Posts filed under ‘Kids’

Vashon Island Events: Miscellaneous – Folk Dance, Dance& Drum, Zen Meditation

Afro-Brazilian Drum and Dance Classes

drumsRhythmJoy commences a  new session of Afro-Brazilian drum instruction and dancing  onMonday, January 5 at 6:30 pm.  Drum students are given an opportunity to apply what they have learned to the dance portion of the program.  Students may bring a friend for free for the first class.  Dance classes start at 7:30.  The cost is $64 for the four week session or $18 to drop in.  No experience is needed and instruments are provided.  The drum class is taught by Geoff Johns  and the dance class by Carol Lutra Johns.

danceFolk Dance

Martin Koenig, sponsored by the Vashon Folkdancers, will offer a series of 8 folk dance classes, held on consecutive Monday evenings between 7 and 9 pm at Havurat Ee Shalom.  The classes start January 5 and end February 23.  The Balkan line and circle dance classes range from simple to moderately complex.  Fees are $80 for individuals and $40 for students for the series.  For more info call 463-1238.

zen1Zen Meditation

The Vashon Buddhist Insight Group meets every Monday from 7 to 8:30 pm at the Zen Center at 20406 Chatauqua Beach Road.  All who are interested are welcome.

January 1, 2009 at 5:14 am Leave a comment

Vashon Island’s Cafe Luna: Great Rain and Jump Track for the Holidays!

 Friday, December 26th, 7:30pm

Get Ready for….

Great Rain

 The Original Folk Rock Insurgentsgreatrainweb2Saturday, December 27th, 7:30pm

Back and better than ever, this well-loved, acoustic duo is all about folk rock with an edge of rock. Their songs are written with a sort of passion and sense of purpose
while still maintaining warm folk traditions.

Saturday, December 27th, 7:30pm

 

 

 

Jump Track

Acoustic Rock Meets World Beat

jumptrackenews_000

If you love the idea of “acoustic meets world beat,” you’re going to love Jumptrack. Geoff Johns and Chuck vanNorman, make music that is as dynamic as it is rhythmically diverse. We’re talking steel and nylon string guitars, exotic sounds, catchy grooves, and instruments that include congas, bongos, West African djembes and tablas from India. Want a taste?

December 25, 2008 at 7:01 am Leave a comment

Vashon Island’s Red Bicycle Bistro: Long Lost Todd and Church of the Great Rain

redbicycleThe Red Bicycle Bistro presents:

 

 

 

12/26/2008 Starts at 09:00 PM

LONG LOST Todd Zinberg, Micheal Gotz and Keith Lowe bring some cool Jazz to the Red Bike!


churchgreatrain07:00 PM – 09:00 PM – 12/28/2008

So what the heck is The Church of Great Rain? Well, it’s not exactly a bunch of Lutherans from Minnesota. But it is a group of Vashon Island performers who aspire to be the pacific northwest’s answer to A Prairie Home Companion.

 

When Garrison Keillor opened A Prairie Home Companion at Janet Wallace Auditorium in Saint Paul on July 6, 1974 there were about 12 people in the audience. But those in attendance thought there were worse ways to spend a Saturday afternoon. The Church of Great Rain hopes you feel the same about how you’ll spend your Sunday evening on Vashon. And besides, when was the last time you were able to order a drink at church? And by harnessing the surgical smart-bombing precision and global reach of the Internet, The Church of Great Rain will launch a preemptive strike on dozens of listeners from around the world. Not since Sarah Palin’s Vice Presidential debate have expectations been so low for a broadcasted performance.

The Church of Great Rain will be performing evening services at The Red Bicycle on the last Sunday of each month. The program will deliver a not-very-well-considered sermon, short stories, rumors and truth about islanders and island living, supported by original songs and a weird cast of island characters to raise everyone’s spirits for the week ahead. Count on it being loose, fun and very Vashon! FREE COVER!

This event repeats on the fourth Sunday of every month until 01/31/2009

 

 


 

 

December 25, 2008 at 6:59 am Leave a comment

Vashon Island’s Cafe Luna: Greg Dember and Suzie Bradford

Vashon’ Cafe Luna 

Friday, December 19th, 7:30 PM

gregdemberGreg Dember
Indie Rock

Following up on “Planets Of Plenty” which he recorded with his defunct band CHIEFLY, Seattle’s Greg Dember, now presenting simply under his own name, has put out another record full of piano, strings, trumpets, rock-band, quirk, hauntingly honest vocals, romantic and spiritual questioning, and a lurking but ultimately triumphant sense of self-acceptance.

“I Don’t Know I Think I Fell From The Sky” is a musical statement that is both personal and universal in its scope, drawing on an indie-rock vocabulary with classic elements thrown in.

Top-notch drumming by James McAlister (Sufjan Stevens) adds both intricacy and power, as does the thorough involvement of producer/guitarist Matt Brown (Trespassers William). While a talented cast of supporting musicians, building on the core, creates a consistent sonic palette, the songs are shaped by quite a variety of styles: piano/guitar rock ballad, electronica, post-rock improvization, Wurlitzer-driven light-industrial pop, Ben-Foldsian piano punk and more.

