End of the year wrap-up and looking forward to 2011

Well the rush of the holidays has prompted a quick note to all those who read this column. Thanks and thanks again for the comments by email, by phone or in person for they are all welcome. Dennis Doeden, the editor, called me on Monday morning for a story about the year in the arts in Bemidji that would be needed for Tuesday’s edition of the paper. It was amazing to go through my files and see how many activites this community has enjoyed in 2010. There were a few left out, not on purpose but simply because I did not write the story, e.g. Billy Collins talk. While trying to keep to a reasonable amount of space, much was condensed or left out altogether so am now offering my apology. Not being a fan of New Year’s Resolutions, only one will be made and that’s because the need to get better organized is paramount. Am going to try out another new system with the hope that this time it works and no one will be left out!  January promises to be a full month of activity starting with First Friday next week and “Steel Magnolias” opening at the Wild Rose Theater. Rumor has it that Greg Gasman is going to mount “Death of a Salesman”  by Arthur Miller.  The Bemidji Public Library will be holding some events with authors Anton Treuer and Aaron Hautala. The costumed History Players will present an event with historical figure John Beargrease.

The end of this year also brings the sad news of the passing of Elaine Hazard. Elaine was a long time member of Bemidji Community Theater and was last seen on stage in “Moon Over Buffalo.” Elaine will be missed by many in the community because she has touched so many lives. Our condolences to Evan and their family.

End of the year reviews, Kevin McColley and some personal musings.

Well this has certainly been a busy year for the arts in Bemidji with two new venues opening (Wild Rose Theater and the Sanford Center), the first annual and very successful Bemidji Book Fest, beavers appearing in downtown Bemidji (with a bit of controversy that got us national attention!) and many more grants from Region 2 Arts Council through the legacy funding amendment. Bemidji Area Arts Endowment received recognition from the Northwest Minnesota Foundation for its work in granting awards to local young string musicians along with underwriting of special events in the area. We just passed the 10th anniversary of our momentous move from the east coast to northern Minnesota and I am closing up on finishing up my sixth year at the Bemidji Pioneer. The editorial staff received nice maroon jackets, knit hats and gloves with Bemidji Pioneer logo to wear on our assignments to better recognize us busy bees.

Kevin McColley is a local author I’ve just discovered on the recommendation of the son of a hospice patient. “Praying to a Laughing God,” although published over ten years ago, has whet my appetite for more of McColley’s work. “Praying to a Laughing God” deserves to be up there with such respected works as “Of Mice and Men” or actually anything written by John Steinbeck. McColley’s attention to detail in describing characters, their motivations caused by age (young and old), dementia or just a man who seeks to redeem himself from past experiences and mistakes. His narrator, Clark Holstrom reminds us time and again,

“Do not go gentle into that good night,

Old age should burn and rave at close of day;

Rage, rage against the dying of the light.”

Dylan Thomas

That quote also happens to be my own mantra.

Fiction tends to be last on my list of need or want to read, but this story did not have me skipping to the end just to get it finished. The portrayal of a god who is driven to maniacal laughter by human foibles (how can man be so self-destructive and thoughtless), an image that drives and torments Clark. He is beset by memories of war; indiscretions allowed by alcohol; loyalty to an old friend driven by guilt perhaps or just a need for redemption and forgiveness from a laughing god. Does that redemption ever happen to the satisfaction of the reader? I only know that this reader is not satisfied with just one book from McColley.

About a week ago, Big Bird and I had a really nice conversation prior to writing a feature piece on the upcoming show at the Sanford Center. This Big Bird is a young black man from Minneapolis who made it out of the turmoil of inner city life with the support of his “very strict” mother and the pastor of his local Baptist church who wouldn’t let him quit the choir. Stories about the triumph of the human spirit always inspire and enervate me. Perhaps that is why working at an agency back east as director of employment for those who have had reason enough to quit trying, but still strove to make their mark in life was so fulfilling.

Final last thought for this year, thanks to Monte Draper at the Pioneer and a couple of classes with Cal Rice through community education, my photography skills are improving. My favorite picture for this year is that of Bella Drevlow and Delayna Dauner pointing to paintings by local youngsters on the library wall. A close second is a smiling Parker Bruns behind the drum set at First Lutheran Church.

May we enjoy and cherish all that this holiday season promises in love, hope and peace. Thank you to the readers for your loyalty to the arts and artists in this community. That’s all she wrote.

P.S. Happy belated birthday to Paul Ericsson manager of the Bemidji Public Library; his big day was last Saturday.

