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Portland Phoenix
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The Portland Phoenix
The Portland Phoenix
http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20205824
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The Portland Phoenix
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january 25–31, 2013 | Portland’s news + arts + entertainment authority | Free firing the warden Prison reform continues | p 4 !news expanding horizons stream the alternative WFNX.com — online 24/7, anywhere New inspiration to learn: F a USM philosopher F a vegan cooking teacher F a musician communing with the dead Art aBstraCt exCellenCe Lois DoDD at the PortLanD MuseuM of art _by Ken Greenleaf | p 18 Dining Chinese delight savorinG Zen’s caLM care _by Brian Duff p 34 LocAL Music the ladY’s no lamB the BeeKeePer’s DeBut aLBuM roars _by sam Pfeifle p 24 support Your faves! nominate local stars thePhoenix. com/best the best of portland 2013 Academic Advising College Placement Testing Adult Basic Education College Transitions ESOL GED C a r e e r A d v is in g Career and Workforce Training Trades Music and Dance IT Healthcare Training, Online Classes A lte rn at iv e E ne rg y Arts and Crafts Cooking, Exercise Employment Skills Certificate Languages Outdoor Fun M et ap hy sic al T op ic s Home and Family Trips Personal Finance Health and Wellness C om pu te rs a n d Te ch n ol og y Gray - New Gloucester adult aNd commuNity educatioN 657-2620 adult educatioN of the KeNNebuNKs aNd aruNdel 985-1116 lewistoN adult educatioN 795-4141 Noble adult & commuNity educatioN (North berwicK) 676-3223 old orchard beach/saco adult aNd commuNity educatioN 934-7922 PortlaNd adult educatioN 775-0432 auburN adult aNd commuNity educatioN 333-6661 boNNy eaGle adult educatioN (buxtoN) 929-9185 cumberlaNd - North yarmouth adult aNd commuNity educatioN 829-2208 rsu 5 recreatioN & commuNity educatioN (freePort) 865-6171 Gorham adult educatioN 222-1095 scarborouGh adult learNiNG ceNter 730-5040 south PortlaNd adult educatioN 347-3389 wells-oGuNquit adult commuNity educatioN 646-4565 wiNdham - raymoNd adult educatioN 892-1819 Ged Now! suPer saturday, march 2, 2013, 9:00 am-1:00 Pm Info and TesTIng avaIlable aT Many of The PrograMs lIsTed here! Call PrograMs fMI or To regIsTer. maiNeadulted.orG aCCess The PrograM websITes Through The web PorTal address below. *Please mention the word "Phoenix" when contacting the programs. 121 Center Street, Portland, ME (207) 772-8274 buy tiCkEtS onlinE: Portlandasylum.com WEd: karaoke tHuRS: Retro night FRi: Plague SAt: Electronic dance Music WEEKly EVEnts Sat. gin bloSSoMS Jan 26 W/ CRASH booM bAng & WoRRiEd WEll AgES: 18+ / Win A FREtligHt guitAR SignEd by tHE ginS! thurs. SEvEnduSt & Feb 7 lACunA Coil W/ AvAtAR / AgES: 18+ tix AlSo AvAilAblE At All bullMooSE loCAtionS! Sat. JoAnnA SMitH Feb 16 AgES: 18+ Sun. toM kEiFER oF Feb 17 CindEREllA AgES: 18+ Sat. HindER W/ nonPoint Mar 2 tix on SAlE 1/25 / AgES: 18+ Sun. SoulFly FEAt. Mar 10 MAx CAvAlERA oF SEPultuRA FAME W/ inCitE & lody king AgES: 18+ thurs. EddiE MonEy Mar 21 unPluggEd AgES: 21+ Sat. gEt tHE lEd out Apr 13 lEd zEPPElin tRibutE bAnd AgES: 18+ uPcomInG EVEnts 575 CONGRESS WWW.PORTLANDEMPIRE.COM 879-8988 EMPIRE COKEWEED, ANEVENINGWITH, MICAH BLUE SMALDONE Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies downstairs, every thursday, no cover, rock-a-billy CLASH OF THE TITANS 311 vs INCUBUS UPCOMING: ALL GOOD FEEL GOOD COLLECTIVE EIGHT FEET TALL, JOINT CHIEFS WED THU 1.23 1.24 FRI SAT 1.25 1.26 BAR IS OPEN.SUN GATTIS–GIRUOARD downstairs, every tuesday, no cover, yacht rock NORTH OF NASHVILLE downstairs, every monday, no cover bluegrass served with a side of waylon MON Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies downstairs, every thursday, no cover, rock-a-billy CLASH OF THE TITANS T REX vs ELO WED THU 1.30 1.31 1.28 1.29 TUE 2.1 Jeƒ Beam, Tan Vampires 2.9 Tricky Britches 2.10 Local Muscle Film Fest 2.14 Butcher Boy 2.22 Whitehorse 2.23 Twiddle 3.2 Milo Greene Friday 1/25 COVER TO COVER SPECIAL FRIDAY EDITION - WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE PRESENTS GREEN DAY•DOOKIE Saturday 1/26 SLY-CHI: THE 3 SIDES OF SLY CHI: JAZZ SET•ALL-ORIGINAL FUNK SET•SLY-CHI DANCE PARTY FEATURING EYENINE! upcoming ShowS monday 1/28- FUNKY MONDAYS • THE PLAYERS’ BALL tuesday 1/29- COVER TO COVER • MAMA’S BOOMSHACK PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION SINCE 1966FouNdEd IN 1999 PEtEr KadzIS executive editor 04 tHIS JuSt IN 06 PoLItICS + otHEr MIStaKES _BY AL DIAMON 06 HooPLEVILLE _BY DAVID KISH 06 oNE CENt’S wortH _BY MArc MewSHAw 08 LEarNINg to tEaCH _BY jeff INgLIS 10 CooKINg VEgaN _BY DeIrDre fuLtON 12 dEad roCK StarS _BY NIcHOLAS ScHrOeDer 14 8 daYS a wEEK _BY NIcHOLAS ScHrOeDer 18 art _BY KeN greeNLeAf 20 tHEatEr _BY MegAN gruMBLINg 22 booKS _BY DeIrDre fuLtON 24 LoCaL MuSIC _BY SAM PfeIfLe 25 LIStINgS 34 dINNEr + MoVIE _BY BrIAN Duff 38 LEttErS + MooN SIgNS + JoNESIN’ January 25, 2013 | Vol XV, No 4 p 34 p 14 ON tHe cOVer F main image design by janet smith taylor, music photo by servin lainez boStoN | ProVIdENCE | PortLaNd StEPHEN M. MINdICH Publisher + chairman EVErEtt FINKELStEIN chief oPerating officer the Phoenix media/communications grouP chairman StEPHEN M. MINdICH chief oPerating officer EVErEtt FINKELStEIN executive editor PEtEr KadzIS senior vice President of client develoPment a. wILLIaM rIStEEN tHE PHoENIX NEwSPaPErS | FNX radIo NEtworK | MaSS wEb PrINtINg | StuFF MagazINE | PEoPLE2PEoPLE grouP PortLaNd general manager JoHN MarSHaLL managing editor JEFF INgLIS editorial design manager JaNEt SMItH taYLor staff Writer dEIrdrE FuLtoN listings coodinator NICHoLaS SCHroEdEr contributing Writers aL dIaMoN, brIaN duFF, aNtHoNY gIaMPEtruzzI, CHrIStoPHEr graY, KEN grEENLEaF, MEgaN gruMbLINg, aLEX IrVINE, daVId KISH, brItta KoNau, MarC MEwSHaw, SaM PFEIFLE, LINdSaY StErLINg, SHaY StEwart-bouLEY, LaNCE taPLEY account executives NICoLE ELwELL, ErIN ELIzabEtH, EMMa HoLLaNdEr, ErIC KENNEY integrated account coordinator adaM oPPENHEIMEr circulations director JIM dorgaN circulations manager MICHaEL JoHNSoN oFFICES boston 126 brooKLINE aVE., boStoN, Ma 02215, 617-536-5390, adVErtISINg dEPt FaX 617-536-1463, EdItorIaL dEPt FaX 617-859-8201, classifieds 126 brooKLINE aVE., boStoN, Ma 02215 617-859-3300, FaX 617-425-2670 | Providence 150 CHEStNut St., ProVIdENCE, rI 02903, 401-273-6397, FaX 401-273-0920 | Portland 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME 04101, 207-773-8900, FaX 207-773-8905 | NatIoNaL SaLES oFFICE 150 CHEStNut St., ProVIdENCE, rI 02903, 401-273-6397 X232, FaX 401-272-8712 | Web site www.tHEPHoENIX.CoM letters to the editor gErMaNE to aN artICLE tHat HaS aPPEarEd IN our PaPEr SHouLd bE SENt to 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME, 04101 | EMaIL to PortLaNd-FEEdbaCK@PHX.CoM. PLEaSE INCLudE a daYtIME tELEPHoNE NuMbEr For VErIFICatIoN. subscriPtions $90/6 MoNtHS, $150/1 YEar | SENd NaME aNd addrESS wItH CHECK or MoNEY ordEr to: SubSCrIPtIoN dEPartMENt, PortLaNd PHoENIX, 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME, 04101 coPyright © 2013 bY tHE PortLaNd PHoENIX, LLC, aLL rIgHtS rESErVEd. rEProduCtIoN wItHout PErMISSIoN, bY aNY MEtHod wHatSoEVEr, IS ProHIbItEd. tHE PortLaNd PHoENIX | JaNuarY 25, 2013 3 4 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com out without warning Ex-Maine State Prison warden Patricia Barnhart. He added: “My philosophy is very differ- ent from most people in corrections.” It’s more like Commissioner Ponte’s, he said. Ponte has said: “We’re not in the business of punishment, but corrections.” Here’s a third clue: Prison reformers have long viewed Barnhart as a reform roadblock, too willing to accept the old ways. And they suspect that a recent alleged assault by a Maine State Prison guard captain on a hand- cuffed prisoner, Renardo Williams, had something to do with Barnhart’s firing. In a telephone interview, Williams, serv- ing 15 years for drug trafficking, gave his ver- sion of the Christmas Eve incident: After he this Just in f Corrections commissioner Joseph Ponte told the Legislature’s Criminal Justice Committee on January 16 that, because of state personnel law, he couldn’t publicly say — until severance negotiations are finished — why he had fired, six days earlier, Maine State Prison warden Patricia Barnhart. She has said she can’t say why, either. But a likely reason is that Barnhart didn’t go along with the program: Ponte’s aggres- sive two-year-old effort to reform the prison. Here’s a major clue. When asked in an interview what sort of new warden he would seek, Ponte replied he wanted somebody skilled in the “change process.” Here’s another clue. Ponte has named Rod Bouffard the acting warden at Warren. One of the most experienced change agents in the prison system, Bouffard reformed the Long Creek Youth Development Center, in South Portland. He transformed it from one of the harshest juvenile lockups in the coun- try to a treatment-oriented model studied all over the country for its success in reducing recidivism, the return to criminal behavior after inmates are released. In a brief interview, Bouffard, who said he wouldn’t apply to become the permanent warden because Warren is too far from his home in the Portland area, tellingly com- mented on his plans for the prison: “I’m definitely going to soften it” — a stunning remark from a corrections official. Bouffard said treating prisoners with respect begets better-behaved prisoners. When it was suggested the prison’s “old boys’ network” may resist change, he replied: “Well, they’d better hang on. I’ve experienced that more than once in my ca- reer,” referring to staff resistance to reform at Long Creek. The final clue: the prison guards’ union has vocally defended the warden after her termination. Getting answers Why the prison warden got fired Scene from a pipeline protest The glue-in f It takes less than two minutes for the squad to fully lock into formation in the TransCanada office in Westborough, Massachusetts. As added insurance, each of them twists open a tube of super glue, slathers the adhesive on their palms, and joins hands with their arms across their chests. A TransCanada employee stares perplexedly at the protesters, tells them that he called the cops, and politely asks everyone to unlock. Devyn Powell, a 20-year-old Tufts junior who has been appointed the group’s spokesperson, draws her line in the sand: “This isn’t against anyone in this office, but we’re not leaving until they stop the pipeline.” The first cop arrives on the scene 10 minutes into the disturbance, and he is not amused. As he paces around the protest circle, explaining the concept of private property, he racks his brain for some solution to the unprecedented conun- drum before him — they don’t get too many glue-ins around these parts. A few minutes pass, and a second officer arrives, followed by the Westborough chief of police and, minutes later, a fire truck. Even with all the king’s horses and all the objected to what he saw as harassment from the captain and a couple of other guards, the captain had handcuffs put on him. Told to sit down, he responded, “I choose to stand.” Then, Williams said, the captain “tackled me,” knocking his legs from under him, and both fell down. Prisoner-rights advocates have com- plained for years that this officer bullied inmates. He reportedly has been suspended or fired. The Corrections department didn’t reply by deadline to a request for his status. (Because the Phoenix wasn’t able to reach him before deadline, his name is being withheld.) Maine NAACP director Rachel Talbot Ross said the group plans to meet with Wil- liams, an African American, to discuss the incident. Williams has been transferred to the Maine Correctional Center in Windham because, he said, “I feared for my life” from the captain’s friends and family working at the state prison. In an interview, Ponte said he couldn’t comment on the incident because an inves- tigation is going on. “It had nothing to do” with Barnhart’s dismissal, he said. Bouffard, the new Maine State Prison boss, has a mental-health-treatment back- ground, having run the Augusta Mental Health Institute (now Riverview Psychiatric Center) and the now-closed Pineland Center for the developmentally disabled. His boss, Ponte, has become nationally known for dramatically reducing solitary confinement, in which many mentally ill prisoners had been placed. Ponte has ac- complished other reforms, including reduc- ing the frequency that probation violations send people back to prison, thereby helping stabilize what had been an ever-growing and ever-more-expensive prison population. He king’s men, though, the first responders call for an outside locksmith. In the meantime, since one cop failed to separate the protesters with sheer force — by attempting to pry their hands apart — the medics move to unseal the glue in a more delicate manner. By scrap- ing and peeling, they manage to eradicate most of the gobs, and erode whatever’s left with swabs soaked in nail-polish remover. Once the protestors are unglued, about an hour and a half into the fray, addi- tional help arrives. Like the cops who called him, the locksmith appears anything but thrilled to be there; he puts his tools down anyway, and begins to drill the ankle lock on UNH senior Ben Trolio. In a 10-minute shower of sparks, the lock- smith manages to free everyone’s legs using the same technique — but that’s the easy part. Someone still has to crack through eight $100 “New York Fahgettaboudit” locks, made of case-hardened, triple-heat-treated boron man- ganese steel. The manufacturer, Kryptonite, is so sure of the impenetrability of their locks, they’ll replace your bike if the product is com- promised. Faced with that challenge, the lock- smith gives up and takes off. Next up: portlaNd The gang has so far raised more than $2000 — for bail commission fees, fines, and other expenses — through their website. As they await their court date, they’ve been speaking out about their January 7 shake-up. This Saturday, January 26, they’ll align with 350 New England and other activist groups in Portland, for a protest against Exxon- Mobil’s Northeastern tar-sands pipeline. _Chris Faraone read the full account, and updates, at thePhoenix.com. also has reduced guard overtime expenses by millions of dollars a year. Speaking of Ponte’s reforms at the Crimi- nal Justice Committee meeting, its Senate chairman, Stan Gerzofsky, a Democrat, remarked, “It’s a big gamble the commis- sioner has taken on,” alluding to possible public reaction if an inmate or former in- mate who was treated less strictly commits a heinous crime. But, Gerzofsky said, “The alternative is warehousing, and that does nobody any good.” “And it’s expensive,” Ponte interjected. Senator Gary Plummer, the committee’s lead Republican, said the state needs to extend “the good things we’ve done with ju- veniles to another population” in the prison system. Ponte and the Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition have long pushed for exactly that. In an email, MPAC’s Jim Bergin said he hoped new leadership at the prison “will facilitate continued change from an out- moded punitive-based means of controlling inmates to an incentive-based approach.” Bergin saw Barnhart’s firing as confirma- tion that “the lack of leadership at the top in the prison created an atmosphere where certain staff have been enabled to disregard policy and even instigate disruption as a means of discrediting the commissioner and his improvements.” Indeed, veteran correctional officers have complained about Ponte’s new approaches to dealing with prisoners — to the point that Barnhart, who was appointed by Commis- sioner Martin Magnusson in 2009, was, after her firing, vigorously defended in the daily press by a guard union official. _Lance Tapley 6 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com politics + other mistakes _BY AL DIAMON _BY DAVID KISh How to fix everything f I’m not a big fan of reform. Per-haps that’s the result of a child- hood lived under constant threats from parents and teachers that if I didn’t change my ways, I’d be sent to “reform school.” I never took those warnings too seriously, so my aversion to reform probably owes more to reading H. L. Mencken. In his A New Dictionary of Quo- tations, there’s this listing: “Reforms should begin at home and stay there.” It’s credited to “author unknown,” but that was often Mencken’s way of quoting himself. Maine’s greatest contribution to Congress, Thomas Brackett Reed (speaker of the House, 1889-1891 and 1895-1899), was also less than enthu- siastic about reform. Reed saw it this way: “An indefinable something is to be done, in a way nobody knows how, at a time nobody knows when, that will accomplish nobody knows what.” This state has a considerable his- tory of reforms that haven’t worked out quite as promised. Prohibition, which Maine adopted long before the rest of the country, proved lucrative for criminals, but ineffective in most other ways. Term limits on legisla- tors were supposed to open up seats so more ordinary citizens could serve. Instead, that law allowed a few mas- terful tacticians to preside over an idiocracy. Public funding of elections was said to be the way to thwart the power of rich people and corpora- tions. It turned out that was uncon- stitutional, and now those entities dominate campaign spending. You might think the reformers would have learned their lesson by now, but you’d be wrong. They’ve just come up with a swell new propos- al. It requires term limits on drinking booze paid for with public money. Oops, sorry. That idea is still in development. This year’s version of fixing what isn’t broken is called ranked-choice voting. The effort to have the governor elected by this complicated and expensive method is being sponsored by Democratic state Representative Janice Cooper and independent state Senator Richard Woodbury, both of Yarmouth (some- body should check the water supply in that town). “This isn’t a major change in the way the system works,” Cooper told the Forecaster. Assuming that by “major,” she doesn’t mean a constitutional amend- ment, the appropriation of millions of dollars, the creation of a logisti- cal nightmare, and the likelihood of mass confusion. After all, most of those same drawbacks plague crowd- control efforts on an average Saturday night in Portland’s Old Port. Speaking of Portland, it already has ranked-choice voting. It was used for the first time in 2011 to pick a mayor from among 15 candidates. Voters rated each contender from their first choice to their last. When the ballots were counted the person with the lowest number of first-place votes was eliminated, and his or her support was distributed to whoever was ranked second. This process continued until somebody got a ma- jority. According to supporters, that’s the big advantage of ranked-choice voting. It produces a winner backed by over 50 percent of the electorate. And it does that in the same way that Prohibition reduced immorality, term limits increased accountability and Clean Election funding did away with corruption. Which is to say, it doesn’t. Michael Brennan, the winner of the mayor’s race in Portland, received support on a little less than 46 per- cent of all valid ballots cast. That’s because ranked-choice voting requires throwing out any “exhausted” bal- lots, those on which the voter didn’t express a preference for either the eventual winner or the runner-up. Let’s say there were five candidates for governor: a Democrat, a Repub- lican, a Green, a well-financed inde- pendent, and a poverty-stricken non- party hopeful with radical plans for improving government. You, being weary of the non-solutions offered by the major parties, fill out your ranked-choice ballot (which requires an advanced degree in mechanical en- gineering to understand) thusly: Your first choice is the under- funded independent. This is the great thing about ranked-choice. It allows you to support a candidate with no chance of winning without wasting your vote. Your second choice is the Green, because you like the outsider’s per- spective. Again, you get to vote your conscience without worrying about being shut out of the final decision. Your third selection is the rich independent. You have your doubts, but you figure you’ve got to vote for somebody who’s a viable candidate. You don’t vote for the Republican or Democrat. After several days of state workers uploading ballots to a computer sys- tem capable of sorting them out and hand-counting the ballots on which there are ambiguities, the results are announced: One of the major-party contenders prevailed. But because you didn’t choose either of them, your vote isn’t figured in those totals. For all intents, you might as well have stayed home on election day. Home? Isn’t that where Mencken said reform belonged? ^ Form your comments. Then, re-form them. Only after that should you email them to me at aldiamon@herniahill.net. Card-Carrying Congress f this year is just barely out of the crate, and already it’s shaping up to be depressingly like last year. With the dust still settling from the fiscal cliff fiasco, foot soldiers on both sides of the aisle are sharpening their knives for yet another clash, this time over some- thing called the debt ceiling. But what exactly is it? tax revenues don’t begin to cover the cost of the uS’s spending programs, meaning the government has to borrow cash to make up the shortfall. But it doesn’t just hit up mom when it needs a loan. instead, it secures funds by packaging its debt into bonds known as “trea- sury securities.” investors — individuals, institutions, and countries — who buy them are effectively loaning the treasury the face value of that bond to do with as it pleases. But there’s a finite amount of bonds the government can have in circulation before it has to seek congressional approval for more. periodically, the uS hits that debt ceil- ing — as happened on december 31, when it reached its borrowing limit of $16.4 trillion — and congress votes on whether or not to extend the government’s line of credit. historically, that’s just a formality, but in the summer of 2011, for the first time the debt ceiling was used as an instrument of political advantage. cue 2013, and once again republicans are holding the debt ceiling hostage to demands for huge spending cuts, under the guise of “deficit reduction.” (the Gop’s real objective? Gouge a big hole into entitlement programs and thereby shrink the government bureaucracies that administer welfare.) the current fight is emblematic of the poisonous, ideology-driven politics of our times. in refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless the president agrees to matching spending cuts, the republican-held congress is deny- ing the president the funds to pay for spending it has already mandated. obama has compared this to dine- and-dash. others have likened it to running up charges on a credit card and refusing to pay the bill at the end of the month. to add to the perversity, the president will be in breach of the law if he fails to dispose of the money the way congress has voted. in short, congress is directing him to spend money that it’s withholding, then exploit- ing the subsequent manufactured crisis to get its way. how’s that for cynical, circular logic? the (sort of) good news is that treasury secretary tim Geithner can stave off bankruptcy for another couple months using a patchwork of “extraordinary measures” (read: accounting tricks). after that, he (or his successor) may have to resort to issuing ious to the uS’s creditors — guarantees that they’ll be paid eventu- ally. that might work for a while, but eventually the uS will default on its debts. in that event, payouts to Social Security beneficiaries will cease, military contractors and federal workers won’t receive paychecks, and foreign creditors will get stiffed (to name a few). But that’s nothing compared to the turbulence that would engulf the global economy and likely tip it back into recession. even if the fight doesn’t get that far, the uS econo- my could be in for a beating. therein lies the hypocrisy of the republicans’ position. though they claim to be looking out for the country’s long-term fiscal health by using the debt ceiling as way to force the issue on deficit reduction, in fact their hostage-taking could do lasting harm. the 2011 debt ceiling debacle led to a grim milestone — the first-ever downgrading of america’s credit rating. Who knows how much more damage the uS’s standing as safe haven and reserve currency might sustain if the Gop follows through on its threat of a knockdown, drag-out fight. So far, obama has ruled out any extrajudicial end runs like minting a $1 trillion coin. instead, he seems to be counting on sanity to bring the opposition to the bargaining table. But with large swathes of the Gop still in thrall to tea party ideologues, that’s a dangerous gamble. ^ one Cent’s Worth _BY mArc mewShAw marc.mewshaw@gmail.com 6 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com politics + other mistakes _BY AL DIAMON _BY DAVID KISh How to fix everything f I’m not a big fan of reform. Per-haps that’s the result of a child- hood lived under constant threats from parents and teachers that if I didn’t change my ways, I’d be sent to “reform school.” I never took those warnings too seriously, so my aversion to reform probably owes more to reading H. L. Mencken. In his A New Dictionary of Quo- tations, there’s this listing: “Reforms should begin at home and stay there.” It’s credited to “author unknown,” but that was often Mencken’s way of quoting himself. Maine’s greatest contribution to Congress, Thomas Brackett Reed (speaker of the House, 1889-1891 and 1895-1899), was also less than enthu- siastic about reform. Reed saw it this way: “An indefinable something is to be done, in a way nobody knows how, at a time nobody knows when, that will accomplish nobody knows what.” This state has a considerable his- tory of reforms that haven’t worked out quite as promised. Prohibition, which Maine adopted long before the rest of the country, proved lucrative for criminals, but ineffective in most other ways. Term limits on legisla- tors were supposed to open up seats so more ordinary citizens could serve. Instead, that law allowed a few mas- terful tacticians to preside over an idiocracy. Public funding of elections was said to be the way to thwart the power of rich people and corpora- tions. It turned out that was uncon- stitutional, and now those entities dominate campaign spending. You might think the reformers would have learned their lesson by now, but you’d be wrong. They’ve just come up with a swell new propos- al. It requires term limits on drinking booze paid for with public money. Oops, sorry. That idea is still in development. This year’s version of fixing what isn’t broken is called ranked-choice voting. The effort to have the governor elected by this complicated and expensive method is being sponsored by Democratic state Representative Janice Cooper and independent state Senator Richard Woodbury, both of Yarmouth (some- body should check the water supply in that town). “This isn’t a major change in the way the system works,” Cooper told the Forecaster. Assuming that by “major,” she doesn’t mean a constitutional amend- ment, the appropriation of millions of dollars, the creation of a logisti- cal nightmare, and the likelihood of mass confusion. After all, most of those same drawbacks plague crowd- control efforts on an average Saturday night in Portland’s Old Port. Speaking of Portland, it already has ranked-choice voting. It was used for the first time in 2011 to pick a mayor from among 15 candidates. Voters rated each contender from their first choice to their last. When the ballots were counted the person with the lowest number of first-place votes was eliminated, and his or her support was distributed to whoever was ranked second. This process continued until somebody got a ma- jority. According to supporters, that’s the big advantage of ranked-choice voting. It produces a winner backed by over 50 percent of the electorate. And it does that in the same way that Prohibition reduced immorality, term limits increased accountability and Clean Election funding did away with corruption. Which is to say, it doesn’t. Michael Brennan, the winner of the mayor’s race in Portland, received support on a little less than 46 per- cent of all valid ballots cast. That’s because ranked-choice voting requires throwing out any “exhausted” bal- lots, those on which the voter didn’t express a preference for either the eventual winner or the runner-up. Let’s say there were five candidates for governor: a Democrat, a Repub- lican, a Green, a well-financed inde- pendent, and a poverty-stricken non- party hopeful with radical plans for improving government. You, being weary of the non-solutions offered by the major parties, fill out your ranked-choice ballot (which requires an advanced degree in mechanical en- gineering to understand) thusly: Your first choice is the under- funded independent. This is the great thing about ranked-choice. It allows you to support a candidate with no chance of winning without wasting your vote. Your second choice is the Green, because you like the outsider’s per- spective. Again, you get to vote your conscience without worrying about being shut out of the final decision. Your third selection is the rich independent. You have your doubts, but you figure you’ve got to vote for somebody who’s a viable candidate. You don’t vote for the Republican or Democrat. After several days of state workers uploading ballots to a computer sys- tem capable of sorting them out and hand-counting the ballots on which there are ambiguities, the results are announced: One of the major-party contenders prevailed. But because you didn’t choose either of them, your vote isn’t figured in those totals. For all intents, you might as well have stayed home on election day. Home? Isn’t that where Mencken said reform belonged? ^ Form your comments. Then, re-form them. Only after that should you email them to me at aldiamon@herniahill.net. Card-Carrying Congress f this year is just barely out of the crate, and already it’s shaping up to be depressingly like last year. With the dust still settling from the fiscal cliff fiasco, foot soldiers on both sides of the aisle are sharpening their knives for yet another clash, this time over some- thing called the debt ceiling. But what exactly is it? tax revenues don’t begin to cover the cost of the uS’s spending programs, meaning the government has to borrow cash to make up the shortfall. But it doesn’t just hit up mom when it needs a loan. instead, it secures funds by packaging its debt into bonds known as “trea- sury securities.” investors — individuals, institutions, and countries — who buy them are effectively loaning the treasury the face value of that bond to do with as it pleases. But there’s a finite amount of bonds the government can have in circulation before it has to seek congressional approval for more. periodically, the uS hits that debt ceil- ing — as happened on december 31, when it reached its borrowing limit of $16.4 trillion — and congress votes on whether or not to extend the government’s line of credit. historically, that’s just a formality, but in the summer of 2011, for the first time the debt ceiling was used as an instrument of political advantage. cue 2013, and once again republicans are holding the debt ceiling hostage to demands for huge spending cuts, under the guise of “deficit reduction.” (the Gop’s real objective? Gouge a big hole into entitlement programs and thereby shrink the government bureaucracies that administer welfare.) the current fight is emblematic of the poisonous, ideology-driven politics of our times. in refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless the president agrees to matching spending cuts, the republican-held congress is deny- ing the president the funds to pay for spending it has already mandated. obama has compared this to dine- and-dash. others have likened it to running up charges on a credit card and refusing to pay the bill at the end of the month. to add to the perversity, the president will be in breach of the law if he fails to dispose of the money the way congress has voted. in short, congress is directing him to spend money that it’s withholding, then exploit- ing the subsequent manufactured crisis to get its way. how’s that for cynical, circular logic? the (sort of) good news is that treasury secretary tim Geithner can stave off bankruptcy for another couple months using a patchwork of “extraordinary measures” (read: accounting tricks). after that, he (or his successor) may have to resort to issuing ious to the uS’s creditors — guarantees that they’ll be paid eventu- ally. that might work for a while, but eventually the uS will default on its debts. in that event, payouts to Social Security beneficiaries will cease, military contractors and federal workers won’t receive paychecks, and foreign creditors will get stiffed (to name a few). But that’s nothing compared to the turbulence that would engulf the global economy and likely tip it back into recession. even if the fight doesn’t get that far, the uS econo- my could be in for a beating. therein lies the hypocrisy of the republicans’ position. though they claim to be looking out for the country’s long-term fiscal health by using the debt ceiling as way to force the issue on deficit reduction, in fact their hostage-taking could do lasting harm. the 2011 debt ceiling debacle led to a grim milestone — the first-ever downgrading of america’s credit rating. Who knows how much more damage the uS’s standing as safe haven and reserve currency might sustain if the Gop follows through on its threat of a knockdown, drag-out fight. So far, obama has ruled out any extrajudicial end runs like minting a $1 trillion coin. instead, he seems to be counting on sanity to bring the opposition to the bargaining table. But with large swathes of the Gop still in thrall to tea party ideologues, that’s a dangerous gamble. ^ one Cent’s Worth _BY mArc mewShAw marc.mewshaw@gmail.com Psychic Medium and Author For Tickets: www.ETix.com or www.Johnedward.net Reading Not Guaranteed July 17, 2013 - 7pm Holiday Inn by the Bay 88 Spring St Portland, ME 04101 July 18, 2013 - 7pm Hilton Boston Logan Airport, 1 Hotel Dr Boston, MA 02128 July 21, 2013 - 1pm The Westin Providence 1 West Exchange St Providence, RI 02903 JOHN EDWARD HAPPY HOUR: Mon-Fri. 4-7pm $2.50 Domestics • $3.50 Micros • $5 Nachos Wed. $7 Domestic Pitchers • 2 Cheeseburgers & Fries $6.99 Thur. 50¢ Wings • $7 Bud Light Pitchers Fri. $5 Burritos • $4 Cuervo Margaritas 121 Center St. Portland • 207-772-8274 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK: 11:30am to 1am www.Portlandasylum.com Friday night is right for puck, beer and food! BruIns v. Islanders @ 7Pm hockey's Back! Our hi-def screens, full bar & killer menu will make you feel like you're at all your favorite games. Voted #1 Wings in Portland! watch all t he actIon on our hI-d ef tvs wIth Ice co ld Brews & food sPec Ials! Hit country single includes: ‘We Can’t Be Friends’ buy tickets online: JOANNA SMITH Feb. 16thSat u rd a y www.PortlandAsylum.com 8 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com The Turning of souls USM prof: Teaching iS aboUT SpiriT, noT daTa _by Jeff ingliS f Making an impassioned plea for humanistic considerations to remain paramount in our societal discussion about education and its continual improvement, University of Southern Maine philosophy professor Jeremiah Conway follows his own advice. He seeds his book, The Alchemy of Teach- ing (forthcoming in March from Sentient Publications), with stories of classroom encounters between students and ideas that remind us of an important, but oft-neglect- ed, truth about education: It is no good if it merely teaches the young facts and tasks to be accomplished in the workforce. Rather, education must deeply and fully engage both students and teachers in the quest for under- standing and connection. Conway begins and ends with aspects of the Greek myth of Daedalus and Icarus — and the Breugel painting depicting that myth’s climactic moment. He inquires thoroughly into what the story might mean (see excerpt in sidebar) Conway gently, calmly, and un- relentingly shreds the data-driven mantras of the modern industrial-style education system. His heartfelt tales of students young and very old transforming themselves — and their teacher — get to the heart of a distinctly European, even Renaissance tradition of edu- cation: that its aim is not to indoctrinate nor to cause memorization, but rather to excite, to enthrall, and, above all, to spark the hu- man potential within each of us. In constructing his subtle argument — for this is among the least argumentative ex- amples of a persuasive essay — Conway mar- shals some unexpected forces. Among those making significant, and sympathetic, ap- pearances here are a religious fundamental- ist, a smartypants overachiever, a reclusive- silent type, and an elderly woman. But there is more. A particularly impas- ‘Descendants of Daedalus’ Conway on what Breugel’s ‘Fall of Icarus’ was really about F considering the story now, i’m aware of themes that i wasn’t when i first looked at the painting. i see that the myth is deeply concerned with the relation between parents and children, one generation and the next. it’s also very much a myth about teach- ing, asking adults to consider the knowledge that they bequeath to the young. Further, the story concerns the powers and limits of technical knowledge. daedalus is a brilliantly clever man; in fact, his very name comes from the Greek word Daidalos, meaning “cunning worker.” in many ways, he personifies human technological inventiveness. yet the myth repeatedly suggests that this acumen can be dangerous, even destructive. daedalus’ tal- ents helped to procreate the minotaur. he let tyrants employ his gifts for sinister purposes. he constructed the labyrinth, only to have it become a slaughterhouse for the young. he mastered the principles of flight and created wings, succeeding in bringing about the death of his son. in the background of The Fall of Icarus, i now see daedalus as a failed teacher and parent. in both roles, his legacy is complex and twisted. his technological brilliance and creativity are undeniable, yet they culminate in achievements that he ends up cursing. his gifts create suffering for himself and others. his care for his son seems limited to the provision of technological devices. is the myth a criticism of technical inventiveness? i doubt it. Whether exemplified in labyrinths or towers of Babel, the impulses to design and make are deeply ingrained in our human make-up and deserving of celebration. to me, the myth hints at a more subtle criticism — one that concerns education — that the transfer of technological knowledge and skills is insufficient. technology, if we are not to rue it, must conjoin with the cultivation of humanity. my attention shifts from [icarus’s] disappearing legs to the brilliant sun dominating the landscape, and the figures of the peasants going about their work. these peasants (whom Breugel often celebrates) possess something often forgotten in the midst of technological brilliance. they, frequently perforce, remain close to the earth. in their farm- ing, fishing, and sailing, they rely upon and care for it. of course, they use technology as sioned section takes the interpretation of Ni- etzsche’s nihilism in a direction even philos- ophy students might be surprised at. While the 19th-century German thinker thought the rise of lamentable decadence was the first step toward its subsequent dissolution, he wrote movingly in Thus Spoke Zarathustra of feel- ing and thinking and sensing and processing deep within the body — “in the blood,” as he put it. Conway’s professorial but not at all dry explication of this section of the text leads to an account of how a particular class of his en- gaged with this idea; the deep soulful exami- nations that discussion entails augur well for Nietzsche’s forlorn hopes. Certainly more a work of thought