“I Don’t Know I Think I Fell From The Sky” definitely rewards repeated listenin

 

 suziebradford

Saturday, December 20th, 7:30 PM

Suzie Bradford

Alternative Pop

  • With a provocative voice and style, her earthiness is a little reminiscent of Lauro Nyro.

  •  

     

     

     

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

    December 19, 2008 at 3:43 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island’s Blue Heron: Blues for Christmas

    Carter Castle, Rick Winsor & John Browne

    Friday, Dec 19, 8 pm
    At:  The Blue Heron
    Tickets: $10 VAA members, students and seniors, $12 general

    rickerswinsorFormer Islander and blues guitarist, Ricker Winsor will join Island musicians Carter Castle and John Browne for an all-blues reunion concert with a holiday flavor, 8 p.m., Friday, December 19, at Blue Heron Art Center. Each musician will play solo and they will also perform as a trio. The evening will also include a few blues-tinged holiday/solstice tunes.

    In addition to the tradition of Mance Lipscomb, John Hurt, Robert Johnson, John Prine and other legendary blues players, Winsor, Browne and Castle will bring their own lifetimes of experience and expertise to the stage for this one-night only show. Each musician will play from his own repertoire solo in round-robin style and together. They also have some holiday tunes in mind for this PG-13 evening of blues.

    Castle, who classifies himself more as a ‘folk-driven’ singer/songwriter, says his music definitely carries elements of blues. “Sometimes it’s about oppression and grief; other times it’s farcical. Blues was the foundation for so many other musical art forms to follow,” says Castle. “I like ‘roots’ music and blues is the ultimate roots music.”

    “When I first heard John Browne play, I thought now there’s a guy who really knows how to play the blues. He’s the real thing; he and Ricker both are very expressive masters of the blues,” says Castle of his fellow players. “They are historians of this type of music and play a lot; they’re both true storytellers.

    Winsor has played guitar since he was a teenager. In addition to his love of the blues, he also plays bossa nova and sings in Portuguese, Italian and French. He performs in venues near his home in Vermont and New Hampshire and has released four wonderful CD’s that belong in the collection of anyone who loves the blues. Read more at rickerwinsor.com.

    johnbrownelrgSeattle native and Vashon resident for 25 years, John Browne has played guitar since his teens and picked up the harmonica in the mid-1960’s. He lived in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district in 1966-67, and played with a jug band called pH Factor. The group’s first paid gig was held at the Matrix where they opened for famous country blues guitarist, Lightnin’ Hopkins.

    Experiencing the psychedelic moment, they toured with Big Brother and the Holding Company and opened for The Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger, the Byrds, Mothers of Invention, Lenny Bruce and Jefferson Airplane. Their band, pH Factor, according to Browne, played 20’s and 30’s street music, a combination of jazz, blues and social protest songs. “It was culturally relevant and a lot of fun,” he says. Browne says they recorded an album, but before it was released, the record company was sold along with all its media property. A decade later, the album was released in England and coined as ‘an example of the San Francisco sound in the 1960’s.’ Browne has one of the few copies.

    For the upcoming show, he plans to play some of the Memphis Jug Band tunes, some Gus Cannon and some original music. “I’ve written enough music to fill an evening myself,” he says. His guitar, harmonica and seasoned blues voice brings authority and generosity of spirit to every tune. Browne is a Vashon classic and rarely plays publicly these days. But he has been working on a CD and may have one available for this performance.

    Don’t miss this concert and stick around for eggnog after the show!

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

    December 19, 2008 at 3:42 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island’s Red Bicycle Bistro: 2ME, Sister Monk and The Spotlights

     

    2me12/19/2008 – Starts at 09:30 PM – 21+ FREE COVER!

    2ME (acoustic Folk/Rock)

     

     With a circus of musicians sitting in with them in different parts of the country on mandolin, horns, keys, kazoos, washboards, and harps, you never know exactly what you’re going to get from 2Me when they roll through, but one thing is always the same: it’ll put a smile on your face and a wiggle in your hips, and there’s a really good chance they will want to do a shot of Jack with you in between sets. If you missed their incredible performance when they opened for Picoso in September, now’s your chance to see them again! http://www.myspace.com/2me

    “Earthy, compulsively listenable, and just jam-bandish enough, 2ME’s Schizophrenic Love Songs, makes merry, Joe-college-friendly folk ’n’ roll with unselfconscious abandon. We’re not selling miracles here, but what if these dudes actually manage to broker some kind of common ground between hipsters and heshers?”     -Sacramento News & Review 12/28/06

     

    sister-monk 12/20/2008 – Starts at 09:30 PM – 21+ after 9pm – FREE COVER!

    12/21/2008 – Starts at 07:00 PM  – 7-9pm. All Ages! FREE COVER!

    Join The Spotlights Danny Cadman, Lauren Sinner, Jerry Todo and Scotty Johnson for a great night of classic rock & roll Christmas songs.
     
     Sister Monk grooves, from Middle-eastern trance to rock and soul, SisterMonk remains one of the hottest emerging Rock-fusion acts today. Sharing bases in Seattle and New York City, the band continues to amass a loyal and diverse fan base. They are following up the success of their previous two releases (sold over 4,000 copies) with a new album, “Never Give Up” in 2008.