Final day of the Farmer’s Market tomorrow and information from the 12/15 blog

The Farmer’s Market is having its final pre-holiday sale on Saturday, Dec. 18 in the old Burger King Building. There will be buffalo meat, honey, baked goods, candy, some late season crops like potatoes and squash, books by local authors, rugs, soaps and crafts for sale. “Smoke” with Joe Holt and Roy Hershberger will be playing and singing from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. when Don Zieman and some of his friends take over the entertainment for the afternoon until 3 p.m. If the crowds at the downtown farmer’s markets are any indication of the interest Bemidji has in this venture, we’ll be missing them during the winter months. There’s a great assortment of goods for last minute holiday shopping.

Jake Jackson who moved to Boston two years ago is back in town and will be performing at Brigid’s Cross Irish Pub and Restaurant this Friday, Dec. 17 from 9 p.m. to midnight. Friends and fans will be able to hear Jake playing acoustic guitar with Greg Gaston on drums and Gary Broste on bass in a show featuring some original tunes by Jackson and a Christmas set of traditional songs set to different styles; some traditional folk in the Guthrie and Dylan style, some lounge jazz like Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra and an extended version of “We Saw Three Ships” with lots of improv.

Annie Lewandowski on piano and Owen Weaver on percussion will be playing a fundraiser for the Headwaters School of Music and Art scholarship fund at 3 p.m., on Sunday, December 26 at HSMA, 519 Minnesota Ave. NW. The program will include works by John Cage, Jo Kondo, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Tickets are $5 and $10 and will be sold at the door with all proceeds going to HSMA.

Bemidji gal, Annie Lewandowski, now lives on the southern coast of England. She received her BA in piano performance from the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul in 2002, and in 2010 completed her MFA in Music Performance with a specialization in Improvisation from Mills College in Oakland, California. She performs frequently in the United States and Europe with her band “Powerdove” and as an improviser on the piano.

An international performer whose youth is no obstacle to getting dates, Annie has toured and recorded with her own group, Hawnay Troof, the Curtains, Xiu Xiu, Okay, Doublends Vert, Caroline Kraabel, the London Improviser’s Orchestra, Fred Frith, John Butcher, Chris Cutler, Charles Hayward and Pauline Oliveros.

This February, “Powerdove’s” debut recording will be released on Circle into Square records which will include CD release concerts throughout Europe. In April 2011, she will be performing a concert in London with improvisers Fred Frith and Evan Parker for broadcast on the BBC.

“Owen Weaver performs adventurous, versatile, and portable solo percussion music which utilizes recycled objects and electronic sounds ranging from the visceral to the sublime, clangorous to hypnotic–to form a unique sound world.” This was just copied from the press release because it demonstrates not only the virtuosity of Weaver and does it in a way that I can’t begin to accomplish.

Weaver has appeared twice in the New York-based Wordless Music Series as well as the Bang on a Can Summer Institute at MassMoCA, the Percussion Festival at Round Top, and Minneapolis’ Marimba Underground Concert Series. He has shared concert bills with artists from Percussion Group Cincinnati and MPDuo to international sensation DJ/Rupture and indie rockers WHY?

In 2008 Weaver collaborated with Conspirare: A Company of Voices for a television special aired nationally on PBS, the recording of which was released on the Harmonia Mundi label and nominated for a Grammy award in 2009.

How Clement Moore came to write the story, “The Night Before Christmas” is at the Minnesota Folklore Theater and the final performances are this week. The first half of the show is how the story came to be and the second part of the play is the actual portrayal of the story. They have Clement Moore and his wife and their three children, a store keeper and Santa Claus. This family show has music from the Nutcracker, sleigh bells, traditional Christmas music. It’s all about the magic of Christmas. For a theater that is only a year old, MFT has done amazing productions in their half of the downtown Laundromat. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $8 for children and may be reserved on-line at minnesotafolkloretheater.org or call 652-2666. The theater is located in downtown Akeley at 6 Broad Street E.

Sarah Carlson with some helpers, Karissa Korbel, Marilyn Gandrud, Jordyn Caulfield and Megan Doyle has assembled the children’s choir and youth from the Sunday School classes at First Lutheran church in a production, “A Shepherd’s Story” by Pam Andrews. The program will be held in the sanctuary at 11 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 19.

When Kari Munson and John Essig of Timberline exit the stage, audiences leave with auditory remembrances of their renditions of traditional folk music. Kari and John will be performing at Brigid’s Cross Pub and Restaurant this Saturday, Dec. 18 from 7 to 10 p.m. The kitchen closes at 9 p.m.

The art show at Neilson Place will be up until January but now’s the time to get there if a painting is an idea for that person who has everything. Students of Natalia Himmerska as well as some encaustics by Himmerska are on display and for sale at the gallery. Even if you don’t go to buy, at the very least, go to look. Some of the work is outstanding and also very affordable.

That’s all she wrote, folks.

Returning local musicians are proving that there’s no place like home for the holidays.