and exploration than of diagnosis or prescrip- tion, The Alchemy of Teaching asks its readers to remember that those ancients who sought to transform base metals into valuable treasure didn’t know exactly how it might occur, but retained their sense of wonder and certainty at the potential of the universe to deliver riches beyond measure. We, and all students of any age or era, should be so lucky as to in herit not only the scientific determinism of the alchemists, but also their mystic faith in the ultimate possibility: that all leaden pupils might, with care, attention, and not a little bit of liberty, transform themselves — and, perhaps, their equally lucky teachers — into golden pioneers simultaneously finding and creating new worlds. ^ thinking teacher Jeremiah conway urges deep interaction with material. well — they harness sail and plow and fishing pole. But their tools seem observant of na- ture, working with its rhythms. the peasant figures seem in the landscape part of nature, not its masters. did Breugel think that they possess a wisdom that daedalus and his son lack? in the simplicity of their lives, do they remain faithful to the earth, cultivating a sense of interdependence (and, hence, an awareness of limits) that neither daedalus nor icarus exhibit? like the circus troupe in Hard Times, do these peasants possess a respect for the earth that, for all his brilliance, daedalus fails to teach? this sixteenth-century painting is particularly appropriate to the world we inhabit. We’re a scientific, technological culture to an extent never previously imagined. We’re descendants of daedalus. i look at those two sticks of bare leg now and confront a warning and a teaching imperative: cultivate the humanity of the young or the advancement of technology will do us little good and considerable harm. help them be more mindful of themselves and others. Grow compassion. consider and make teaching a noble profession. perhaps there’s time to develop a more acute sense of the interdependence of life. perhaps we can become more faithful to the earth. it is for us as it was for daedalus: the lives of our children depend on it. excerpted from The Alchemy of Teaching by Jeremiah conway, published by Sentient Publications, copyright 2013. Used by permission. let it be a leSSon to yoU breugel’s ‘The fall of icarus’ has another hid- den message for us. 121 Center St. Portland • 207-772-8274 www.Portlandasylum.com sunday Feb. 17th ageS: 18+ / lead singer of cinderella The ViVisecTors on tour from Moscow saTurday Feb. 26Th @ 9 pM No cover 8 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com The Turning of souls USM prof: Teaching iS aboUT SpiriT, noT daTa _by Jeff ingliS f Making an impassioned plea for humanistic considerations to remain paramount in our societal discussion about education and its continual improvement, University of Southern Maine philosophy professor Jeremiah Conway follows his own advice. He seeds his book, The Alchemy of Teach- ing (forthcoming in March from Sentient Publications), with stories of classroom encounters between students and ideas that remind us of an important, but oft-neglect- ed, truth about education: It is no good if it merely teaches the young facts and tasks to be accomplished in the workforce. Rather, education must deeply and fully engage both students and teachers in the quest for under- standing and connection. Conway begins and ends with aspects of the Greek myth of Daedalus and Icarus — and the Breugel painting depicting that myth’s climactic moment. He inquires thoroughly into what the story might mean (see excerpt in sidebar) Conway gently, calmly, and un- relentingly shreds the data-driven mantras of the modern industrial-style education system. His heartfelt tales of students young and very old transforming themselves — and their teacher — get to the heart of a distinctly European, even Renaissance tradition of edu- cation: that its aim is not to indoctrinate nor to cause memorization, but rather to excite, to enthrall, and, above all, to spark the hu- man potential within each of us. In constructing his subtle argument — for this is among the least argumentative ex- amples of a persuasive essay — Conway mar- shals some unexpected forces. Among those making significant, and sympathetic, ap- pearances here are a religious fundamental- ist, a smartypants overachiever, a reclusive- silent type, and an elderly woman. But there is more. A particularly impas- ‘Descendants of Daedalus’ Conway on what Breugel’s ‘Fall of Icarus’ was really about F considering the story now, i’m aware of themes that i wasn’t when i first looked at the painting. i see that the myth is deeply concerned with the relation between parents and children, one generation and the next. it’s also very much a myth about teach- ing, asking adults to consider the knowledge that they bequeath to the young. Further, the story concerns the powers and limits of technical knowledge. daedalus is a brilliantly clever man; in fact, his very name comes from the Greek word Daidalos, meaning “cunning worker.” in many ways, he personifies human technological inventiveness. yet the myth repeatedly suggests that this acumen can be dangerous, even destructive. daedalus’ tal- ents helped to procreate the minotaur. he let tyrants employ his gifts for sinister purposes. he constructed the labyrinth, only to have it become a slaughterhouse for the young. he mastered the principles of flight and created wings, succeeding in bringing about the death of his son. in the background of The Fall of Icarus, i now see daedalus as a failed teacher and parent. in both roles, his legacy is complex and twisted. his technological brilliance and creativity are undeniable, yet they culminate in achievements that he ends up cursing. his gifts create suffering for himself and others. his care for his son seems limited to the provision of technological devices. is the myth a criticism of technical inventiveness? i doubt it. Whether exemplified in labyrinths or towers of Babel, the impulses to design and make are deeply ingrained in our human make-up and deserving of celebration. to me, the myth hints at a more subtle criticism — one that concerns education — that the transfer of technological knowledge and skills is insufficient. technology, if we are not to rue it, must conjoin with the cultivation of humanity. my attention shifts from [icarus’s] disappearing legs to the brilliant sun dominating the landscape, and the figures of the peasants going about their work. these peasants (whom Breugel often celebrates) possess something often forgotten in the midst of technological brilliance. they, frequently perforce, remain close to the earth. in their farm- ing, fishing, and sailing, they rely upon and care for it. of course, they use technology as sioned section takes the interpretation of Ni- etzsche’s nihilism in a direction even philos- ophy students might be surprised at. While the 19th-century German thinker thought the rise of lamentable decadence was the first step toward its subsequent dissolution, he wrote movingly in Thus Spoke Zarathustra of feel- ing and thinking and sensing and processing deep within the body — “in the blood,” as he put it. Conway’s professorial but not at all dry explication of this section of the text leads to an account of how a particular class of his en- gaged with this idea; the deep soulful exami- nations that discussion entails augur well for Nietzsche’s forlorn hopes. Certainly more a work of thought and exploration than of diagnosis or prescrip- tion, The Alchemy of Teaching asks its readers to remember that those ancients who sought to transform base metals into valuable treasure didn’t know exactly how it might occur, but retained their sense of wonder and certainty at the potential of the universe to deliver riches beyond measure. We, and all students of any age or era, should be so lucky as to in herit not only the scientific determinism of the alchemists, but also their mystic faith in the ultimate possibility: that all leaden pupils might, with care, attention, and not a little bit of liberty, transform themselves — and, perhaps, their equally lucky teachers — into golden pioneers simultaneously finding and creating new worlds. ^ thinking teacher Jeremiah conway urges deep interaction with material. well — they harness sail and plow and fishing pole. But their tools seem observant of na- ture, working with its rhythms. the peasant figures seem in the landscape part of nature, not its masters. did Breugel think that they possess a wisdom that daedalus and his son lack? in the simplicity of their lives, do they remain faithful to the earth, cultivating a sense of interdependence (and, hence, an awareness of limits) that neither daedalus nor icarus exhibit? like the circus troupe in Hard Times, do these peasants possess a respect for the earth that, for all his brilliance, daedalus fails to teach? this sixteenth-century painting is particularly appropriate to the world we inhabit. We’re a scientific, technological culture to an extent never previously imagined. We’re descendants of daedalus. i look at those two sticks of bare leg now and confront a warning and a teaching imperative: cultivate the humanity of the young or the advancement of technology will do us little good and considerable harm. help them be more mindful of themselves and others. Grow compassion. consider and make teaching a noble profession. perhaps there’s time to develop a more acute sense of the interdependence of life. perhaps we can become more faithful to the earth. it is for us as it was for daedalus: the lives of our children depend on it. excerpted from The Alchemy of Teaching by Jeremiah conway, published by Sentient Publications, copyright 2013. Used by permission. let it be a leSSon to yoU breugel’s ‘The fall of icarus’ has another hid- den message for us. 10 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Plant-based Practice Learning to eat more with Less impact _by DeirDre FuLton f In the course of an hour, Chris Mc-Clay convinced me that I just may be able to live without cheese. Shocking, I know. It was her vegan chipotle nachos, made with lentils and nut-based “cheese” sauce (see sidebar for the recipe), that sparked my conviction. McClay, 38, is the proprietor of Port- land’s new Modern Vegan Cooking School and the Maine representative for the Wellness Forum, a national for-profit dietary-education organization. She’s been eating a plant-based diet since 1992, when a college course piqued her interest in vegetarianism and then full-on vegan- ism. She hasn’t eaten any animal-derived products since then — really. No meat, no cheese, no dairy products. And, perhaps most remarkably, no cravings. “It’s my choice,” she says in her West- brook kitchen on a recent afternoon. She wakes up every day and thinks, “I can eat whatever I want today.” It just so happens that what she wants are vegan foods. While the philosophy of veganism — avoiding the consumption of animal products — has been around for centuries, the term itself was coined in 1944 and the American Vegan Society was founded in 1960. Interest in the United States has gained steadily since then; surveys report that between 0.5 and 3 percent of Ameri- cans now identify as vegan (including Bill Clinton and Mike Tyson). Proponents claim that eating a plant- based diet improves overall health and well-being, resilience to disease, skin problems, and energy levels. It also decreases a person’s carbon footprint, given that the industrial livestock sector releases significant pollution and green- house gas emissions into our water and atmosphere. “I can’t think of a worse way to use resources that produce worse worldly out- comes,” McClay says. “It’s very political for me.” She also cites weight-loss ben- efits and disease-prevention as personal motivators. Plus, going vegan can reduce your grocery bill, especially if you start to buy ingredients from the bulk aisle. Two years ago — right around the time Clinton announced he’d gone vegan — McClay decided it was time to put herself out there as a resource to her community. She’d reaped internal benefits of vegan- ism for two decades; now she wanted to spread the word. She began offering personal chef services and private cook- ing lessons, and got positive responses to both. And so this month, she’s launching a series of public cooking classes to further widen her reach. On the docket in Febru- ary: courses covering winter soups, cook- ing for weight-loss, greens, and dinner- party fare. Her teaching strategy is simple: Focus on creating an entire meal, rather than “meat with a side of vegetables.” Incorpo- rate complex carbohydrates, grains, and legumes. When people dive into a plant- based diet thinking they can survive on salads alone, McClay cringes. “They’re bloated, they’re starving, they’re bored,” she says. With a Modern Vegan education, there are no restrictions, no portion control. McClay likes to teach her students that they can eat as much as they want — as long as they’re eating the right stuff. “You’re feeding yourself foods that nourish every cell in your body,” she says. Her number one tip for healthier cooking? Stop using oil for sautéeing veg- etables. Instead, use small amounts of water, lemon juice, broth, wine, or beer — not enough to steam what’s in the pan, just enough to make sure nothing burns or sticks (this doesn’t work in a nonstick pan). An equally important tactic, much to my dismay, is to eliminate cheese, which McClay notes has addictive properties (researchers have claimed that cheese pro- duces opiate effects in consumers — not to mention its high levels of cholesterol and fat). Now that I have her nut-sauce recipe in hand, I may be able to get closer to a cheese-less existence. Not to worry: in McClay’s world, even baby steps count. If you sign up for a Modern Vegan cooking class, “I don’t ex- pect that you have any intention of going vegan,” McClay says. “It’s about learning new foods, new things to eat, and ways to incorporate that on a personal level.” ^ Learn more about Modern Vegan and the Wellness Forum on Tuesday, January 29, when McClay hosts a free dinner and dis- cussion at the Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland. Registration is required; call 207.409.7778 or visit portland.wellnessfor- umrep.com. More information about Modern Vegan cooking classes can be found at modern-vegan.com. heaLThy STRaTegieS chris mcclay suggests sautéeing with water and switching out cheese for non-dairy alternatives. Vegan chipotle nachos with cheese sauce For ‘cheese sauce’ 1/2 cup raw cashews 1/2 cup nutritional yeast 1 tablespoon chili powder 1/2 teaspoon paprika 1/2 teaspoon onion powder 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder 1 teaspoon ground mustard put all the ingredients into your food p rocessor and mix until it forms a liquid . pour into a medium saucepan and warm on medium heat, stirring co nstantly. once the sauce thickens up a bit it’s ready to pour over your nachos. For ‘nacho meat’ over medium-low heat, mix together cooked lentils, a bit of oregano, cumin , coriander, and salt, as well as minced garlic, onion, and chipotle pep per, three tablespoons of tomato past e, and a dash of sriracha. mash with a fork. pile lentil mixture on top of yellow cor n chips, drizzle with cheese sauce, and dress with guacamole and salsa to your liking. 1 teaspoon cayenne 1 tablespoon tahini 1 tablespoon miso paste 2 cups plain almond milk 2 tablespoons cornstarch or arrowroot po wder (to thicken) 10-15 slices of jarred jalapeño slices (depending on your tolerance for sp ice) AT UNDER $2,600 IN TUITION SMCC GIVES YOU A LOT TO SMILE ABOUT. Get started now! Visit www.smccME.edu/smile or call 207-741-5800 • Work towards a degree • Earn easily transferable credits • Take a class to grow personally or professionally • And more! S O U T H P O R T L A N D | B R U N S W I C K | O F F S I T E | O N L I N E 12 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com of the Cold War. And while a sermon from the spirit world isn’t a source you could confidently cite in an academic text, that claim might have some truth to it. But leaving academic matters aside, even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained here, where the author refreshingly avoids the conven- tional ballyhoo and sanctimonious drivel that clouds most “rock insider” writing. In a chapter titled “Finding the Group,” he apprises that “(s)ome of your collabora- tors might be refugees from awful jobs, insipid record collections, religious sects, bad marriages, and dormitories full of sports enthusiasts. Your group will be their last hope, and there might be des- peration in their eyes. These are the ones you want.” In “Determining Goals,” we learn that “the group is familial, a radi- cal restructuring of the family unit from the nuclear model to something more akin to a hunter-gatherer tribe or a Stalin- era collectivist farm.” And in “Sex,” we come to understand that “for the groupie, there were live boys; for the men there were dead heroes. After all, the boy who mourns and honors the dead is transcend- ing carnality . . . and is expressing his depth and his authentic passion for the music.” But for all its bogus posturing and aca- demic pretensions, Supernatural Strategies is ultimately the work of one of the move- ment’s true believers, and might be read as a serious — some might say important — effort. As he puts it, Svenonius sees rock and roll as “a sort of expression that was smothered during the rational age of enlightenment,” or a form of primordial communication that addresses timeless ideas of community and collaborative ef- fort. “That explains its totally universal appeal. That’s why it’s like rediscovering fire, why it never gets old.” Ideology is grossly inefficient, and so it naturally goes overlooked in any profit- bearing career model, let alone one as competitive as the music business. The ones proferred in Supernatural Strategies, over a brisk 250 pages, analyze seemingly every facet of the industry as we know it, yet still might not get you any closer to the ultimate, unimpeachable goal of rock stardom. Some truly determined entre- preneurs out there might even subvert the author’s aim, finding Supernatural Studies to be a useful proxy for years of toil gigging the club circuit or conducting countless hours of stereo research. But however use- ful its readers might find it, this book is an event — because let’s face it, today’s rock and roll so often isn’t. ^ Supernatural StrategieS for Making a rock ’n’ roll group | by Ian Svenonius | 250 pages | Akashic Books | $14.95 | Svenoni- us reads, with a DJ set, January 27 @ 7:30 pm | at SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 | space538.org Are you A believer? Ian SvenonIuS conjureS the SpIrIt world In revIvIng rock and roll hIStory _by nIcholaS Schroeder f These days, the road toward a suc-cessful music career seems very brightly lit. Like an intricate GPS device teeming with metadata, today’s lifestyle mags, rock camps, music blogs, real- ity shows, and alcohol industries each help to illuminate the path for young musicians, so that their efforts to create a healthy, productive rock group go as smoothly and efficiently as possible. So where’s the problem? While this sce- nario might appear as a blessing for those looking to land a nice, comfortable career in music — or a zesty Pandora playlist, for that matter — some augur a certain danger in whittling rock and roll to a series of clean, flat stones placed over a bog one traverses en route to artistic fame or financial success. One of those conspiring to muck up the path is Ian Svenonius: writer, DJ, and frontman of DC post-punk groups the Make-Up, Nation of Ulysses, and now Chain and the Gang. In his new and uniquely comprehensive book, Supernatu- ral Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group, Svenonius invokes the black-magic art of the séance in revising rock history, resur- recting dead rock stars and long-buried ideological perspectives on the origins and exhibitions of the well-traveled form. Like a smoke bomb in a SXSW show- case, the ambitious project of Supernatural Strategies is to inject a spume of confusion into the staid, success-driven rock nar- rative of today, while serving as a quasi- mystical handbook for that rare musician still willing to take the long route. Writ- ten in a language couched in satire and anchored by years of experience, it is both a rigorous study of an elusive and endur- ing cultural art and a sobering critique of its many tortured machinations. And as the contemporary music landscape has been re-stratified by new technologies and contracted economies, it might even be particularly topical. As Svenonius told the Portland Phoenix in a tele- phone call, the book is a response to what he perceives as a shifting ethos in the music world. “It’s generally considered a positive development that rock and roll bands are becoming institutionalized,” he explains. “There are all these rock camps for kids now — they’re sponsored and fomented — and they’re filled with really practical knowl- edge about how to be in a band. It’s all laid out like a Petri dish, and that has profound implications on the form of rock and roll.” While those familiar with Svenonius’s musical endeavors will recognize the sé- ance as a stylistic conceit necessary to hurdle the threat of didacticism that can block such lofty concepts (see also the cheekily Marxian diatribes in Ulysses’ liner notes; his fey, soft-brewed James Brown impression fronting the Make-Up; or his squinty deadpan persona in the web series talk show Soft Focus), the shtick bet- ter allows him to reframe rock history as a politically fraught yet ultimately irresist- ible social development, a paradoxical sort of “hocus-pocus” that both liberates its followers from the tedium and technoc- racy of daily life while at the same time capitalizing on the worst traits of con- sumer culture. For the average rock fan, these ideas may sound exhausting, but such are the labors of séance. And it’s true; the lessons of Supernatural Strategies can sometimes feel born from more than the mind of one man. In its pages, Brian Jones decrees that “suffering is necessary to maintain the in- tegrity of the group as an ‘object.’” Mary Wells redresses that “the actual origin of ‘the group’ as we know it . . . is the urban street gang.” Paul McCartney — go with it — dissects the British Invasion by tell- ing us how “without the stain of slavery and oblivious to US race and class ten- sion, (Britishers) felt free to mimic their favorite records . . . (and) gained success by imitating American — usually black — rock ’n’ roll artists.” And Richard Berry conjures that “(s)ince the USA is a nation founded on the ideas of individualism, rebellion, evangelism, white supremacy, black slavery, expulsion of native peoples, expansionism, commerce, and industry, these values all play a part in the forma- tion of (its) primary and arguably great- est cultural export.” Each of these claims could supply an historian with a sizable research project, yet Svenonius, faithful to his muses, unpacks them in a mere few paragraphs before pressing on. After some glib and crisply written chapters of historical repositioning, the reader emerges with a rather grimly conspiratorial view of rock and roll as an American-manufactured cultural weapon thE lIvInG AnD thE DEAD Ian Svenonius digs into what might have happened while trying to chart a course to the future. Even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained in this volume. Premium cigars, hookah tobacco, pipes, tobacco accessories and much more. Featuring Walk-in Humidors in Brunswick & Windham and our Beer Cave in Lisbon Falls! 263 St John St Portland 253-5550 778 Roosevelt Trail, Windham 892-8923 580 Lisbon St, Lisbon Falls 353-8788 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick 729-1704 579 Congress St, Portland 772-2709 A Smoker’s Paradise 12 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com of the Cold War. And while a sermon from the spirit world isn’t a source you could confidently cite in an academic text, that claim might have some truth to it. But leaving academic matters aside, even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained here, where the author refreshingly avoids the conven- tional ballyhoo and sanctimonious drivel that clouds most “rock insider” writing. In a chapter titled “Finding the Group,” he apprises that “(s)ome of your collabora- tors might be refugees from awful jobs, insipid record collections, religious sects, bad marriages, and dormitories full of sports enthusiasts. Your group will be their last hope, and there might be des- peration in their eyes. These are the ones you want.” In “Determining Goals,” we learn that “the group is familial, a radi- cal restructuring of the family unit from the nuclear model to something more akin to a hunter-gatherer tribe or a Stalin- era collectivist farm.” And in “Sex,” we come to understand that “for the groupie, there were live boys; for the men there were dead heroes. After all, the boy who mourns and honors the dead is transcend- ing carnality . . . and is expressing his depth and his authentic passion for the music.” But for all its bogus posturing and aca- demic pretensions, Supernatural Strategies is ultimately the work of one of the move- ment’s true believers, and might be read as a serious — some might say important — effort. As he puts it, Svenonius sees rock and roll as “a sort of expression that was smothered during the rational age of enlightenment,” or a form of primordial communication that addresses timeless ideas of community and collaborative ef- fort. “That explains its totally universal appeal. That’s why it’s like rediscovering fire, why it never gets old.” Ideology is grossly inefficient, and so it naturally goes overlooked in any profit- bearing career model, let alone one as competitive as the music business. The ones proferred in Supernatural Strategies, over a brisk 250 pages, analyze seemingly every facet of the industry as we know it, yet still might not get you any closer to the ultimate, unimpeachable goal of rock stardom. Some truly determined entre- preneurs out there might even subvert the author’s aim, finding Supernatural Studies to be a useful proxy for years of toil gigging the club circuit or conducting countless hours of stereo research. But however use- ful its readers might find it, this book is an event — because let’s face it, today’s rock and roll so often isn’t. ^ Supernatural StrategieS for Making a rock ’n’ roll group | by Ian Svenonius | 250 pages | Akashic Books | $14.95 | Svenoni- us reads, with a DJ set, January 27 @ 7:30 pm | at SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 | space538.org Are you A believer? Ian SvenonIuS conjureS the SpIrIt world In revIvIng rock and roll hIStory _by nIcholaS Schroeder f These days, the road toward a suc-cessful music career seems very brightly lit. Like an intricate GPS device teeming with metadata, today’s lifestyle mags, rock camps, music blogs, real- ity shows, and alcohol industries each help to illuminate the path for young musicians, so that their efforts to create a healthy, productive rock group go as smoothly and efficiently as possible. So where’s the problem? While this sce- nario might appear as a blessing for those looking to land a nice, comfortable career in music — or a zesty Pandora playlist, for that matter — some augur a certain danger in whittling rock and roll to a series of clean, flat stones placed over a bog one traverses en route to artistic fame or financial success. One of those conspiring to muck up the path is Ian Svenonius: writer, DJ, and frontman of DC post-punk groups the Make-Up, Nation of Ulysses, and now Chain and the Gang. In his new and uniquely comprehensive book, Supernatu- ral Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group, Svenonius invokes the black-magic art of the séance in revising rock history, resur- recting dead rock stars and long-buried ideological perspectives on the origins and exhibitions of the well-traveled form. Like a smoke bomb in a SXSW show- case, the ambitious project of Supernatural Strategies is to inject a spume of confusion into the staid, success-driven rock nar- rative of today, while serving as a quasi- mystical handbook for that rare musician still willing to take the long route. Writ- ten in a language couched in satire and anchored by years of experience, it is both a rigorous study of an elusive and endur- ing cultural art and a sobering critique of its many tortured machinations. And as the contemporary music landscape has been re-stratified by new technologies and contracted economies, it might even be particularly topical. As Svenonius told the Portland Phoenix in a tele- phone call, the book is a response to what he perceives as a shifting ethos in the music world. “It’s generally considered a positive development that rock and roll bands are becoming institutionalized,” he explains. “There are all these rock camps for kids now — they’re sponsored and fomented — and they’re filled with really practical knowl- edge about how to be in a band. It’s all laid out like a Petri dish, and that has profound implications on the form of rock and roll.” While those familiar with Svenonius’s musical endeavors will recognize the sé- ance as a stylistic conceit necessary to hurdle the threat of didacticism that can block such lofty concepts (see also the cheekily Marxian diatribes in Ulysses’ liner notes; his fey, soft-brewed James Brown impression fronting the Make-Up; or his squinty deadpan persona in the web series talk show Soft Focus), the shtick bet- ter allows him to reframe rock history as a politically fraught yet ultimately irresist- ible social development, a paradoxical sort of “hocus-pocus” that both liberates its followers from the tedium and technoc- racy of daily life while at the same time capitalizing on the worst traits of con- sumer culture. For the average rock fan, these ideas may sound exhausting, but such are the labors of séance. And it’s true; the lessons of Supernatural Strategies can sometimes feel born from more than the mind of one man. In its pages, Brian Jones decrees that “suffering is necessary to maintain the in- tegrity of the group as an ‘object.’” Mary Wells redresses that “the actual origin of ‘the group’ as we know it . . . is the urban street gang.” Paul McCartney — go with it — dissects the British Invasion by tell- ing us how “without the stain of slavery and oblivious to US race and class ten- sion, (Britishers) felt free to mimic their favorite records . . . (and) gained success by imitating American — usually black — rock ’n’ roll artists.” And Richard Berry conjures that “(s)ince the USA is a nation founded on the ideas of individualism, rebellion, evangelism, white supremacy, black slavery, expulsion of native peoples, expansionism, commerce, and industry, these values all play a part in the forma- tion of (its) primary and arguably great- est cultural export.” Each of these claims could supply an historian with a sizable research project, yet Svenonius, faithful to his muses, unpacks them in a mere few paragraphs before pressing on. After some glib and crisply written chapters of historical repositioning, the reader emerges with a rather grimly conspiratorial view of rock and roll as an American-manufactured cultural weapon thE lIvInG AnD thE DEAD Ian Svenonius digs into what might have happened while trying to chart a course to the future. Even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained in this volume. 14 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com a round-up of notabl e happenings in portland and beyo nd _COmpiled by NiChOlas sChrOeder thursday 24 CHANGE YOUR TONE | For today’s accomplished musician, the most pressing question is what, exactly, to play? Some especially daring ones ask that question in real time — again and again and again. Peek in on their answers at the Brunswick cultural depot known as Frontier Café, where the New eNglaNd ImprovIsers orchestra bring the venue’s “Frontiers of Music” series into focus. 7 pm; by donation. 14 Maine St. in the Fort Andross Mill. 207.725.5222. DON’T TOUCH THE RED BUTTON | To use a disproportionately high- stakes analogy, today’s music- lovers might think of dubstep as previous generations observed the Cold War: a protracted, victimless war of attrition where allied forces battle a mysterious and alien other for the hearts and minds of its followers. It’s far from over, but the result of this one might diverge from historical precedent. Dubstep, particularly its more populist and unsubtle Western iterations, is a tireless and beguiling foe. Its devotees — who beget disorient- ing colors and aromas, rehearse their gesticulations in oversized uniforms, and seemingly only strike at night — appear legion, and have proven to be alarmingly adept at reproducing their thun- derous, unifying hymns in clever, almost imperceptible variations. As the day of reckoning approaches, one such chorale leader, the DJ/ producer known as phutureprImI- tIve from Portland, Oregon, rallies the local delegation tonight at the Empire Dine and Dance, with a set from the native, bass-driven producer of the trees. 9 pm; $12 at 575 Congress St. 207.879.8988. OH, YOU TWO! | Two boy-girl mu- sical projects of considerable ardor, the New York acoustic folk duo two tree and the immaculately restrained outland meditations of arborea, make an attractive pair- ing at Local Sprouts Cooperative. 7 pm; by donation at 649 Congress St. 207.899.3529. friday 25 AND WHAT A VOICE IT IS | The alto saxophonist and performer mataNa roberts turned many heads with her 2011 record COIN COIN Chapter One: Gens de couleur libres. The avant-jazz document represented her first forays into vocalizations — both linguistic and otherwise — and gave birth to many harrowing, poetic, and dizzyingly emotional images of the history of black life in America. Among other unforgettable mo- ments, the politically-charged album contains an a capella gospel blues chant reimagining a slave auction (“libation for Mr. Brown: Bid em in...”), a breathless respin- ning of Albert Ayler-style sax work (“rise”), and a heartwrenchingly bittersweet paean to the life’s work of the artist’s mother (“how much would you cost?”). COIN COIN is a contemporary masterpiece of sorts, and the Chicago-born Roberts, still coming into her own as a performer (her resume includes more formal solo records amid collaborations with Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Sticks and Stones, and TV on the Radio, among oth- ers), is a remarkably compelling draw to Bowdoin College tonight. She leads a sax masterclass at 2 and performs a work-in-progress concert piece called “Prologue” at 7:30 pm. Tickets are free (but reservations recommended) at the college’s Studzinski Recital Hall, Kanbar Auditorium. 207.798.4141. WAY UP THERE | The rise to prominence of Maine psych-rock band coke weed has been nothing short of remarkable. As if catching the US still in the insatiable binge of its post-Nirvana boom, the group busted out two haunting, velvety records in three years and scored a national gig opening for the Walkmen, all the while operating from Bar Harbor, which isn’t exactly the new Brooklyn. They’ve lately been chumming with the singular blues musician mIcah blue smaldoNe, whose folk compositions have evolved over the years from faithful delta ditties to mesmerizing long-form meditations on the macabre. They play sets both separate and to- gether (we’re told), along with the shapeshifting rock act aN eveNINg wIth. 9 pm; $6 at Empire Dine and Dance. READ THE SIGNS | A surfeit of symbolic terms collide so perfectly in Waterville that we can’t help but take note: the rock and roll Americana group called gIrls, guNs, aNd glory play a club called Mainely Brews. Might be the most time capsule-able show in recent memory. 9 pm; by donation at 1 Post Office Sq. 207.873.2457. VERY VERY LOCAL | The latest in a string of attractive shows at Mayo Street Arts, four of the re- gion’s most engaging, slow-burn- ing post-rock acts collect in defiant exhibition. Attend and you’ll get the delicate and ethereal songwork of lIsa/lIza; the heartache-y acoustic tales of wesley alleN hartley; the psych-folk of greg JamIe; and acId smoker, one man’s hypnagogic take on noisy no wave. 8 pm; $5 at 10 Mayo St. 207.615.3609. Down the street, there’s a show that might be this one’s kissing cousin. Avant-folk group sNaex (Chriss Sutherland and Christopher Teret) play with songwriters matt rock and Na- thaN salsburg, the latter known for his revenant early-folk record- ings and curatorship of the Alan Lomax Archive. 8 pm in — get this — Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St. 207.671.7792. STRUm fOR THE HILLS | Re- surfacing above ground, we have the bluesy, soulful, feel-good rock musician martIN sextoN play- ing a show at the State Theatre. Known as an A+ live performer, the songwriter reopens his long love affair with Maine audiences with a set by alterNate routes, a rock orthodox five-piece from Connecti- cut. 8 pm; $25-30 at 609 Congress St., 207.956.6000. saturday 26 STORmING THE TREEfORT | Survey the comedy scene from any angle and you’ll notice the same thing: where are all the women? Local, national, whatever: the fun- ny business is a male-dominated sport. Tonight, the Maine writer, blogger, and comic erIN doNovaN brings us a welcome break from the standard. She reprises a show she calls “I’m Gonna Kill Him,” f mataNa roberts, at Bowdoin College’s Studzinski Recital Hall, in Brunswick on Jan 25. f ethel, at USM’s Abromson Community Center, in Portland on Jan 30. 8 days a WEEK continued on p 16 Get tickets online at statetheatreportland.com , in person at the Cumberland County Civic Center Box Office and charge by phone at 800-745-3000. Tickets available at the State Theatre Box Office on night of show one hour before doors. 609 CONGRESS ST. PORTLAND (207) 956-6000 with MATT and KIM APRIL 7 FEB 10 & 11 FEB 12 & 13 FEB 14 SAT MAR 9 FRI MAR 8 SAT MAR 16 MAR 20 FRI MAR 29 APRIL 24 MAY 8 THIS FRIDAY, JANUARY 25 JANUARY 29 JANUARY 30 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9 FEB 14 SAT MAR 9 ON SALE FRI 10AM! Educate your palate on over 300 beers from both near and far. Portland Pottery & Metalsmithing Studio 118-122 Washington Ave • Portland, ME Vacation Camp for Kids February 18th - 22nd Choose from 5 Classes Daily Wheel throwing, glass, sculpture & metalsmithing. Classes starting at $13/class or $60/day Intro to clay classes beginning February 7th Next Session - Clay & Jewelry Classes starting February 27 - March 5 8-week classes include materials, studio access, firings, and discounted workshops Upcoming Saturday Workshops: February 9th • 1pm-5pm Pottery for the Japanese Tea Ceremony w/ Steve Murphy March 30th •12-5pm Tile Making w/ Jon White 207-772-4334 • www.portlandpottery.com Check out Portland Pottery Cafe for your next meal! We offer homemade baked good, sandwiches, daily specials, & coffee! 16 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f tIft merrItt, at One Longfellow Square, in Portland on Jan 30. a multimedia vent on marital strife (which she performed last summer at the State Theatre), at the Camden Opera House. 7:30 pm; $15 at 29 Elm St. in Camden. 207.236.7963. PLAY DEAD | If your January has been relatively free from pain and strife, you might renew your acquaintanceship with the themes in Augusta, where the thumpy popular metal band dead seasoN, an Oxford County original, play Bridge Street Tavern. 