    Since the birth of SisterMonk in 1999 Kathleen Deane’s sultry, soulful vocals and djembe-drumming prowess have alchemically combined with Jody Rubel’s rhythm guitar. Raised by Irish immigrant parents in NYC, Kathy’s first musical influence was traditional Irish folk songs. She has taken voice training with Erene Mastrangelli (NYC) and Cathleen Wilder (Seattle). Mostly a self-taught percussionist, Kathy has briefly studied with Senegalese Master Drummer Thione Diop, Pepe Danza and Gordy Ryan.

    After studying cultural anthropology, guitarist Jody Rubel was inspired to initiate his own progressive, cultural experiment through songwriting and performance. Jody draws musical and lyrical inspiration from Peter Gabriel, Jorge Ben Jor and the music of Bahia Brazil, William Blake, yoga, dialectics and world religion.

    Joining the songwriting duo is Scott Den Adel on lead guitar. Born and raised in Seattle, Scott started playing guitar at aged 9 and early influences included Scotty Moore, Chet Atkins, Elvis, The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Waylon Jennings, Jessi Coulter, Townes Van Zandt and Jimi Page. He graduated from Musician’s Institute in 1991 and studied with Scott Henderson, Ron Benson and Ron Eschete. Later influences include Merle Travis, James Burton, John McGlaughlin, Robin Ford, Larry Coryell, Lenni Breau, and Pet Metheny.

    SisterMonk has shared the stage with such notable acts as Zap Mama, Michael Franti & Spearhead, Anoushka Shankar, Karl Denson Trio, On the One, Delta Nove and more. They have appeared at a variety of prominent venues on both east and west coasts. East coast venues include The Knitting Factory, LeBarBat’s, SUNY New Paltz (opened for Michael Franti & Spearhead), Tower Records and Border Books. Pacific Northwest venues include the NW Folklife Festival, Seattle Hempfest, Rolling Thunder Democracy Tour (opened for Zap Mama), Nectar, Jazzbones, Evergreen St. College, Bastyr U., Humboldt State U., and numerous other clubs and venues in the area. They have been featured on radio shows such as “The Beat” with Dave Beck – KUOW 94.9FM (NPR), KBCS’s “Roots and Branches” segment, KSER 90.7FM’s “The Sunlit Room” and KISM 92.9FM’s “Locals Only” segment.

     12/21/2008 – Starts at 07:00 PM - 9:00 pm. All Ages! FREE COVER!

    Join The Spotlights Danny Cadman, Lauren Sinner, Jerry Todo and Scotty Johnson for a great night of classic rock & roll Christmas songs.
     
    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe. 

     
     

     

    December 19, 2008 at 3:41 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island’s Red Bicycle Bistro: Clinton Fearon and the Boogie Brown Band – House Engine

    12/13/2008 – Starts at 09:30 PM – $10 cover. 21+
     
     

     

    fearonIf you know reggae music, you know Clinton “Basie” Fearon. For over 18 years Fearon was a singer and bass player with the internationally renowned group The Gladiators. Fearon’s first two releases with the group were (singles) “Freedom Train” and “Rockaman Soul” on Lloyd Daley’s Matador label, both of which reached the Top 10 on the Jamaican charts. Jamaica’s top producer, Coxsone Dodd of Studio One, produced “The Gladiators” a full length album featuring Fearon as songwriter and vocalist on several songs including Step Right Back.

     

    In 1974 The Gladiators went to Joe Gibbs’ studio to record “Proverbial Reggae”; Fearon wrote many of the songs on this album and the producer Prince Tony Robinson insisted that Fearon sing the lead vocals including “Can You Imagine How I Feel”, “Stop Before You Go”, and “Marvel Not”. In addition to his demanding recording schedule with The Gladiators, Fearon was also a house musician for Lee “Scratch” Perry’s Black Ark Studio. Fearon recorded on many of Perry’s best known songs, including “Roast Fish and Cornbread,” which features one of Fearon’s most famous bass lines. When Fearon relocated to Seattle in 1989 he co-founded The Defenders. He wrote the lyrics and sang lead vocals on The Defenders’ EP “Chant Down Babylon/Rock YourBones.”

     In 1990 Fearon released his first compilation of original tunes “Feel The Spirit,”and the first pressing sold out in less than one month. In 1993 Fearon formed his own group, the Boogie Brown Band. The debut album was a collection of 13 original songs entitled “Disturb the Devil”. A second CD, “Mystic Whisper” was released in early 1997. Fearon and the Boogie Brown Band released their third album, a double CD entitled “What a System” in June of 1999 on the Kool Yu Foot label. Mixed by renowned JA engineer, Scientist, “What A System” has received international critical acclaim and has secured and maintained Top Charting positions since then.

     Clinton Fearon is counted among Jamaica’s most talented musicians by peers and professionals in the Reggae music industry. His infectious bass riffs have always led the way, whether he is playing bass, guitar or percussion, singing lead vocals or providing background harmonies. If you missed his show at the Red Bicycle Bistro & Sushi last August…now’s your chance to see him live & in person on Vashon Island. What a treat it is to have this band come to us. Clinton Fearon sold out both times he performed at the Bike, so it is highly recommended that you call in advance and purchase your tickets.

