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Thu, May 15th
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Jack Peterson & the Music of Les Paul at the Elks
Fri, May 16th, @5:00pm - 06:00PM
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Sat, May 17th
Yavapai Recreation League Weekly Shoots
Sat, May 17th, @8:00am - 11:00AM
2008 Arizona Safe Boating Celebration
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Goings-on at the Raven Cafe | It's all about Movies and Music...and food and beer and coffee E-mail
Local A&E
by Newt Lynn   

If wild animals could talk, what would they say?  I imagine they would say things like, "I'm not going to eat you, but your pet looks like it might want to go on a picnic with me."  Or maybe, "I've heard good things about that Raven Cafe...I'd like to meet you there for coffee and a salad."  For the time being, we'll just be living with suppositions, but suppositions are fun and fill us with hours and hours of entertainment...Just like the Raven.

Monday:  Pizza, Pitcher and a Picture night continues.  Bike Month comes to an end with one more bike-based movie. It's a surprise, and you'll love it.  One thing I can tell you...Lot's of bikes.  8pm

Tuesday:  Ben is whipping up an evening of "Bayou Great-Times."  Etouffee, Gumbo, She-Crab Soup, Po-Boys (Oyster and Artichoke), Collard Greens, Corn Bread, and Swamp Green Salad.  Sounds good?  Sounds Good!  Music by The Porchlights from Dolores, Colorado.  Fill a coctail shaker with 2 parts Grateful Dead, 1 part Allman Brothers, a dash of Joni Mitchell, and some Johnny Cash to taste.  Shaking not stirred.  7pm

Wednesday:  Burger Night...Plus...From San Diego, The Smart Brothers bring their mix of vaudeville, harmony, great instrumentation, and a phenomenal stage show...but that's not all...Then, Eric Fresia and the Offspring from Nova Scotia will be on hand.  A must see band of a father being backed by his two children (ages 9 and 11).  Imagine Bob Marley if the Wailers were in grade school and from Canada.  8pm

Thursday:  Slightly-Soul Food night and our second Jazz Jam Session.  We provide the house band...the rest is up to you (all ages welcome).  8pm

Friday:  Jonathon Best and Matt LaVoire are returning for an evening of well-rehearsed improvisational-jazz-funk-jam-fusion.  Good for moving your bending parts.  8pm

Saturday:  From Pennsylvania...The Raven is proud to present Amanda Jo Williams and Matthew O'Neill for an evening of entirely original music.  How do I explain?  Country, Rock, Georgia, Lightening, Deliverance, Flannery O'Connor, Rudolph Steiner, and the Mayan Calendar.  I know, it's hard to scern through all of that, but come see them and tell me if I'm wrong.  Ben Dickey, Newt Lynn, and Adam Schrader will be the backing band.  8pm

Sunday:  Brunch with Jonathon Best on the old-upright.

Your Album of the Week:  The Black Hollies "Casting Shadows"  is new to me and in heavy rotation right now.  They are a little like the first album by Pink Floyd, The Who, and The Stones all mixed together...Maximum "R n B" in a classic garage style.  Plus...They will be playing at the Raven on May 28th.

 
Nature Writing and Its Authors with Karyn Riedell at the Highland Center E-mail
Community Events
by Press Release   

Nature Writing and Its Authors is the subject of this free presentation by Karyn Riedell on Wednesday, May 21, 2008 at 2:00 pm and it will examine current nature writing and authors such as Annie Dillard, Barry Lopez, Simon Ortiz, bell hooks, Terry Tempest Williams, and Barbara Kingsolver. This presentation being held at the Highlands Center for Natural History will discuss important works by these writers as well as others, and will consider the following questions: What does this writer have to say about nature? What is his or her reason for writing about nature? Do these writers see their art as a way of bringing about environmental activism?

Karyn Riedell is an English instructor at Arizona State University, where she teaches both traditional and online classes including composition, professional writing, American literature, popular culture, and creative nonfiction. She holds a Ph.D. in 20th century American literature. In addition to teaching, she has also worked as a full-time journalist, including coverage of environmental issues. She currently lives in Pine, Arizona.

This program is made possible by the Arizona Humanities Council. For more information visit www.highlandscenter.org or  call 776-9550.

 
Punk Rock Roots, Rockabilly Spirit: Pants Optional E-mail
Local A&E
by Jen Malone   

Hawaiian music has evolved like most things on islands do—slowly, and with its own nuances. Bringing a new breed of rock and roll/punk/rockabilly to the mainland are The Hell Caminos, Hawaii’s first band to capture these genres and bring them together. The Hell Caminos will be at Sundance's Place (116 N Montezuma St, Prescott) on May 17th, touring in support of their new CD, Lust.