7-ish; small cover if any. 18 Bridge St., 207.623.8561. WE fOUND OUT ABOUT THEm | It’s hardly newsworthy to report that most Americans aged 21 to 45 get a gIN blossoms song caught in their head 2.7 times per week (source redacted), but it might register as news to say that they like it. The long-tenured alt-rock band, author of the ’90s traditional “Hey Jealousy” and many others, play the Asylum tonight with local pop act worrIed well and crash boom baNg, new-breed rock funda- mentalists from DC. 9 pm; $29 at 121 Center St. 207.772.8274. GETTING OUTTA HAND | The pianist chrIstopher o’rIley, who made his mark in 2003 convert- ing Radiohead songs to plaintive, new age-y piano ballads (he’s since done similar with the work of El- liott Smith and Nick Drake, among others), exhibits his craftsmanship at the Franco American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St. in Lewiston. $27 ($15 students under 18), 207.689.2000. sunday 27 mUSIC’S NOT fOR EVERYONE | While it’s rare to find the musi- cian and performer IaN sveNoNIus without at least some of his tongue wedged firmly into cheek, his new book Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group is a satisfying and seriously invigorating read (see this writer’s full review on page 12). He uncovers its themes in a sort of teach-in tonight at SPACE Gallery at 7:30, followed by a DJ set lasting until the magic runs out. NOT THAT BARD EITHER | An annual show of various talents col- lects to celebrate Robert Burns, the 18th-century Scottish lyricist of tremendous cultural import. Speak of “The Bard” in Scotland and expect not some bloated rejoinder on the greatness of Shakespeare, but instead a silent, lips-pursed nod of gratitude in the direction of this man. The Portland version of that, now running six years strong, contains performances by poets aNNIe fINch and betsy sholl, composer daN soNeNberg, piper ray scott, and Cape Breton band hIghlaNd soles. 2 pm; $15 at the Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave. 207.767.6396. monday 28 NOT THAT GENTLEmANLY | If Sunday’s Robert Burns celebration leaves Shakespeare devotees feeling rebuffed, they might counter with a pint at the Press Room, where Seacoast theater troupe Seven Stages Shakespeare Company put on a dramatic reading of Two GenTlemen of Verona at 6:30. 77 Daniel St. in Portsmouth, NH. 603.431.5186. LOCAL DOC | Still haven’t seen last year’s landmark documentary BeTTinG The farm? Filmmakers Cecily Pingree and Jason Mann’s award-winning appraisal of a Maine dairy-farming community’s resistance efforts screens for free at Local Sprouts Cooperative at 7 pm. tuEsday 29 THERE IS NO ENVIRONmENT | The New York Times made the controversial decision to shutter its Environmental section recently, folding the department’s seven re- porters and two editors into other parts of the paper. This happens despite findings that climate- change coverage has declined in national media outlets since 2009. One of those reporters is JustIN gIllIs, the writer who stewards the Green blog about energy and the environment, and who speaks at the College of the Atlantic’s Deer- ing Campus Center at 7 pm. 105 Eden St., Bar Harbor, 207.288.5015. LOW-END THEORY | Or say funk that, a sentiment best handled by local act mama’s boomshack, who tackle Parliament’s fat-bottomed classic Mothership Connection at the club’s Cover to Cover, a series that serves up classic albums whole. 9 pm; $5 at 55 Market St. 207.775.2266. WEdnEsday 30 STRING BEING | The contem- porary classical group ethel, a darkly stirring and dynamic string quartet (one of their projects reinterprets the work of Marvin Gaye), play one of several regional shows tonight at USM’s Abromson Community Center, 93 Bedford St. Tickets are in the $45 range (poke around our classical listings for a free show) for the 7:30 show. Call 207.842.0800. THE HEART Of THE COUNTRY | Because of the era we live in, the presentation of songwriter tIft merrItt has been glossed with a veneer of “indie,” but it’s dyed- in-the-wool alt-country. It’s also quite good, incorporating doses of southern belle charisma, morosely poetic torch songs, and a literary quality resembling Joni Mitchell or Emmylou Harris. Merritt plays One Longfellow Square with “Mexo-Americana” duo davId wax museum. 8 pm; $22 at 181 State St., 207.761.1757. thursday 31 TURN THE PAGE | File another month of life in the archive, and begin to wade into the deep waters of another theater season. Good Theater opens the dark com- edy DeaTh By DesiGn this week, Penobscot in Bangor brings The suGar Bean sisTers, and Mad Horse, reviewed on page 20, takes the muzzle off BenGal TiGer in The BaGhDaD Zoo. SPACE celebrates the written word with a maINe womeN wrIte event while the Portland Public Library honors poet wesley mcNaIr, as another poet sharing his name, wesley hartley, continues the important work of remounting of his band the trav- elINg trees (at One Longfellow). continued from p 14 Summer Session I: May 20–July 1 | Session II: July 5–August 15 Summer Session 2013 Day and Evening Classes Art, Biology, Chemistry, Citizenship, Education, English, Environmental Studies, History, Mathematics, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology and Sports Management Programs for High School Students Scholarships available! Live and study on UNE’s oceanfront campus and earn college credit in one of four programs: • Coastal Marine Ecology • Creative Writing—Poetry • Neuroscience • Pre-Law/Trial Advocacy For more information, call (207) 602-2050 or visit www.une.edu/oce Ask about Art Courses open to high school juniors and seniors. Earn college credit! Chart Your Own Course, Make this Summer Count! 18 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com ‘COW PARSNIP, 1996’ f “Lois Dodd: Catching the Light” is the kind of show that reminds you why you got interested in art in the first place. The paintings are terrific and the big, first-floor gallery at the Portland Mu- seum of Art has never looked better. This is Dodd’s first career retrospective, and it is long overdue. There are more than 50 paintings that span 60 years. Ma- ny are large, the quality is uniformly high, and her method, while it has evolved over the years, has remained steady and consis- tent. Early in her career she found a way to work that suited her own needs and ful- filled her understanding of what art was about, and has followed it ever since with remarkable focus and clarity. I’ve been a fan of Dodd’s for many years, and I’m in good company. She’s had a regular and appreciative audience of crit- ics and other artists who love her work and sometimes learn from her way of seeing, or from her decades-long faith in her rela- tionship to her own vision, or from both. It would be no surprise to see a steady stream of visitors from New York and far- ther coming to Portland for this show. Dodd began her showing career in the early 1950s, right around the high-water mark of New York School abstraction. At the time, modernist ideas had coalesced into something of an imperative toward abstraction, but there were a number of artists who felt that the sense of place and implicit narrative of representation still had powerful valence. There was no going back after the reiterative self-awareness of Cézanne, Malevich, Eliot, Joyce, and Mondrian A brilliAnt exAmple _by Ken Greenleaf lois DoDD’s first career retrospective showcases a briGht abstractionist established conclusively that art was about the relationship between artist and viewer, and not about the subject. But a number of artists felt there was power in the relationship of the artist not so much to the subject, but to the subjective nature of the moment in its presence, and to the act of seeing it. Every day, even in the same spot, is different. Among those art- ists were Fairfield Porter, Alex Katz, Neil Welliver, and, especially, Lois Dodd. Many of them came to Maine from New York for part of the year, and in, say, the 1970s, one could easily walk into a 57th Street gallery and spot a recognizable scene from Lincolnville. But it wasn’t about the scene as subject as much as it was about the artist’s pres- ence at a place as an event. Dodd picks out subjects that will make a painting that reso- nates with her own interests. The rest is up to the viewer, who will take away their own, possibly rather different, experience, not of the place but of the painting. Process is of very little value when dis- cerning an artist’s thinking, but method is useful. The famous William Carlos Wil- liams dictum “No ideas but in things” is at work here. In this show we can take a few of the formal outliers as a entry point for apprehending the pervasive, and inter- esting, underlying thinking that informs Dodd’s whole body of work. Take, for instance the tall, skinny “Woods, 1975” — 14 feet tall by three wide. The white house and yard in the bottom third are framed by tall thin spruce trunks that occupy the whole of the painting, and most of its area is filled by the trees’ art crisscrossing horizontal branching. There is only one reason for such an unlikely framing arrangement: Dodd spotted it, liked it, and worked up the shape and size because she thought it would be interest- ing. It is. Dodd’s color range can be complex and broad, but one particular painting, “Red Gladioli, 2005,” stands as an outer bound- ary of how she works with color. The back- ground is in mostly greens, representing the foliage and stems of the plants. The blossoms, which course up through the painting moving slightly to the left, are brightly and unquestionably red, comple- mentary in a way that makes the image visually unstable. It’s pretty big, four feet high by two wide, and cropped to provide little detail about the subject. This one vibrates and grabs you from a distance — a trick of the color, so to speak. Dodd’s color is strong and coherent, and the effect of this whole group together has a kind of luminosity that suggests the shows title actually makes sense, an exhibitional rarity. She doesn’t choose a subject because it’s inherently interest- ing or luminous; she picks it because she can make what she sees into a compel- ling painting, and that makes the subject interesting. It’s light created, more than light depicted. It’s a subtle but important distinction. The regular geometries of “Door, Stair- case, 1981” and the color fields of “Burn- ing House, Night, Vertical, 2007” and the implied domes of “Cow Parsnip, 1996” are worth looking at because of what she has made of them. She discovers, or uncov- ers, the poetic resonance of her subject. We know it exists because she can see it and has the skills to make it available to others. We like these paintings because of what they are, rather than for what they show us. The ideas are in the things, and they are good ideas. Picture after picture, Dodd’s penetrating pictorial intelligence shows through. They are thought out as pictures in the moment of their execution, not as demonstrations of a pre-conceived thesis. The kinds of things she thinks about could only be done as what they are. The modernist reality of the awareness of the artificiality of any work of art coupled with the emotional and subjective aware- ness of place and circumstance result in a deep philosophical verity. These paintings are very real and very personal. The modernist idea was born in Europe but grew up in the US. Dodd’s paintings, in that sense, are very American. Now in her mid-80s, Dodd has quietly worked her way through a long and productive career without the fanfare and argument that have been characteristic of many of her peers. She is still at the top of her game, and this exhibition shows she has been there for many years. ^ “LOIS DODD: CATCHING THE LIGHT” | at the Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Sq, Port- land | through April 7 | portlandmuseum.org ‘RED VINE AND BLANKET, 1979’ New Year, New You Bh akt i in Motion • Yoga • Meditation • Dance • Play • Healing Arts • Studio Rental 155 Brackett st Portland • www.bhaktinmotion.com • 207.233.0966 Contact Improv, Barefoot Boogies, Improvisation, Modern Dance, Kids Hip Hop & more Yoga for Your Life! NEW multi-class/monthly unlimited yoga passes Dancing Eros (for women) w/Kellie Ryan 1/25/13 SPEND A FEW BUCKS. FEEL LIKE A MILLION. $10 PER MONTH* FREE FITNESS TRAINING abs. cardio. upper & lower body WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED. 145 Marginal Way • Portland, ME • 207-879-2200 * NOW OPEN 24/7 for 2013! 8 Thomas Drive • Westbrook, ME • 207-773-7774 264 Civic Center Drive • Augusta, ME • 207-623-0023 *Billed monthly to a checking account. 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Making the world a better place, pose by pose. 20 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f Not too long into Ben-gal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, most of the characters pacing the stage are either dead, near death, or inti- mate enough with it to see ghosts. In an immediately post-Saddam Baghdad, vi- olence and chaos are daily tangibles, and the dead are never truly gone. Between the deeds of a tyrant, two soldiers, a translator, and a tiger, playwright Rajiv Joseph weaves together potent and discomfiting threads in his Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama, produced by Mad Horse Theatre Company under the direction of Nathan Speckman. The agonies here are thick and myriad. Disturb- ingly simple-minded US Marine Kev (Jake Cote) wants pussy, but he also aches to have any kind of friend in fellow Marine Tom (Evan Dalzell). Tommy, however, is preoccupied with protecting his war spoils, a gold-plated semi-automatic and a gold toilet seat looted from Saddam’s dead son Uday (Brent Askari). Tom’s reluctant Arabic inter- preter, Musa (Mark Rubin), once worked as a garden artist for Uday, whom he had every reason to loathe; now he’s disgusted by the ignorant self-interest of his new American boss. Finally, the Tiger (Tootie Van Reenen) — only recently shipped to Baghdad and pretty pissed off about it, and shot by Kev in the very first scene — philosophizes remorse- fully on his life as a killer and the God that made it so. Cote’s unsettling Kev has the most nu- ance and the best-dramatized arc in Bengal Tiger, a play whose characters are sometimes difficult to invest in, perhaps partly because of the allegorical flavor of the script. But Kev inspires a dramatically convincing am- bivalence. Even early on, as he’s creepily ob- sessed with shooting animals and “getting his dick wet,” his deep need for human con- nection is a poignant source of sympathy. There are plenty of reasons to despise his col- league Tom, but it’s harder to crack into this gold-looter’s anguish. In Dalzell’s hands, Tom’s barking aggression nicely bespeaks cultural arrogance and a desperation under- lying it; I’d like to see him brought closer to a more vulnerable breaking point. Askari pulls out the stops in his inimi- table, sarcasm-dripping fashion, portraying an eminently despicable Uday. His psycho- pathic, faux-jovial tormenting of Rubin’s sympathetic, subtle Musa is dark and often quite graphic stuff, and I only wish that the script had employed a little more economy in presenting this relationship: the drawing out of even verbal torture certainly heightens the agony of the victim, but an audience can be presented with only so much sadistic CASUALTIES OF WAR The living evidence of terror and pain. Caging the tiger _by Megan gruMbling Mad Horse puTs on a searing puliTzer-noMinaTed iraq war play imagery and whimpering before we begin to become desensitized. As the Tiger, and as a “guy” tiger at that, Van Reenen is a bit of an odd choice. On Broadway, the role was played by Robin Wil- liams, whose usual barely-contained kinetic energy was probably put to good use as a dangerously constrained cat. Van Reenen hits the Tiger’s wry, languishing anomie compellingly, but could do more to evoke the beast’s frustrated strength and sinews — perhaps in a blocking that better utilized the show’s in-the-round staging to help dra- matize the Tiger’s and others’ philosophical anguish. The writing is both sensational and ex- pository. “The tiger keeps talking about epis- temology and original sin,” complains Kev to Tom, “and it’s annoying as fuck.” It kind of is, sometimes: while the ideas that these characters grapple with — the perpetuation of violence, the relation of the living and the dead — are of vital importance, it’s tiring to hear them told rather than shown, as when Kev mulls, “What happens now that I am aware of and sensitive to the universe?” That said, Joseph writes a few arrestingly lovely, painful, fraught details, and Speck- man and his actors handle them beautifully. One is when an Iraqi prostitute (Allison McCall) inspects Tom’s “bionic hand” and sweetly, candidly laughs to Musa in Arabic that it “smells like milk” — a detail some- how at once humane and deeply strange, and reprised later to haunting effect. Such small details best let us feel the enormity of these creatures’ immeasurable horrors, as well as their glints of absolution. ^ Bengal Tiger aT The Baghdad Zoo | by Rajiv Joseph | Directed by Nathan Speckman | Pro- duced by Mad Horse Theatre Company | though February 3 | 207.730.2389 theater Looking for Love in Biddo New paintings & old favorites by NANCY KURETH At the OAK & the AX 140 Main St. Suite 107 in Biddeford Opening Friday, January 25 5:00-9:00 887 Forest Ave. Portland, ME 04103 (207)773-8808 Open 7 days a week BEER • WINE • SPIRITS Why do people THINK I’m a wine EXPERT, when I’m REALLY a wine IDIOT? Simple… whenever I need a wine for a special dinner or occasion, I head over to RSVP Discount Beverage and peruse their Best Buy wine rack. 40 or more choices, all with high ratings from Wine Spectator and Wine Enthusiast magazines. Plus… almost all of them are under $20 a bottle, and MOST are $10 or under. So I’m virtually guaranteed a great wine, at a value price! For your next wine purchase, visit the Best Buy wine rack at RSVP Discount beverage, Forest Avenue, Portland! Phoenix Studio Have you ever dreamed of beautiful stained glass in your house? Do you love DIY projects? Now you can learn the art of stained glass at the Phoenix Studio. Call 774-4154 or visit us online! 630 Forest Ave. Portland, ME 04101•www.phoenixstudio.com•207.774.4154 Stained Glass Classes: • Stained Glass - Day/Evening (All Levels) • Stained Glass for Kids - Saturdays We also offer a wide selection of tools, glass, and equipment. Art Classes: • Studio Drawing & Painting with guest artist Tomás Baleztena Restoration and Design of Fine Art Glass Since 1976 Serving extraordinary pub fare & pizza from 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. daily 94 Commercial Street, Portland, Maine 207 874.2639 2 Portland Bands 1 Great Weekend at Andy’s Five Finger Discount on Friday night Silent Sam & the Evans on Saturday night 2 Portland Bands 1 Great Weekend Served up with so me of the best food & drink on th e waterfront. 22 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f If these chilly winter days have you dreaming of sunbathing on the beach, a new mystery novel by Maine au- thor Josh Pahigian could be just the thing to turn up the heat. Set in Old Orchard Beach over the course of a summer, Strangers on the Beach is Pahigian’s first work of fiction; the part- time University of New England writing professor has previously written several books about baseball. It’s an impressive debut. This suspenseful thriller, imbued with local flavor (settings include Old Orchard Beach landmarks such as The Brunswick and Beach Bagels), is a page- turner with short, snappy chapters that often end in cliffhangers. It would make a great beach read, come to think of it. Pahigian introduces the reader to a diverse and well-drawn cast of characters, including wealthy foreign adventurer Ferdinand Sevigny, whose arrival in town sets off a deadly chain of events; his beau- tiful younger mistress, Marisol, who has hidden motivations of her own; Billy, the teenaged son of a local alcoholic who simply wants to escape his bleak life; and Sally, a mentally challenged older woman who sees much but says little. All their lives, and more, become intertwined on an early-summer evening before the in- flux of tourists arrives. Skepticism of outsiders — those who are from away as well as those who live outside of accepted boundaries —is a theme explored throughout the book. Of course, the central plot relies on the con- cept of foreign invaders, a/k/a strangers, disrupting a sleepy summer town set in its routines. Additionally, there are several places where Pahigian (who currently lives in Buxton but formerly lived and worked in OOB) makes sharp observations about tensions between locals and tourists, and this undertone of mistrust courses through the novel. It’s Sevigny who is the catalyst for the action — his boat and belongings that wash ashore, prompting in- terest from local law enforcement and inter- national paparazzi, his girlfriend who shows up all but naked on Pine Point Beach, his nephew who attempts to involve young Billy in a murder- ous scheme. Appropriate- ly, the reader learns Se- vigny’s true story in bits and pieces, much as one would by asking around at coffee shops and bars. Painted as larger-than- life at the start, and gradually becoming more sympathetic, Sevigny is an intriguing protagonist in a classic stranger- comes-to-town tale. Despite a gripping plot and smooth writing, there are several sections that would have benefitted from a bit more showing, and little less telling. Particularly, Pahigian has a tendency to overexplain his characters’ emotional rea- soning. Consider this passage: “Marisol did not identify her lover by name, but she told the girls she’d been swept off her feet and taken away,” Pa- higian writes. “She told them he’d been twice her age, and that he’d taken her all over the world. But in time she’d grown lonely and resentful. He’d told her where to go, and how to act, and she’d never had any real say in anything. She’d begun to feel like a kept woman, like she was just there for his pleasure.” Compelling complexity, to be sure, but the reader already knows much of this from earlier scenes. It’s almost like the non-fiction author in Pahigian wants to make absolutely sure his readers un- derstand what’s going on in his fictional characters’ heads — but perhaps he could trust his audience more. Still, none of his interpretations or explanations are off- base, so this quibble is minor. Strangers on the Beach is at its core a very self-contained thriller, leaving few loose ends in its wake. We are left with the impression that even after the Sevigny shake-up, the townies, the year-rounders, will resume their routines in short order. They will be perfectly happy to let the waves wash away the brief, if exciting, in- trusion, and to relish the quiet of winter, when fewer strangers come around. ^ StrangerS on the Beach | by Josh Pahi- gian | 282 pages | Islandport Press | $22.95 | Josh Pahigian reads January 30 @ 6:30 pm at McArthur Public Library, 207 Main St, Bid- deford | February 7 @ 7 pm at North Gorham Public Library, 2 Standish Neck Rd, Gorham | February 9 @ 2 pm at Thomas Memorial Library, 6 Scott Dyer Rd, Cape Elizabeth | all readings are free CoMBING ThE DoRCh Local author Josh Pahigian digs mystery in the sands. Mysterious strangers _by DeirDre FuLton LocaL susPense noveL conJures summertime Books Hair | Waxing | Bridal | Facial & Cosmetic | Massage Now with StyliSt, liz Pelletier! 305 COMMERCIAL STREET #6 PORTLAND MAINE 04101-4668 info@knaughtyhair.com | 207.874.0929 Get Caught Being welcome, StudeNtS! Career placement assistance | Day & evening schedules |Financial aid available for those who qualify One eagle Drive SanfOrD, Me Portland Phoenix PPX21 Call or Click Today! 800-758-7679 seacoastcareerschools.edu Classes Forming now For: Professional Medical assistant HealtH claiMs sPecialist Massage tHeraPy For Seacoast Career School’s Student Consumer Information visit www.seacoastcareerschools.edu/info Health Care - The Smart Career Move in 2013! One visit and you'll see why students choose 24 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com LfCAL MUSIC _by Sam Pfe ifle sam_pfeifl e@yahoo.com Watch the vid at the psych-jazz group’s Vimeo (vimeo.com/57838638) and decide for yourself. F When the music you make fits no social or historical milieu whatsoever, you know you’re on to something. this is the juncture that multi-in- strumentalist RobeRt Stillman finds himself at upon release of the new long-player Station Wagon Interior Perspective (A Requiem for John Fahey). With the record, the portland-born musi- cian takes on the specter (or “spectre,” perhaps — Stillman’s a Briton now) of the american primi- tive guitarist with many instrumental arrange- ments — not one of them involving guitar. Why such deviation from the form? Because though it may appear like a parlor trick, such tortuous routes are necessary to charm and seduce a ghost, especially one as famously curmudgeonly as Fahey. the album, issued locally as a 10-inch on apohadion RecoRdS under the name rob- ert Stillman and the archaic Future players, is a fuzzily familiar mix of pre-jazz american folk, lurching brass toots, and skeletal sound-collage. it’s a creative retelling of a music legend, and one that won’t prompt its spectral muse to emerge from the spiritual plane to issue a corrective. Or so we hope! unearth this particular wax at theapohadion.wordpress.com. F We’ve been meaning to ask: do you drone? yeah, us too. and lately we’ve been doing so, in small doses, with indRe StyRke, a dark ambi- ent project of rural Ghosts’ frontman erik neil- son. the demo track “Good morning Sun” falls somewhere between the meditations of robert rich and a psychotically Twin Peaks-y new age bliss. Will Finest Times, the project’s promised full-length, follow suit? and when? From the mouth of the poet f The delivery is primal, shouted: “I’m as blue as blood before the blood goes red.” It is just one more reminder late in Lady Lamb the Beekeeper’s debut album, Ripely Pine, that she is no meek Lamb to be led around, but rather Queen Bee, very much a force of nature. If you’ve even glanced at Aly Spaltro’s photo (she’s the band, all by herself or otherwise), or seen her five-foot-nothing figure out in public, you know as soon as you hear the opening “Hair to the Ferris Wheel” that she summons her arresting voice from someplace seemingly outside herself, like her spirit is wearing a body three sizes too small. The first bars simmer, moody with a spare electric guitar that will come to seem like Lady Lamb’s fifth limb, and her voice has no huskiness that might indicate even an extra effort to get so low. “Love is selfish,” she leers, “love goes tick tock tick/And love knows Jesus/Apples and oranges.” What the fuck that means I don’t really care because the care with which she lets each word drop is exact- ing, like she’s mulling them over, unsure about them, wanting to view them from every angle, inside and out. Spaltro does this throughout the al- bum, sometimes seeming to actually move in with certain phrases, living with them for months before setting them free. But then, after just a hint of clicking static, late enough in a long song that you’ve forgotten it might happen, there it, sinking her teeth to the gums. Somehow, there’s a bass like a dance track, an old-school soul delivery with energy like Spaltro’s unhinged. Seriously. Listen to the mocking “ha, ha, ha, ha” that helps close the truly rocking “Bird Balloons,” which is otherwise like 6gig with rounded edges, plus a hip-hop bra- vado: “I’m a ghost and you all know it/I’m singing songs and I ain’t slowin’.” And is that Dr. Dre programming the strings af- ter the tempo change into a strut? But we’re talking unhinged. How about “I still need your teeth in my organs” as a repeated lament? It’s what drives “You Are the Apple,” a jazz-punk tune that features a sneaky three-note guitar riff and stalker vamp. She’s magnesium on fire, but you never want to look away. After years of living only with her first demos done in a home set-up, the amount of volume and body Brooklyn-based pro- ducer Nadim Issa delivers from such sparse arrangements (all done by Spaltro) is just so satisfying. It’s every bit an artist com- ing into her own. To see this executed with a full band — to reportedly include bass, drums, trumpets, trombone, violins, viola, cello, tuba, clarinet, keyboards, autoharp, and a choir (maybe not all at once) — will be pretty special, indeed. Often enough, though, Spaltro proves she doesn’t need much accompaniment at all. “Regarding the Ascending Stairs” is a banjo tune like Abigail Washburn’s sorta-goth sister, where you can hear her walk in, sit down, and begin to play, and the sentiment is like this: “You handle me like an infant skull/And I cradle you like a newborn nightmare.” After a whole song’s worth of patience, a playful electric bass line pops in, along with a tambourine. It fades and comes back even better, integrated with the ban- jo plucking so that they bounce off each other like helium atoms in a balloon. How is this woman only 23? Her feel for dynamics, depth of feeling, and general grace are pretty special. To think that this is just the beginning? That’s fairly exciting. ^ Ripely pine | Released by lady lamb the beekeeper | on ba da bing Records, Feb 19 | at Space Gallery, in portland | march 2 | lady- lambthebeekeeper.com A LIoneSS of A LAdy LAMb The Powerful debuT: Ripely pine is a full rock entrance: “It’s a zoo in your room ... and you long to kiss like you won’t exist come the morningtime.” The drums come in rapid-fire bursts and then there is a muscular and grungy distorted guitar solo before we’re alternately ca- ressed and slapped by a cappella vocals and staccato bursts of guitar. From that point forward, you’re on notice to be on your toes. In songs that often sprawl out past five minutes, and sometimes build in chambers of backing strings and horns, Lady Lamb will take you wherever her muse leads and it’s nigh impossible not to follow. “Rooftop” is the “single,” released first to the public as though for a radio station that doesn’t exist, a compact three min- utes. It’s probably the catchiest out of the gate, with a quick snare keeping things lively and an indie-rock plinking of notes moving up and down the fretboard as a central message. But then are there trom- bones that bleed in, just a scratch of high- up fiddle, then a full-on string section laying a backing bed, even clanking pots and pans for God’s sake, so much going on that it’s nearly overwhelming. Overwhelming is Spaltro’s stock and trade. Hearing her live, even if only on the Live at Brighton Music Hall album that was just kind of given life and let wander on the Internet last year, you’ll find she may be even more strident and invested than she is here in the studio, taking a song like “Aubergine” and burying her face in FWAX TAbLeT WAXTAbleT@PhX.cOm Often enough, Spaltro proves she doesn’t need much accompaniment at all. F there’s a debate raging in the Wax Tablet offices about which is more colorful: the sun- shine-and-lollipops imagery of inaugural poet richard Blanco’s “one today,” or the sparkling new video for Jaw GemS’ “Star Visor.” it’s heat- ed. Some are in thrall to Blanco’s lyrical paean to “finishing one more report for the boss on time” and testament to building the “last floor of the Freedom tower.” others are more passionate about the imaginative stanzas of tyler Quist and hassan muhammad’s synth lines. Some quiver at Blanco’s rendering of “one moon like a silent drum tapping on every rooftop;” others at the stilted, jittery meter of dJ moore’s drumwork. Some line up to salute the poet’s “rhythm of traffic lights, fruit stands: apples, limes, and oranges arranged like rainbows begging our praise(,)” while others can’t pull themselves away from the drippily kaleidoscopic visuals of direc- tors Jay Brown and paul mihailoff. While our hQ remains bitterly divided, make sure your personal bureau of creative arts stays well informed. Robert Stillman S h e r V iN l a iN e makinG heR own imaGe lady lamb the beekeeper gets going with a powerful disc. 7:30 PM Refresher Lessons before Saturday dances 1/26/13-American Tango-Deb Roy Marita Kennedy-Castro offers West African Dance Classes Thursdays 7:15-8:30PM Cost: $40 for 4 classes or $12 for Drop-ins (1st class is 1/2 price) Chinese/Taiwanese Cuisine Dine in or Take out 15 Temple Street Portland, Maine (207)773-9559 www.bubblemaineia.com Bubb le Tea , Shav ed Ice , Smoo thies and m ore.... Free WiFi Enjoy the Summer! Monday-Friday 11-4 & Saturday AND Sunday 11-5 65 Market Street in the Old Port 761.4441 LArge bOw L OF SOuP ONLy $3! with this coupon Listings SUNDAY 27 BRIAN BORU | Portland | open tradi- tional Irish session | 3 pm DOBRA TEA | Portland | “Rhythmic Cypher” open mic & poetry slam | 7 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Trap Night,” hip hop with Pensivv + El Shupacabra + Sandbag + Mr Harps + God.Damn.Chan. + Psychologist | 9 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Sean Mencher | 11 am OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | open mic | 6 pm RIRA | Portland | Sly-Chi | noon SPACE GALLERY | Portland | Ian Sve- nonius: “Supernatural Strategies,” book reading & DJ set | 7:30 pm STYXX | Portland | karaoke with Cherry Lemonade | 7 pm MONDAY 28 BIG EASY | Portland | “The Players’ Ball,” funk jam | 9 pm | $3 EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: open jam | 6 pm | downstairs: North of Nashville | 8 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Lord Earth + Builder of the House | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Captain Steve | 9:30 pm TUESDAY 29 BIG EASY | Portland | “Cover to Cov- er,” live album cover night: Mama’s Boomshack perform Parliament’s “Mothership Connection,” with original set | 9 pm | $5 BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | open mic poetry with Port Veritas | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: Will Gattis + Scott Girouard | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 10 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Mark Dennis | 7 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | open mic with Joint Enterprise | 8-11 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | open mic | 9:30 pm SLAINTE | Portland | karaoke with DJ Ponyfarm | 9 pm WEDNESDAY 30 ASYLUM | Portland | upstairs: kara- oke with DJ Johnny Red | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | “Rap Night,” with Ill By Instinct + Shupe | 9 pm | $3 BINGA’S STADIUM | Portland | down- stairs: DJ Verbatum | 8:30 pm BLUE | Portland | Tim Adam’s Bodhran Spectacular | 7:30 pm | tra- ditional Irish session | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | upstairs: “Clash of the Titans: T Rex vs ELO,” live cover night | 9:30 pm | $6 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Isaiah Bennett | 7:30 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Jennifer Porter | 6 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | old time music jam | 7 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Portland | Tift Merritt + David Wax Museum | 8 pm | $18-22 RIRA | Portland | Jeff Cusack | 8:30 pm !GET LISTED Send an e-mail to submit@phx.com CLUBS GREATER PORTLAND THURSDAY 24 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | karaoke with DJ Billy Young 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Al’s Basement,” with DJ King Alberto | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | Band Beyond Description | 10 pm BLUE | Portland | Katrin | 7 pm | Samu- el James & Dana Gross | 9 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | Heart Shaped Rock | 9 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Ghost of Paul Revere | 8 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | downstairs: Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies | 7:30 pm | upstairs: Phutureprimitive + Of the Trees | 9 pm | $12 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Ben John- son + Kissing Club + Oliver Water- man | 9 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Birdland Jazz Quartet | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Vinyl Tap | 8 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | DJ Boondocks | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Two Tree + Arborea | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Port- land | Portland Jazz Orchestra | 8 pm | $5-9 PEARL | Portland | Maine Electronic | 10 pm PEPPERCLUB | Portland | Chipped Enamel | 7:30 pm RIRA | Portland | Kilcollins | 10 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Kate | 9 pm FRIDAY 25 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | VJ Pulse 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Plague,” goth/industrial night with Scavenger + Znuh + Bullet Bill | 9 pm | $2-5 BIG EASY | Portland | “Cover to Cov- er,” live album cover night: When Particles Collide perform Green Day’s “Dookie,” with original set | 9 pm | $5 BLUE | Portland | Bob Rasero | 6 pm | Putnam Murdock | 8 pm | Trapparatus | 10 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | Jason Spoon- er Band | 9 pm | Jumpoff | 9 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “80s Night,” with DJ Jon | 9 pm | $5 BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/FREEPORT | Freeport | Travis James Humphrey & the Honky Tonk Love Machine | 9:30 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Brian Patricks | 5 pm | Travis James Humphrey | 5 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | upstairs: Coke Weed + An Evening With + Micah Blue Smaldone | 9 pm | $6 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Slow & Low,” EDM with Mr. Dereloid + Ed Garrison + Chris Gauthier | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Great Western Plain + MiniBoone + Bunny’s Swine + R.S.O. | 9 pm | $5 GILBERT’S CHOWDER HOUSE/ WINDHAM | Windham | Ralph Arse- nault | 6 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Blue Steel Express | 9 pm GOLD ROOM | Portland | Chance Lang- ton | 8 pm | $10 JAMESON TAVERN | Freeport | Travis James Humphrey | 6 pm JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | Portland | DJ Roy LOCAL BUZZ | Cape Elizabeth | Brian Patricks | 8 pm | Tumbling Bones | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | “Resurgam Records,” show- case | 7 pm MAYO STREET ARTS | Portland | Greg Jamie + Lisa/Liza + Wesley Allen Hart- ley + Acid Smoker | 8 pm | $5 OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Portland | Chad Hollister Trio | 8 pm | $15-20 PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | karaoke with DJ Bob Libby | 9 pm RIRA | Portland | Complaints | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Tony B | 9 pm ZACKERY’S | Portland | Straight Lace | 8:30 pm | $5 SATURDAY 26 51 WHARF | Portland | lounge: DJ Tony B | 9 pm | main floor: DJ Jay-C | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | upstairs: “Strike a Chord: a Music Discovery Fun- house,” interactive music exhibit with Portland Music Foundation | noon | downstairs: “Balance,” house music with Marcus Caine + Jeremy Chaim + VJ Foo + Ed Garrison | 9 pm | upstairs: Gin Blossoms + Worried Well + Crash Boom Bang | 9 pm | $26-29 BAYSIDE BOWL | Portland | “Tiki Freakout,” with Vivisectors + Icepicks + Caught Flies + Zombie Beach | 8 pm | $5 BIG EASY | Portland | Sly-Chi + Ey- enine | 8:30 pm | $8 BLUE | Portland | Marc Chillemi Quartet | 6 pm | Domino Jazz | 8 pm | Wurlibird | 10 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “Everything Dance Party,” with DJ Jon | 9 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Wetsuits EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | upstairs: All Good Feel Good Collec- tive + Eight Feet Tall + Joint Chiefs | 9 pm | $5 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Electro- vangogh + Animal Colors | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Her Majesty’s Cabaret + Wilbur Wilbur Nealbur + A Severe Joy + Chamberlain | 9 pm | $5 GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Rick Miller & His Band | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Chronic Funk JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | Portland | DJ Roy LOCAL BUZZ | Cape Elizabeth | Nick Ludington | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Tumbling Bones | 11 am | Dark Follies + So Sol + Lauren Zuniga | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | club: DJ Lenza | 8 pm | downstairs: DJ Tiny Dancer | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Port- land | Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters | 8 pm | $27-30 PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | DJ Jim Fahey | 9 pm RIRA | Portland | Tickle | 10 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | karaoke with Long Island Larry | 8:30 pm SLAINTE | Portland | “Dance Night,” with