     
     

     

    Opening for Fearon will be  Jacob Bain and Mike Marlatt of Trolls Cottage doing a sweet set of acoustic TC songs. 

    To Reserve Your Tickets Call the Red Bicycle between 11am and 6pm at 206-463-5959. Please have your credit card information ready

      

    Vashon Island’s Red Bicycle Bistro presents House Engine

    12/14/2008 – Starts at 07:00 PM – All ages. FREE COVER!

    houseengine_2

    House Engine’s goal is to provide the excuse to shake it. This is a new band with lots of experience, full of history, and everyone brings a little something to the plate. The music is primarily blues, but varies with a little rock, alternative country, originals, Motown , funk, and a little Shout styles thrown in. Vashon has an incredible array of musicians and this band contributes.

     

     

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

     

     

    December 11, 2008 at 11:43 pm Leave a comment

    Vashon Island’s Blue Heron Theater: Vashon Island Youth Chorus

    choir1More than a dozen Island children, aged 5-12, will take the Blue Heron stage this weekend to sing a tribute to the songs of the silver screen.  The performance is at 7 p, on Saturday, December 13 and at 4: pm on Sunday, December 14.  Songs by such legends as Mae West and Katharine Hepburn will help fill the bill.  The group is accompanied on piano by Justin Cornier.  The second half of the show will feature songs of the season, with a sing-along finale.  Tickets are $7 for VAA members and $9 for the general public.  Pre-schoolers are admitted for free. 

     

     

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

    December 11, 2008 at 11:40 pm Leave a comment

    Vashon Island’s Night Life for Teens: Vashon Island Library Program

    children-playingLateNight @ The Library will meet from 6 to 10 pm on Saturday, December 13 at the Vashon Library.  Teens from grades 6 – 12 can work out to Dance Revolution and Guitar Hero open play., have their palms read in the Roma tradition, participate in the Vashon Library Cyber Café, surf the web or play a game.  Security will be provided for the event.  For more information call the library at 463-2069.

     

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

     

    December 11, 2008 at 11:36 pm Leave a comment

    Vashon Island Continuing Events: Vashon Island Art Studio Tour; Vashon Island Drama Dock; Vashon Island Christmas Tree Sale; Vashon Island Nutcracker Ballet

     artstour

    Vashon Island Art Studio Tour: December 13-14

    The eagerly anticipated Vashon Island Art Studio Tour will be held on Saturday and Sunday, December 6 and 7 and 13 and 14.  This year’s Tour features over 30 studios on Vashon and Maury Islands, and five galleries will also be displaying the work of local artists.  Guides to the Tour can be found at Vashon Allied Arts and at local businesses.  The Tour also features the Vashon Island Potters’ Tour, including five potters’ studios in the program.

    Galleries and Shops showing Island art include:

    Café Luna: The Imaginary Tourist by Greg Wessel, pin-registered multiple-block linocut prints pressed by hand. 463-0777.  

    Giraffe: Photography by Jeanne Robinson. Images of everyday life in India and Vashon. 463-1372.

     

    Blue Heron Gallery: Invitational exhibition of Masters in Miniature, showcases works from over 30 artists.  Painting, pottery, wood, sculpture, printmaking, fiber and mixed media. 463-5131.

    Heron’s Nest (displaying 80 island artists’ work). 463-5252.

    Silverwood Gallery: Eric Heffelfinger, goldsmith, with Margaret Tylczak, Ted Kutscher, Donna Romero, Gretchen Hancock, Joy Mann, David Erue, Kristen Reitz-Green, Joanne Bohannon and Ivonne Escobar de Kommer. 463-1722.

     

     Vashon Island Drama Dock: Musical Auditions for Honk and Urinetown

    Mask
    Vashon Island’s Drama Dock has put out a call for auditions for two musical productions: Honk and Urinetown.  Auditions will be held at the Vashon High School band room in the F Building.  Auditions are on December 13 from 10-3 and on December 14 from 12-4.  Call Phil Dunn for more information at 463-1849.

     

     

     

    christmas

    Vashon Island Boy Scout Troop 249: Christmas Tree Sale

    Boy Scout Troop 249 will be selling Christmas trees on December 13 and 14 from a lot next to the US Bank.  Proceeds benefit the Boy Scouts of America.

     

    ballet

    Vashon Island Junior Civic Ballet presents The Nutcracker

    The annual holiday classic, The Nutcracker, will be presented by the Vashon Junior Civic Ballet  from December 12 through the 20th at Vashon High School, sponsored by the Vashon Park District.  For times and tickets, visit

     

    P.S.  Are you receiving updates every week for Vashon Island Events?  If not, click here to subscribe.

     

    December 11, 2008 at 11:33 pm Leave a comment

    Vashon Music Events at the Red Bicycle Bistro

     comedyHosted by Vashon’s own Steffon Moody. FREE COVER!

     12/04/2008 – Starts at 08:00 PM

     Thursday Comedy! Comedians Michael Agostini and Riggs 

    Mike Agostini was an usher at The Paramount Theater in 1983. That year the finals of The Seattle International Comedy Competition were held at the Paramount. The 23 year old usher briefly talked to that year’s champion – Ross Shafer – and a dream was born. For the next 21 years Mike Agostini told himself that one day he would be in the competition!