The Hell Caminos wanted a CD that could accurately represent their diverse sound, and after a first release (Through the Day, and Through the Night, self-released, 2005), two mainland tours, four years and a lot of hard work, they created their second release, Lust, a product of which they are very proud. The title track sounds like Boston punk in the vein of Dropkick Murphys. “18” has more of an early ‘80s sound with simple guitar, and vocals rivaling an X-rated Cars song. If June Carter and Johnny Cash had more of a psychobilly sound, they would have created the 12th song on Lust, “Brackish Line,” instead of “Jackson.”

Although the CD is excellent, the band’s live show is what really does these songs justice. Michael Camino (doghouse bass, vocals), Nick Danger (lead guitar, vocals), Jesse Atomic (rhythm guitar, vocals) and Handsome Jack (drums) get up on stage and come alive—singing, shouting, running, bouncing, twirling their instruments, standing on their instruments and standing on each other at times—it’s a very lively performance for the fans each and every night.

It’s important to The Hell Caminos that the fans are happy, all the fans. Michael promotes all-ages shows in Hawaii, remembering the times when he had to sneak into shows because there wasn’t a scene for the underage crowd. The days of the close knit punk scene are not forgotten to The Hell Caminos. Unity is still important. As is fun… and rocking shows, and playing good music. They’ve won two HUMAs (Hawaiian Underground Music Awards) to prove it—Best  Stage Show and People’s Choice. Take that Don Ho!

To listen to some tunes, get a peek at the show or for more information on the tour, go to www.MySpace.com/thehellcamios.

 
Up, up and away: First 2008 bald eagle fledgling takes flight in Arizona E-mail
Outdoor News
by AZG&F Press Release   
After weeks of hopping and flapping, nestling bald eagles are growing up and beginning to take to Arizona’s skies. The first 2008 bald eagle fledgling took flight recently from a cliff-side nest along the waters of Lake Pleasant.
  
The first fledgling’s sibling is expected to take its initial flight shortly, and the Arizona Game and Fish Department continues to keep a vigilant eye on bald eagle nesting activity around the state.
  
“Bald eagles are sensitive to human activity, so this is a critical time of year for nestlings,” says Kenneth Jacobson, head of the Arizona Game and Fish Department Bald Eagle Management Program. “Game and Fish asks recreationists to stay away from bald eagle nests so that they don’t prematurely scare a nestling from the nest. If a bald eagle is found on the ground, report it to Game and Fish promptly as a rescue team will be deployed immediately.”
  
Eaglets demonstrate pre-flight behaviors of hopping up and down in the nest; flapping their wings; and hovering over the nest slightly. These exercises help prepare them for a successful first flight.
  
Thus far in 2008, over 60 bald eagle eggs have hatched with more eggs expected to hatch in the coming weeks.
  
Outdoor recreationists are asked to help protect important breeding areas by honoring the closure of 16 areas across the state, most of which end in June. Various land and wildlife management agencies close the breeding areas from December through the spring to protect the state’s 48 breeding pairs of bald eagles. Some of the closure areas are located near popular recreation sites. For a list of closure areas, visit www.azgfd.gov.
 
Local Photographer's Equine Art Portraits Grace Walls of Prescott's Newest Gallery E-mail
Culture News
by Press Release   

Jody Miller's haunting horse portraits have been drawing a lot of attention since they went up on the walls of Prescott's Grayleaf Galleria in March. Grayleaf owner Katherine Koenig found in Miller's work a perfect complement to the gallery's southwestern aesthetic. "I chose to bring Jody’s work into our gallery because of her unique eye and soul-stirring Western photography," Koenig relates.

Like so many Arizona photographers, Miller came here to leave the rat race behind, to work with long views and the clear desert light. Alongside her day job, she set up herself up as a commercial portraitist and art photographer, doing business as MillersReflections. Miller has won awards from the Prescott Fine Arts Association and the Phippen Museum, where her work appeared in the Emerging Photographic Talent of the West exhibit. She supports the community with ongoing donations of services and artwork to Horses with Heart, the Soroptimists, Habitat for Humanity, and Future for KIDS.

Before becoming an Arizonan, Miller's love of horses led her to spend a number of years on a working horse ranch in the California desert. She says, "I have loved horses ever since I was a teenager. They are majestic, powerful, glorious animals that love to perform and show off their beauty. I enjoy the challenge of capturing that special connection people have with their animals."

So it was natural that as she took up photography, the horse would stand at the center of her focus. Miller designs her commercial portraits to show off the distinctive character of each animal and the flavor of the relationship between human and horse. Her Western art photography also centers around the horse and the humans who love and work with them. The images focus on details (spurs, chaps, hands on the reins, flying hooves churning dust) as well as featuring long shots of riders in open country, splashing through a stream, working stock or gathered around the chuck wagon.

 

Read more...
 


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