Deejay Tremendous Cream + Deejay Marieke VI | 9 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Mosart212 STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Chris O | 9 pm | front room: DJ Kate Rock | 9 pm SLAINTE | Portland | open mic | 8 pm | Kwesi Kankam | 10 pm THURSDAY 31 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | karaoke with DJ Billy Young 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Al’s Basement,” with DJ King Al- berto | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | Band Beyond Description | 10 pm BLUE | Portland | Wesley Hartley & the Traveling Trees + Sorcha + Henry Jamison | 7 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | North of Nashville | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies | 7:30 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Blaq- dada,” with Che Ros + Bary Juicy | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Diapasyn + KBG | 8 pm | $5 GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Octane | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Vinyl Tap | 8 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | DJ Boondocks | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Jimmy Dority | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PEARL | Portland | Maine Electronic | 10 pm RIRA | Portland | Kilcollins | 10 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Kate | 9 pm MAINE THURSDAY 24 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | open mic with Coopers | 8:30 pm BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Calibur BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | karaoke BEBE’S BURRITOS | Biddeford | Dan Stevens | 6:30 pm BIG EASY LOUNGE | Bangor | Kevin Bate | 9 pm BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | kara- oke with Pete Powers | 9 pm BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | karaoke with DJ Biggs | 9 pm FRESH | Camden | Lee Sykes | 6 pm FRONTIER CAFE | Brunswick | “Frontiers of Music #7,” with New England Improvisers Orchestra | 7 pm | by donation FUSION | Lewiston | open mic | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 8 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | Red Stripes THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Juke Joint Devils | 7 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | DJ Steady + Dray Sr. + Dray Jr. + Envy MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Mike Rodrigue | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | North of Nashville | 8 pm PHOENIX PUB | Bangor | DJ Reid | 8 pm THE RACK | Kingfield | open mic RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Pitch Black Ribbons | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | Hurry Down Sunshine | 6 pm Continued on p 26 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 25 81 Market St. Portland (across from Tommy's Park) VisiT us aT www.arcanamaine.com To book or To read abouT The oTher serVices ThaT we offer! healing arTs, sTaTemenT Jewelry, local crafT Only $55 your first hour Massage or acupuncture session 248 Saint John Street Portland, ME 04102 (207) 774-2219 Summa Cum LOUD Saddleback is one of only SEVEN ski mountains in New England with a top elevation over 4,000 ft. • Top Elevation: 4,120 ft with summit snowfields • Vertical Drop: 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Listings Continued from p 25 SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau FRIDAY 25 ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | Ken- nebunkport | karaoke | 8:30 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft | DJ Knotty Bear BIG EASY LOUNGE | Bangor | Saman- tha Lynn | 9 pm BILLY’S TAVERN | Thomaston | 220s | 9 pm BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Belfast Brogue BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Poke Chop & The Other White Meats | 9 pm THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Tickle | 8:30 pm BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | Dexter | Dee- jay Relykz BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | Bitter Brew | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd- eford | DJ Filthy Rich | 9 pm CRYSTAL FALLS | Chelsea | Almost There | 9 pm FEDERAL JACK’S | Kennebunk | Kilcol- lins | 10:30 pm FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | Wells | Karaoke Annie | 8 pm FRESH | Camden | Mehuman Johnson | 6 pm FUSION | Lewiston | Veggies By Day GATCH’S FOOD & SPIRITS | Rumford | Ragged Jack | 8 pm GUTHRIE’S | Lewiston | A Moment’s Notice | 8 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Rock- in’ Ron | 9 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | Ran- dom Order KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Gorilla Fin- ger Dub Band | 8 pm LEGENDS RESTAURANT | Newry | Denny Breau | 7 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Girls, Guns, & Glory | 9 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | DJ Laser Lou MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | Bethel | Brad Hooper | 8 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Chuck & Jerry | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Last Kid Picked | 9 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | Him & Her | 8 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Dakota PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | Newry | Nick Racciopi | 7 pm THE RACK | Kingfield | Darlin’ Corey | 9 pm RAVEN’S ROOST | Brunswick | Red Sky Mary | 8 pm SHOOTERS BILLIARDS BAR & GRILL | Lincoln | karaoke SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Cow- boy Billy SLIDERS RESTAURANT | Newry | David Mello | 7 pm SPLITTERS | Augusta | karaoke SUDS PUB | Bethel | Dan Stevens | 7:30 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | karaoke TUG’S PUB | Southport | Steve Jones Trio | 5:30 pm VACANCY PUB | Old Orchard Beach | karaoke | 9 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins | 9 pm WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | Kingfield | Ross Livermore Band SATURDAY 26 ALL AMERICAN TAVERN | West Paris | Jordan Kaulback + Frontline BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Maine Event | 9 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | Black Rose BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Paddy Mills BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Pam Baker & the SGs | 9 pm BRIDGE STREET TAVERN | Augusta | Dead Season THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Hurri- canes | 8:30 pm BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | Dexter | Richard Cranium BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | Bitter Brew | 8 pm | Bitter Brew | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | DJ Filthy Rich | 9 pm CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | Jeroba Jump | 8 pm THE FOGGY GOGGLE | Newry | Joshua Tree [U2 tribute] | 9 pm FUSION | Lewiston | DJ Kool V | 9 pm THE GREEN ROOM | Sanford | Sun Dog | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 3 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | ForeFront THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | Nikki Hunt Band KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Lower East Side | 8 pm LEGENDS RESTAURANT | Newry | Jim Gallant | 7 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Mud- dy Marsh Ramblers | 9 pm LOMPOC CAFE | Bar Harbor | Forget Forget MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | DJ Ken | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Sam Shain & the Scolded Dogs | 9 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | Back in Black [AC/DC Tribute] MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | Bethel | Pete Kilpatrick | 8:30 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Ron Durgin Trio | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Last Kid Picked | 9 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | Kevin Bate | 8 pm THE OAK AND THE AX | Biddeford | O’Death + “Little” Timmy Findlen & His Aroostook Hillbillies | 8 pm | $10 PEAK LODGE | Newry | Poke Chop & The Other White Meats | 7 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Dakota PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | Newry | Deepshine | 4 pm | Shut Down Brown | 9 pm RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Girls, Guns, & Glory | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | “Young Musician Showcase” | 6 pm SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | karaoke with DJ Stormin’ Norman | 10 pm SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Re- cord Family | Record Family SLIDERS RESTAURANT | Newry | Adam Waxman | 7 pm STUDIO BISTRO AND BAR | Bethel | Caroline Cotter | 7:30 pm TUCKER’S PUB | Norway | Denny Breau + Arlo West WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | Rock Street Refugees | 9 pm WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | Kingfield | Ross Livermore Band YORK HARBOR INN | York Harbor | Dan Stevens | 8 pm SUNDAY 27 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | Tom Rebmann | 11 am BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | open mic | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | karaoke with DJ Don Corman | 9:30 pm FRESH | Camden | Blind Albert | 6 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Bobby do J-Max | 5 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | karaoke with DJ Ed McCurdy | 7 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic blues jam | 4 pm MONDAY 28 FRESH | Camden | Paddy Mills | 6 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | open mic | 8:30 pm MARGARITA’S/AUBURN | Auburn | karaoke | 8 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | kara- oke | 9:30 pm PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | Lewiston | open mic SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAK- ERY | Hallowell | Denny Breau + Paul Melynn + Ann Breau | 8:15 pm | $15 TUESDAY 29 CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | karaoke | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm THE END ZONE | Waterville | open mic | 5 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Dave Mello | 6 pm | open mic blues jam with Dave Mello | 9 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | open mic | 7 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | jazz jam with G Majors | 7 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | open mic | 9:30 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | DJ Tew Phat | 7 pm WEDNESDAY 30 BACK BURNER TAVERN | Brownfield | open acoustic jam CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm CHARLAMAGNE’S | Augusta | open mic DAVIS ISLAND GRILL | Edgecomb | open mic FAST BREAKS | Lewiston | open blues jam with Denny Breau FUSION | Lewiston | VJ Pulse | 9 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | karaoke IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | ka- raoke THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | open jam with Derek Savage | 9 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | karaoke with DJ Ed McCurdy | 7 pm SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | open mic | 9:30 pm WOODMAN’S BAR & GRILL | Orono | open mic | 10 pm THURSDAY 31 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | open mic with Coopers | 8:30 pm BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Cali- bur BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | karaoke BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Gorilla Finger Dub Band | 9 pm BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd- eford | karaoke with DJ Biggs | 9 pm THE DEPOT PUB | Gardiner | Nikki Hunt Band FUSION | Lewiston | open mic | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 8 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | Red Stripes IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | Mike Krapovicky THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Steve Jones Band | 7 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | DJ Baby Bok Choy + DJ T Coz | 8 pm 26 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Continued on p 28 THE RACK | Kingfield | open mic RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Pat Foley | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | Hurry Down Sunshine | 6 pm SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau NEW HAMPSHIRE THURSDAY 24 BARLEY PUB | Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes Trio CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | James McGarvey | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Maganahan’s Revival THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Chris O’Neil | 8:30 pm MARTINGALE WHARF | Ports- mouth | B-Cap | 8 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Bob Halperin | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Joel Cage | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Chris Klaxton | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Tim Theriault | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Irish session | 6 pm | Lady Soul + Wave/ Decay + Blacklight Ruckus | 9 pm | $5 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Bad Baby | 8 pm FRIDAY 25 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | Seth Gooby + Peter Squires CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs | 9 pm DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Charlotte Locke + Nemes | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim McCoy & the Papercuts HILTON GARDEN INN | Portsmouth | Wellfleet THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Side Car | 8:30 pm HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | Seabrook | Ghosts of Rory + A Minor Revolution KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Livin’ the Dream | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm THE LOFT AT STRAFFORD FARMS | Dover | Dan Walker MARTINGALE WHARF | Ports- mouth | Marina Davis & Dave Brown | 8 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Bob Arens & Margo Reola | 8 pm PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Ports- mouth | grill: Sev | 9:30 pm | pub: Brooks Hubbard | 10 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Juliet & the Lonesome Romeos | 9 pm | $5 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | George Vala + Audioprophecy | 9 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Duke Snyder | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Brickyard Blues | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Big Ol’ Dirty Bucket + Eight Feet Tall | 9 pm | $5-7 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Old Abode | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Old Bas- tards | 9 pm SATURDAY 26 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | Jamsterdam CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs | 9 pm CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | Double Shot DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | A Simple Complex + East is East | 9 pm FAT BELLY’S | Portsmouth | DJ Provo | 7 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Watkinsonics HILTON GARDEN INN | Portsmouth | Rick Watson THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Robert Charles | 8:30 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Gazpacho | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Don Severance | 8 pm PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Portsmouth | grill: Dave Clark | 9:30 pm | pub: Jimmy D | 10 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Larry Garland & Friends | 1 pm | Jim Dozet Group | 9 pm | $5 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Matt McNeill | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Tim Theriault | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Chris Klaxton | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Rhythm Method | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Para- noid Social Club | 9 pm | $10 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Todo Bien | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Rage | 9 pm SUNDAY 27 DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | kara- oke with DJ Erich Kruger | 8 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Jon Lorentz Quartet | 6 pm | $10 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Green Lion Crew | 9 pm | $5 RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Sharon Jones | 11 am SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Jim Gallant | 7 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open mic with Dave Ogden | 7 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Rob Ben- ton | 9 pm MONDAY 28 CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke with Davey K | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Jim Dozet Trio | 8 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | “Hush Hush Sweet Harlot,” with Jay Psaros + GramaFoma | 8 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Oran Mor | 7 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Old School | 9 pm TUESDAY 29 103 RESTAURANT | Rochester | ka- raoke | 8 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke with Nick Papps | 10 pm COUSIN SAM’S PIZZERIA AND BREW | Rochester | Tony Santesse | 5 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim Theriault | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | ka- raoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | jazz jam with Larry Garland | 5:30 pm | “Hoot,” open mic | 9 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | George Belli | 8 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | blue- grass jam with Dave Talmage | 9 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm WEDNESDAY 30 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | open mic | 8:30 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | DJ Bobby Freedom CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | open mic | 8 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | All Good Feel Good Collective MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | ka- raoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Ross Robinson | 9 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Eva- redy | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Dimitri Yian- nicopulus | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Kate Redgate | 8 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Reverie Machine WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | “Hip Hop Wednesdays,” with DJ Provo + Hustle Simmons | 9 pm THURSDAY 31 BARLEY PUB | Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes Trio CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Southbound Outlaws | 9 pm THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Dave Gerard | 8 pm HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | Seabrook | Granite Planet PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Back on the Train | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Fil Pacino | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | John Franzosa | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Frank Drake Trio | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Irish session | 6 pm | “Tightgroove Record- ings Takeover,” EDM night | 9 pm | $3-5 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Eddie Japan + Kingsley Flood | 9 pm COMEDY THURSDAY 24 OPEN MIC | 8 pm | Slainte, 24 Preble St, Portland | 207.828.0900 FRIDAY 25 FOCUS GROUP | improv comedy | 8 pm | Next Generation Theatre, 39 Center St, Brewer | 207.989.7100 or nextgenerationtheatre.com TOM HAYES + JAY GROVE + TAMMY POOLER | 8 pm | Franco- American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $10-12 | 207.689.2000 SATURDAY 26 ERIN DONOVAN: “I’M GONNA KILL HIM” | 7:30 pm | Camden Opera House, 29 Elm St, Camden | $15 | 207.236.7963 or www.camdenopera- house.com SUNDAY 27 ”OFFBEAT COMEDY,” OPEN MIC | 9 pm | Mama’s Crowbar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230 THURSDAY 31 OPEN MIC | See listing for Thurs CONCERTS CLASSICAL THURSDAY 24 ROY MACNEIL | 7:30 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Cor- thell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gorham | 207.780.5256 FRIDAY 25 ”THE GOLD RUSH,” FILM SCREEN- ING & LIVE SCORE BY TEMPO | 7 pm | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ells- worth | $15, $10 youth 12 & under | 207.667.9500 or grandonline.org SATURDAY 26 CHRISTOPHER O’RILEY: “OUT OF MY HANDS” | 7:30 pm | Franco- American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $27, $15 students un- der 18 | 207.689.2000 UNH CHORAL GALA | 7 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html SUNDAY 27 BANGOR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: “BACH, MOZART, MAHLER” | 3 pm | Collins Center for the Arts, Univer- sity of Maine, 5746 Collins Center for the Arts, Orono | $19-43 | 207.581.1755 PORTLAND SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA: “HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOZART” | 2:30 pm | Merrill Audito- rium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | $26-64 | 207.842.0800 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 27 Greater Portland’s only conservatory-style acting school “We grow great performances” ACTING CLASSES www.acorn-productions.org 854-0065 It’s not too late to sign up! Winter classes for adults and children began this week, but we still have room in many classes. No experience necessary - visit our website to sign up! AtlAntis MAssAge $50/hour Specializing in repetitive use injuries & Japanese hot stones. Jennifer Lague LMT & AMTA Member State Theater Building 615 Congress St. Suite 601-i 409.4370 atlantismassage@yahoo.com facebook: atlantis Massage Listings Continued from p 27 MONDAY 28 ”DECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MUSIC SEASON 5 - CONCERT 1” | 6 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $12-15 | 207.761.1757 TUESDAY 29 ETHEL: “FLASH CONCERT” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org WEDNESDAY 30 ETHEL: “PRESENT BEAUTY” | 7:30 pm | Portland Ovations, Hannaford Hall, Abromson Community Cen- ter, 93 Bedford St, Portland | $46, $42 seniors | 207.842.0800 THURSDAY 31 PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHES- TRA: “KINDERKONZERT” | 9:30 &10:30 am | Crooker Theater, Bruns- wick High School, 116 Maquoit Rd, Brunswick | 207.319.1910 POPULAR FRIDAY 25 AUDIOBODY | 7 pm | Fryeburg Acad- emy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | $15, $10 students | 207.935.9232 or frye- burgacademy.org ”HEAR MY SONG: THE BEST OF BROADWAY & BEYOND,” WITH MARIE PRESSMAN & ED REICHERT | 8 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Corthell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gor- ham | 207.780.5256 JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER OR- CHESTRA | 8 pm | Portland Ova- tions, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | sold out | 207.842.0800 MARTIN SEXTON + ALTERNATE ROUTES | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $25-30 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreport- land.com MATANA ROBERTS: “PROLOGUE” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Studz- inski Recital Hall, Kanbar Audito- rium, 3900 College Station, Bruns- wick | 207.798.4141 OLD SOUL | 6 pm | Motorland Vin- tage America, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | 207.710.6699 PAUL BYROM | 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllon- donderry.com SHANNA UNDERWOOD | Fri-Sat 7 pm | Samoset Resort, 220 Warrenton St, Rockport | 207.596.6055 SNAEX + MATT ROCK + NATHAN SALSBURG | 8 pm | Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St, Portland | $5 | 207.671.7792 SATURDAY 26 BONEHEADS | 8 pm | Boothbay Har- bor Opera House, 86 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | $10 | 207.633.6855 CHRIS SMITHER | 7:30 pm | Choco- late Church Arts Center, 804 Wash- ington St, Bath | $22-25 | 207.442.8455 or chocolatechurcharts.org DON CAMPBELL: “AN EVENING OF DAN FOGELBERG MUSIC” | 7:30 pm | Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer St, South Portland | $22 | 207.799.1421 or lyricmusictheater.com JP JOFRE HARD TANGO CHAMBER BAND | 7 pm | Strand Theatre, 345 Main St, Rockland | $35, $25 adults 21-35, $10 youth under 21 | 207.594.0070 SHANNA UNDERWOOD | See list- ing for Fri WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | Sat 7 pm; Sun 4 pm | Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodford St, Portland | $15, $10 seniors/students | 207.774.8243 or woodfordschurch.org SUNDAY 27 ANNI CLARK & DOUG BENNETT BAND | 3 pm | York Public Library, 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 HIGHLAND SOLES + DAN SONEN- BERG + ANNIE FINCH + RAY SCOTT | 2 pm | Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave, Portland | $15, $10 youth 18 & under | 207.772.8277 WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | See listing for Sat MONDAY 28 FRED BUDA QUINTET | 8 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html WEDNESDAY 30 ENGLISH BEAT | 8 pm | Tupelo Mu- sic Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $35-40 | 603.437.5100 or tupelo- halllondonderry.com KEANE + YOUNGBLOOD HAWKE | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $30-35 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreportland.com DANCE PARTICIPATORY FRIDAY 25 SACRED CIRCLE DANCE | 7 pm | Portsmouth Center for Yoga and the Arts, 95 Albany St #9, Portsmouth, NH | $5 | 603.431.4755 | www.ports- mouthyoga.com SATURDAY 26 BALLROOM DANCE PARTY | 8 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $7 | 207.439.0114 CONTRA DANCE WITH JENNY VAN WEST & FRIENDS | 8 pm | Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St, Portland | $7 | 207.615.3609 SUNDAY 27 ECSTATIC DANCE | 10 am | Ecstatic Dance Maine, 408 Broadway, South Portland | $10-15 sugg. donation | 207.408.2684 | ecstaticdanceme.com PERFORMANCE FRIDAY 25 TAP TAP JAZZ | Fri 7 pm; Sat 1 & 4 pm | Maine State Ballet, 348 Rte 1, Falmouth | $15-20 | 207.781.7672 | www.mainestateballet.org SATURDAY 26 DARK FOLLIES + SO SOL + LAUREN ZUNIGA | 7 pm | Local Sprouts Coop- erative, 649 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 | localsproutscoopera- tive.com RED, HOT, & LADYLIKE + SO- NARDANCE + DJ ASIA + JESSANI BELLYDANCE | 6:30 pm | Avant Dance & Event Center, 865 Spring St, Westbrook | $15 | 207.899.4211 | avantmaine.com TAP TAP JAZZ | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 SOUL STREET DANCE: “TAKIN’ IT TO THE STREET” | Soul Street Dance | 10 & 11:30 am | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ellsworth | $3 | 207.667.9500 | grandonline.org EVENTS FRIDAY 25 ”SUSTAIN MAINE,” PEP RALLY FOR “NO TAR SANDS RALLY” | with performance by Substitutes | 5 pm | Empire Dine And Dance, 575 Congress St, Portland | 207.879.8988 SATURDAY 26 ”SAME-SEX MARRIAGE ‘WED- DING RECEPTION,’” COMMUNITY CELEBRATION | 6 pm | St Ansgar Lutheran Church, 515 Congress St, Portland | free | 207.774.8740 ”TAR SANDS FREE NORTHEAST DAY OF ACTION,” TAR SANDS OIL PROTEST & AWARENESS RALLY | 11:30 am | Monument Square, Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.9979 WEDNESDAY 30 WINTER BIRD WALK | with Anna Stunkel | 1 pm | College of the Atlan- tic, Dorr Museum, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5395 THURSDAY 31 ”WESTBROOK FEUD,” LIVE GAME SHOW | benefit | 6:30 pm | West- brook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St, Westbrook | $7, $5 students | 207.857.3860 FAIRS & FESTIVALS FRIDAY 25 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHTLIFE CELEBRATION | vari- ous locations | downtown Portland | 207.772.6828 | www.portlandmaine. com/cornerstone-events/ SATURDAY 26 ”CAMDEN WINTERFEST” | with crafts, face painting, & activities | noon | Camden Public Library, 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.3440 | mainedreamvacation.com/event/ camden-winterfest ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri SUNDAY 27 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri TUESDAY 29 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri WEDNESDAY 30 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | downtown Biddeford | 207.284.8520 | www.heartofbiddeford.org/ ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri THURSDAY 31 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | See listing for Wed ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri FOOD SATURDAY 26 FARMERS’ MARKET | 9:30 am | Saco River Market, Saco Island, 110 Main St, Biddeford WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET | 9 am | Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St, Portland | 207.780.0118 or maineirish.com TUESDAY 29 4-COURSE LASAGNA DINNER | 6 pm | Wellness Forum, Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland | 207.409.7778 WEDNESDAY 30 CUMBERLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 10 am | Allen, Sterling, & Lothrop, 191 US Rte 1, Falmouth POETRY & PROSE THURSDAY 24 KATRINA KENISON | discusses Magical Journey: an Apprenticeship in Contentment | 6:30 pm | The Mu- sic Hall Loft, 131 Congress St, Ports- mouth, NH | $39 | 603.436.2400 FRIDAY 25 JOHN BOVE | discusses Two Weeks Notice...Aloha | noon | Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Sq, Portland | 207.871.1758 or portlandli- brary.com SATURDAY 26 ”LOCAL WRITERS” | poetry & prose readings | 4 pm | Local Buzz, 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth | 207.541.9024 STEVE ALMOND: “IF SEX SELLS, I’M BUYING: A NIGHT OF RED HOT EROTICA” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gal- lery, 538 Congress St, Portland | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538.org SUNDAY 27 IAN SVENONIUS: “SUPERNATU- RAL STRATEGIES” | with discus- sion of Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ‘n’ Roll Group, & DJ set | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org ”NEW HAMPSHIRE AUTHORS SERIES,” WITH REBECCA RULE | Joe Monninger discusses his non- fiction work | 2 pm | University of New Hampshire, Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | 603.862.1535 ”RHYTHMIC CYPHER” OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with Sarah Lynn Herklots + Mark Dennis | 7 pm | Dobra Tea, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.370.1890 MONDAY 28 MOSTLY HARMLESS BOOK GROUP | discuss Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com TUESDAY 29 INTERNATIONAL BOOK GROUP | discuss Barbara Nadel’s Belshaz- zar’s Daughter | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com JASON ANTHONY | discusses Hoosh: Roast Penguin, Scurvy Day, & Other Stories of Antarctic Cuisine | noon | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org JUSTIN GILLIS | New York Times reporter | 7 pm | College of the At- lantic, Deering Campus Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 OPEN MIC POETRY WITH PORT VERITAS | 9:30 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 ”SUPER BOWL POETRY SLAM,” WITH PORT VERITAS | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 THURSDAY 31 ”MAINE WOMEN WRITE” | with readings from Monica Wood + Bar- bara Walsh + Debra Spark + Morgan C. Rogers + Annie Finch | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Port- land | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538. org WESLEY MCNAIR | discusses his poetry volume, The Words I Chose: a Memoir of Family & Poetry | 6 pm | Portland Public Library, Rines Audi- torium, 5 Monument Sq, Portland TALKS THURSDAY 24 ”CLIMATE CHANGE ARRIVED -- NOW WHAT?” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.775.3321 ”DEEP THINGS OUT OF DARKNESS: A HISTORY OF NATURAL HISTO- RY” | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, Gates Community Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 steve almond presents ‘If Sex Sells, Then I’m Buying: A Night of Red Hot Erotica’ | SPACE Gallery, Jan 26 @ 7:30 pm 28 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Fresh Maine seaFood – done right IT’S HERE! LATE NIGHT HAPPY HOUR THURSDAY - SATURDAY TRIVIA NIGHT - LADIES NIGHTS - DART LEAGUES NOW SERVING SUNDAY BRUNCH 10AM - 2PM OPEN ALL WINTER! WED. - SUN 175 Lower main St. Freeport, Maine 04032 207 865 9105 freeportseafoodco.com ”DIRIGO NORTH & SOUTH: MAINE’S LONG & VARIED CONNEC- TION FROM THE POLAR WORLD” | with Charles H. Lagerbom | 7 pm | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org FRIDAY 25 ”CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE: THE IMPACT OF WAR ON THE LIVES OF CHILDREN” | with Dan Muller | 7 pm | Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St, Portland | 207.772.0680 or meg- perrycenter.com MONDAY 28 ”THE TROUBLE WITH MALARIA IN AFRICA” | with James L.A. Webb, Jr | 6 pm | University of New England - Portland, WCHP Lecture Hall, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | 207.221.4375 TUESDAY 29 ”ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLAN- NING” | 9 am | Midcoast Center for Higher Education, 9 Park St, Bath | 877.282.2182 ”ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLAN- NING” | 1 pm | Southern Midcoast CareerCenter, 275 Bath Rd, Bruns- wick | 800.281.3703 ”MAKING PARAGUAY REAL: THE POLITICS OF MEASUREMENT IN THE AGE OF REGULATION” | with Kregg Hetherington | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, McCormick Lecture Hall, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 or coa.edu WEDNESDAY 30 ”BUILDING HEALTHY COMMUNI- TIES: A PATHWAY TO HEALTH EQ- UITY” | with Georges C. Benjamin | noon | University of New England - Portland, Ludcke Auditorium, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | 207.221.4950 or une.edu THURSDAY 31 ”MANAGING YOUR ONLINE REPU- TATION” | with Matt Ivester | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Memorial Hall, Libra Theater Studio, Bruns- wick | 207.725.3225 ”NUCLEAR ARCHITECTURE IN CANCER & AGING-RELATED DIS- EASES” | with Lindsay Shopland | noon | University of New England - Biddeford, Alfond Hall, 11 Hills Beach Rd, Biddeford | 207.602.2888 THEATER BATES COLLEGE | | Schaeffer Black Box Theater, 329 College St, Lewiston | Jan 25-26: “Asia Night,” variety show | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm CASCO BAY HIGH SCHOOL | | 196 Allen Ave, Portland | Jan 25-27: Pippin | Fri-Sat 7 pm; Sun 2 pm FRYEBURG ACADEMY | 207.935.9232 | fryeburgacademy.org | Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | Jan 25: Audiobody | 7 pm | $15, $10 students GOOD THEATER | 207.885.5883 | goodtheater.com | St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St, Portland | Jan 30-Feb 24: Death by Design | Wed- Thurs 7 pm | $15-25 HEARTWOOD YOUTH ENSEMBLE | 207.563.1373 | heartwoodtheater.org | Parker B. Poe Theater, Lincoln Acad- emy, Academy Hill Rd, Newcastle | Jan 25-27: Ghost-Writer | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 3 pm HUSSON UNIVERSITY | 207.941.7051 | Gracie Theatre, 1 College Circle, Bangor | Jan 27: “Potted Potter! The Unauthorized Harry Experience: A Parody” | 3 & 8 pm | $25, $15 youth under 12 LAKE REGION COMMUNITY THE- ATRE | 207.838.3846 | Lake Region High School Auditorium, 1877 Roos- evelt Trail, Naples | Jan 25-26: Lovers & Other Strangers | Fri 7:30 pm; Sat 1 & 7:30 pm | $9 MAD HORSE THEATRE COMPANY | 207.730.2389 | Hutchins School, 24 Mosher St, South Portland | Jan 24-Feb 3: Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo | Thurs-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $22 MYSTERY FOR HIRE | 207.782.2088 | DaVinci’s Eatery, 150 Mill St, Lewiston | Jan 26: “Mystery at My Family Re- union,” dinner theater | 7 pm | $39 (incl. meal) NEXT GENERATION THEATRE | 207.989.7100 | nextgenerationtheatre. com | 39 Center St, Brewer | Jan 30: “The Nite Show with Dan Cash- man,” variety show | 6 pm O’BRIEN EVENTS CENTER | 207.873.0111 | 375 Main St, Waterville | Jan 26: Ray Santos, hypnotist | 8 pm PENOBSCOT THEATRE COMPANY | 207.942.3333 | penobscottheatre.org | Bangor Opera House, 131 Main St, Ban- gor | Jan 30-Feb 17: The Sugar Bean Sisters | Wed-Thurs 7 pm | $22 PLAYERS’ RING | 603.436.8123 | playersring.org | 105 Marcy St, Ports- mouth, NH | Jan 25-Feb 10: The Odd Couple | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 7 pm | $15, $12 seniors/students PORTLAND PLAYERS | 207.799.7337 | 420 Cottage Rd, Portland | Jan 25-Feb 10: Arsenic & Old Lace | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $20 PORTLAND STAGE COMPANY | 207.774.0465 | portlandstage.com | 25A Forest Ave, Portland | Through Feb 17: Greater Tuna | Thurs-Fri + Wed 7:30 pm; Sat 4 & 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $34-44 PUBLIC THEATRE | 207.782.3200 | thepublictheatre.org | 31 Maple St, Lewiston | Jan 25-Feb 3: The Hound of the Baskervilles | Fri + Thurs 7:30 pm; Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $18, $5 youth 18 & under ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE | 603.335.1992 | 31 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | Jan 24-Feb 2: All Shook Up | Thurs-Fri 8 pm; Sat 2 & 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $8-15 SANDY RIVER PLAYERS | 207.779.7084 | University of Maine - Farmington, Emery Community Arts Center, Farmington | Jan 25-27: Once Upon a Mattress | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $17, $15 students SEVEN STAGES SHAKESPEARE COMPANY | | 7stagesshakes.word- press.com | Press Room, 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH | Jan 28: “Shakes- BEERience: Two Gentlemen of Ve- rona” | 6:30 pm STATE THEATRE | 207.956.6000 | statetheatreportland.com | 609 Con- gress St, Portland | Jan 29: “Spank! The 50 Shades Parody” | 8 pm | $27.50-32.50 THEATER PROJECT | 207.729.8584 | theaterproject.com | 14 School St, Brunswick | Jan 25-Feb 10: “Winter Cabaret” | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | pay-what-you-want ART GALLERIES 3 FISH GALLERY | 772.342.6467 | 377 Cumberland Ave, Portland | 3fishgal- lery.com | Thurs-Sat 1-4 pm & by ap- pointment | Through Jan 31: “Smoke Stack Series,” works by Neill Ewing Wegmann 45 MEMORIAL CIRCLE | 207.622.3813 | Lobby Gallery, 45 Memorial Circle, Augusta | Through Jan 25: “Mapping the Air,” instal- lation by Donna Parkinson & Sarah Vosmus AARHUS GALLERY | 207.338.0001 | 50 Main St, Belfast | aarhusgallery. com | Thurs-Sun noon-6 pm | Jan 31- Feb 24: “Heart,” mixed media group exhibition ADDISON WOOLLEY GALLERY | 207.450.8499 | 132 Washington Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat noon-5 pm | Through Jan 26: “Travels With Eddie & Other Surprises,” photography by Diane Hudson + “Visual Whispers,” photography by Dan Dow ARTSTREAM STUDIO GALLERY | 603.330.0333 | 56 North Main St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Fri noon-6 pm; Sat 10 am-2 pm | Through Jan 30: “Prints of the Year,” group print- making exhibition AUCOCISCO GALLERIES | 207.775.2222 | 89 Exchange St, Port- land | aucocisco.com | Wed-Sat 11 am-5 pm, and by appointment | Through March 30: “Winter Salon,” mixed media group exhibition BUOY GALLERY | 207.450.2402 | 2 Government St, Kittery | Wed-Sat 5-9 pm | Through Jan 26: “Patterned Continued on p 30 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 29 Listings Continued from p 27 MONDAY 28 ”DECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MUSIC SEASON 5 - CONCERT 1” | 6 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $12-15 | 207.761.1757 TUESDAY 29 ETHEL: “FLASH CONCERT” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org WEDNESDAY 30 ETHEL: “PRESENT BEAUTY” | 7:30 pm | Portland Ovations, Hannaford Hall, Abromson Community Cen- ter, 93 Bedford St, Portland | $46, $42 seniors | 207.842.0800 THURSDAY 31 PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHES- TRA: “KINDERKONZERT” | 9:30 &10:30 am | Crooker Theater, Bruns- wick High School, 116 Maquoit Rd, Brunswick | 207.319.1910 POPULAR FRIDAY 25 AUDIOBODY | 7 pm | Fryeburg Acad- emy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | $15, $10 students | 207.935.9232 or frye- burgacademy.org ”HEAR MY SONG: THE BEST OF BROADWAY & BEYOND,” WITH MARIE PRESSMAN & ED REICHERT | 8 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Corthell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gor- ham | 207.780.5256 JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER OR- CHESTRA | 8 pm | Portland Ova- tions, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | sold out | 207.842.0800 MARTIN SEXTON + ALTERNATE ROUTES | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $25-30 