    In December of 2004 Mike stopped wishing and went on stage for the first time at the Tacoma Comedy Underground. Since that day he has entertained literally thousands of people with his stand-up. Mike uses his life experiences as the foundation for most of his material. He is extremely likeable and actually appears to be having as much fun as his audience !

    Riggs got his start on KGRG’s “Mornings With Bill” radio show. After years of interviewing comedians and attending shows, He decided that it was much easier to get up at 5 p.m. than 5 a.m. and promptly made the change to stand-up comedian and has never looked back. Riggs quickly rose among the ranks to enjoy success in a variety of venues, becoming a local favorite.

    With a cutting edge, sarcastic and unique perspective on a wide variety of topics and social issues. His stoic character and winning personality have made him a favorite at clubs, colleges and casinos. Riggs recently competed in the prestigious San Fransisco Comedy Competition. He is relatable and funny. If you want to look at life a little differently, don’t miss Riggs’ act. You will laugh out loud.

    Show starts at 8pm. Free cover! 

    Robyn Landis is a gifted wordsmith and award-winning songwriter. Her deft and powerful command of language has garnered repeated comparisons to Richrobyn-landisard Shindell, Gillian Welch and Dar Williams, and a reputation among fellow songwriters as “an amazing lyricist.”

    Noted for her honesty, depth and intelligence, Robyn uses song to tackle subjects ranging from war to weather to (what else?) love–with a distinctive and articulate voice. With a writing approach that is courageous, literate and heartfelt, Robyn delivers her incisive insights through pure, intimate vocals and pleasing melodies.

    Since 2005, Robyn has accrued more than 35 songwriting awards and honors nationally and internationally, in competitions and at festivals. Indie-Music.com says, “Smooth vocals, like an earthy Laurie Lewis…Landis has won a lot of songwriting awards, and it’s easy to see why.”

     

     Olivia De La Cruz, boolivia-de-la-cruzrn and raised in the small town of Lake Chelan, has been singing since she was five years old. Climbing up on tables to make sure she could be seen and heard, she immediately hushed audiences the moment she opened her mouth.

    Picking up a guitar when she was 16, she immediately started performing at local coffee shops and wineries for tips. After writing her first song at 18, she provoked and enticed her audiences with the clarity of her voice and chords of her guitar. Her lyrics are intertwined with the life experiences of love, loss, and sense that she has experienced thus far. Her old soul demeanor has attracted various groups of individuals that enjoy the way her guitar becomes a part of her body as it moves with each sway and pitch. Her life description cannot be identified as anything less than “entertainer”. If you were to ask the individuals that came to Tsillan Cellars summer of 2008, her job was to serve, sing, and play for customers and have them leave with an overwhelming sense of satisfaction.

    Her songs have evolved from charming and pleasant to poetic and intriguing. Her first CD, “A Learning Curve”, was completed July of 2008 and she is now in the studio working and modifying new tracks for her second album to be released. Olivia will be opening up for Robyn Landis tonight, so please…come out and give her a warm Vashon welcome. 21+ FREE COVER!

     12/05/2008 – Starts at 07:00 PM: Robyn Landis and Olivia de la Cruz

     

     12/06/2008 - Starts at 09:30 PM – Red Jacket Mine

     

     

    Led by singer/songwriter Lincoln Barr, Seattle band Red Jacket Mine has spent the last two years perfecting its singular brand of twilit pop—equrjm1al parts soaring psychedelia, spectral Americana, and string-laden chamber rock.

    Begun as a solo four-track project to satiate an overactive mind trapped in the barren hill country of southeast Missouri, arrangements have grown more ambitious and tape hiss levels have mercifully fallen, but Barr’s vivid lyrical imagery and melodic songcraft have remained constant. Joined in Seattle by fellow Missouri transplant Andy Salzman (drums), Seattle rock veteran Patrick Porter (guitar/pedal steel), and Idahoan jungle cat Ryan Chapman (bass), Barr’s dreams of Red Jacket Mine-as-real-band finally became reality, and the band set about honing its craft in a series of increasingly high-profile club gigs while Barr penned the songs that would comprise their debut studio album.

    Recorded at Seattle’s Studio Litho by producer/engineer Shawn Simmons, Hello, Old Cloud delivers on the promise of Red Jacket Mine’s early recordings and impassioned live performances. Featuring an impressive array of guest musicians, including upright bassist Keith Lowe (Bill Frisell, Fiona Apple), keyboard whiz Paul Hiraga (Downpilot, Ian Moore), and renowned string arranger Eyvind Kang (Blonde Redhead, Laura Veirs), the album was released in April 2008. The band is currently working on a follow-up with producer/contributor Ken Stringfellow (The Posies/R.E.M./Big Star).

    Nathan Wade & The Dark Pioneers are Seattle’s purveyors of apocalyptic Americana, hitching the rusted scraps of American roots music to a battered pick-up truck and dragging it across a broken 21st Century landscape. It’s a cinematic trip down a desolate highway as the dashboard rattles apart and the truck radio blasts songs of murder, drug abuse, and Biblical arcana.

