside the stylist box. Apparently these “scissor-happy” artists are a raucous bunch dishing a lot of jokes and banter.

At the TV press conference, Scott Sassa, Vice Chair of the network, asked TV critics to think of El Rey as the “Turner Classic Movies of action, horror, grindhouse, kung fu, blaxploitation, or any other genre that movie fans love.”

It seems only fitting then that the cable channel’s motto is “Ride with El Rey,” inviting viewers watching the channel’s programs to come along for a wild adventure.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

  1. Aug. 16 'Symphony on the Lake' to feature chamber concert, twilight dinner
  2. Whispering Light to perform at Twin Pine Casino for Wine Adventure
  3. American Life in Poetry: The Ring Toss Lady Breaks a Five

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