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreport- land.com MATANA ROBERTS: “PROLOGUE” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Studz- inski Recital Hall, Kanbar Audito- rium, 3900 College Station, Bruns- wick | 207.798.4141 OLD SOUL | 6 pm | Motorland Vin- tage America, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | 207.710.6699 PAUL BYROM | 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllon- donderry.com SHANNA UNDERWOOD | Fri-Sat 7 pm | Samoset Resort, 220 Warrenton St, Rockport | 207.596.6055 SNAEX + MATT ROCK + NATHAN SALSBURG | 8 pm | Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St, Portland | $5 | 207.671.7792 SATURDAY 26 BONEHEADS | 8 pm | Boothbay Har- bor Opera House, 86 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | $10 | 207.633.6855 CHRIS SMITHER | 7:30 pm | Choco- late Church Arts Center, 804 Wash- ington St, Bath | $22-25 | 207.442.8455 or chocolatechurcharts.org DON CAMPBELL: “AN EVENING OF DAN FOGELBERG MUSIC” | 7:30 pm | Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer St, South Portland | $22 | 207.799.1421 or lyricmusictheater.com JP JOFRE HARD TANGO CHAMBER BAND | 7 pm | Strand Theatre, 345 Main St, Rockland | $35, $25 adults 21-35, $10 youth under 21 | 207.594.0070 SHANNA UNDERWOOD | See list- ing for Fri WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | Sat 7 pm; Sun 4 pm | Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodford St, Portland | $15, $10 seniors/students | 207.774.8243 or woodfordschurch.org SUNDAY 27 ANNI CLARK & DOUG BENNETT BAND | 3 pm | York Public Library, 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 HIGHLAND SOLES + DAN SONEN- BERG + ANNIE FINCH + RAY SCOTT | 2 pm | Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave, Portland | $15, $10 youth 18 & under | 207.772.8277 WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | See listing for Sat MONDAY 28 FRED BUDA QUINTET | 8 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html WEDNESDAY 30 ENGLISH BEAT | 8 pm | Tupelo Mu- sic Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $35-40 | 603.437.5100 or tupelo- halllondonderry.com KEANE + YOUNGBLOOD HAWKE | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $30-35 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreportland.com DANCE PARTICIPATORY FRIDAY 25 SACRED CIRCLE DANCE | 7 pm | Portsmouth Center for Yoga and the Arts, 95 Albany St #9, Portsmouth, NH | $5 | 603.431.4755 | www.ports- mouthyoga.com SATURDAY 26 BALLROOM DANCE PARTY | 8 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $7 | 207.439.0114 CONTRA DANCE WITH JENNY VAN WEST & FRIENDS | 8 pm | Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St, Portland | $7 | 207.615.3609 SUNDAY 27 ECSTATIC DANCE | 10 am | Ecstatic Dance Maine, 408 Broadway, South Portland | $10-15 sugg. donation | 207.408.2684 | ecstaticdanceme.com PERFORMANCE FRIDAY 25 TAP TAP JAZZ | Fri 7 pm; Sat 1 & 4 pm | Maine State Ballet, 348 Rte 1, Falmouth | $15-20 | 207.781.7672 | www.mainestateballet.org SATURDAY 26 DARK FOLLIES + SO SOL + LAUREN ZUNIGA | 7 pm | Local Sprouts Coop- erative, 649 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 | localsproutscoopera- tive.com RED, HOT, & LADYLIKE + SO- NARDANCE + DJ ASIA + JESSANI BELLYDANCE | 6:30 pm | Avant Dance & Event Center, 865 Spring St, Westbrook | $15 | 207.899.4211 | avantmaine.com TAP TAP JAZZ | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 SOUL STREET DANCE: “TAKIN’ IT TO THE STREET” | Soul Street Dance | 10 & 11:30 am | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ellsworth | $3 | 207.667.9500 | grandonline.org EVENTS FRIDAY 25 ”SUSTAIN MAINE,” PEP RALLY FOR “NO TAR SANDS RALLY” | with performance by Substitutes | 5 pm | Empire Dine And Dance, 575 Congress St, Portland | 207.879.8988 SATURDAY 26 ”SAME-SEX MARRIAGE ‘WED- DING RECEPTION,’” COMMUNITY CELEBRATION | 6 pm | St Ansgar Lutheran Church, 515 Congress St, Portland | free | 207.774.8740 ”TAR SANDS FREE NORTHEAST DAY OF ACTION,” TAR SANDS OIL PROTEST & AWARENESS RALLY | 11:30 am | Monument Square, Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.9979 WEDNESDAY 30 WINTER BIRD WALK | with Anna Stunkel | 1 pm | College of the Atlan- tic, Dorr Museum, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5395 THURSDAY 31 ”WESTBROOK FEUD,” LIVE GAME SHOW | benefit | 6:30 pm | West- brook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St, Westbrook | $7, $5 students | 207.857.3860 FAIRS & FESTIVALS FRIDAY 25 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHTLIFE CELEBRATION | vari- ous locations | downtown Portland | 207.772.6828 | www.portlandmaine. com/cornerstone-events/ SATURDAY 26 ”CAMDEN WINTERFEST” | with crafts, face painting, & activities | noon | Camden Public Library, 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.3440 | mainedreamvacation.com/event/ camden-winterfest ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri SUNDAY 27 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri TUESDAY 29 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri WEDNESDAY 30 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | downtown Biddeford | 207.284.8520 | www.heartofbiddeford.org/ ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri THURSDAY 31 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | See listing for Wed ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri FOOD SATURDAY 26 FARMERS’ MARKET | 9:30 am | Saco River Market, Saco Island, 110 Main St, Biddeford WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET | 9 am | Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St, Portland | 207.780.0118 or maineirish.com TUESDAY 29 4-COURSE LASAGNA DINNER | 6 pm | Wellness Forum, Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland | 207.409.7778 WEDNESDAY 30 CUMBERLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 10 am | Allen, Sterling, & Lothrop, 191 US Rte 1, Falmouth POETRY & PROSE THURSDAY 24 KATRINA KENISON | discusses Magical Journey: an Apprenticeship in Contentment | 6:30 pm | The Mu- sic Hall Loft, 131 Congress St, Ports- mouth, NH | $39 | 603.436.2400 FRIDAY 25 JOHN BOVE | discusses Two Weeks Notice...Aloha | noon | Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Sq, Portland | 207.871.1758 or portlandli- brary.com SATURDAY 26 ”LOCAL WRITERS” | poetry & prose readings | 4 pm | Local Buzz, 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth | 207.541.9024 STEVE ALMOND: “IF SEX SELLS, I’M BUYING: A NIGHT OF RED HOT EROTICA” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gal- lery, 538 Congress St, Portland | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538.org SUNDAY 27 IAN SVENONIUS: “SUPERNATU- RAL STRATEGIES” | with discus- sion of Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ‘n’ Roll Group, & DJ set | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org ”NEW HAMPSHIRE AUTHORS SERIES,” WITH REBECCA RULE | Joe Monninger discusses his non- fiction work | 2 pm | University of New Hampshire, Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | 603.862.1535 ”RHYTHMIC CYPHER” OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with Sarah Lynn Herklots + Mark Dennis | 7 pm | Dobra Tea, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.370.1890 MONDAY 28 MOSTLY HARMLESS BOOK GROUP | discuss Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com TUESDAY 29 INTERNATIONAL BOOK GROUP | discuss Barbara Nadel’s Belshaz- zar’s Daughter | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com JASON ANTHONY | discusses Hoosh: Roast Penguin, Scurvy Day, & Other Stories of Antarctic Cuisine | noon | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org JUSTIN GILLIS | New York Times reporter | 7 pm | College of the At- lantic, Deering Campus Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 OPEN MIC POETRY WITH PORT VERITAS | 9:30 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 ”SUPER BOWL POETRY SLAM,” WITH PORT VERITAS | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 THURSDAY 31 ”MAINE WOMEN WRITE” | with readings from Monica Wood + Bar- bara Walsh + Debra Spark + Morgan C. Rogers + Annie Finch | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Port- land | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538. org WESLEY MCNAIR | discusses his poetry volume, The Words I Chose: a Memoir of Family & Poetry | 6 pm | Portland Public Library, Rines Audi- torium, 5 Monument Sq, Portland TALKS THURSDAY 24 ”CLIMATE CHANGE ARRIVED -- NOW WHAT?” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.775.3321 ”DEEP THINGS OUT OF DARKNESS: A HISTORY OF NATURAL HISTO- RY” | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, Gates Community Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 steve almond presents ‘If Sex Sells, Then I’m Buying: A Night of Red Hot Erotica’ | SPACE Gallery, Jan 26 @ 7:30 pm 28 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com • Water pipes from Illadelph, HBG, MGW, Delta 9, and Medicali • Local hand blown glass from around the country • Tapestries and Posters • ONLY authorized Illadelph in the area. Northern Lights 1140 Br ighton Ave, Por t land , ME • (207) 772-9045 Mon-Sat 9am-9:30pm/Sun 10am-8pm MUST BE 18 TO PURCHASE TOBACCO PRODUCTS. Photo ID required. THE BEST selection of hookahs & accessories including Fantasia Shisha THE LARGEST selection of vaporizers (including parts and accessories) Enter to win our monthly raffle ($200 Value) hot dates 24/7 Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2012 PC LLC 234824/7 Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2012 PC LLC 1886 1-888-MegaMatesTM 1-888- MegaMatesTM 207.253.5200 For other local numbers call Tell-A- Friend REWARDSREWARDS (207) 828.0000 FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE TO LISTEN & REPLY TO ADS! Portland 207.253.5200 For other local numbers call: FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE to listen & reply to ads! Portland (207) 828.0000 Tickets: 207.774.0465 | www.portlandstage.org PROFESSIONAL THEATER MADE IN MAINE Ill us tr at io n by R us se ll C ox “The third smallest town in Texas,” where the Lions Club is too liberal and Patsy Cline never dies. A hysterical, off-beat comedy. Versatile performers Tom Ford and Dustin Tucker –both West Texas natives – team up to play over 20 of Tuna’s eccentric inhabitants, from gun-clubbers to church ladies, in a quick-changing two-man tour-de-force that celebrates and satirizes the quirks of small-town life. Sponsored by: L.L.Bean | Maine Home + Design | maine | Wright-Ryan Homes Wright Express | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram 72 Oak St. LOftS Arts District Living featuring Artist Workspace, Art Gallery, Large Windows, Natural Sunlight, Onsite Laundry, and Heat, Hot Water, and WiFi included. Income Limits Apply. fMI: avestahousing.org or 553-7780 x.253 Time to clean out. Time to get organized. Time to box up the no-longer used, worn, played with or needed. Time to donate to Goodwill - bringing order back to your home, while creating jobs, reducing landfills and putting clothes on your neighbor’s back. In fact, Goodwill has been reducing, recycling, repurposing and retraining for over 100 years. Now that’s just a bit of time creating a healthy, sustainable community where nothing goes to waste. Not a shirt. Not a shoe. Not a person. Goodwill. Seeking solutions that work. Join us. FALMOUTH Shaw’s Plaza follow us accredited committed GORHAM 102 Main St. PORTLAND 1104 Forest Ave. S. PORTLAND 555 Maine Mall Rd. S. PORTLAND Millcreek Plaza TOPSHAM 106 Park Dr. WINDHAM 31 Landing Rd. GORHAM BUY THE POUND 34 Hutcherson Dr. It’s time. goodwillnne.org Listings Continued from p 29 Vernacular,” works by Jenny McGee Dougherty + Katrine Hildebrant- Hussey CHOCOLATE CHURCH ARTS CEN- TER | 207.442.8455 | 804 Washington St, Bath | chocolatechurcharts.org | Tues-Wed 10 am-4 pm; Thurs noon-7 pm; Fri 10 am-4 pm; Sat noon-4 pm | Jan 25-March 16: “Winter Wonder- land,” mixed media group exhibi- tion | reception Jan 25 6-8 pm COFFEE BY DESIGN/CONGRESS ST | 207.772.5533 | 620 Congress St, Portland | Mon-Wed 6:30 am-8 pm; Thurs-Sat 6:30 am-9 pm; Sun 7 am-8 pm | Through Jan 31: “Lori Austill: New Encaustics...Dancers, Florals, & Abstracts” COFFEE BY DESIGN/INDIA ST | 207.879.2233 | 67 India St, Portland | Mon-Fri 6:30 am-7 pm; Sat-Sun 7 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Lori Austill: New Encaustics...Dancers, Florals, & Abstracts” COLEMAN BURKE GALLERY/ BRUNSWICK | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | Mon-Sat 10 am-7 pm | Through March 16: “Standing Navigation on End of a Needle,” installation by Cynthia Davis COLEMAN BURKE GALLERY/PORT- LAND | 207.725.3761 | 504 Congress St, Port City Music Hall Window, Port- land | Through March 24: “Looking In | Looking Out,” installation by Amy Jorgenson CONSTELLATION ART GALLERY | 207.409.6617 | 511 Congress St, Port- land | constellationgallery.webs.com | Mon-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-4 pm & 6-8 pm; Sat 2-8 pm | Jan 25-Feb 20: “Occupy Gallery,” mixed media group exhibition DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland | Mon-Thurs 11 am-10 pm; Fri-Sat 11 am-11 pm; Sun 11 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Eclipse: Works of Art in Pen & Ink,” by Travis Graslie EDWARD T. POLLACK FINE ARTS | 617.610.7173 | 25 Forest Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Mallarme Suite,” works by Ells- worth Kelly ELIZABETH MOSS GALLERIES | 207.781.2620 | 251 Rte 1, Falmouth | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through March 10: “Despite Winter, Gar- dens,” works by Martha Burkert + Sue Hammerland + Andrea Rouda + Alysia C. Walker + Angel Braestrup FRANKLIN GALLERY | 603.332.2227 | 60 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Fri 9 am-8 pm; Sat 9 am-6 pm; Sun 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 27: “From the Many, One,” mixed me- dia group exhibition FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | explorefrontier.com | Tues-Thurs 11 am-9 pm; Fri-Sat 11 am-10 pm; Sun 9 am-3 pm | Through Feb 24: “CSA: Community Supporting Arts,” mixed media group exhibition GALLERY AT 100 MARKET STREET | 603.436.4559 | 100 Market St, Ports- mouth, NH | Floors One & Two 8 am-8 pm; Floors Three & Four 9-11 am & 2-4 pm | Through April 27: “Regional & State Invitational,” juried mixed media exhibit GREEN HAND BOOKSHOP | 207.450.6695 | 661 Congress St, Port- land | greenhandbooks.blogspot.com | Tues-Fri 11 am-6 pm; Sat 11 am-7 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Through Jan 31: “Fancy Food Chains,” drawings by Jada Fitch HANSON STREET GALLERY | 603.948.2035 | Portable Pantry, 12 Hanson St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Wed 7:30 am-2:30 pm; Fri-Sat 7:30 am-8 pm; Sun 7:30 am-4 pm | Through Jan 27: works by Nate Twombly HARLOW GALLERY | 207.622.3813 | 160 Water St, Hallowell | harlowgal- lery.org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun- Tues by appointment | Through Feb 9: “Ingrained,” printmaking show by Sarah Vosmus + Willy Reddick + Donna Parkinson + Tony Kulik + Martha Briana HARMON & BARTON’S | 207.650.3437 | 584 Congress St, Portland | harmonsbartons.com | 8 am-5:30 pm | Through Jan 31: “Why I Moved to Maine: Photographs & Cyanotypes of Maine & Beyond,” photography by Michael Heiko INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN ART | | 45 Smith St, #1, Portland | institute- foramericanart@gmail.com | Sat 4-8 pm | Through Feb 16: print by Mars- den Hartley JENNY WREN GALLERY | 603.335.3577 | 107 N Main St, Roch- ester, NH | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 27: works by Chad Kouri JUNE FITZPATRICK GALLERY AT MECA | 207.699.5083 | 522 Congress St, Portland | junefitzpatrickgallery. com | Tues-Sat noon-5 pm | Through Feb 15: “From the Inside,” MECA staff exhibition | Through Jan 27: “MECA Painters 10 Years Later,” paintings by John Capello + Jason Cornell + Michael Marks + Nolan Stewart + Sage Tucker-Ketcham + Stacey Vallerie JUST US CHICKENS GALLERY | 207.439.4209 | 9 Walker St, Kittery | call for hours | Through Feb 16: silk paintings, scarves, pillows, & other works by Sue Wierzba KENNEBUNK FREE LIBRARY | 207.985.2173 | 112 Main St, Kennebunk | kennebunklibrary.org | Mon-Tues 9:30 am-8 pm; Wed 12:30-8 pm; Thurs-Sat 9:30 am-5 pm | Through Jan 31: “Honest & Catkins - a Life’s Work of Beauty,” retrospective ex- hibit by Florence Nellie Holland KENNEDY GALLERY | 603.436.7007 | 41 Market St, Portsmouth, NH | Mon- Tues 9:30 am-6 pm; Wed-Thurs 9:30 am-6:30 pm; Fri-Sat 9:30 am-7 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Feb 3: works by Dave Petengill KITTERY ART ASSOCIATION | 207.967.0049 | 8 Coleman Ave, Kittery | kitteryartassociation.org | Sat noon- 6 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Jan 26-Feb 17: “Waste Not, Want Not,” member exhibition LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland | local188.com | Mon-Fri 5:30 pm-1 am; Sat-Sun 9 am-2 pm & 5:30 pm-1 am | Through Jan 31: works by Kimberly Convery + Meg K Walsh LUCY’S ART EMPORIUM | 603.740.9195 | 303 Central Ave, Dover, NH | lucysartemporium.com | Mon-Fri 11 am-6 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 2: “Holiday Small Works Show,” group exhibition MAINE FARMLAND TRUST GAL- LERY | 207.338.6575 | 97 Main St, Belfast | Through Feb 28: “CSA: Com- munity Supporting Arts,” mixed media group exhibition MAINE FIBERARTS | 207.721.0678 | 13 Main St, Topsham | mainefiberarts. org | Tues-Fri 10 am-4 pm; Sat 11 am-2 pm | Through Feb 15: “Tools to Equip the Shaman for Night Trav- els,” installation by Susan Mills MAINELY FRAMES AND GALLERY | 207.828.0031 | 541 Congress St, Portland | Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm; Thurs-Fri 10 am-8 pm; Sat 10 am-6 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Through Jan 31: “Collection of a Maine Top Selling Artist: Bill Paxton,” watercolors, acrylics, & oils MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland | call for hours | Through Jan 31: works by Pat Cor- rigan + Jennifer Gardiner MCLAUGHLIN-HILLS GALLERY | 603.319.8306 | 110 State St, Ports- mouth, NH | Tues-Sun 1-6 pm | Through Jan 27: “Oblivion,” works by Fernando M. Diaz MEG PERRY CENTER | 207.772.0680 | 644 Congress St, Portland | megper- rycenter.com | Tues-Sat noon-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “A Child’s View from Gaza,” youth drawings | recep- tion Jan 25 5-9 pm MONKITREE GALLERY | 207.512.4679 | 263 Water St, Gardiner | Tues-Fri 10 am-6 pm;Sat noon-6 pm | Through Jan 26: “Local Color,” works by Nancy Barron + Megan Bastey + Johanna Moore MOTORLAND VINTAGE AMERICA | 207.710.6699 | North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | Mon-Fri 10 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-3 pm | Jan 25: works by Peter Dugovic | reception 5-8 pm NEW HAMPSHIRE ART ASSOCIA- TION | 603.431.4230 | 136 State St, Portsmouth, NH | Wed-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 26: “50 Shades of Gray,” mixed me- dia group exhibition NORTH DAM MILL | 207.229.3560 | Pepperell Mill, 2 Main St, Biddeford | northdammill.com | Daily noon-5 pm | Jan 25: works by Alternative Pro- gram students | reception 5-8 pm PORTLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.871.1700 | Lewis Art Gallery, 5 30 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Monument Sq, Portland | portland- library.com/programs/LewisGallery. htm | Mon-Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Fri 10 am-7 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 23: “Prints: Breaking Boundar- ies,” group printmaking exhibit | Through June 13: “The Sea Within Us: Iconically Maritime in Fashion & Design” RICHARD BOYD GALLERY | 207.792.1097 | Island Ave. & Epps St., Peaks Island | Thurs-Sun 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 17: “New Year,” mixed media works by Jay LaBrie + Bob Salandrea + Wyn Foland + Pam Ca- banas + Jeanne O’Toole Hayman RIVER ARTS | 207.563.1507 | 241 Rte 1, Damariscotta | Tues-Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 25: “Black, White, Grey,” mixed me- dia group exhibition ROSE CONTEMPORARY | 207.780.0700 | 492 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sat noon-4:30 pm | Through Jan 26: “Emergent,” in- stallation by Rebecca Fitzpatrick + Petra Simmons + Andrew Frederick | reception Jan 26 6-9 pm SALAZAR GALLERY | | 265 Main St, 3rd Floor, Biddeford | salazargallery. com | call for hours | Jan 25: “Maine Seascapes & Landscapes,” paintings by Roland Salazar Rose | reception 5-8 pm SAVORY MAINE | 207.563.2111 | 11 Water St, Damariscotta | call for hours | Through Feb 5: “CSA: Com- munity Supporting Arts,” group exhibit SEACOAST ARTIST ASSOCIATION GALLERY | 603.778.8856 | 225 Water St, Exeter, NH | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Jan 31: works by Terry Donsker | Through Feb 2: “Black & White,” juried art exhibition SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland | space538. org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; by ap- pointment | Through Feb 15: “itiswhatitis,” ambrotype photo- graphs by Michael Kolster | Through Feb 16: “Creator / Creations,” prints by Edwige Charlot SPINDLEWORKS | 207.725.8820 | University College, 9 Park St, Bath | call for hours | Through Feb 28: “Un- expected Thaw,” works by Donald Freeman + Dana Albright + Kevin Babine + Michelle Rice THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland | thedogfishbarandgrille.com | Mon-Sat 11:30 am-12:30 am; Sun noon-8 pm | Through Jan 31: photography by Patti Genest THE OAK AND THE AX | | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford | theoakandtheax.blogspot.com | Daily 11 am-8 pm | Jan 25-Feb 16: “Look- ing for Love in Biddo,” paintings by Nancy Kureth | reception Jan 25 5-9 pm THOS. MOSER SHOWROOM | 207.865.4519 | 149 Main St, Freeport | Mon-Sat 10 am-6 pm; Sun 11 am-5 pm | Jan 31-April 15: “Paintings & Prints,” by Laurie Hadlock + Carrie Lonsdale | reception Jan 31 6-8 pm TOPSHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.725.1727 | 25 Foreside Rd, Top- sham | topshamlibrary.org | Mon + Wed 10 am-6 pm; Tues + Thurs 10 am-8 pm; Fri noon-6 pm; Sat 9:30 am-2:30 pm | Through Feb 16: “Joy of Art,” mixed media group show YARMOUTH ARTS | | 317 Main St Community Music Center, Yarmouth | yarmoutharts.org | Mon-Fri noon-6 pm | Through Feb 7: “Small Works Holiday Show,” mixed media group exhibition YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.363.2818 | 15 Long Sands Rd, York | Fri 10 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-1 pm; Mon-Tues + Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Wed noon-8 pm | Through March 26: “Alumni Show,” mixed media group exhibition MUSEUMS BATES COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.786.6158 | 75 Russell St, Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | bates.edu/muse- um-about.xml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through March 22: “Max Klinger (German, 1857-1920), The Intermezzo Portfolio” + Robert S. Neuman’s “Ship to Paradise,” paintings | Jan 25-March 22: Fransje Killaars: “Color at the Center,” textile installation BOWDOIN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.725.3275 | Bowdoin College, 9400 College Station, Brunswick | bowdoin.edu/art-museum | Tues-Wed + Fri-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Thurs 10 am- 8:30 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Free admis- sion; donations welcome | Through Feb 24: “Real/Ideal: Transforma- tions in 19th Century Painting” | Through March 3: “The Fixed Im- age: History & Process in American Photography” | Through March 5: “Fantastic Stories: the Supernatural in 19th Century Japanese Prints” | Through March 10: “A Printmaking ABC: In Memorium David P. Becker” | Jan 31-Feb 1: “Reading Prints: David P. Becker’s Legacy at the Bowdoin Museum of Art,” printmaking symposium | Ongoing: “The Re- naissance & the Revival of Classical Antiquity” + “In Dialogue: Art from Bowdoin & Colgate Collections” + “In a New Light: American & Eu- ropean Masters” + “Simply Divine: Gods & Demigods in the Ancient Mediterranean” COLBY COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.859.5600 | 5600 Mayflower Hill Dr, Waterville | colby.edu/museum | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 31: “Rediscoveries 4: Comedy, Seriously” | Ongoing: “Process & Place: Exploring the Design Evolu- tion of the Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion” + “Alex Katz Collection” DYER LIBRARY/SACO MUSEUM | 207.283.3861 | 371 Main St, Saco | sacomuseum.org | Tues-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-8 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 31: “Watercolors: Beginners & Beyond,” group exhibit | Through March 2: “I My Needle Ply With Skill: Samplers of the Federal Period,” historical needlework exhibit | Jan 25 | gallery talk with Leslie Rounds | 6:30 pm FARNSWORTH ART MUSEUM | 207.596.6457 | 16 Museum St, Rock- land | farnsworthmuseum.org | 10 am-5 pm, open until 8 pm with free admission Wed | $12, seniors & students $10; under 17 free and Rockland residents free | Admission $12; $10 seniors and students; free for youth under 17 and Rockland residents | Through March 10: “Re- cent Acquisitions” | Through April 7: “Andrew Wyeth: Pencil Drawings & Watercolor Sketches” | Through Sept 22: “Decorating the Everyday: Popu- lar Art from the Farnsworth” ICA AT MECA | 207.879.5742 | 522 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sun 11 am-5 pm; Thurs 11 am-7 pm | Through March 3: “This Will Have Been: Art, Love, & Politics in the 1980s,” mixed media | Through April 7: “Ander Mikalson: Score for Two Dinosaurs” + “Whales & Nails,” in- stallation by Dan DenDanto MAINE COLLEGE OF ART | 207.775.3052 | 522 Congress St, Port- land | meca.edu | Mon-Fri 8 am-8 pm; Sat-Sun 12 pm-5 pm | Through Feb 3: “Create: an Exhibition of Works by Continuing Studies Students” | Through Feb 10: “Process & Place: MECA 2013 Residency Exhibition” MAINE JEWISH MUSEUM | 207.329.9854 | 267 Congress St, Portland | treeoflifemuseum.org | Through Feb 25: “Dorothy Schwartz: Evolution of a Printmaker” MUSEUM OF AFRICAN CULTURE | 207.871.7188 | 13 Brown St, Portland | museumafricanculture.org | Tues- Fri 10:30 am-4 pm; Sat noon-4 pm | $5 suggested donation | Through Jan 30: “The Incarnation of Earthly Creations,” mixed media Haitian art exhibit | Ongoing: “An Exhibition of Bronze” PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY | 603.777.3461 | Lamont Gallery, Freder- ick R Mayer Art Center, Tan Ln, Exeter, NH | exeter.edu/art/visit_Lamont.ht- ml | Mon 1-5 pm; Tues-Sat 9 am-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 2: “Pop Paradise,” works by Dave Lefner + Kelly Reemtsen + Robert Townsend | reception Jan 25 6:30-8 pm | gallery talk Jan 26 10 am PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART | 207.775.6148 | 7 Congress Square, Portland | portlandmuseum.org | Tues-Thurs + Sat-Sun 10 am-5 pm; Fri 10 am-9 pm | Admission $12; $10 students, seniors; $6 youth 13-17; free for youth 12 & under and for all Fri 5-9 pm | Through Feb 3: “The Portland Society of Art & Winslow Homer’s Legacy in Maine” | Through Feb 17: “Between Past & Present: Historic Photographic Processes & the Winslow Homer Studio” | Through April 7: Lois Dodd: “Catch- ing the Light,” plein-air painting retrospective SALT INSTITUTE FOR DOCUMEN- TARY STUDIES | 207.761.0660 | 561 Congress St, Portland | salt.edu | Tues- Fri noon-4:30 pm | Through Feb 8: “Tinder,” mixed media documen- tary exhibit Continued on p 32 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 31 Open 5PM to 1AM Great new menu served until 12:30 am every night Facebook.com/SlainteWineBar Twitter.com/SlainteME 2012 1/23 @8 Open Mic 1/24 @8 Open Mic Comedy 1/25 FREE @9 Reggae Winter Showdown featuring DJ Geofferson & Lukaduke 1/26 @9 FREE Matt Brown’s Soul Dance Party 1/29 FREE @9 DJ Ponyfarm’s Karaoke Party SPARETIME PORTLAND 867 Riverside Street 207.878.2695 GALACTIC BOWLING Call to make reservations! 4 person minimum 1030pm—1 am Fri $15 Sat $17 KARAOKE FRIDAYS 9pm to 1am 1/8 Page R 3.25x4 JANUARY 24-30 COMING UP: ST. PATTY’S WEEKEND HUGE EVENT b r i a n b o r u p o r t l a n d . C O M 2 0 7 . 7 8 0 . 1 5 0 6 Thu. 24: HEART SHAPED ROCK 9:30pm Fri. 25: THE JASON SPOONER BAND 9:30pm Sat. 26: THE JUMPOFF 9:30pm Sun. 27: IRISH SESSIONS 3-6pm Tue. 29: GAME NITE 6pm Wed. 30: TRIVIA NITE 7pm AtlAntis MAssAge $50/hour Specializing in repetitive use injuries & Japanese hot stones. Jennifer Lague LMT & AMTA Member State Theater Building 615 Congress St. Suite 601-i 409.4370 atlantismassage@yahoo.com facebook: atlantis Massage UNIVERSITY OF MAINE - FARM- INGTON | 207.778.7072 | Art Gallery, 246 Main St, Farmington | Tues-Sun noon-4 pm | Jan 31-March 7: “Beauty & the Political Body,” works by Har- riet Casdin-Silver UNIVERSITY OF MAINE - ORONO | 207.581.3245 | Lord Hall Gallery, 5743 Lord Hall, Orono | Mon-Fri 9 am-4:30 pm | Through Jan 25: “UM Department of Art Senior Studio Exhibition” UNIVERSITY OF MAINE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.561.3350 | Norumbega Hall, 40 Harlow St, Bangor | umma. umaine.edu | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 21: “Michael Crouser: Dog Run,” print photography + “Robert Rivers: The Promised Land,” drawings + “Candice Ivy: Honey from the Belly of the Lion,” installation | Ongoing: “Selections from the Permanent Collection” UNIVERSITY OF NEW ENGLAND - PORTLAND | 207.221.4499 | Art Gal- lery, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | une. edu/artgallery | Wed 1-4 pm; Thurs 1-7 pm; Fri-Sun 1-4 pm | Through March 3: “Maine Women Pioneers III: Homage” | Ongoing: paintings & photography by Maine artists + labyrinth installation UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.862.1535 | Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | call for hours | Through March 22: “Embel- lishments: Constructing Victorian Detail” UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSEUM OF ART | 603.862.3712 | Paul Creative Arts Center, Durham, NH | unh.edu/moa | Mon-Wed 10 am-4 pm; Thurs 10 am-8 pm; Sat- Sun 1-5 pm | Free admission | Jan 26-March 28: “California Impres- sionism: Paintings from the Irvine Museum” + “Sacred Landscapes of Peru: the Photographs of Carl Aus- tin Hyatt” | reception Jan 25 6-8 pm UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - GORHAM | 207.780.5008 | Art Gallery, USM Campus, Gorham | usm.maine.edu/~gallery | Tues-Fri 11 am-4 pm; Sat-Sun 1-5 pm | Through March 6: “Everything,” installation by Astrid Bowlby UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - LEWISTON | 207.753.6500 | Atrium Gallery, 51 Westminster St, Lewiston | usm.maine.edu/lac/art/ex- hibits.html | Mon-Thurs 8 am-8 pm; Fri 8 am-4:30 pm | Free admission | Through March 23: “Area Artists 2013,” open juried biennial exhibit UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - PORTLAND | 207.780.5008 | Area Gallery, Woodbury Campus Center, Bedford St, Portland | Mon- Fri 7 am-10 pm | Through April 3: “USM Art Faculty Exhibition,” mixed media | reception Jan 24 4-6 pm OTHER MUSEUMS ABBE MUSEUM | 207.288.3519 | 26 Mount Desert St, Bar Harbor | ab- bemuseum.org | Through Oct 31: “N’tolonapemk: Our Relatives’ Place” | Ongoing: “Layers of Time: Archaeology at the Abbe Museum” + “Dr. Abbe’s Museum” CHILDREN’S MUSEUM & THEATRE OF MAINE | 207.828.1234 | 142 Free St, Portland | kitetails.com | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm; Mon during school vacations | $10, $9 seniors, $7 youth under 17, free under 6; first Friday of the month is free 5-8 pm | Jan 24: Tiny Tots: Instrument Exploration 10:30 am; “Bouncing Birds,” creative move- ment class 11-11:45 am; Star Show 11:30 am; Dominoes Deluxe 3:30 pm | Jan 25: Llama Llama Puppet Show 10:30 am; Touch Tank 11:30 am; Cloud Dough 3:30 pm | Jan 26: Natural Artifact Exploration 11 am; Camera Obscura Presentation noon; Kids on the Block 1 pm; Open Art Studio 2-3 pm; DIY Perfume Work- shop 3:30 pm ($8) | Jan 27: Trash to Treasure: Amazing Aquariums 1 pm; Music & Dance Afternoon 2:30 pm | Jan 29: Let’s Play: Fast & Slow 11 am; Paper Mache Play: Birds! 3:30-4:30 pm | Jan 30: Open Art Stu- dio 11 am-noon; Cocoa Storytime: Madeline 3:30 pm | Jan 31: Tiny Tots: Shape Scavenger Hunt 10:30 am; Star Show 11:30 am; Dollar-Go- Round 3:30 pm CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.742.2002 | 6 Washington St, Dover, NH | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Admission $7, seniors $6 | Through March 1: “Toys,” oil paintings by Anne Scheer DISCOVER PORTSMOUTH CEN- TER | 603.436.8420 | 10 Middle St, Portsmouth, NH | portsmouthhistory. org | 10 am-5 pm | Through March 31: “Nancy Lyon: Weaving the New Hampshire Landscape,” textiles MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY | 207.774.1822 | 489 Congress St, Portland | mainehistory.org | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm | $8, $7 seniors/ students, $2 children, kids under 6 free | Through May 26: “Wired! How Electricity Came to Maine,” histori- cal exhibit MAINE MARITIME MUSEUM | 207.443.1316 | 243 Washington St, Bath | mainemaritimemuseum.org | Daily 9:30 am-5 pm | Admission $10, $9 seniors, $7 for children seven through 17, free for children six and under | Through May 26: “Ahead Full at Fifty: 50 Years of Collecting at Maine Maritime Mu- seum” | Through Oct 25: “Honing the Edge: the Apprenticeshop at 40” | Ongoing: “A Maritime History of Maine” + “A Shipyard in Maine: Percy & Small & the Great Schoo- ners” + “Snow Squall: Last of the American Clipper Ships” + “The Sea Within Us: Iconically Maritime in Fashion & Design” MAINE STATE MUSEUM | 207.287.2301 | 83 State House Stn, Augusta | mainestatemuseum.org | Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Admission $2, $1 for seniors and children ages 6-18, under 6 free | Through May 18: “Malaga Island, Fragmented Lives” | Ongoing: 12,000-plus years of Maine’s history, in homes, nature, shops, mills, ships, & factories MUSEUM L-A | 207.333.3881 | Bates Mill Complex 1, 35 Canal St, Lewiston | museumla.org | Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Admission $5, students and seniors $4 | Jan 26-March 22: Fransje Killaars: “Color at the Center,” textile installation | Ongoing: “Por- traits & Voices: Shoemaking Skills of Generations” OSHER MAP LIBRARY | 207.780.4850 | University of South- ern Maine, Glickman Family Library, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | usm. maine.edu/maps | Tues-Thurs 1-4 pm | Free admission | Through Feb 28: “Iconic America: the United States Map as a National Symbol” PEARY-MACMILLAN ARCTIC MUSEUM | 207.725.3416 | Bowdoin College, Hubbard Hall, 5 College St, Brunswick | bowdoin. edu/arctic-museum/index.shtml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Free | Through April 6: “Animal Allies: Inuit Views of the Natural World” | Through April 16: “In a State of Becoming: Inuit Art from the Collection of Rabbi Harry Sky” | Ongoing: “Chilling Discoveries About Global Warming” + “The Roosevelt: a Model of Strength” + “The North Pole” + “Permanent Collection” PORTSMOUTH ATHENAEUM | 603.431.2538 | 9 Market Sq, Ports- mouth, NH | Tues, Thurs, & Sat 1-4 pm | Through Feb 28: “17th Annual Proprietors Art Show” SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM | 207.780.4249 | Science Building, 70 Falmouth St, University of Southern Maine - Portland, | usm.maine.edu/ planet | call for hours | free | Jan 25: Two Small Pieces of Glass 7 pm; Eight Planets & Counting 8:30 pm | Jan 26: Rusty Rocket 3 pm | Jan 27: Full Dome: The Little Star That Could 3 pm Listings Continued from p 31 32 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com What Portland needs is a board game theme restaurant. If you’ve got a great idea, you need a great Web presence. We can help. Eunice Pomfret Media . Portland, Maine (207) 619-2143 . patricia@eunicepomfret.com Rippleffect Gala 2013 at Space Gallery in Portland, Maine February 28, 2013 6:30pm doors open & 7:30pm live auction live music * live auction * cool people beverages & heavy hors d’oeuvres details and registration: www.rippleffect.net/events 207.791.7870 Proudly Featuring Head Chef John Dugans and Head Brewer Rob Prindall Hand-Crafted ales • Great food • eCleCtiC Beer seleCtion 678 Roosevelt Trail, At the Light in Naples, ME • (207) 693-6806 • www.braysbrewpub.com P U B BREWERY BRAY’s ALE Causeway Cream Ale old Church GUEsT TAP Aventinus eisbock January 26: Gorilla FinGer @ 9pm BRAY’S SHOWCASE FeaturinG olD CHurCH anD roCKn rolanD BlaCK rye FeBruary 7@5pm@ tHe Great loSt Bear See you tHere! 