    Their new album, The Chroma Session EP, was recorded live at Chroma Sound Studio in Seattle. It’s an electrified, slash-and-burn reinvention of songs from Nathan Wade’s debut album, The Dead Leaves Sing, along with a double-barrel shot of new music. The Chroma Session EP stands as a bullet-riddled mile marker on the road to musical armageddon, a future the band is driving into at high speed; behind them, a blood-red sun settles in the dust they’ve left behind. 21+ FREE COVER!

     

     

    FREE COVER! Bob’s Your Uncle is comprised of mostly teachers with a couple of other folks mixed in. On banjo/vocals is Rochelle Wolfe (Elementary PE teacher), on guitar/vocals is Ken Larsen (5th grade teacher), on bass is Bruce Haulman (History Professor), on mandolin/guitar/banjo/vocals is Paul Colwell (Paraeducator at VHS). Rounding out the band on the non-teaching side on fiddle/vocals is Randy Bruce and on dobro/vocals is Wilson Abbott.

    Bob’s Your Uncle formed in 2002 to play a St. Patrick’s day gig and have been together ever since. They play just about anything they can that fits their instruments and voices thus “Bob’s Your Uncle” meaning from the U.K. “whatever”, or “there it goes” was named. All Ages.FREE COVER!

     12/07/2008 – Starts at 07:00 PM Bob’s Your Uncle

     

     

     

    December 4, 2008 at 4:39 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island Events: Xmas Trees, The Nutcracker, A Celebration of Carols

    Mask

    Vashon Island’s Drama Dock has put out a call for auditions for two musical productions: Honk and Urinetown.  Auditions will be held at the Vashon High School band room in the F Building.  Auditions are on December 13 from 10-3 and on December 14 from 12-4.  Call Phil Dunn for more information at 463-1849.Vashon Island Drama Dock: Musical Auditions for Honk and Urinetown

    christmas

    Vashon Island Boy Scout Troop 249: Christmas Tree Sale

    Boy Scout Troop 249 will be selling Christmas trees on December 13 and 14 from a lot next to the US Bank.  Proceeds benefit the Boy Scouts of America.

    ballet

    Vashon Island Junior Civic Ballet presents The Nutcracker

    The annual holiday classic, The Nutcracker, will be presented by the Vashon Junior Civic Ballet  from December 12 through the 20th at Vashon High School, sponsored by the Vashon Park District.  For times and tickets, visit

     

    choir

    Vashon Island Chorale: Carols

    Vashon Island Chorale continues their traditional presentation of “A Celebration of Carols.”  Performances are slated for 7:30 pm Saturday, December 6, and 3 pm on Sunday, December7, at Bethel Evangelical Church.  The 75 member choir will be joined by a 15-piece chamber orchestra.  The performance will include Vaughn Williams “Fantasia on Christmas Carols” and “A Christmas Garland” by Conrad Susa.

    Bethel Church is located at SW 158th Street and 119th Avenue.  Tickets are $12.50 or $10 for students and seniors and available in advance at Books by the Way and the Vashon Bookshop.

     

    December 4, 2008 at 1:14 am Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Cafe Luna: 5:01, Riverbend and Dr. Strangelove

    Friday, November 28th, 7:30 PM

    guitar15:01
    Country Rock at Its Finest!

    This vocally driven, rock-flavored music has an original sound that’s easy to tap your toe to. Expect anything from true love to political commentary from this all-Island band that is Jack Barbash on piano, Doug Ringer on bass, Luke McQuillin rocking on electric guitar, Mark Wells and his acoustic guitar, and Geordan Mitchell doing his percussion thing, shades on, laid back, and ready to make it happen.

    Saturday, November 29th, 7:30 PM

    riverbendRiver Bend

    Traditional, Old-Time Country Favorites River Bend

    Chuck Roehm, Peter Larson, and Shelly Frankel of The Garage Boys fame, plus Paul Colwell of “Bob’s Your Uncle,” “The Colwell Brothers” and the “Up With People” groups, and, Dave Lang of more than one fabulous Cajun band makes this popular Island band. Add guitars, banjos, mandolins, harmonicas, and upright bass and you end up with new twists on popular rock to original songs to those great old traditions from that long ago garage. Don’t miss ‘em!
     

     

    Sunday, November 30th, 6 PM

    Peace Film #4
    the Incorrigible…..Dr. Strangelove

     

     

    Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

     

     

    BY ROGER EBERT / October 28, 1994
       

     

    In the days after it first opened in early 1964, Stanley Kubrick’s ”Dr. Strangelove” took on the enchanted aura of a film that had gotten away with something. Johnson was in the White House, the Republicans were grooming Goldwater, both sides took the Cold War with grim solemnity, and the world was learning to be comfortable with the term “nuclear deterrent,” which meant that if you blow me up, I’m gonna blow you up, and then we’ll all be dead. “Better dead than Red,” some said. Others said the opposite. The choice was not appealing.

    The Bomb overshadowed global politics. It was a kind of ultimate hole card in a game where the stakes were life on earth.

    Then Kubrick’s film opened with the force of a bucketful of cold water, right in the face. What Kubrick’s Cold War satire showed was not men at the mercy of machines, but machines at the mercy of men – especially the loony Gen. Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden).