Jake Jackson who moved to Boston two years ago is back in town and will be performing at Brigid’s Cross Irish Pub and Restaurant this Friday, Dec. 17 from 9 p.m. to midnight. Friends and fans will be able to hear Jake playing acoustic guitar with Greg Gaston on drums and Gary Broste on bass in a show featuring some original tunes by Jackson and a Christmas set of traditional songs set to different styles; some traditional folk in the Guthrie and Dylan style, some lounge jazz like Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra and an extended version of “We Saw Three Ships” with lots of improv.

Annie Lewandowski on piano and Owen Weaver on percussion will be playing a fundraiser for the Headwaters School of Music and Art scholarship fund at 3 p.m., on Sunday, December 26 at HSMA, 519 Minnesota Ave. NW. The program will include works by John Cage, Jo Kondo, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Tickets are $5 and $10 and will be sold at the door with all proceeds going to HSMA.

Bemidji gal, Annie Lewandowski, now lives on the southern coast of England. She received her BA in piano performance from the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul in 2002, and in 2010 completed her MFA in Music Performance with a specialization in Improvisation from Mills College in Oakland, California. She performs frequently in the United States and Europe with her band “Powerdove” and as an improviser on the piano.

An international performer whose youth is no obstacle to getting dates, Annie has toured and recorded with her own group, Hawnay Troof, the Curtains, Xiu Xiu, Okay, Doublends Vert, Caroline Kraabel, the London Improviser’s Orchestra, Fred Frith, John Butcher, Chris Cutler, Charles Hayward and Pauline Oliveros.

This February, “Powerdove’s” debut recording will be released on Circle into Square records which will include CD release concerts throughout Europe. In April 2011, she will be performing a concert in London with improvisers Fred Frith and Evan Parker for broadcast on the BBC.

“Owen Weaver performs adventurous, versatile, and portable solo percussion music which utilizes recycled objects and electronic sounds ranging from the visceral to the sublime, clangorous to hypnotic–to form a unique sound world.” This was just copied from the press release because it demonstrates not only the virtuosity of Weaver and does it in a way that I can’t begin to accomplish.

Weaver has appeared twice in the New York-based Wordless Music Series as well as the Bang on a Can Summer Institute at MassMoCA, the Percussion Festival at Round Top, and Minneapolis’ Marimba Underground Concert Series. He has shared concert bills with artists from Percussion Group Cincinnati and MPDuo to international sensation DJ/Rupture and indie rockers WHY?

In 2008 Weaver collaborated with Conspirare: A Company of Voices for a television special aired nationally on PBS, the recording of which was released on the Harmonia Mundi label and nominated for a Grammy award in 2009.

How Clement Moore came to write the story, “The Night Before Christmas” is at the Minnesota Folklore Theater and the final performances are this week. The first half of the show is how the story came to be and the second part of the play is the actual portrayal of the story. They have Clement Moore and his wife and their three children, a store keeper and Santa Claus. This family show has music from the Nutcracker, sleigh bells, traditional Christmas music. It’s all about the magic of Christmas. For a theater that is only a year old, MFT has done amazing productions in their half of the downtown Laundromat. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $8 for children and may be reserved on-line at minnesotafolkloretheater.org or call 652-2666. The theater is located in downtown Akeley at 6 Broad Street E.

Sarah Carlson with some helpers, Karissa Korbel, Marilyn Gandrud, Jordyn Caulfield and Megan Doyle has assembled the children’s choir and youth from the Sunday School classes at First Lutheran church in a production, “A Shepherd’s Story” by Pam Andrews. The program will be held in the sanctuary at 11 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 19.

When Kari Munson and John Essig of Timberline leave the stage, audiences leave with auditory remembrances of their renditions of traditional folk music. Kari and John will be performing at Brigid’s Cross Pub and Restaurant this Saturday, Dec. 18 from 7 to 10 p.m. The kitchen closes at 9 p.m.

The art show at Neilson Place will be up until January but now’s the time to get there if a painting is an idea for that person who has everything. Students of Natalia Himmerska as well as some encaustics by Himmerska are on display and for sale at the gallery. Even if you don’t go to buy, at the very least, go to look. Some of the work is outstanding and also very affordable.

That’s all she wrote, folks.

Two Tap Trio at Brigid’s Cross, comedy show at the Hampton, fine craft artisans hold open houses, musical family theater

Whatever you enjoy doing, there’s lots of it this weekend in Bemidji with fine craft at holiday open houses, three different holiday musicals and two days of lively music at Brigid’s Cross Irish Pub and Restaurant.