103 RESTAURANT | 603.332.7790 | 103 N Main St, Rochester, NH 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | 207.935.3021 | 636 Main St, Fryeburg 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | 207.894.5730 | 765 Roosevelt Trail, Windham 51 WHARF | 207.774.1151 | 51 Wharf St, Portland ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | 207.967.4841 | 5 Dock Sq, Ken- nebunkport ALL AMERICAN TAVERN | 207.674.3800 | 64 Bethel Rd, West Paris ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | 207.874.2639 | 94 Commercial St, Portland ASYLUM | 207.772.8274 | 121 Center St, Portland BACK BURNER TAVERN | 207.935.4444 | 109 Main St, Brownfield BARLEY PUB | 603.742.4226 | 328 Central Ave, Dover, NH BAYSIDE BOWL | 207.791.2695 | 58 Alder St, Portland BEACHFIRE BAR AND GRILLE | 207.646.8998 | 658 Main St., Ogunquit BEAR BREW PUB | 207.866.2739 | 36 Main St, Orono BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | 207.564.8733 | 73 North St, Dover Foxcroft BEBE’S BURRITOS | 207.283.4222 | 140 Main St, Biddeford BIG EASY | 207.775.2266 | 55 Market St, Portland BIG EASY LOUNGE | 207.992.2820 | Charles Inn, 20 Broad St, Bangor BILLY’S TAVERN | 207.354.1177 | 1 Starr St, Thomaston BINGA’S STADIUM | 207.347.6072 | 77 Free St, Portland BLACK BEAR CAFE | 207.693.4770 | 215 Roosevelt Trail, Naples BLUE | 207.774.4111 | 650A Congress St, Portland BLUE MERMAID | 603.427.2583 | 409 The Hill, Portsmouth, NH BRAY’S BREWPUB | 207.693.6806 | Rte 302 and Rte 35, Naples BRIAN BORU | 207.780.1506 | 57 Center St, Portland BRIDGE STREET TAVERN | 207.623.8561 | 18 Bridge St, Augusta THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | 207.934.2171 | 39 West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | 207.828.0549 | 92 Portland St, Portland BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/FREEPORT | 207.865.0600 | 581 Rte 1, Freeport BULL FEENEY’S | 207.773.7210 | 375 Fore St, Portland BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | 207.924.7286 | Moosehead Trail Mo- tor Lodge, 300 Corrina Rd, Dexter BUXTON TAVERN | 207.929.8668 | 1301 Rte 22, Buxton BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | 207.443.6776 | 98 Center St, Bath BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | 207.729.9400 | 16 Station Ave, Brunswick THE CAGE | 207.783.0668 | 97 Ash St, Lewiston CAMPFIRE GRILLE | 207.803.2255 | 656 North High St, Bridgton CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | 207.336.2126 | 371 Turner St, Buckfield CENTRAL WAVE | 603.742.9283 | 368 Central Ave, Dover, NH CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | 207.282.7900 | 15 Thornton St, Biddeford CHARLAMAGNE’S | 207.242.2711 | 228 Water St, Augusta CHOP SHOP PUB | 603.760.7706 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH CLUB TEXAS | 207.784.7785 | 150 Center St, Auburn COUSIN SAM’S PIZZERIA AND BREW | | 160 Washington St, Rochester, NH CRYSTAL FALLS | 207.582.8620 | 1280 Eastern Ave, Chelsea CURVA ULTRA LOUNGE | 207.866.3600 | 103 Park St, Orono DANIEL STREET TAVERN | 603.430.1011 | 111 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH DAVIS ISLAND GRILL | 207.687.2190 | 318 Eddy Rd, Edgecomb DEER RUN TAVERN | 207.846.9555 | 365 Main St, Yarmouth THE DEPOT PUB | 207.588.0081 | 20 Maine St, Gardiner DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland DOOBIE’S BAR & GRILL | 207.623.7625 | 349 Water St, Augusta DOVER BRICK HOUSE | 603.749.3838 | 2 Orchard St, Dover, NH EASY STREET LOUNGE | 207.622.3360 | 7 Front St, Hallowell EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | 207.879.8988 | 575 Congress St, Portland THE END ZONE | 207.861.4435 | 26 Elm St, Waterville THE FARM BAR & GRILLE | 603.516.3276 | 25A Portland Ave, Dover, NH FAST BREAKS | 207.782.3305 | 1465 Lisbon St, Lewiston FAT BELLY’S | 603.610.4227 | 2 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH FEDERAL JACK’S | 207.967.4322 | 8 Western Ave, Kennebunk FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | 207.251.4065 | 1619 Post Rd, Wells FLASK LOUNGE | 207.772.3122 | 117 Spring St, Portland THE FOGGY GOGGLE | 207.824.5056 | South Ridge Lodge, Sunday River, Newry FORE PLAY | 207.780.1111 | 436 Fore St, Portland FRESH | 207.236.7005 | 1 Bay View Landing, Camden FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick THE FUNKY RED BARN | 207.824.3003 | 19 Summer St, Bethel FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | 603.617.3633 | 1 Washington St, Dover, NH FUSION | 207.330.3775 | 490 Pleasant St, Lewiston GATCH’S FOOD & SPIRITS | 207.364.2050 | 137 Rumford Ave, Rumford GELATO FIASCO | 207.607.4002 | 74 Maine St., Brunswick GENO’S | 207.221.2382 | 625 Congress St, Portland THE GIN MILL | 207.620.9200 | 302 Water St, Augusta GINGKO BLUE | 207.541.9190 | 2 Portland Sq, Portland GOLD ROOM | 207.221.2343 | 510 Warren Ave, Portland THE GREEN ROOM | 207.490.5798 | 898 Main St, Sanford GRITTY MCDUFF’S | 207.772.2739 | 396 Fore St, Portland GRITTY MCDUFF’S/AUBURN | 207.782.7228 | 68 Main St, Auburn GUTHRIE’S | 207.376.3344 | 115 Middle St, Lewiston HANNA’S TAVERN | 207.490.5122 | 324 Country Club Rd, Sanford HIGHER GROUNDS COFFEEHOUSE AND TAVERN | 207.621.1234 | 119 Water St, Hallowell HILTON GARDEN INN | 603.431.1499 | 100 High St, Portsmouth, NH HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | 877.779.7771 | 500 Main St, Bangor THE HOLY GRAIL | 603.679.9559 | 64 Main St, Epping, NH HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | 603.760.2013 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH HOOLIGAN’S IRISH PUB | 207.934.4063 | 2 Old Orchard Rd, Old Orchard Beach HOXTER’S BAR & BISTRO | 207.629.5363 | 122 Water St, Hallowell IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | 207.942.5180 | 10 Broad St, Bangor IRISH TWINS PUB | 207.376.3088 | 743 Main St, Lewiston JACK’S PLACE | 207.797.7344 | 597 Bridgton Rd, Westbrook JAMESON TAVERN | 207.865.4196 | 115 Main St, Freeport JIMMY THE GREEK’S/ OLD ORCHARD BEACH | 207.934.7499 | 215 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach JIMMY THE GREEK’S/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.774.7335 | 115 Philbrook Rd, South Portland JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | 207.699.5559 | 420 Fore St, Portland JONATHAN’S | 207.646.4777 | 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit JUMPIN’ JAKE’S SEAFOOD CAFE & BAR | 207.937.3250 | 181 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach KELLEY’S ROW | 603.750.7081 | 421 Central Ave, Dover, NH THE KENNEBEC WHARF | 207.622.9290 | 1 Wharf St, Hallowell KERRYMEN PUB | 207.282.7425 | 512 Main St, Saco KJ’S SPORTS BAR | 603.659.2329 | North Main St, Newmarket, NH LEGENDS RESTAURANT | 207.824.3500 | Grand Summit Resort Hotel, 97 Summit Dr, Newry THE LIBERAL CUP | 207.623.2739 | 115 Water St, Hallowell LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland LOCAL BUZZ | 207.541.9024 | 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | 207.899.3529 | 649 Congress St, Portland THE LOFT | 207.541.9045 | 865 Forest Ave, Portland THE LOFT AT STRAFFORD FARMS | 603.742.7012 | 58 New Rochester Rd, Dover, NH LOMPOC CAFE | 207.288.9392 | 36 Rod- ick St, Bar Harbor MAINE STREET | 207.646.5101 | 195 Maine St, Ogunquit MAINELY BREWS | 207.873.2457 | 1 Post Office Sq, Waterville MAMA’S CROWBAR | 207.773.9230 | 189 Congress St, Portland MARGARITA’S/AUBURN | 207.782.6036 | 180 Center St, Auburn MARK’S PLACE | 207.899.3333 | 416 Fore St, Portland MARTINGALE WHARF | 603.431.0091 | 99 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH MATHEW’S | 207.253.1812 | 133 Free St, Portland MAXWELL’S PUB | 207.646.2345 | 243 Main St, Ogunquit MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | 207.642.3363 | 35 Blake Rd, Standish MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | 207.824.2175 | Bethel Inn, On the Com- mon, Bethel MILLIE’S TAVERN | 603.967.4777 | 17 L St, Hampton, NH MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | 207.443.6563 | Rte 1, Woolwich MOOSE ALLEY | 207.864.9955 | 2809 Main St, Rangeley MY TIE LOUNGE | 207.406.2574 | 94 Maine St, Brunswick NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | 207.907.4380 | 56 Main St, Bangor NONANTUM RESORT | 207.967.4050 | 95 Ocean Ave, Kennebunkport THE OAK AND THE AX | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford THE OAR HOUSE | 603.436.4025 | 55 Ceres St, Portsmouth, NH OASIS | 207.370.9048 | 42 Wharf St, Portland OLD PORT TAVERN | 207.774.0444 | 11 Moulton St, Portland THE OLDE MILL TAVERN | 207.583.9077 | 56 Main St, Harrison ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | 207.761.1757 | 181 State St, Portland PADDY MURPHY’S | 207.945.6800 | 26 Main St, Bangor THE PAGE | 603.436.0004 | 172 Hanover St, Portsmouth, NH PEAK LODGE | 800.543.2754 | Sunday River, Newry PEARL | 207.653.8486 | 444 Fore St, Portland PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | 207.783.6200 | 134 Main St, Lewiston PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | 207.941.8805 | 14 Larkin St, Bangor PEPPERCLUB | 207.772.0531 | 78 Middle St, Portland PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | 207.824.2222 | 9 Timberline Dr, Newry PHOENIX PUB | 207.404.4184 | 123 Franklin St, Bangor PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | 207.899.4990 | 504 Congress St, Portland PORTLAND EAGLES | 207.773.9448 | 184 Saint John St, Portland PORTLAND LOBSTER CO | 207.775.2112 | 180 Commercial St, Portland PORTSMOUTH BOOK AND BAR | 617.908.8277 | 40 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, NH PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | 603.430.9122 | 64 Market St, Portsmouth, NH POST ROAD TAVERN | 207.641.0640 | 705 Main St, Ogunquit PRESS ROOM | 603.431.5186 | 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH PROFENNO’S | 207.856.0011 | 934 Main St, Westbrook PUB 33 | 207.786.4808 | 33 Sabattus St, Lewiston THE RACK | 207.237.2211 | Sugarloaf Mountain A, Kingfield RAVEN’S ROOST | 207.406.2359 | 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick THE RED DOOR | 603.373.6827 | 107 State St, Portsmouth, NH CLUB DIRECTORY RIRA | 207.761.4446 | 72 Commercial St, Portland RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | 603.319.1680 | 22 Market St, Portsmouth, NH RJ’S BAR AND GRILL | 83 Washington St, Dover, NH THE ROOST | 207.799.1232 | 62 Chicopee Rd, Buxton RUDI’S | 603.430.7834 | 20 High St, Portsmouth, NH RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | 207.571.9648 | 100 Main St, Saco Island, Saco RUSTY HAMMER | 603.436.9289 | 49 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, NH SAVORY MAINE | 207.563.2111 | 11 Water St, Damariscotta SCHEMENGEES BAR AND GRILL | 207.777.1155 | 551 Lincoln St, Lewiston SEA 40 | 207.795.6888 | 40 East Ave, Lewiston SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.871.7000 | 125 Western Ave, South Portland SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | 207.725.0162 | 1 Maine St, Great Mill Island, Topsham SEASONS GRILLE | 207.775.6538 | 155 Riverside St, Portland SEBAGO BREW PUB/KENNEBUNK | 207.467.8107 | 67 Portland Rd, Ken- nebunk SHOOTERS BILLIARDS BAR & GRILL | 207.794.8585 | 222B West Broadway, Lincoln SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | 207.772.9885 | 123 Commercial St, Portland SILVER SPUR | 207.345.3211 | 272 Lewiston St, Mechanic Falls SILVER STREET TAVERN | 207.680.2163 | 2 Silver St, Waterville SLAINTE | 207.828.0900 | 24 Preble St, Portland SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAKERY | 207.622.4104 | 169 Water St, Hallowell SLIDERS RESTAURANT | 207.824.5300 | Jordan Grand Resort Hotel, Sunday River, Newry SOLO BISTRO | 207.443.3378 | 128 Front St, Bath SONNY’S | 207.772.7774 | 83 Exchange St, Portland SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland SPARE TIME | 207.878.2695 | City Sports Grille, 867 Riverside St, Portland SPECTATORS | 207.324.9658 | Rte 4, Sanford SPLITTERS | 207.621.1710 | 2246 N Bel- fast Ave, Augusta SPRING HILL TAVERN | 603.431.5222 | Dolphin Striker, 15 Bow St, Ports- mouth, NH SPRING POINT TAVERN | 207.733.2245 | 175 Pickett St, South Portland STONE CHURCH | 603.659.6321 | 5 Granite St, Newmarket, NH STUDIO BISTRO AND BAR | 207.824.3241 | Mill Hill Inn, 24 Mill Hill Rd, Bethel STYXX | 207.828.0822 | 3 Spring St, Portland SUDS PUB | 207.824.6558 | Sudbury Inn Main St, Bethel TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | 207.657.7973 | 61 Portland Rd, Gray T&B’S OUTBACK TAVERN | 207.877.7338 | 6 Jefferson St, Waterville THATCHER’S PUB | 207.887.3582 | 10 Cumberland St, Westbrook THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | 603.427.8645 | 21 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH THE THIRSTY PIG | 207.773.2469 | 37 Exchange St, Portland TORTILLA FLAT | 207.797.8729 | 1871 Forest Ave, Portland TUCKER’S PUB | 207.739.2200 | 290 Main St, Norway TUG’S PUB | 207.633.3830 | Robinson Wharf, Southport UNION STATION BILLIARDS | 207.899.3693 | 272 St. John St, Portland VACANCY PUB | 207.934.9653 | Ocean Park Rd, Old Orchard Beach WALLY’S PUB | 603.926.6954 | 144 Ashworth Ave, Hampton, NH WATER STREET GRILL | 207.582.9464 | 463 Water St, Gardiner WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | 207.237.6845 | Sugarloaf Mtn, Kingfield YORK HARBOR INN | 800.343.3869 | Rte 1A, York Harbor ZACKERY’S | 207.774.5601 | Fireside Inn & Suites, 81 Riverside St, Portland portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 33 155 Brackett St. Portland 774-7250 www.freShaPProachmarket.com Mon-Fri 8-7 • Sat 9-7 • Sun 9-5 a Cut aBoVE uSDa PriME, choice & Select ten quality standards ensure the brand’s premium name. thiS week’S SPecialS All-nAturAl, boneless, skinless chicken breAst 10lB. Bag-$19.90 center-cut, boneless pork roAst $2.29/lB. usDA choice lonDon broil steAk $3.99/lB. Deli-sliceD oven-roAsteD turkey breAst $3.99/lB. P E P P E R C L U B dinner 7 nights The Good Egg Café six mornings two favorites in one location Thursday, 1/24: Chipped Enamel @ 7:30 Music, Food, Drinks and No Cover! Private room available 78 Middle Street Portland, Maine 04101 207.772.0531 www.pepperclubrestaurant.com Installations Network Support Wa rra nti es Consulting Re mo te Of fsi te Ba ck up Break/Fix PC’s & Printers (office) 207-774-5821 (fax) 207-774-5840 107 Elm St. Portland, ME 04101 info@menhcomputers.com www.menhcomputers.com 34 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com room to emerge. And Zen is getting many little things right: The sour soup, too of- ten an afterthought, has been given some care. It has a real sour zing and the bite of fresh scallion. Even a ramekin of sweet house-made duck sauce was a pleasant surprise, as it was cloudy with the pulp of actual fruit. Zen has a chatty owner, usually be- hind the bar. He will give you work-out tips, and perhaps lead you to off- menu dishes once you are a regular. I wouldn’t be surprised if the best dishes are there, since someone in the kitchen knows their stuff. Zen, the concept, is about the elimi- nation of suffering, and if we patronize quality Chinese places like Zen, or China Taste across town, it might go some way toward eliminating the incen- tive for cruel labor prac- tices at some other Chinese spots in Maine. ^ Our Ratings $ = $15 or less $$ = $16-$22 $$$ = $23-$30 $$$$ = $31 and up Based on average entrée price MOvie Review Dining Review dinner + movie The koan of Chinese food Where can We find our moment of Zen? _By Brian duff f It seems every time I check out a promising new Chinese place in Portland, federal officials arrest someone at a dismal Chinese restaurant elsewhere in Maine (this week it was the Twin Super Buffet in Brewer that was raided by the feds). Is this the Chinese-food uni- verse maintaining some kind of spiritual balance? Is it karma? In this case it’s Zen. Zen Chinese Bistro to be exact, which has taken over the west-Old Port space formerly occupied by District. Zen the concept is not about transcen- dence, but rather about deepening the quality of our worldly presence. Zen the Chinese Bistro is not exactly transcendent, but it does enhance the quality of Chinese cuisine in Portland. The menu does not veer far from the beaten path of American- ized-Chinese, but it executes those classic dishes well, with fresh ingredients. That is enough to put Zen among the upper tier of Chinese restaurants in town. In taking the space over from District, they have not changed it much. There is minimal Asian kitsch. Downstairs is the same bar, with dark wood, black leather booths, and a few tables. And they are taking the bar seriously: they have a nice Asian-tinged cocktail list, some good beer on draft, and a genuine wine list. Upstairs they have brightened the large dining room a bit, mostly with a vibrant blue paint. Many dishes at this sort of restaurant depend on the quality of the brown sauce that forms the base for so many entrées. Zen has a good one: neither too thick nor too thin, with a nice base of garlic and soy. It’s used to good effect in a number of dishes, like Hunan beef, where it had a mild chili heat. It coated big tender pieces of meat and diced veggies — piping hot from the wok, but still with plenty of crunch. The same basic sauce was leant a sharper garlic bite and more aggressive pepper heat in a dish of vegetables with garlic sauce. Cashew chicken started with a different, lighter, sauce that offered a nice balance of sugars and heat. There were plenty of springy button mushrooms, along with a crunchy mix of celery, carrots, and green bell peppers that were on the edge of red, and thus not too bitter. Sesame chicken was sweet but not candy-sweet like you often get, and the breading stayed crisp rather than getting sauce-soaked. An udon noodle dish was good as well. The noodles were soft but not mushy, and the pork tender. The dish had that sort of mildness that isn’t bland, but allows the quieter umami flavors of onion and mush- $ ZEN CHINESE BISTRO | 45 Danforth St, Portland | 11:30 am-10:30 pm (bar open later weekends) Visa/MC/Amex/Disc | 207.775.6888 outstanding excellent good average poor xxxx xxx xx x z FShort Takes movie reviews in brief xxxw gRegORY CRewDSOn: BRieF enCOUnTeRS 77 minutes | pma movies Photographer Gregory Crewdson makes pictures that do every- thing a movie does except move. Focused on the depressed towns of Western Massachusetts, he puts together a meticulously detailed scene, engages a crew of up to 60, arranges dozens of lights, waits for the right mo- ment, snaps the photo, and then subjects it to a rigorous post- production process. When they succeed, the images transcend the lower-class world that is their subject and touch on an otherworldliness reminiscent of David Lynch, Edward Hopper, or Andrei Tarkovsky. Ben Shapiro shot this documentary over 10 years and not only achieves a portrait of the artist but also captures the artistic process itself, following Crewdson from initial inspiration to finished product. “It’s a sign,” Crewdson says when a garbage picker mys- teriously appears on a somber street scene in Lee, Massachu- setts, perfecting the shot. Just one more epiphany in a body of work that shimmers with im- manent revelation. _peter Keough xx HYDe PARK On HUDSOn 94 minutes | eveninGstar + railroad sQuare + wells Lurking beneath Hyde Park on Hud- son, the latest film to repurpose historical icons for Oscar-bait melodrama, is a screwball com- edy trying desperately to break though. Franklin D. Roosevelt, played by Bill Murray, seems chiefly interested in escaping his motorcade so he can score a handjob from his distant cousin (Laura Linney). King George and Queen Elizabeth visit in hopes of securing help for England during WWII, but spend most of their xx BROKen CiTY 109 minutes | auburn + oxford + smitty’s biddeford + smitty’s sanford + spotliGht + wells To paraphrase Roman Polanski’s masterful noir, it’s not China- town. Not for lack of trying, though, as burly gumshoe and disgraced ex-cop Billy Tag- gart (Mark Wahlberg) initiates a creaky, convoluted plot by taking 50 grand from lubri- cious New York mayor Hostetler (Russell Crowe) to find out who’s shtupping Hizzoner’s wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Before you can say Noah Cross, Billy finds himself drawn into a maelstrom of corruption, shady real estate deals, extor- tion, murder, and half-baked dialogue. This, plus the ordeal of watching his actress wife get humped in an “indie” movie, drives the recovering alcoholic Taggert back to the Jameson bottle, allowing Wahlberg to stir from his inertia and draw on his explosive physicality. Mean- while, director Allen Hughes tries to be “indie” himself by pointlessly circling the camera around random scenes. Jeffrey Wright distinguishes himself in the star-heavy cast as the mor- ally ambiguous police commis- sioner; for his reward he gets the best line in the film. _peter Keough time fretting about the social implications of being served hot dogs at a picnic. The First Lady (Olivia Williams) spends her time debating whether it’s impo- lite to refer to Her Royal High- ness as “Elizabeth.” Sometimes it’s all played for droll, knowing laughs. But most of the time it feels like an SNL sketch with all the punchlines removed. _Jake mulligan Broken City ATTENTION TO DETAIL often an afterthought at other restaurants, Zen’s sour soup is made with care. 2.7 Barrington Levy w Mighty Mystic & Soul Rebel Project 2.17 Punch Brothers 2.6 Jukebox The Ghost 2.16 The Dunwells 1.25 Private Event Book your next event at PCMH Just Added 2.28 Talib Kweli FRIDAY 1/25 SATURDAY 1/26 FRIDAY 2/1 WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE PRESENTS GREEN DAY/DOOKIE SLY-CHI W/ EYENINE MAMA’S BOOMSHACK PRESENTS PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION 6TH ANNUAL RUCKUS CUP MC BATTLE LYLE DIVINSKY & THE VELVET VAGABONDS / THE NAT OSBORN BAND w/ ALICIA LEMKE JAN 29 JAN 25 JAN 26 FEB 01 FEB 02 $5 COVER Tuesday nights! CLASSIC ALBUM NIGHT cover to cover And original music showcase GREEN DAY/DOOKIE WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE GREEN DAY AFTER PARTY! JAN 25 FRIDAY PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION MAMA’S BOOMSHACK JAN 29 TORI AMOS/BOYS FOR PELE The CHILDREN OF TREES FEB 5 BRIGHT EYES/LIFTED BUILDER OF THE HOUSE OR The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground FEB 26 THE DEAD MILKMEN/BEELZEBUBBA COVERED IN BEES FEB 19 SATURDAY 2/2 TUESDAY 1/29 36 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Portland ClarKS Pond CInEMaGIC Grand 333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023 Call for shows & times. nICKElodEon CInEMaS 1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.9751 Call for shows & times. PMa MoVIES 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 GrEGorY CrEWdSon: BrIEF En- CoUntErS | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2 WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC 183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456 Call for shows & times. MaInE alaMo tHEatrE 85 Main St, Bucksport | 207.469.0924 lES MISEraBlES | Fri-Sat: 6:30 | Sun: 2 aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10 746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605 BroKEn CItY | 4:10, 6:55, 9:15 GanGStEr SQUad | 7:25, 9:45 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | 4:35 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | 12:20, 2:30, 7:30, 9:35 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY 3d | 12:40, 4:05 tHE laSt Stand | 9:50 lInColn | 12:30, 3:50, 7:10 MaMa | 1:30, 4:25, 7:05, 9:20 lES MISEraBlES | noon, 3:30, 6:45 MoVIE 43 | 1:20, 4:15, 7, 9:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | 1:10 ParKEr | 12:50, 4, 7:15, 9:40 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | 1, 3:55, 6:50, 9:25 ZEro darK tHIrtY | 12:10, 3:40, 7:20 CEntEr tHEatrE 20 E Main St, Dover-Foxcroft | 207.564.8943 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri: 7 | Sat: 2, 7 | Sun: 2 | Mon-Tue: 7 ColonIal tHEatrE 163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times. EVEnInGStar CInEMa Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Bruns- wick | 207.729.5486 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri-Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 8:30 | Mon-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30 FrontIEr CInEMa 14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222 CHaSInG ICE | Sun: 2, 6, 8 | Tue: 2 | Wed: 2, 6, 8 | Thu: 2 lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10 855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010 Call for shows & times. narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877 dJanGo UnCHaInEd | Fri-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Tue: 7:20 | Wed: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Thu: 7:20 dinner + movie movie TheaTer lisTings Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday,January 25 through Thurs- day, January 31. Times can and do change without notice, so do call the theater before heading out. For up-to-date film-schedule in- formation, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at thePhoenix.com. SMIttY’S CInEMa- BIddEFord 420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 7, 10 | Sun- Thu: 7 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sun: noon, 7 | Mon-Thu: 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon- Thu: 3:30 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 7:15 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 3:30, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 MonStErS, InC 3d | Fri-Sun: 12:30 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon-Thu: 4 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:45, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 SMIttY’S CInEMa- SanFord 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 6:30, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 6:30 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri: 12:30, 7:30 | Sat-Sun: 12:30, 6:30 | Mon- Thu: 6:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fr-Sati: 3:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: 11:45 am, 3:15 | Mon-Thu: 3:15 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 7 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Mon: 3:50, 6:40 | Tue: 6:40 | Wed: 3:50, 6:40 | Thu: 6:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri-Mon: 4:30, 9:30 | Tue: 9:30 | Wed: 4:30, 9:30 | Thu: 9:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Mon: 1:30, 7 | Tue: 7 | Wed: 1:30, 7 | Thu: 7 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 7:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Mon: 1:20 | Wed: 1:20 ParKEr | Fri-Mon: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Tue: 6:50, 9:20 | Wed: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Thu: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri- Mon: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Tue: 9:10 | Wed: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Thu: 9:10 tHIS IS 40 | 9 WrECK-It ralPH | Fri-Mon: 1:10, 4:20 | Wed: 1:10, 4:20 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Mon: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Tue: 7:30 | Wed: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Thu: 7:30 nordICa tHEatrE 1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Sat: 3:40, 10 | Mon-Thu: 3:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:20, 9:50 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4:15, 7:20 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 12:10, 6:30 lInColn | 12:30, 4, 7:30 lES MISEraBlES | 12:45, 3:50, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: noon, 3:15, 6:30 oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 1:10, 4:05, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10, 9:20 | Sun-Thu: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 2, 6:45 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20, 9:35 | Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sat: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50, 9:15 | Sun-Thu: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50 ParKEr | Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 6:55, 9:30 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4, 6:55 raIlroad SQUarE 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 3, 7:10, 9 | Sat: 1, 3, 7:10, 9 | Sun-Mon: 1, 3, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 3, 7:10 tHE IMPoSSIBlE | Fri: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sat: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sun: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 lIFE oF PI | Fri-Sat: 2:40, 7:10, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 2:40, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Mon- Tue: 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Wed: 4:40, 7 | Thu: 2:20, 4:40, 7 SIStEr | Sat-Sun: 10 am rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times. SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX 783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234 Call for shows & times. MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: noon, 4, 7, 10 | Sun: noon, 4, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:30 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: 11:45 am, 3, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 11:45 am, 3:30, 7 | Mon-Thu: 3:15, 7 SPaCE GallErY 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 CHaSInG ICE | Fri: 7:30 onlY tHE YoUnG | Wed: 7:30 SPotlIGHt CInEMaS 6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 BroKEn CItY | 12:35, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35, 9:55 tHE laSt Stand | 12:25, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 MaMa | 12:40, 3:20, 5:25, 7:40, 9:50 StonInGton oPEra HoUSE Main St, Stonington | 207.367.2788 ProMISEd land | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 4 Strand tHEatrE 345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070 tHE BIG PICtUrE | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sun: 1, 6 | Mon-Thu: 7 HoW to SUrVIVE a PlaGUE | Sun: 3:30 tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10 9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times. WEllS FIVE Star CInEMa 75 Wells Plaza, Rte 1, Wells | 207.646.0500 BroKEn CItY | Fri: 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sat: 1:15, 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sun: 1:15, 4:15, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4:15, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri: 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sat: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 | Mon- Thu: 4:10, 7:10 Chasing Ice HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sat: 1, 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sun: 1, 4, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:45 lInColn | Fri: 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:30 lES MISEraBlES | Fri: 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sat: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sun: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25 | Mon-Thu: 3:25, 6:25 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sat: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sun: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 4:05, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri: 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sat: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sun: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35 | Mon-Thu: 3:35, 6:35 nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall 28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900 a latE QUartEt | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 3, 7 | Tue-Thu: 7 lIVE BroadCaSt oF tHE MaGIStratE BY tHE natIonal tHEatrE oF london | Sat: 1 rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15 45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times. FIlM SPECIalS BatES CollEGE Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | 207.786.6255 arGo | Fri: 7:30 | Sat: 2, 7:30 | Sun: 2 | Mon: 4:30 BoWdoIn CollEGE Visual Arts Center, Brunswick | 207.725.3000 CHICo Y rIta | Thu: 7 a ContraCorrIEntE | Wed: 7 loPE | Mon: 7:30 taMBIEn la llUVIa | Tue: 7 CaMdEn PUBlIC lIBrarY 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.2823 aMErICa’S MUSIC: SWInG JaZZ | Sun: 3 CatHolIC CHarItIES USM - Portland, Glickman Library, 7th Floor, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | 207.781.8550 UProotEd | Tue: 6 drEaMland tHEatEr Winter Street Center, 880 Washing- ton St, Bath | 207.443.2174 Man on a WIrE | Thu: 7 tHE Grand 165 Main St, Ellsworth | 207.667.9500 tHE Gold rUSH (WItH lIVE SCorE BY tEMPo) | Fri: 7 lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater Rd, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424 EUroPa KonZErt FroM naPolI | Sun: 2 lEd ZEPPElIn: CElEBratIon daY | Thu: 7 loCal SProUtS CooPEratIVE 653 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 BEttInG tHE FarM | Mon: 7 UnItY CollEGE Center for the Performing Arts, 42 Depot St, Unity | 207.948.7469 tHE atoMIC StatES oF aMErICa | Mon: 7 YorK PUBlIC lIBrarY 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 aIMEE & JaGUar | Sat: 7 36 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Portland ClarKS Pond CInEMaGIC Grand 333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023 Call for shows & times. nICKElodEon CInEMaS 1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.9751 Call for shows & times. PMa MoVIES 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 GrEGorY CrEWdSon: BrIEF En- CoUntErS | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2 WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC 183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456 Call for shows & times. MaInE alaMo tHEatrE 85 Main St, Bucksport | 207.469.0924 lES MISEraBlES | Fri-Sat: 6:30 | Sun: 2 aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10 746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605 BroKEn CItY | 4:10, 6:55, 9:15 GanGStEr SQUad | 7:25, 9:45 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | 4:35 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | 12:20, 2:30, 7:30, 9:35 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY 3d | 12:40, 4:05 tHE laSt Stand | 9:50 lInColn | 12:30, 3:50, 7:10 MaMa | 1:30, 4:25, 7:05, 9:20 lES MISEraBlES | noon, 3:30, 6:45 MoVIE 43 | 1:20, 4:15, 7, 9:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | 1:10 ParKEr | 12:50, 4, 7:15, 9:40 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | 1, 3:55, 6:50, 9:25 ZEro darK tHIrtY | 12:10, 3:40, 7:20 CEntEr tHEatrE 20 E Main St, Dover-Foxcroft | 207.564.8943 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri: 7 | Sat: 2, 7 | Sun: 2 | Mon-Tue: 7 ColonIal tHEatrE 163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times. EVEnInGStar CInEMa Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Bruns- wick | 207.729.5486 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri-Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 8:30 | Mon-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30 FrontIEr CInEMa 14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222 CHaSInG ICE | Sun: 2, 6, 8 | Tue: 2 | Wed: 2, 6, 8 | Thu: 2 lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10 855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010 Call for shows & times. narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877 dJanGo UnCHaInEd | Fri-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Tue: 7:20 | Wed: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Thu: 7:20 dinner + movie movie TheaTer lisTings Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday,January 25 through Thurs- day, January 31. Times can and do change without notice, so do call the theater before heading out. For up-to-date film-schedule in- formation, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at thePhoenix.com. SMIttY’S CInEMa- BIddEFord 420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 7, 10 | Sun- Thu: 7 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sun: noon, 7 | Mon-Thu: 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon- Thu: 3:30 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 7:15 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 3:30, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 MonStErS, InC 3d | Fri-Sun: 12:30 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon-Thu: 4 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:45, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 SMIttY’S CInEMa- SanFord 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 6:30, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 6:30 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri: 12:30, 7:30 | Sat-Sun: 12:30, 6:30 | Mon- Thu: 6:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fr-Sati: 3:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: 11:45 am, 3:15 | Mon-Thu: 3:15 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 7 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Mon: 3:50, 6:40 | Tue: 6:40 | Wed: 3:50, 6:40 | Thu: 6:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri-Mon: 4:30, 9:30 | Tue: 9:30 | Wed: 4:30, 9:30 | Thu: 9:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Mon: 1:30, 7 | Tue: 7 | Wed: 1:30, 7 | Thu: 7 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 7:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Mon: 1:20 | Wed: 1:20 ParKEr | Fri-Mon: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Tue: 6:50, 9:20 | Wed: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Thu: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri- Mon: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Tue: 9:10 | Wed: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Thu: 9:10 tHIS IS 40 | 9 WrECK-It ralPH | Fri-Mon: 1:10, 4:20 | Wed: 1:10, 4:20 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Mon: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Tue: 7:30 | Wed: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Thu: 7:30 nordICa tHEatrE 1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Sat: 3:40, 10 | Mon-Thu: 3:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:20, 9:50 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4:15, 7:20 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 12:10, 6:30 lInColn | 12:30, 4, 7:30 lES MISEraBlES | 12:45, 3:50, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: noon, 3:15, 6:30 oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 1:10, 4:05, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10, 9:20 | Sun-Thu: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 2, 6:45 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20, 9:35 | Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sat: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50, 9:15 | Sun-Thu: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50 ParKEr | Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 6:55, 9:30 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4, 6:55 raIlroad SQUarE 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 3, 7:10, 9 | Sat: 1, 3, 7:10, 9 | Sun-Mon: 1, 3, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 3, 7:10 tHE IMPoSSIBlE | Fri: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sat: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sun: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 lIFE oF PI | Fri-Sat: 2:40, 7:10, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 2:40, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Mon- Tue: 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Wed: 4:40, 7 | Thu: 2:20, 4:40, 7 SIStEr | Sat-Sun: 10 am rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times. SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX 783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234 Call for shows & times. MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: noon, 4, 7, 10 | Sun: noon, 4, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:30 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: 11:45 am, 3, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 11:45 am, 3:30, 7 | Mon-Thu: 3:15, 7 SPaCE GallErY 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 CHaSInG ICE | Fri: 7:30 onlY tHE YoUnG | Wed: 7:30 SPotlIGHt CInEMaS 6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 BroKEn CItY | 12:35, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35, 9:55 tHE laSt Stand | 12:25, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 MaMa | 12:40, 3:20, 5:25, 7:40, 9:50 StonInGton oPEra HoUSE Main St, Stonington | 207.367.2788 ProMISEd land | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 4 Strand tHEatrE 345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070 tHE BIG PICtUrE | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sun: 1, 6 | Mon-Thu: 7 HoW to SUrVIVE a PlaGUE | Sun: 3:30 tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10 9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times. WEllS FIVE Star CInEMa 75 Wells Plaza, Rte 1, Wells | 207.646.0500 BroKEn CItY | Fri: 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sat: 1:15, 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sun: 1:15, 4:15, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4:15, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri: 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sat: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 | Mon- Thu: 4:10, 7:10 Chasing Ice HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sat: 1, 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sun: 1, 4, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:45 lInColn | Fri: 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:30 lES MISEraBlES | Fri: 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sat: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sun: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25 | Mon-Thu: 3:25, 6:25 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sat: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sun: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 4:05, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri: 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sat: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sun: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35 | Mon-Thu: 3:35, 6:35 nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall 28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900 a latE QUartEt | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 3, 7 | Tue-Thu: 7 lIVE BroadCaSt oF tHE MaGIStratE BY tHE natIonal tHEatrE oF london | Sat: 1 rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15 45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times. FIlM SPECIalS BatES CollEGE Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | 207.786.6255 arGo | Fri: 7:30 | Sat: 2, 7:30 | Sun: 2 | Mon: 4:30 BoWdoIn CollEGE Visual Arts Center, Brunswick | 207.725.3000 CHICo Y rIta | Thu: 7 a ContraCorrIEntE | Wed: 7 loPE | Mon: 7:30 taMBIEn la llUVIa | Tue: 7 CaMdEn PUBlIC lIBrarY 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.2823 aMErICa’S MUSIC: SWInG JaZZ | Sun: 3 CatHolIC CHarItIES USM - Portland, Glickman Library, 7th Floor, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | 207.781.8550 UProotEd | Tue: 6 drEaMland tHEatEr Winter Street Center, 880 Washing- ton St, Bath | 207.443.2174 Man on a WIrE | Thu: 7 tHE Grand 165 Main St, Ellsworth | 207.667.9500 tHE Gold rUSH (WItH lIVE SCorE BY tEMPo) | Fri: 7 lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater Rd, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424 EUroPa KonZErt FroM naPolI | Sun: 2 lEd ZEPPElIn: CElEBratIon daY | Thu: 7 loCal SProUtS CooPEratIVE 653 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 BEttInG tHE FarM | Mon: 7 UnItY CollEGE Center for the Performing Arts, 42 Depot St, Unity | 207.948.7469 tHE atoMIC StatES oF aMErICa | Mon: 7 YorK PUBlIC lIBrarY 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 aIMEE & JaGUar | Sat: 7 AVAILABLE NOW © 2012 FOX. All Rights Reserved. “Taken 2 is slick, professional action… 3 stars out of 4 “ - Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times AvAilAble JAnuAry 29th © 2012 Sony Pictures Animation Inc. All Rights Reserved. © 2013 Layout and Design Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. “Fantastic Fun For The Entire Family.” -Joel Amos, moviefanatic.com 38 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f This week the moon is waxing and waning, and that all-important full moon happens on Saturday. Full moons are useful for taking a crisis to a breaking point, or bringing random people together to make a “team.” Since this moon is in child-centered Leo, you may find an urge to procreate somehow blends with a desire to get a whole new set of toys (hey, it happens). If you need to make a decision, and you feel it’s all too confusing right now, you do have another two weeks until the new moon, when deci- siveness comes more easily. For more, visit moonsigns. net or friend me as “Symboline Dai” on Facebook. thursday january 24 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waxing moon in cancer. protection and defense are today’s themes, particularly for cancer, Scorpio, aries, libra, capricorn, and pisces — you folks may feel the walls aren’t high enough to shield you. taurus, Virgo, Gemini, aquarius, Sagittarius, and leo may feel a domestic urge, and a recipe that requires complicated ingredients will be more ap- pealing than usual. however, the homebody instinct will prevail for all! Friday january 25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waxing moon in cancer; moon void-of-course 3:35 pm until 9:20 am Saturday. We should have a term for the “light of the moon,” the day before the full moon when everything’s a little nuts. Big fat cancer moons generally signify turf-wars. “Where’s mine?” comes naturally to many, particularly cancer, Scorpio, aries, libra, capricorn, and pisces. Sensitive yet insightful could be the default mode for taurus, Virgo, Gemini, aquarius, Sagittarius, and leo. saturday january 26 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Full moon in leo; moon void-of-course in cancer before 9:20 am. have a new year’s party now! also a fine day for promoting your- self and/or acting like a child. how about having fun with your toys? are you still charmed by what Santa left under the tree? moon and mars are at odds, so domesticity and bliss may be at odds, particularly for aquari- us, taurus, and Scorpio. Gemini, cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, aries, capri- corn, pisces, and Sagittarius: speak up for what you need. sunday january 27 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in leo. another fine day for an impromptu party. leo, taurus, Scorpio, and aquarius: what’s up with your exercise regimen? talk is cheap, and gym memberships are cheaper. Gemini, can- cer, leo, Virgo, libra, aries, capricorn, pisces, and Sagittarius: take action if you feel confined. others will admire you for it. leo moons bring out the boasting impulse, which can be amusing to behold. Monday january 28 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in leo; moon void-of-course 11:59 am until 6:27 pm, when it moves into Virgo. an all-day void-of-course moon makes for missing information, misfiled data, and communication confusion, particularly for taurus, Gemini, Scorpio, Sagittarius, aquar- ius, and pisces. however, there’s excellent ingredients for a “do-over” for cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, capricorn, and aries. tuesday january 29 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in Virgo. personally, i find Virgo moons useful (de- spite the phase) for cleaning and organizing. Seeing what you don’t need, or what you can live without, is a good exercise today. Finding fault with others’ microscopic errors is far more fun that facing huge gaps in one’s own understanding. Virgo’s insights are worth listening to — even on a Friday. pisces, self-doubt is natural right now. taurus and capricorn: enjoy being efficient, even if your tasks take longer than anticipated. Wednesday january 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in Virgo; moon void-of-course 8:59 pm until 1:36 am thursday. Jupiter moves direct. an evening void-of-course moon means you may doubt your judgment, but during the day, follow your in- stincts, even if you’re going to monkey with others’ choices (“you’re wear- ing that again?”). moving in circles is safer than forward momentum into “the void.” cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, Scorpio, taurus, capricorn, aries, aquarius: finish the project. pisces, Gemini, and Sagittarius: pay attention to interruptions, which may save you from a poor choice. jonesin’ _by Matt Jones Moonsigns _by syMboline Dai Back page Moon Keys This horoscope traces the passage of the moon, not the sun. Simply read from day to day to watch the moon’s influence as it moves through the signs of the zodiac. | When the moon is in your sun sign, you are beginning a new 28-day emotional cycle, and you can expect increased insight and emotionality. When the moon moves into the sun sign opposite yours (see below), expect to have difficulties dealing with the opposite sex, family, or authority figures; social or romantic activities will not be at their best. | When the moon is in Aries, it opposes Libra, and vice versa. Other oppositions are Taurus/Scorpio, Gemini/Sagittarius, Cancer/Capricorn, Leo/Aquarius, and Virgo/Pisces. The moon stays in each sign approximately two and a half days. | As the moon moves between signs, it will sometimes become “void of course,” making no major angles to planets. Consider this a null time and try to avoid making or implementing decisions if you can. But it’s great for brainstorming. | For Symboline Dai’s sun-sign horoscopes and advice column, visit our Web site at thePhoenix.com. Symboline Dai can be reached at sally@moonsigns.net. Across 1 mosque officials 6 Stop, drop or roll 10 agents of change? 