    Commanding a wing of the Strategic Air Command, he orders the B-52 bombers under his command to attack the Soviet Union. When an aghast British military attache (Peter Sellers) tries to stop him, Ripper sucks on a huge phallic cigar while explaining the Commie plot to taint our water supply and deplete our “precious bodily fluids.” He refuses to reveal the code which could recall the nuclear-armed planes, and eventually shoots himself while the world careens toward doom.

    Events on Ripper’s army base are intercut with scenes on board one of the B-52s, and with an emergency meeting in the Pentagon’s War Room – still one of the most memorable sets ever constructed for a movie, with its vast global maps looming over a huge round table with an unblinking circle of light above it. Here U.S. President Merkin Muffley (Sellers again) learns with horror from his strategic adviser Dr. Strangelove (Sellers in his third role) that the Russians have a Doomsday Machine, set to launch a counterattack if the Soviet Union is bombed. It appears that neither the Doomsday Machine nor one of the U.S. bombers can be dissuaded from their missions.

    The movie’s screenplay, by Terry Southern with help from Kubrick and Peter George, fashions this scenario into a dark comedy of errors, illuminated by flashes of brilliant satire. Some of the dialogue has entered the language – “precious bodily fluids,” of course, and also the way the dim-witted Col. Bat Guano (Keenan Wynn) (hints darkly of Commie “preverts.” The scene at the telephone booth between Guano and the British attache, who does not have the correct small change to call the White House and save the world, is one of the movie’s best-constructed gags.

    If Sterling Hayden makes a glowering, paranoiac Gen. Ripper, George C. Scott is brilliant as his counterpoint, Gen. Buck Turgidson, head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who chews gum, makes faces, and breaks one piece of bad news after another to the President. And Sellers, as president, has a series of painfully labored hotline conversations with the Soviet Premier (“He went and did a funny thing, Dimitri . . .”) that reduce nuclear annihilation to the level of a very serious social gaffe.

    At about the same time Joseph Heller’s Catch-22 was showing the way language can be tortured into new shapes and meanings, “Dr.

    Strangelove” had the same kind of verbal wit: “The auto-destruct mechanism destroyed itself,” we learn, and “You can’t fight in the War Room!” And in contrast to the abstract debates in the Pentagon, there’s the simple patriotism of the B-52 pilot, Maj. “King” Kong (Slim Pickens) who promises his crew there’s going to be promotions and decorations all around. His exit from the movie, riding a bomb like a bronco, remains one of the most famous moments in modern film.

    The only part of the film that doesn’t really work is the War Room sequence that comes between Pickens’ wild ride and the closing nuclear montage. Sellers, as Strangelove, battles hilariously with his misbehaving bionic hand, but the dialogue doesn’t seem to lead anywhere, and the sequence seems oddly inconclusive. In an earlier shot in the War Room, we’ve seen a long table covered with cakes and pies, and it’s said Kubrick intended to end the scene with a pie fight. I’m happy that he didn’t, but maybe he could have moved the whole scene earlier; after Pickens rides that bomb to the ground the only possible segue is to all those mushroom clouds.

    Seen after 30 years, ”Dr. Strangelove” seems remarkably fresh and undated – a clear-eyed, irreverant, dangerous satire. And its willingness to follow the situation to its logical conclusion – nuclear annihilation – has a purity that today’s lily-livered happy-ending technicians would probably find a way around. Its black and white photography helps, too, putting an unadorned face on its deadly political paradoxes. If movies of this irreverence, intelligence and savagery were still being made, the world would seem a younger place.

     

     

     

    November 27, 2008 at 5:38 am Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Red Bicycle Bistro: Backbone Campaign Rolling Stones Benefit

    startmeup

     backbonelogo3

     

    Join us for another incredible night of music, community, politics, food and drink. Emcee Steffon Moody will shock, delight,and entertain. Bring your checkbooks as we’ll have a great auction with great “stone” themed items and Green Gifts to save you from some holiday shopping.

    Pete Welch has organized another amazing line up of musicians, so come and recover from your Turkey Hangover – and help get the Backbone Campaign to Inauguration and off to Campuses with our Procession for the Future. 

    The festivities start at 7:30 pm at The Red Bicycle on Saturday, November 29.  Tickets are $15 and available at Books by the Way and Vashon Bookshop, or by calling 408-8058.  All money raised at the event will fund the Backbone Campaign’s Spring Campus Tour.  The event is all ages until 9:30 pm and over 21 thereafter.
     

     

     

     

     

     

    Join us for another incredible night of music, community, politics, food and drink. Emcee Steffon Moody will shock, delight,and entertain. Bring your checkbooks as we’ll have a great auction with great “stone” themed items and Green Gifts to save you from some holiday shopping.

    Pete Welch has organized another amazing line up of musicians, so come and recover from your Turkey Hangover – and help get the Backbone Campaign to Inauguration and off to Campuses with our Procession for the Future.

    November 27, 2008 at 5:37 am Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Red Bicycle Bistro: The Pharmacy Honors Ross Krinsky

    The Pharmacy plays an ALL AGES SHOW TO HONOR OUR GOOD FRIEND ROSS KRINSKY!