“A Christmas Carol (Gasman’s Recollection) will finish its run beginning on Thursday of this week until Saturday. This show deserves better audiences than they had last weekend and it is good family entertainment. Most of the principal players were mentioned in the feature story so will just fill in with those not mentioned. There are lots of Treuers with Elias as Tim, Blair as Mrs; Dilber, Madeline as Belle, Evan and Mia as street urchins, and Issac and The Littliest Marley. Bob Cratchit is Derrick Houle and Mrs. Cratchit is Nicole Kieson and their children are Lily Fulton, Marley Lofthus, and Jesse McCormick. Young Fran is Ellie Munson and the charity women are Katie Houg and Amy Tichy who are kind to the street urchins who include: Anna and Avery MacLeod, Nyshia Pierre, Halle Fodness, Abby Kieso, and Sadie and Sarah Hamrin. Little Marley is Robert Byers and young Scrooge is Robert Byers. The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is David Schoenborn, the turkey boy is Mitchell Shaw and the chorus includes Michael Muers, Ashley and Rachel Houle, and Rachel McCormick.

Fred Rogers of the Minnesota Folklore Theater is downtown Akeley has penned a story of how “The Night Before Christmas” came to be written. With local actors and Fred as Santa Claus, this family event opens this week, Thursday, Dec. 9 and runs until Dec. 18. It is amazing what Fred can accomplish both on and off-stage. His attention to detail is a testament to the years he spent in professional theater in costume design and building, set design and construction and directing. He also directed a couple of shows at the old PBP at Ruttgers when Fulton Gallagher was music director. For a theater has is only a year old, MFT has done amazing productions in their half of the downtown Laundromat—what other show can one go to and do the laundry at the same time. I’m only joking, of course, for the laundromat closes during performance times. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $8 for children and may be reserved on-line at minnesotafolkloretheater.org or call 652-2666. The theater is located in downtown Akeley at 6 Broad Street E.

A sample of Fred's set piece from "The Night Before Christmas."

This is the last weekend for “Ole and Lena’s –It’s a Wonderful Life” at Long Lake Theater in Hubbard. This theater has all the charm of a “real summer stock” venue as it is in a converted church, the restrooms are located outside the building and the refreshment stand is a screened-in porch. The shows are consistently good and worth the trip down to Hubbard. We like to stop at the Y Steak House on the way down and it will be open until the end of December this year—look for the big “Y” at the fork in the road into Park Rapids.

Local fine artisans are holding receptions this weekend. Be sure to check them out for some last minute or beginning Christmas shopping. See the Wednesday arts column in the hard copy or online of the Bemidji Pioneer.

Tim Harmston

Try to see if you can squeeze in a comedy show this Friday at the Hampton Inn. Part of the ticket price goes to United Way, Bemidji. There will be two shows with headliner Tim Harmston: 7 and 9:30 p.m. and tickets are $15 each with $5 going to United Way. My friend Laurie Swenson tells me that her friend Ben San Del is so funny that you’ll want to see him again. This time, he’s the opening act, maybe next time, he’ll be the headliner.

Ben San Del

Finally, we come to the last venue in this blog. Brigid’s Cross Irish Pub and Restaurant is as authentic pub grub as one can find anywhere around. We’re partial to the Irish Whiskey Mushroom Soup, Corned Beef and Cabbage Egg Rolls, Irish Stew with Guinness (yes, they even know how to pour a pint) and Colcannon Potatoes made fresh to order. There are the old favorites of fish and chips or Shepherd’s Pie and lots of beer, all kinds! They even have a shuttle to take customers to the Sanford Center (BREC) and return them back to Brigid’s. If this sounds like a commercial, it’s not, it’s just two person’s opinion. The restaurant stops taking orders at 9 p.m. but the pub stays open until the 1 a.m. Bemidji bar closing time.

But let’s get to the real reason for this long introduction. The entertainment this weekend is amazing. The Friday Nite Hippie Hour with the opening act of the Baba Yagas (a group of seven women singers) will feature Luke Rutten on mandolin, Tom Groshens on hand drums, Tony Standera on guitar and Dawn Standera on bass. The group will be on from 8 to 11 p.m.

Up from the Twin Cities, “The Two Tap Trio” with Eric Carlson on the Bodhram will be playing from 8 p.m. until midnight. Bemidji native Carlson will be playing with another Bemidji guy, Brian Miller on the guitar. Norah Rendell is a vocalist and plays the flute and whistle. Norah tours with UK/Irish group “The Outside Track” on both sides of the ocean. Nathan Gourley started playing the violin as a toddler and graduated to the Suzuki method. A fine classical violinist who cut his teeth performing for his father’s bands, Nathan is now a fiddler who plays traditional Irish music with the Doon Ceili Band.

When we were in Ireland a few years back, all we heard was country-western music in the pubs and found out that most of the well known groups are on tour both here and abroad. This is a great opportunity to listen to authentic traditional Irish folk music right here in downtown Bemidji!

That’s all she wrote folks, hope to see you sometime during the weekend.