14 tag cry 15 olympic figure skater Kulik 16 trade 17 “our movies are so riveting they contain ___” 19 one of marlon’s brothers 20 immigrant’s class, briefly 21 horse with whitish hairs 22 mineral used in sandpaper 24 Sugar alternative in chewing gum 26 Block, as a river 27 dog doc 28 Where press releases arrive 31 Kartik Seshadri’s instrument 34 Bean whose top producer is cote d’ivoire 35 one of George of the Jungle’s pals 36 it’s got an outskirts 37 hard to see through 38 play like a bad cd 39 lance on the bench “buy one, get one free” — you can’t afford *not* to own these! ©2013 Jonesin’ CrossworDs | eDitor@JonesinCrossworDs.CoM 40 Frivolous decisions 41 Stopped existing 42 Strands in the back 44 2013 Golden Globes cohost tina 45 Say without saying 46 it opens many doors 50 Bitter end 52 cafe au ___ 53 lofty poem 54 candid 55 “our pillows are extra full because we ___!” 58 half-owner of lake titicaca 59 “disappear” band 60 ___ in the bud 61 overly emphatic assent said with a fist pump 62 nair competitor 63 “Strawberry Wine” singer carter Down 1 textbook section 2 Shy and quiet 3 in any way 4 alternative to gov, edu or com 5 Word before pistol or kit 6 totally necessary 7 tiger’s ex 8 2016 olympics city 9 type and type and type 10 Samba singer ___ Gilberto 11 “our meringues stand up so well that you’ll see ___” 12 Win at chess 13 dalmatian feature 18 cantankerous old guy 23 “i ___ over this...” 25 “terrible” ruler 26 dealer’s packets 28 dea figures: var. 29 music magazine 30 held onto 31 Word on a Kool-aid packet 32 Greek vowel 33 “our races are scrutinized down to the millisecond because we use ___” 34 his nose was tweaked many times 37 Submitted a ballot, perhaps 38 Simon ___ 40 auto race units 41 london entertainment district 43 Words at the start of a countdown 44 epic ___ 46 the p in pBr 47 King in the Super mario Bros. series 48 hubble of the hubble telescope 49 Gossip 50 not quick to catch on: var. 51 Fencing sword 52 de ___ 56 “a chorus line” hit 57 Go kaput F Puzzle solution at thePhoenix.coM/recro oM Big Fat Whale _by brian McFaDDen PORTLAND’S ORIGINAL UNORIGINAL MUSIC NIGHT 311 vs. INCUBUS JAN 23 T. REX vs. ELO JAN 30 TOOL vs. RUSH FEB 6 BILL WITHERSvs. AL GREEN FEB 13 ARCADE FIRE vs. VAMPIRE WEEKEND FEB 20 80’s TVvs. 90’s TV FEB 27 TOM WAITSvs. LEONARD COHEN MAR 6 QOTSA vs. BLACK SABBATH MAR 13 SNOOP DOGG vs. CYPRESS HILL MAR 20 JUSTIN TIMBERLAK E vs. BEYONCE MAR 27 EMPIRE • WEDNESDAYS • 9PM DOORS 575 CONGRESS STREET PORTLAND ME PORTLANDEMPIRE.COM 207.879.8988 presented by
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january 25–31, 2013 | Portland’s news + arts + entertainment authority | Free firing the warden Prison reform continues | p 4 !news expanding horizons stream the alternative WFNX.com — online 24/7, anywhere New inspiration to learn: F a USM philosopher F a vegan cooking teacher F a musician communing with the dead Art aBstraCt exCellenCe Lois DoDD at the PortLanD MuseuM of art _by Ken Greenleaf | p 18 Dining Chinese delight savorinG Zen’s caLM care _by Brian Duff p 34 LocAL Music the ladY’s no lamB the BeeKeePer’s DeBut aLBuM roars _by sam Pfeifle p 24 support Your faves! nominate local stars thePhoenix. com/best the best of portland 2013 Academic Advising College Placement Testing Adult Basic Education College Transitions ESOL GED C a r e e r A d v is in g Career and Workforce Training Trades Music and Dance IT Healthcare Training, Online Classes A lte rn at iv e E ne rg y Arts and Crafts Cooking, Exercise Employment Skills Certificate Languages Outdoor Fun M et ap hy sic al T op ic s Home and Family Trips Personal Finance Health and Wellness C om pu te rs a n d Te ch n ol og y Gray - New Gloucester adult aNd commuNity educatioN 657-2620 adult educatioN of the KeNNebuNKs aNd aruNdel 985-1116 lewistoN adult educatioN 795-4141 Noble adult & commuNity educatioN (North berwicK) 676-3223 old orchard beach/saco adult aNd commuNity educatioN 934-7922 PortlaNd adult educatioN 775-0432 auburN adult aNd commuNity educatioN 333-6661 boNNy eaGle adult educatioN (buxtoN) 929-9185 cumberlaNd - North yarmouth adult aNd commuNity educatioN 829-2208 rsu 5 recreatioN & commuNity educatioN (freePort) 865-6171 Gorham adult educatioN 222-1095 scarborouGh adult learNiNG ceNter 730-5040 south PortlaNd adult educatioN 347-3389 wells-oGuNquit adult commuNity educatioN 646-4565 wiNdham - raymoNd adult educatioN 892-1819 Ged Now! suPer saturday, march 2, 2013, 9:00 am-1:00 Pm Info and TesTIng avaIlable aT Many of The PrograMs lIsTed here! Call PrograMs fMI or To regIsTer. maiNeadulted.orG aCCess The PrograM websITes Through The web PorTal address below. *Please mention the word "Phoenix" when contacting the programs. 121 Center Street, Portland, ME (207) 772-8274 buy tiCkEtS onlinE: Portlandasylum.com WEd: karaoke tHuRS: Retro night FRi: Plague SAt: Electronic dance Music WEEKly EVEnts Sat. gin bloSSoMS Jan 26 W/ CRASH booM bAng & WoRRiEd WEll AgES: 18+ / Win A FREtligHt guitAR SignEd by tHE ginS! thurs. SEvEnduSt & Feb 7 lACunA Coil W/ AvAtAR / AgES: 18+ tix AlSo AvAilAblE At All bullMooSE loCAtionS! Sat. JoAnnA SMitH Feb 16 AgES: 18+ Sun. toM kEiFER oF Feb 17 CindEREllA AgES: 18+ Sat. HindER W/ nonPoint Mar 2 tix on SAlE 1/25 / AgES: 18+ Sun. SoulFly FEAt. Mar 10 MAx CAvAlERA oF SEPultuRA FAME W/ inCitE & lody king AgES: 18+ thurs. EddiE MonEy Mar 21 unPluggEd AgES: 21+ Sat. gEt tHE lEd out Apr 13 lEd zEPPElin tRibutE bAnd AgES: 18+ uPcomInG EVEnts 575 CONGRESS WWW.PORTLANDEMPIRE.COM 879-8988 EMPIRE COKEWEED, ANEVENINGWITH, MICAH BLUE SMALDONE Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies downstairs, every thursday, no cover, rock-a-billy CLASH OF THE TITANS 311 vs INCUBUS UPCOMING: ALL GOOD FEEL GOOD COLLECTIVE EIGHT FEET TALL, JOINT CHIEFS WED THU 1.23 1.24 FRI SAT 1.25 1.26 BAR IS OPEN.SUN GATTIS–GIRUOARD downstairs, every tuesday, no cover, yacht rock NORTH OF NASHVILLE downstairs, every monday, no cover bluegrass served with a side of waylon MON Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies downstairs, every thursday, no cover, rock-a-billy CLASH OF THE TITANS T REX vs ELO WED THU 1.30 1.31 1.28 1.29 TUE 2.1 Jeƒ Beam, Tan Vampires 2.9 Tricky Britches 2.10 Local Muscle Film Fest 2.14 Butcher Boy 2.22 Whitehorse 2.23 Twiddle 3.2 Milo Greene Friday 1/25 COVER TO COVER SPECIAL FRIDAY EDITION - WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE PRESENTS GREEN DAY•DOOKIE Saturday 1/26 SLY-CHI: THE 3 SIDES OF SLY CHI: JAZZ SET•ALL-ORIGINAL FUNK SET•SLY-CHI DANCE PARTY FEATURING EYENINE! upcoming ShowS monday 1/28- FUNKY MONDAYS • THE PLAYERS’ BALL tuesday 1/29- COVER TO COVER • MAMA’S BOOMSHACK PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION SINCE 1966FouNdEd IN 1999 PEtEr KadzIS executive editor 04 tHIS JuSt IN 06 PoLItICS + otHEr MIStaKES _BY AL DIAMON 06 HooPLEVILLE _BY DAVID KISH 06 oNE CENt’S wortH _BY MArc MewSHAw 08 LEarNINg to tEaCH _BY jeff INgLIS 10 CooKINg VEgaN _BY DeIrDre fuLtON 12 dEad roCK StarS _BY NIcHOLAS ScHrOeDer 14 8 daYS a wEEK _BY NIcHOLAS ScHrOeDer 18 art _BY KeN greeNLeAf 20 tHEatEr _BY MegAN gruMBLINg 22 booKS _BY DeIrDre fuLtON 24 LoCaL MuSIC _BY SAM PfeIfLe 25 LIStINgS 34 dINNEr + MoVIE _BY BrIAN Duff 38 LEttErS + MooN SIgNS + JoNESIN’ January 25, 2013 | Vol XV, No 4 p 34 p 14 ON tHe cOVer F main image design by janet smith taylor, music photo by servin lainez boStoN | ProVIdENCE | PortLaNd StEPHEN M. MINdICH Publisher + chairman EVErEtt FINKELStEIN chief oPerating officer the Phoenix media/communications grouP chairman StEPHEN M. MINdICH chief oPerating officer EVErEtt FINKELStEIN executive editor PEtEr KadzIS senior vice President of client develoPment a. wILLIaM rIStEEN tHE PHoENIX NEwSPaPErS | FNX radIo NEtworK | MaSS wEb PrINtINg | StuFF MagazINE | PEoPLE2PEoPLE grouP PortLaNd general manager JoHN MarSHaLL managing editor JEFF INgLIS editorial design manager JaNEt SMItH taYLor staff Writer dEIrdrE FuLtoN listings coodinator NICHoLaS SCHroEdEr contributing Writers aL dIaMoN, brIaN duFF, aNtHoNY gIaMPEtruzzI, CHrIStoPHEr graY, KEN grEENLEaF, MEgaN gruMbLINg, aLEX IrVINE, daVId KISH, brItta KoNau, MarC MEwSHaw, SaM PFEIFLE, LINdSaY StErLINg, SHaY StEwart-bouLEY, LaNCE taPLEY account executives NICoLE ELwELL, ErIN ELIzabEtH, EMMa HoLLaNdEr, ErIC KENNEY integrated account coordinator adaM oPPENHEIMEr circulations director JIM dorgaN circulations manager MICHaEL JoHNSoN oFFICES boston 126 brooKLINE aVE., boStoN, Ma 02215, 617-536-5390, adVErtISINg dEPt FaX 617-536-1463, EdItorIaL dEPt FaX 617-859-8201, classifieds 126 brooKLINE aVE., boStoN, Ma 02215 617-859-3300, FaX 617-425-2670 | Providence 150 CHEStNut St., ProVIdENCE, rI 02903, 401-273-6397, FaX 401-273-0920 | Portland 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME 04101, 207-773-8900, FaX 207-773-8905 | NatIoNaL SaLES oFFICE 150 CHEStNut St., ProVIdENCE, rI 02903, 401-273-6397 X232, FaX 401-272-8712 | Web site www.tHEPHoENIX.CoM letters to the editor gErMaNE to aN artICLE tHat HaS aPPEarEd IN our PaPEr SHouLd bE SENt to 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME, 04101 | EMaIL to PortLaNd-FEEdbaCK@PHX.CoM. PLEaSE INCLudE a daYtIME tELEPHoNE NuMbEr For VErIFICatIoN. subscriPtions $90/6 MoNtHS, $150/1 YEar | SENd NaME aNd addrESS wItH CHECK or MoNEY ordEr to: SubSCrIPtIoN dEPartMENt, PortLaNd PHoENIX, 65 wESt CoMMErCIaL St., SuItE 207, PortLaNd, ME, 04101 coPyright © 2013 bY tHE PortLaNd PHoENIX, LLC, aLL rIgHtS rESErVEd. rEProduCtIoN wItHout PErMISSIoN, bY aNY MEtHod wHatSoEVEr, IS ProHIbItEd. tHE PortLaNd PHoENIX | JaNuarY 25, 2013 3 4 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com out without warning Ex-Maine State Prison warden Patricia Barnhart. He added: “My philosophy is very differ- ent from most people in corrections.” It’s more like Commissioner Ponte’s, he said. Ponte has said: “We’re not in the business of punishment, but corrections.” Here’s a third clue: Prison reformers have long viewed Barnhart as a reform roadblock, too willing to accept the old ways. And they suspect that a recent alleged assault by a Maine State Prison guard captain on a hand- cuffed prisoner, Renardo Williams, had something to do with Barnhart’s firing. In a telephone interview, Williams, serv- ing 15 years for drug trafficking, gave his ver- sion of the Christmas Eve incident: After he this Just in f Corrections commissioner Joseph Ponte told the Legislature’s Criminal Justice Committee on January 16 that, because of state personnel law, he couldn’t publicly say — until severance negotiations are finished — why he had fired, six days earlier, Maine State Prison warden Patricia Barnhart. She has said she can’t say why, either. But a likely reason is that Barnhart didn’t go along with the program: Ponte’s aggres- sive two-year-old effort to reform the prison. Here’s a major clue. When asked in an interview what sort of new warden he would seek, Ponte replied he wanted somebody skilled in the “change process.” Here’s another clue. Ponte has named Rod Bouffard the acting warden at Warren. One of the most experienced change agents in the prison system, Bouffard reformed the Long Creek Youth Development Center, in South Portland. He transformed it from one of the harshest juvenile lockups in the coun- try to a treatment-oriented model studied all over the country for its success in reducing recidivism, the return to criminal behavior after inmates are released. In a brief interview, Bouffard, who said he wouldn’t apply to become the permanent warden because Warren is too far from his home in the Portland area, tellingly com- mented on his plans for the prison: “I’m definitely going to soften it” — a stunning remark from a corrections official. Bouffard said treating prisoners with respect begets better-behaved prisoners. When it was suggested the prison’s “old boys’ network” may resist change, he replied: “Well, they’d better hang on. I’ve experienced that more than once in my ca- reer,” referring to staff resistance to reform at Long Creek. The final clue: the prison guards’ union has vocally defended the warden after her termination. Getting answers Why the prison warden got fired Scene from a pipeline protest The glue-in f It takes less than two minutes for the squad to fully lock into formation in the TransCanada office in Westborough, Massachusetts. As added insurance, each of them twists open a tube of super glue, slathers the adhesive on their palms, and joins hands with their arms across their chests. A TransCanada employee stares perplexedly at the protesters, tells them that he called the cops, and politely asks everyone to unlock. Devyn Powell, a 20-year-old Tufts junior who has been appointed the group’s spokesperson, draws her line in the sand: “This isn’t against anyone in this office, but we’re not leaving until they stop the pipeline.” The first cop arrives on the scene 10 minutes into the disturbance, and he is not amused. As he paces around the protest circle, explaining the concept of private property, he racks his brain for some solution to the unprecedented conun- drum before him — they don’t get too many glue-ins around these parts. A few minutes pass, and a second officer arrives, followed by the Westborough chief of police and, minutes later, a fire truck. Even with all the king’s horses and all the objected to what he saw as harassment from the captain and a couple of other guards, the captain had handcuffs put on him. Told to sit down, he responded, “I choose to stand.” Then, Williams said, the captain “tackled me,” knocking his legs from under him, and both fell down. Prisoner-rights advocates have com- plained for years that this officer bullied inmates. He reportedly has been suspended or fired. The Corrections department didn’t reply by deadline to a request for his status. (Because the Phoenix wasn’t able to reach him before deadline, his name is being withheld.) Maine NAACP director Rachel Talbot Ross said the group plans to meet with Wil- liams, an African American, to discuss the incident. Williams has been transferred to the Maine Correctional Center in Windham because, he said, “I feared for my life” from the captain’s friends and family working at the state prison. In an interview, Ponte said he couldn’t comment on the incident because an inves- tigation is going on. “It had nothing to do” with Barnhart’s dismissal, he said. Bouffard, the new Maine State Prison boss, has a mental-health-treatment back- ground, having run the Augusta Mental Health Institute (now Riverview Psychiatric Center) and the now-closed Pineland Center for the developmentally disabled. His boss, Ponte, has become nationally known for dramatically reducing solitary confinement, in which many mentally ill prisoners had been placed. Ponte has ac- complished other reforms, including reduc- ing the frequency that probation violations send people back to prison, thereby helping stabilize what had been an ever-growing and ever-more-expensive prison population. He king’s men, though, the first responders call for an outside locksmith. In the meantime, since one cop failed to separate the protesters with sheer force — by attempting to pry their hands apart — the medics move to unseal the glue in a more delicate manner. By scrap- ing and peeling, they manage to eradicate most of the gobs, and erode whatever’s left with swabs soaked in nail-polish remover. Once the protestors are unglued, about an hour and a half into the fray, addi- tional help arrives. Like the cops who called him, the locksmith appears anything but thrilled to be there; he puts his tools down anyway, and begins to drill the ankle lock on UNH senior Ben Trolio. In a 10-minute shower of sparks, the lock- smith manages to free everyone’s legs using the same technique — but that’s the easy part. Someone still has to crack through eight $100 “New York Fahgettaboudit” locks, made of case-hardened, triple-heat-treated boron man- ganese steel. The manufacturer, Kryptonite, is so sure of the impenetrability of their locks, they’ll replace your bike if the product is com- promised. Faced with that challenge, the lock- smith gives up and takes off. Next up: portlaNd The gang has so far raised more than $2000 — for bail commission fees, fines, and other expenses — through their website. As they await their court date, they’ve been speaking out about their January 7 shake-up. This Saturday, January 26, they’ll align with 350 New England and other activist groups in Portland, for a protest against Exxon- Mobil’s Northeastern tar-sands pipeline. _Chris Faraone read the full account, and updates, at thePhoenix.com. also has reduced guard overtime expenses by millions of dollars a year. Speaking of Ponte’s reforms at the Crimi- nal Justice Committee meeting, its Senate chairman, Stan Gerzofsky, a Democrat, remarked, “It’s a big gamble the commis- sioner has taken on,” alluding to possible public reaction if an inmate or former in- mate who was treated less strictly commits a heinous crime. But, Gerzofsky said, “The alternative is warehousing, and that does nobody any good.” “And it’s expensive,” Ponte interjected. Senator Gary Plummer, the committee’s lead Republican, said the state needs to extend “the good things we’ve done with ju- veniles to another population” in the prison system. Ponte and the Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition have long pushed for exactly that. In an email, MPAC’s Jim Bergin said he hoped new leadership at the prison “will facilitate continued change from an out- moded punitive-based means of controlling inmates to an incentive-based approach.” Bergin saw Barnhart’s firing as confirma- tion that “the lack of leadership at the top in the prison created an atmosphere where certain staff have been enabled to disregard policy and even instigate disruption as a means of discrediting the commissioner and his improvements.” Indeed, veteran correctional officers have complained about Ponte’s new approaches to dealing with prisoners — to the point that Barnhart, who was appointed by Commis- sioner Martin Magnusson in 2009, was, after her firing, vigorously defended in the daily press by a guard union official. _Lance Tapley 6 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com politics + other mistakes _BY AL DIAMON _BY DAVID KISh How to fix everything f I’m not a big fan of reform. Per-haps that’s the result of a child- hood lived under constant threats from parents and teachers that if I didn’t change my ways, I’d be sent to “reform school.” I never took those warnings too seriously, so my aversion to reform probably owes more to reading H. L. Mencken. In his A New Dictionary of Quo- tations, there’s this listing: “Reforms should begin at home and stay there.” It’s credited to “author unknown,” but that was often Mencken’s way of quoting himself. Maine’s greatest contribution to Congress, Thomas Brackett Reed (speaker of the House, 1889-1891 and 1895-1899), was also less than enthu- siastic about reform. Reed saw it this way: “An indefinable something is to be done, in a way nobody knows how, at a time nobody knows when, that will accomplish nobody knows what.” This state has a considerable his- tory of reforms that haven’t worked out quite as promised. Prohibition, which Maine adopted long before the rest of the country, proved lucrative for criminals, but ineffective in most other ways. Term limits on legisla- tors were supposed to open up seats so more ordinary citizens could serve. Instead, that law allowed a few mas- terful tacticians to preside over an idiocracy. Public funding of elections was said to be the way to thwart the power of rich people and corpora- tions. It turned out that was uncon- stitutional, and now those entities dominate campaign spending. You might think the reformers would have learned their lesson by now, but you’d be wrong. They’ve just come up with a swell new propos- al. It requires term limits on drinking booze paid for with public money. Oops, sorry. That idea is still in development. This year’s version of fixing what isn’t broken is called ranked-choice voting. The effort to have the governor elected by this complicated and expensive method is being sponsored by Democratic state Representative Janice Cooper and independent state Senator Richard Woodbury, both of Yarmouth (some- body should check the water supply in that town). “This isn’t a major change in the way the system works,” Cooper told the Forecaster. Assuming that by “major,” she doesn’t mean a constitutional amend- ment, the appropriation of millions of dollars, the creation of a logisti- cal nightmare, and the likelihood of mass confusion. After all, most of those same drawbacks plague crowd- control efforts on an average Saturday night in Portland’s Old Port. Speaking of Portland, it already has ranked-choice voting. It was used for the first time in 2011 to pick a mayor from among 15 candidates. Voters rated each contender from their first choice to their last. When the ballots were counted the person with the lowest number of first-place votes was eliminated, and his or her support was distributed to whoever was ranked second. This process continued until somebody got a ma- jority. According to supporters, that’s the big advantage of ranked-choice voting. It produces a winner backed by over 50 percent of the electorate. And it does that in the same way that Prohibition reduced immorality, term limits increased accountability and Clean Election funding did away with corruption. Which is to say, it doesn’t. Michael Brennan, the winner of the mayor’s race in Portland, received support on a little less than 46 per- cent of all valid ballots cast. That’s because ranked-choice voting requires throwing out any “exhausted” bal- lots, those on which the voter didn’t express a preference for either the eventual winner or the runner-up. Let’s say there were five candidates for governor: a Democrat, a Repub- lican, a Green, a well-financed inde- pendent, and a poverty-stricken non- party hopeful with radical plans for improving government. You, being weary of the non-solutions offered by the major parties, fill out your ranked-choice ballot (which requires an advanced degree in mechanical en- gineering to understand) thusly: Your first choice is the under- funded independent. This is the great thing about ranked-choice. It allows you to support a candidate with no chance of winning without wasting your vote. Your second choice is the Green, because you like the outsider’s per- spective. Again, you get to vote your conscience without worrying about being shut out of the final decision. Your third selection is the rich independent. You have your doubts, but you figure you’ve got to vote for somebody who’s a viable candidate. You don’t vote for the Republican or Democrat. After several days of state workers uploading ballots to a computer sys- tem capable of sorting them out and hand-counting the ballots on which there are ambiguities, the results are announced: One of the major-party contenders prevailed. But because you didn’t choose either of them, your vote isn’t figured in those totals. For all intents, you might as well have stayed home on election day. Home? Isn’t that where Mencken said reform belonged? ^ Form your comments. Then, re-form them. Only after that should you email them to me at aldiamon@herniahill.net. Card-Carrying Congress f this year is just barely out of the crate, and already it’s shaping up to be depressingly like last year. With the dust still settling from the fiscal cliff fiasco, foot soldiers on both sides of the aisle are sharpening their knives for yet another clash, this time over some- thing called the debt ceiling. But what exactly is it? tax revenues don’t begin to cover the cost of the uS’s spending programs, meaning the government has to borrow cash to make up the shortfall. But it doesn’t just hit up mom when it needs a loan. instead, it secures funds by packaging its debt into bonds known as “trea- sury securities.” investors — individuals, institutions, and countries — who buy them are effectively loaning the treasury the face value of that bond to do with as it pleases. But there’s a finite amount of bonds the government can have in circulation before it has to seek congressional approval for more. periodically, the uS hits that debt ceil- ing — as happened on december 31, when it reached its borrowing limit of $16.4 trillion — and congress votes on whether or not to extend the government’s line of credit. historically, that’s just a formality, but in the summer of 2011, for the first time the debt ceiling was used as an instrument of political advantage. cue 2013, and once again republicans are holding the debt ceiling hostage to demands for huge spending cuts, under the guise of “deficit reduction.” (the Gop’s real objective? Gouge a big hole into entitlement programs and thereby shrink the government bureaucracies that administer welfare.) the current fight is emblematic of the poisonous, ideology-driven politics of our times. in refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless the president agrees to matching spending cuts, the republican-held congress is deny- ing the president the funds to pay for spending it has already mandated. obama has compared this to dine- and-dash. others have likened it to running up charges on a credit card and refusing to pay the bill at the end of the month. to add to the perversity, the president will be in breach of the law if he fails to dispose of the money the way congress has voted. in short, congress is directing him to spend money that it’s withholding, then exploit- ing the subsequent manufactured crisis to get its way. how’s that for cynical, circular logic? the (sort of) good news is that treasury secretary tim Geithner can stave off bankruptcy for another couple months using a patchwork of “extraordinary measures” (read: accounting tricks). after that, he (or his successor) may have to resort to issuing ious to the uS’s creditors — guarantees that they’ll be paid eventu- ally. that might work for a while, but eventually the uS will default on its debts. in that event, payouts to Social Security beneficiaries will cease, military contractors and federal workers won’t receive paychecks, and foreign creditors will get stiffed (to name a few). But that’s nothing compared to the turbulence that would engulf the global economy and likely tip it back into recession. even if the fight doesn’t get that far, the uS econo- my could be in for a beating. therein lies the hypocrisy of the republicans’ position. though they claim to be looking out for the country’s long-term fiscal health by using the debt ceiling as way to force the issue on deficit reduction, in fact their hostage-taking could do lasting harm. the 2011 debt ceiling debacle led to a grim milestone — the first-ever downgrading of america’s credit rating. Who knows how much more damage the uS’s standing as safe haven and reserve currency might sustain if the Gop follows through on its threat of a knockdown, drag-out fight. So far, obama has ruled out any extrajudicial end runs like minting a $1 trillion coin. instead, he seems to be counting on sanity to bring the opposition to the bargaining table. But with large swathes of the Gop still in thrall to tea party ideologues, that’s a dangerous gamble. ^ one Cent’s Worth _BY mArc mewShAw marc.mewshaw@gmail.com 6 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com politics + other mistakes _BY AL DIAMON _BY DAVID KISh How to fix everything f I’m not a big fan of reform. Per-haps that’s the result of a child- hood lived under constant threats from parents and teachers that if I didn’t change my ways, I’d be sent to “reform school.” I never took those warnings too seriously, so my aversion to reform probably owes more to reading H. L. Mencken. In his A New Dictionary of Quo- tations, there’s this listing: “Reforms should begin at home and stay there.” It’s credited to “author unknown,” but that was often Mencken’s way of quoting himself. Maine’s greatest contribution to Congress, Thomas Brackett Reed (speaker of the House, 1889-1891 and 1895-1899), was also less than enthu- siastic about reform. Reed saw it this way: “An indefinable something is to be done, in a way nobody knows how, at a time nobody knows when, that will accomplish nobody knows what.” This state has a considerable his- tory of reforms that haven’t worked out quite as promised. Prohibition, which Maine adopted long before the rest of the country, proved lucrative for criminals, but ineffective in most other ways. Term limits on legisla- tors were supposed to open up seats so more ordinary citizens could serve. Instead, that law allowed a few mas- terful tacticians to preside over an idiocracy. Public funding of elections was said to be the way to thwart the power of rich people and corpora- tions. It turned out that was uncon- stitutional, and now those entities dominate campaign spending. You might think the reformers would have learned their lesson by now, but you’d be wrong. They’ve just come up with a swell new propos- al. It requires term limits on drinking booze paid for with public money. Oops, sorry. That idea is still in development. This year’s version of fixing what isn’t broken is called ranked-choice voting. The effort to have the governor elected by this complicated and expensive method is being sponsored by Democratic state Representative Janice Cooper and independent state Senator Richard Woodbury, both of Yarmouth (some- body should check the water supply in that town). “This isn’t a major change in the way the system works,” Cooper told the Forecaster. Assuming that by “major,” she doesn’t mean a constitutional amend- ment, the appropriation of millions of dollars, the creation of a logisti- cal nightmare, and the likelihood of mass confusion. After all, most of those same drawbacks plague crowd- control efforts on an average Saturday night in Portland’s Old Port. Speaking of Portland, it already has ranked-choice voting. It was used for the first time in 2011 to pick a mayor from among 15 candidates. Voters rated each contender from their first choice to their last. When the ballots were counted the person with the lowest number of first-place votes was eliminated, and his or her support was distributed to whoever was ranked second. This process continued until somebody got a ma- jority. According to supporters, that’s the big advantage of ranked-choice voting. It produces a winner backed by over 50 percent of the electorate. And it does that in the same way that Prohibition reduced immorality, term limits increased accountability and Clean Election funding did away with corruption. Which is to say, it doesn’t. Michael Brennan, the winner of the mayor’s race in Portland, received support on a little less than 46 per- cent of all valid ballots cast. That’s because ranked-choice voting requires throwing out any “exhausted” bal- lots, those on which the voter didn’t express a preference for either the eventual winner or the runner-up. Let’s say there were five candidates for governor: a Democrat, a Repub- lican, a Green, a well-financed inde- pendent, and a poverty-stricken non- party hopeful with radical plans for improving government. You, being weary of the non-solutions offered by the major parties, fill out your ranked-choice ballot (which requires an advanced degree in mechanical en- gineering to understand) thusly: Your first choice is the under- funded independent. This is the great thing about ranked-choice. It allows you to support a candidate with no chance of winning without wasting your vote. Your second choice is the Green, because you like the outsider’s per- spective. Again, you get to vote your conscience without worrying about being shut out of the final decision. Your third selection is the rich independent. You have your doubts, but you figure you’ve got to vote for somebody who’s a viable candidate. You don’t vote for the Republican or Democrat. After several days of state workers uploading ballots to a computer sys- tem capable of sorting them out and hand-counting the ballots on which there are ambiguities, the results are announced: One of the major-party contenders prevailed. But because you didn’t choose either of them, your vote isn’t figured in those totals. For all intents, you might as well have stayed home on election day. Home? Isn’t that where Mencken said reform belonged? ^ Form your comments. Then, re-form them. Only after that should you email them to me at aldiamon@herniahill.net. Card-Carrying Congress f this year is just barely out of the crate, and already it’s shaping up to be depressingly like last year. With the dust still settling from the fiscal cliff fiasco, foot soldiers on both sides of the aisle are sharpening their knives for yet another clash, this time over some- thing called the debt ceiling. But what exactly is it? tax revenues don’t begin to cover the cost of the uS’s spending programs, meaning the government has to borrow cash to make up the shortfall. But it doesn’t just hit up mom when it needs a loan. instead, it secures funds by packaging its debt into bonds known as “trea- sury securities.” investors — individuals, institutions, and countries — who buy them are effectively loaning the treasury the face value of that bond to do with as it pleases. But there’s a finite amount of bonds the government can have in circulation before it has to seek congressional approval for more. periodically, the uS hits that debt ceil- ing — as happened on december 31, when it reached its borrowing limit of $16.4 trillion — and congress votes on whether or not to extend the government’s line of credit. historically, that’s just a formality, but in the summer of 2011, for the first time the debt ceiling was used as an instrument of political advantage. cue 2013, and once again republicans are holding the debt ceiling hostage to demands for huge spending cuts, under the guise of “deficit reduction.” (the Gop’s real objective? Gouge a big hole into entitlement programs and thereby shrink the government bureaucracies that administer welfare.) the current fight is emblematic of the poisonous, ideology-driven politics of our times. in refusing to raise the debt ceiling unless the president agrees to matching spending cuts, the republican-held congress is deny- ing the president the funds to pay for spending it has already mandated. obama has compared this to dine- and-dash. others have likened it to running up charges on a credit card and refusing to pay the bill