    Saturday November 28 at 9:00 PM.

    pharmacyScott Yoder and Brendhan Bowers made plenty of noisy racket in the local garages and teen centers growing up on Vashon Island. They moved across the Puget Sound to Seattle and booked their first tour as The Pharmacy (with then-member Joey Seward) in 2003 and have kept the show pretty much on the road ever since. In 2006 Joey left for more metal pursuits and classically trained pianist and fellow Vashon kid Stefan Rubicz joined on keyboards. Since then they’ve transformed from the synth-heavy overdrive of their 2005 debut album B.F.F. through the drizzly sunshine of the Overcast Summer 7″ at last landing on the off-kilter psychedelic pop of Choose Yr Own Adventure. Replete with epic instrumentation – viola, violin, cello, harpsichord and horns all make an appearance- Choose Yr Own Adventure has been years in the making, re-vamped re-recorded and re-written over time.

    They have played Bumbershoot, the Capitol Hill Block Party, every club in town and every basement in the country. They have played with the Moldy Peaches and toured with Kimya Dawson (as her opening and backing band), Jeffrey Lewis and Matt & Kim. The 2008 European tour is happening right now. If they could live on tour then they would….. Let’s welcome these guys back to Vashon in a big way, the day after Thanksgiving. ALL AGES SHOW. 9-11pm. We’re making this a really affordable show by ONLY charging $4 cover!!

     

    churchgreatrainVashon’s Church of the Great Rain – Sunday, November 29 at 7:00 pm – All Ages and Free

    Vashon’s Church of the Great Rain performs their second public broadcast in the Pacific Northwest’s answer to the Prairie Home Companion.  Islanders can come to the show or listen on the Voice of Vashon.  The group will perform on the last Sunday of each month.  The organizers allow that the show will include a “not-very-well-considered sermon, short stories, rumors, and truth about Islanders and Island living. 

     

    November 27, 2008 at 5:37 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island Music Festival: 2008 Video Premier

    vimfRez 1 Productions will present the premier of the documentary video 2008 Vashon Island Music Festival at the Ober Park Building on Saturday, November 22, from 6:00 until 9:30 pm.  The film, shot by “G” Mitchell, captures all the spirit and artistry of this wonderful community event, including music by Resonance, John Browne, “501″, Subconscious Population, Trolls Cottage, and more.  The DVD was created from more than 15 hours of footage in high definition, wide-screen format.  DVDs will be available for purchase.

      Tickets are $7 or $5 with a donation to the Vashon Food Bank.

    November 20, 2008 at 6:03 am Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Blue Heron: Hells Bellows!

    hellsbellowslrgThe Seattle-based accordion quartet, Hells Bellow’s!, will take the Blue Heron stage on Saturday, November 22, at 8 pm.  Hell’s Bellows formed in 2006 to “bring the gospel of accordion chaos from Seattle to the world.”  The group performs mostly original music in a repertoire that spans from contemporary classical to gypsy/Eastern European.  Four-part harmony vocals add texture and color to their live performances.

    Tickets are $10 for VAA members, students and seniors and $12 for general admission.  To reserve tickets call 463-5131.

    November 20, 2008 at 1:36 am Leave a comment

    Vashon Island Flu Shots

    grannyslogoGranny’s Attic will host a free flu shot clinic from 11 am to 3 pm on Wednesday, November 26.

    November 20, 2008 at 1:32 am Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Cafe Luna: Lunavision Presents “Asparagas, Stalking the Wild Life”

    film1Vashon’s Cafe Luna presents “Asparagus, Stalking the Wild Life” as part of its Lunavision series Thursday, November 13, at 7 pm.  The film, directed by Anne de Mare and Kirsten Kelly, explores the world of Oceana, County, MI, the so-called Asparagas Capital of the World.  Scenes depict and Asparagas Festival, various collections of asparagas apparel and dinnerware, and a high school classroom experiment about the effects of asparagas on the human body.  Be honest . . . didn’t you want to know why . . . ?  The film also takes a look at the global economy and the war on drugs and their effect on Oceana’ apparent lock on the edible niche market.

    November 12, 2008 at 8:16 pm Leave a comment

    Vashon’s Blue Heron: Hell’s Bellows!

    hells-bellowsVashon’s Blue Heron Arts Center presents Hell’s Bellows! on Saturday, November 22, a Seattle-based quartet featurin, you guessed it, the gospel of accordian chaos.  The bands repertoire ranges from contemporary classical to gypsy/Eastern European, and four-part harmony vocals.  “Collectively the group has played for 47 years and in concert touched nearly 700 buttons and keys.”

    Tickets are $10 for VAA members, students and seniors and $12 general admission.  Call 463-5131 to reserve tickets.

    November 12, 2008 at 8:15 pm Leave a comment

    Older Posts Newer Posts


    Vashon HOMES for SALE

    CONTACT US

    Phone 206.388.3882
    Email govashon@gmail.com
    Click here for FREE updates by Email No spam privacy policy!

    Categories

    FREE Updates By Email

    Click here to subscribe to www.GoVashon.com by Email
    for weekly updates on island events, featured homes and more.
    p.s. No Spam... 100% privacy policy

    Subscribe to RSS Feed

    Click icon to subscribe

    Follow

    Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.