at the end of the month. to add to the perversity, the president will be in breach of the law if he fails to dispose of the money the way congress has voted. in short, congress is directing him to spend money that it’s withholding, then exploit- ing the subsequent manufactured crisis to get its way. how’s that for cynical, circular logic? the (sort of) good news is that treasury secretary tim Geithner can stave off bankruptcy for another couple months using a patchwork of “extraordinary measures” (read: accounting tricks). after that, he (or his successor) may have to resort to issuing ious to the uS’s creditors — guarantees that they’ll be paid eventu- ally. that might work for a while, but eventually the uS will default on its debts. in that event, payouts to Social Security beneficiaries will cease, military contractors and federal workers won’t receive paychecks, and foreign creditors will get stiffed (to name a few). But that’s nothing compared to the turbulence that would engulf the global economy and likely tip it back into recession. even if the fight doesn’t get that far, the uS econo- my could be in for a beating. therein lies the hypocrisy of the republicans’ position. though they claim to be looking out for the country’s long-term fiscal health by using the debt ceiling as way to force the issue on deficit reduction, in fact their hostage-taking could do lasting harm. the 2011 debt ceiling debacle led to a grim milestone — the first-ever downgrading of america’s credit rating. Who knows how much more damage the uS’s standing as safe haven and reserve currency might sustain if the Gop follows through on its threat of a knockdown, drag-out fight. So far, obama has ruled out any extrajudicial end runs like minting a $1 trillion coin. instead, he seems to be counting on sanity to bring the opposition to the bargaining table. But with large swathes of the Gop still in thrall to tea party ideologues, that’s a dangerous gamble. ^ one Cent’s Worth _BY mArc mewShAw marc.mewshaw@gmail.com Psychic Medium and Author For Tickets: www.ETix.com or www.Johnedward.net Reading Not Guaranteed July 17, 2013 - 7pm Holiday Inn by the Bay 88 Spring St Portland, ME 04101 July 18, 2013 - 7pm Hilton Boston Logan Airport, 1 Hotel Dr Boston, MA 02128 July 21, 2013 - 1pm The Westin Providence 1 West Exchange St Providence, RI 02903 JOHN EDWARD HAPPY HOUR: Mon-Fri. 4-7pm $2.50 Domestics • $3.50 Micros • $5 Nachos Wed. $7 Domestic Pitchers • 2 Cheeseburgers & Fries $6.99 Thur. 50¢ Wings • $7 Bud Light Pitchers Fri. $5 Burritos • $4 Cuervo Margaritas 121 Center St. Portland • 207-772-8274 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK: 11:30am to 1am www.Portlandasylum.com Friday night is right for puck, beer and food! BruIns v. Islanders @ 7Pm hockey's Back! Our hi-def screens, full bar & killer menu will make you feel like you're at all your favorite games. Voted #1 Wings in Portland! watch all t he actIon on our hI-d ef tvs wIth Ice co ld Brews & food sPec Ials! Hit country single includes: ‘We Can’t Be Friends’ buy tickets online: JOANNA SMITH Feb. 16thSat u rd a y www.PortlandAsylum.com 8 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com The Turning of souls USM prof: Teaching iS aboUT SpiriT, noT daTa _by Jeff ingliS f Making an impassioned plea for humanistic considerations to remain paramount in our societal discussion about education and its continual improvement, University of Southern Maine philosophy professor Jeremiah Conway follows his own advice. He seeds his book, The Alchemy of Teach- ing (forthcoming in March from Sentient Publications), with stories of classroom encounters between students and ideas that remind us of an important, but oft-neglect- ed, truth about education: It is no good if it merely teaches the young facts and tasks to be accomplished in the workforce. Rather, education must deeply and fully engage both students and teachers in the quest for under- standing and connection. Conway begins and ends with aspects of the Greek myth of Daedalus and Icarus — and the Breugel painting depicting that myth’s climactic moment. He inquires thoroughly into what the story might mean (see excerpt in sidebar) Conway gently, calmly, and un- relentingly shreds the data-driven mantras of the modern industrial-style education system. His heartfelt tales of students young and very old transforming themselves — and their teacher — get to the heart of a distinctly European, even Renaissance tradition of edu- cation: that its aim is not to indoctrinate nor to cause memorization, but rather to excite, to enthrall, and, above all, to spark the hu- man potential within each of us. In constructing his subtle argument — for this is among the least argumentative ex- amples of a persuasive essay — Conway mar- shals some unexpected forces. Among those making significant, and sympathetic, ap- pearances here are a religious fundamental- ist, a smartypants overachiever, a reclusive- silent type, and an elderly woman. But there is more. A particularly impas- ‘Descendants of Daedalus’ Conway on what Breugel’s ‘Fall of Icarus’ was really about F considering the story now, i’m aware of themes that i wasn’t when i first looked at the painting. i see that the myth is deeply concerned with the relation between parents and children, one generation and the next. it’s also very much a myth about teach- ing, asking adults to consider the knowledge that they bequeath to the young. Further, the story concerns the powers and limits of technical knowledge. daedalus is a brilliantly clever man; in fact, his very name comes from the Greek word Daidalos, meaning “cunning worker.” in many ways, he personifies human technological inventiveness. yet the myth repeatedly suggests that this acumen can be dangerous, even destructive. daedalus’ tal- ents helped to procreate the minotaur. he let tyrants employ his gifts for sinister purposes. he constructed the labyrinth, only to have it become a slaughterhouse for the young. he mastered the principles of flight and created wings, succeeding in bringing about the death of his son. in the background of The Fall of Icarus, i now see daedalus as a failed teacher and parent. in both roles, his legacy is complex and twisted. his technological brilliance and creativity are undeniable, yet they culminate in achievements that he ends up cursing. his gifts create suffering for himself and others. his care for his son seems limited to the provision of technological devices. is the myth a criticism of technical inventiveness? i doubt it. Whether exemplified in labyrinths or towers of Babel, the impulses to design and make are deeply ingrained in our human make-up and deserving of celebration. to me, the myth hints at a more subtle criticism — one that concerns education — that the transfer of technological knowledge and skills is insufficient. technology, if we are not to rue it, must conjoin with the cultivation of humanity. my attention shifts from [icarus’s] disappearing legs to the brilliant sun dominating the landscape, and the figures of the peasants going about their work. these peasants (whom Breugel often celebrates) possess something often forgotten in the midst of technological brilliance. they, frequently perforce, remain close to the earth. in their farm- ing, fishing, and sailing, they rely upon and care for it. of course, they use technology as sioned section takes the interpretation of Ni- etzsche’s nihilism in a direction even philos- ophy students might be surprised at. While the 19th-century German thinker thought the rise of lamentable decadence was the first step toward its subsequent dissolution, he wrote movingly in Thus Spoke Zarathustra of feel- ing and thinking and sensing and processing deep within the body — “in the blood,” as he put it. Conway’s professorial but not at all dry explication of this section of the text leads to an account of how a particular class of his en- gaged with this idea; the deep soulful exami- nations that discussion entails augur well for Nietzsche’s forlorn hopes. Certainly more a work of thought and exploration than of diagnosis or prescrip- tion, The Alchemy of Teaching asks its readers to remember that those ancients who sought to transform base metals into valuable treasure didn’t know exactly how it might occur, but retained their sense of wonder and certainty at the potential of the universe to deliver riches beyond measure. We, and all students of any age or era, should be so lucky as to in herit not only the scientific determinism of the alchemists, but also their mystic faith in the ultimate possibility: that all leaden pupils might, with care, attention, and not a little bit of liberty, transform themselves — and, perhaps, their equally lucky teachers — into golden pioneers simultaneously finding and creating new worlds. ^ thinking teacher Jeremiah conway urges deep interaction with material. well — they harness sail and plow and fishing pole. But their tools seem observant of na- ture, working with its rhythms. the peasant figures seem in the landscape part of nature, not its masters. did Breugel think that they possess a wisdom that daedalus and his son lack? in the simplicity of their lives, do they remain faithful to the earth, cultivating a sense of interdependence (and, hence, an awareness of limits) that neither daedalus nor icarus exhibit? like the circus troupe in Hard Times, do these peasants possess a respect for the earth that, for all his brilliance, daedalus fails to teach? this sixteenth-century painting is particularly appropriate to the world we inhabit. We’re a scientific, technological culture to an extent never previously imagined. We’re descendants of daedalus. i look at those two sticks of bare leg now and confront a warning and a teaching imperative: cultivate the humanity of the young or the advancement of technology will do us little good and considerable harm. help them be more mindful of themselves and others. Grow compassion. consider and make teaching a noble profession. perhaps there’s time to develop a more acute sense of the interdependence of life. perhaps we can become more faithful to the earth. it is for us as it was for daedalus: the lives of our children depend on it. excerpted from The Alchemy of Teaching by Jeremiah conway, published by Sentient Publications, copyright 2013. Used by permission. let it be a leSSon to yoU breugel’s ‘The fall of icarus’ has another hid- den message for us. 121 Center St. Portland • 207-772-8274 www.Portlandasylum.com sunday Feb. 17th ageS: 18+ / lead singer of cinderella The ViVisecTors on tour from Moscow saTurday Feb. 26Th @ 9 pM No cover 8 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com The Turning of souls USM prof: Teaching iS aboUT SpiriT, noT daTa _by Jeff ingliS f Making an impassioned plea for humanistic considerations to remain paramount in our societal discussion about education and its continual improvement, University of Southern Maine philosophy professor Jeremiah Conway follows his own advice. He seeds his book, The Alchemy of Teach- ing (forthcoming in March from Sentient Publications), with stories of classroom encounters between students and ideas that remind us of an important, but oft-neglect- ed, truth about education: It is no good if it merely teaches the young facts and tasks to be accomplished in the workforce. Rather, education must deeply and fully engage both students and teachers in the quest for under- standing and connection. Conway begins and ends with aspects of the Greek myth of Daedalus and Icarus — and the Breugel painting depicting that myth’s climactic moment. He inquires thoroughly into what the story might mean (see excerpt in sidebar) Conway gently, calmly, and un- relentingly shreds the data-driven mantras of the modern industrial-style education system. His heartfelt tales of students young and very old transforming themselves — and their teacher — get to the heart of a distinctly European, even Renaissance tradition of edu- cation: that its aim is not to indoctrinate nor to cause memorization, but rather to excite, to enthrall, and, above all, to spark the hu- man potential within each of us. In constructing his subtle argument — for this is among the least argumentative ex- amples of a persuasive essay — Conway mar- shals some unexpected forces. Among those making significant, and sympathetic, ap- pearances here are a religious fundamental- ist, a smartypants overachiever, a reclusive- silent type, and an elderly woman. But there is more. A particularly impas- ‘Descendants of Daedalus’ Conway on what Breugel’s ‘Fall of Icarus’ was really about F considering the story now, i’m aware of themes that i wasn’t when i first looked at the painting. i see that the myth is deeply concerned with the relation between parents and children, one generation and the next. it’s also very much a myth about teach- ing, asking adults to consider the knowledge that they bequeath to the young. Further, the story concerns the powers and limits of technical knowledge. daedalus is a brilliantly clever man; in fact, his very name comes from the Greek word Daidalos, meaning “cunning worker.” in many ways, he personifies human technological inventiveness. yet the myth repeatedly suggests that this acumen can be dangerous, even destructive. daedalus’ tal- ents helped to procreate the minotaur. he let tyrants employ his gifts for sinister purposes. he constructed the labyrinth, only to have it become a slaughterhouse for the young. he mastered the principles of flight and created wings, succeeding in bringing about the death of his son. in the background of The Fall of Icarus, i now see daedalus as a failed teacher and parent. in both roles, his legacy is complex and twisted. his technological brilliance and creativity are undeniable, yet they culminate in achievements that he ends up cursing. his gifts create suffering for himself and others. his care for his son seems limited to the provision of technological devices. is the myth a criticism of technical inventiveness? i doubt it. Whether exemplified in labyrinths or towers of Babel, the impulses to design and make are deeply ingrained in our human make-up and deserving of celebration. to me, the myth hints at a more subtle criticism — one that concerns education — that the transfer of technological knowledge and skills is insufficient. technology, if we are not to rue it, must conjoin with the cultivation of humanity. my attention shifts from [icarus’s] disappearing legs to the brilliant sun dominating the landscape, and the figures of the peasants going about their work. these peasants (whom Breugel often celebrates) possess something often forgotten in the midst of technological brilliance. they, frequently perforce, remain close to the earth. in their farm- ing, fishing, and sailing, they rely upon and care for it. of course, they use technology as sioned section takes the interpretation of Ni- etzsche’s nihilism in a direction even philos- ophy students might be surprised at. While the 19th-century German thinker thought the rise of lamentable decadence was the first step toward its subsequent dissolution, he wrote movingly in Thus Spoke Zarathustra of feel- ing and thinking and sensing and processing deep within the body — “in the blood,” as he put it. Conway’s professorial but not at all dry explication of this section of the text leads to an account of how a particular class of his en- gaged with this idea; the deep soulful exami- nations that discussion entails augur well for Nietzsche’s forlorn hopes. Certainly more a work of thought and exploration than of diagnosis or prescrip- tion, The Alchemy of Teaching asks its readers to remember that those ancients who sought to transform base metals into valuable treasure didn’t know exactly how it might occur, but retained their sense of wonder and certainty at the potential of the universe to deliver riches beyond measure. We, and all students of any age or era, should be so lucky as to in herit not only the scientific determinism of the alchemists, but also their mystic faith in the ultimate possibility: that all leaden pupils might, with care, attention, and not a little bit of liberty, transform themselves — and, perhaps, their equally lucky teachers — into golden pioneers simultaneously finding and creating new worlds. ^ thinking teacher Jeremiah conway urges deep interaction with material. well — they harness sail and plow and fishing pole. But their tools seem observant of na- ture, working with its rhythms. the peasant figures seem in the landscape part of nature, not its masters. did Breugel think that they possess a wisdom that daedalus and his son lack? in the simplicity of their lives, do they remain faithful to the earth, cultivating a sense of interdependence (and, hence, an awareness of limits) that neither daedalus nor icarus exhibit? like the circus troupe in Hard Times, do these peasants possess a respect for the earth that, for all his brilliance, daedalus fails to teach? this sixteenth-century painting is particularly appropriate to the world we inhabit. We’re a scientific, technological culture to an extent never previously imagined. We’re descendants of daedalus. i look at those two sticks of bare leg now and confront a warning and a teaching imperative: cultivate the humanity of the young or the advancement of technology will do us little good and considerable harm. help them be more mindful of themselves and others. Grow compassion. consider and make teaching a noble profession. perhaps there’s time to develop a more acute sense of the interdependence of life. perhaps we can become more faithful to the earth. it is for us as it was for daedalus: the lives of our children depend on it. excerpted from The Alchemy of Teaching by Jeremiah conway, published by Sentient Publications, copyright 2013. Used by permission. let it be a leSSon to yoU breugel’s ‘The fall of icarus’ has another hid- den message for us. 10 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Plant-based Practice Learning to eat more with Less impact _by DeirDre FuLton f In the course of an hour, Chris Mc-Clay convinced me that I just may be able to live without cheese. Shocking, I know. It was her vegan chipotle nachos, made with lentils and nut-based “cheese” sauce (see sidebar for the recipe), that sparked my conviction. McClay, 38, is the proprietor of Port- land’s new Modern Vegan Cooking School and the Maine representative for the Wellness Forum, a national for-profit dietary-education organization. She’s been eating a plant-based diet since 1992, when a college course piqued her interest in vegetarianism and then full-on vegan- ism. She hasn’t eaten any animal-derived products since then — really. No meat, no cheese, no dairy products. And, perhaps most remarkably, no cravings. “It’s my choice,” she says in her West- brook kitchen on a recent afternoon. She wakes up every day and thinks, “I can eat whatever I want today.” It just so happens that what she wants are vegan foods. While the philosophy of veganism — avoiding the consumption of animal products — has been around for centuries, the term itself was coined in 1944 and the American Vegan Society was founded in 1960. Interest in the United States has gained steadily since then; surveys report that between 0.5 and 3 percent of Ameri- cans now identify as vegan (including Bill Clinton and Mike Tyson). Proponents claim that eating a plant- based diet improves overall health and well-being, resilience to disease, skin problems, and energy levels. It also decreases a person’s carbon footprint, given that the industrial livestock sector releases significant pollution and green- house gas emissions into our water and atmosphere. “I can’t think of a worse way to use resources that produce worse worldly out- comes,” McClay says. “It’s very political for me.” She also cites weight-loss ben- efits and disease-prevention as personal motivators. Plus, going vegan can reduce your grocery bill, especially if you start to buy ingredients from the bulk aisle. Two years ago — right around the time Clinton announced he’d gone vegan — McClay decided it was time to put herself out there as a resource to her community. She’d reaped internal benefits of vegan- ism for two decades; now she wanted to spread the word. She began offering personal chef services and private cook- ing lessons, and got positive responses to both. And so this month, she’s launching a series of public cooking classes to further widen her reach. On the docket in Febru- ary: courses covering winter soups, cook- ing for weight-loss, greens, and dinner- party fare. Her teaching strategy is simple: Focus on creating an entire meal, rather than “meat with a side of vegetables.” Incorpo- rate complex carbohydrates, grains, and legumes. When people dive into a plant- based diet thinking they can survive on salads alone, McClay cringes. “They’re bloated, they’re starving, they’re bored,” she says. With a Modern Vegan education, there are no restrictions, no portion control. McClay likes to teach her students that they can eat as much as they want — as long as they’re eating the right stuff. “You’re feeding yourself foods that nourish every cell in your body,” she says. Her number one tip for healthier cooking? Stop using oil for sautéeing veg- etables. Instead, use small amounts of water, lemon juice, broth, wine, or beer — not enough to steam what’s in the pan, just enough to make sure nothing burns or sticks (this doesn’t work in a nonstick pan). An equally important tactic, much to my dismay, is to eliminate cheese, which McClay notes has addictive properties (researchers have claimed that cheese pro- duces opiate effects in consumers — not to mention its high levels of cholesterol and fat). Now that I have her nut-sauce recipe in hand, I may be able to get closer to a cheese-less existence. Not to worry: in McClay’s world, even baby steps count. If you sign up for a Modern Vegan cooking class, “I don’t ex- pect that you have any intention of going vegan,” McClay says. “It’s about learning new foods, new things to eat, and ways to incorporate that on a personal level.” ^ Learn more about Modern Vegan and the Wellness Forum on Tuesday, January 29, when McClay hosts a free dinner and dis- cussion at the Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland. Registration is required; call 207.409.7778 or visit portland.wellnessfor- umrep.com. More information about Modern Vegan cooking classes can be found at modern-vegan.com. heaLThy STRaTegieS chris mcclay suggests sautéeing with water and switching out cheese for non-dairy alternatives. Vegan chipotle nachos with cheese sauce For ‘cheese sauce’ 1/2 cup raw cashews 1/2 cup nutritional yeast 1 tablespoon chili powder 1/2 teaspoon paprika 1/2 teaspoon onion powder 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder 1 teaspoon ground mustard put all the ingredients into your food p rocessor and mix until it forms a liquid . pour into a medium saucepan and warm on medium heat, stirring co nstantly. once the sauce thickens up a bit it’s ready to pour over your nachos. For ‘nacho meat’ over medium-low heat, mix together cooked lentils, a bit of oregano, cumin , coriander, and salt, as well as minced garlic, onion, and chipotle pep per, three tablespoons of tomato past e, and a dash of sriracha. mash with a fork. pile lentil mixture on top of yellow cor n chips, drizzle with cheese sauce, and dress with guacamole and salsa to your liking. 1 teaspoon cayenne 1 tablespoon tahini 1 tablespoon miso paste 2 cups plain almond milk 2 tablespoons cornstarch or arrowroot po wder (to thicken) 10-15 slices of jarred jalapeño slices (depending on your tolerance for sp ice) AT UNDER $2,600 IN TUITION SMCC GIVES YOU A LOT TO SMILE ABOUT. Get started now! Visit www.smccME.edu/smile or call 207-741-5800 • Work towards a degree • Earn easily transferable credits • Take a class to grow personally or professionally • And more! S O U T H P O R T L A N D | B R U N S W I C K | O F F S I T E | O N L I N E 12 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com of the Cold War. And while a sermon from the spirit world isn’t a source you could confidently cite in an academic text, that claim might have some truth to it. But leaving academic matters aside, even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained here, where the author refreshingly avoids the conven- tional ballyhoo and sanctimonious drivel that clouds most “rock insider” writing. In a chapter titled “Finding the Group,” he apprises that “(s)ome of your collabora- tors might be refugees from awful jobs, insipid record collections, religious sects, bad marriages, and dormitories full of sports enthusiasts. Your group will be their last hope, and there might be des- peration in their eyes. These are the ones you want.” In “Determining Goals,” we learn that “the group is familial, a radi- cal restructuring of the family unit from the nuclear model to something more akin to a hunter-gatherer tribe or a Stalin- era collectivist farm.” And in “Sex,” we come to understand that “for the groupie, there were live boys; for the men there were dead heroes. After all, the boy who mourns and honors the dead is transcend- ing carnality . . . and is expressing his depth and his authentic passion for the music.” But for all its bogus posturing and aca- demic pretensions, Supernatural Strategies is ultimately the work of one of the move- ment’s true believers, and might be read as a serious — some might say important — effort. As he puts it, Svenonius sees rock and roll as “a sort of expression that was smothered during the rational age of enlightenment,” or a form of primordial communication that addresses timeless ideas of community and collaborative ef- fort. “That explains its totally universal appeal. That’s why it’s like rediscovering fire, why it never gets old.” Ideology is grossly inefficient, and so it naturally goes overlooked in any profit- bearing career model, let alone one as competitive as the music business. The ones proferred in Supernatural Strategies, over a brisk 250 pages, analyze seemingly every facet of the industry as we know it, yet still might not get you any closer to the ultimate, unimpeachable goal of rock stardom. Some truly determined entre- preneurs out there might even subvert the author’s aim, finding Supernatural Studies to be a useful proxy for years of toil gigging the club circuit or conducting countless hours of stereo research. But however use- ful its readers might find it, this book is an event — because let’s face it, today’s rock and roll so often isn’t. ^ Supernatural StrategieS for Making a rock ’n’ roll group | by Ian Svenonius | 250 pages | Akashic Books | $14.95 | Svenoni- us reads, with a DJ set, January 27 @ 7:30 pm | at SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 | space538.org Are you A believer? Ian SvenonIuS conjureS the SpIrIt world In revIvIng rock and roll hIStory _by nIcholaS Schroeder f These days, the road toward a suc-cessful music career seems very brightly lit. Like an intricate GPS device teeming with metadata, today’s lifestyle mags, rock camps, music blogs, real- ity shows, and alcohol industries each help to illuminate the path for young musicians, so that their efforts to create a healthy, productive rock group go as smoothly and efficiently as possible. So where’s the problem? While this sce- nario might appear as a blessing for those looking to land a nice, comfortable career in music — or a zesty Pandora playlist, for that matter — some augur a certain danger in whittling rock and roll to a series of clean, flat stones placed over a bog one traverses en route to artistic fame or financial success. One of those conspiring to muck up the path is Ian Svenonius: writer, DJ, and frontman of DC post-punk groups the Make-Up, Nation of Ulysses, and now Chain and the Gang. In his new and uniquely comprehensive book, Supernatu- ral Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group, Svenonius invokes the black-magic art of the séance in revising rock history, resur- recting dead rock stars and long-buried ideological perspectives on the origins and exhibitions of the well-traveled form. Like a smoke bomb in a SXSW show- case, the ambitious project of Supernatural Strategies is to inject a spume of confusion into the staid, success-driven rock nar- rative of today, while serving as a quasi- mystical handbook for that rare musician still willing to take the long route. Writ- ten in a language couched in satire and anchored by years of experience, it is both a rigorous study of an elusive and endur- ing cultural art and a sobering critique of its many tortured machinations. And as the contemporary music landscape has been re-stratified by new technologies and contracted economies, it might even be particularly topical. As Svenonius told the Portland Phoenix in a tele- phone call, the book is a response to what he perceives as a shifting ethos in the music world. “It’s generally considered a positive development that rock and roll bands are becoming institutionalized,” he explains. “There are all these rock camps for kids now — they’re sponsored and fomented — and they’re filled with really practical knowl- edge about how to be in a band. It’s all laid out like a Petri dish, and that has profound implications on the form of rock and roll.” While those familiar with Svenonius’s musical endeavors will recognize the sé- ance as a stylistic conceit necessary to hurdle the threat of didacticism that can block such lofty concepts (see also the cheekily Marxian diatribes in Ulysses’ liner notes; his fey, soft-brewed James Brown impression fronting the Make-Up; or his squinty deadpan persona in the web series talk show Soft Focus), the shtick bet- ter allows him to reframe rock history as a politically fraught yet ultimately irresist- ible social development, a paradoxical sort of “hocus-pocus” that both liberates its followers from the tedium and technoc- racy of daily life while at the same time capitalizing on the worst traits of con- sumer culture. For the average rock fan, these ideas may sound exhausting, but such are the labors of séance. And it’s true; the lessons of Supernatural Strategies can sometimes feel born from more than the mind of one man. In its pages, Brian Jones decrees that “suffering is necessary to maintain the in- tegrity of the group as an ‘object.’” Mary Wells redresses that “the actual origin of ‘the group’ as we know it . . . is the urban street gang.” Paul McCartney — go with it — dissects the British Invasion by tell- ing us how “without the stain of slavery and oblivious to US race and class ten- sion, (Britishers) felt free to mimic their favorite records . . . (and) gained success by imitating American — usually black — rock ’n’ roll artists.” And Richard Berry conjures that “(s)ince the USA is a nation founded on the ideas of individualism, rebellion, evangelism, white supremacy, black slavery, expulsion of native peoples, expansionism, commerce, and industry, these values all play a part in the forma- tion of (its) primary and arguably great- est cultural export.” Each of these claims could supply an historian with a sizable research project, yet Svenonius, faithful to his muses, unpacks them in a mere few paragraphs before pressing on. After some glib and crisply written chapters of historical repositioning, the reader emerges with a rather grimly conspiratorial view of rock and roll as an American-manufactured cultural weapon thE lIvInG AnD thE DEAD Ian Svenonius digs into what might have happened while trying to chart a course to the future. Even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained in this volume. Premium cigars, hookah tobacco, pipes, tobacco accessories and much more. Featuring Walk-in Humidors in Brunswick & Windham and our Beer Cave in Lisbon Falls! 263 St John St Portland 253-5550 778 Roosevelt Trail, Windham 892-8923 580 Lisbon St, Lisbon Falls 353-8788 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick 729-1704 579 Congress St, Portland 772-2709 A Smoker’s Paradise 12 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com of the Cold War. And while a sermon from the spirit world isn’t a source you could confidently cite in an academic text, that claim might have some truth to it. But leaving academic matters aside, even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained here, where the author refreshingly avoids the conven- tional ballyhoo and sanctimonious drivel that clouds most “rock insider” writing. In a chapter titled “Finding the Group,” he apprises that “(s)ome of your collabora- tors might be refugees from awful jobs, insipid record collections, religious sects, bad marriages, and dormitories full of sports enthusiasts. Your group will be their last hope, and there might be des- peration in their eyes. These are the ones you want.” In “Determining Goals,” we learn that “the group is familial, a radi- cal restructuring of the family unit from the nuclear model to something more akin to a hunter-gatherer tribe or a Stalin- era collectivist farm.” And in “Sex,” we come to understand that “for the groupie, there were live boys; for the men there were dead heroes. After all, the boy who mourns and honors the dead is transcend- ing carnality . . . and is expressing his depth and his authentic passion for the music.” But for all its bogus posturing and aca- demic pretensions, Supernatural Strategies is ultimately the work of one of the move- ment’s true believers, and might be read as a serious — some might say important — effort. As he puts it, Svenonius sees rock and roll as “a sort of expression that was smothered during the rational age of enlightenment,” or a form of primordial communication that addresses timeless ideas of community and collaborative ef- fort. “That explains its totally universal appeal. That’s why it’s like rediscovering fire, why it never gets old.” Ideology is grossly inefficient, and so it naturally goes overlooked in any profit- bearing career model, let alone one as competitive as the music business. The ones proferred in Supernatural Strategies, over a brisk 250 pages, analyze seemingly every facet of the industry as we know it, yet still might not get you any closer to the ultimate, unimpeachable goal of rock stardom. Some truly determined entre- preneurs out there might even subvert the author’s aim, finding Supernatural Studies to be a useful proxy for years of toil gigging the club circuit or conducting countless hours of stereo research. But however use- ful its readers might find it, this book is an event — because let’s face it, today’s rock and roll so often isn’t. ^ Supernatural StrategieS for Making a rock ’n’ roll group | by Ian Svenonius | 250 pages | Akashic Books | $14.95 | Svenoni- us reads, with a DJ set, January 27 @ 7:30 pm | at SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 | space538.org Are you A believer? Ian SvenonIuS conjureS the SpIrIt world In revIvIng rock and roll hIStory _by nIcholaS Schroeder f These days, the road toward a suc-cessful music career seems very brightly lit. Like an intricate GPS device teeming with metadata, today’s lifestyle mags, rock camps, music blogs, real- ity shows, and alcohol industries each help to illuminate the path for young musicians, so that their efforts to create a healthy, productive rock group go as smoothly and efficiently as possible. So where’s the problem? While this sce- nario might appear as a blessing for those looking to land a nice, comfortable career in music — or a zesty Pandora playlist, for that matter — some augur a certain danger in whittling rock and roll to a series of clean, flat stones placed over a bog one traverses en route to artistic fame or financial success. One of those conspiring to muck up the path is Ian Svenonius: writer, DJ, and frontman of DC post-punk groups the Make-Up, Nation of Ulysses, and now Chain and the Gang. In his new and uniquely comprehensive book, Supernatu- ral Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group, Svenonius invokes the black-magic art of the séance in revising rock history, resur- recting dead rock stars and long-buried ideological perspectives on the origins and exhibitions of the well-traveled form. Like a smoke bomb in a SXSW show- case, the ambitious project of Supernatural Strategies is to inject a spume of confusion into the staid, success-driven rock nar- rative of today, while serving as a quasi- mystical handbook for that rare musician still willing to take the long route. Writ- ten in a language couched in satire and anchored by years of experience, it is both a rigorous study of an elusive and endur- ing cultural art and a sobering critique of its many tortured machinations. And as the contemporary music landscape has been re-stratified by new technologies and contracted economies, it might even be particularly topical. As Svenonius told the Portland Phoenix in a tele- phone call, the book is a response to what he perceives as a shifting ethos in the music world. “It’s generally considered a positive development that rock and roll bands are becoming institutionalized,” he explains. “There are all these rock camps for kids now — they’re sponsored and fomented — and they’re filled with really practical knowl- edge about how to be in a band. It’s all laid out like a Petri dish, and that has profound implications on the form of rock and roll.” While those familiar with Svenonius’s musical endeavors will recognize the sé- ance as a stylistic conceit necessary to hurdle the threat of didacticism that can block such lofty concepts (see also the cheekily Marxian diatribes in Ulysses’ liner notes; his fey, soft-brewed James Brown impression fronting the Make-Up; or his squinty deadpan persona in the web series talk show Soft Focus), the shtick bet- ter allows him to reframe rock history as a politically fraught yet ultimately irresist- ible social development, a paradoxical sort of “hocus-pocus” that both liberates its followers from the tedium and technoc- racy of daily life while at the same time capitalizing on the worst traits of con- sumer culture. For the average rock fan, these ideas may sound exhausting, but such are the labors of séance. And it’s true; the lessons of Supernatural Strategies can sometimes feel born from more than the mind of one man. In its pages, Brian Jones decrees that “suffering is necessary to maintain the in- tegrity of the group as an ‘object.’” Mary Wells redresses that “the actual origin of ‘the group’ as we know it . . . is the urban street gang.” Paul McCartney — go with it — dissects the British Invasion by tell- ing us how “without the stain of slavery and oblivious to US race and class ten- sion, (Britishers) felt free to mimic their favorite records . . . (and) gained success by imitating American — usually black — rock ’n’ roll artists.” And Richard Berry conjures that “(s)ince the USA is a nation founded on the ideas of individualism, rebellion, evangelism, white supremacy, black slavery, expulsion of native peoples, expansionism, commerce, and industry, these values all play a part in the forma- tion of (its) primary and arguably great- est cultural export.” Each of these claims could supply an historian with a sizable research project, yet Svenonius, faithful to his muses, unpacks them in a mere few paragraphs before pressing on. After some glib and crisply written chapters of historical repositioning, the reader emerges with a rather grimly conspiratorial view of rock and roll as an American-manufactured cultural weapon thE lIvInG AnD thE DEAD Ian Svenonius digs into what might have happened while trying to chart a course to the future. Even the most ideal rock camp won’t equip you with the lessons contained in this volume. 14 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com a round-up of notabl e happenings in portland and beyo nd _COmpiled by NiChOlas sChrOeder thursday 24 CHANGE YOUR TONE | For today’s accomplished musician, the most pressing question is what, exactly, to play? Some especially daring ones ask that question in real time — again and again and again. Peek in on their answers at the Brunswick cultural depot known as Frontier Café, where the New eNglaNd ImprovIsers orchestra bring the venue’s “Frontiers of Music” series into focus. 7 pm; by donation. 14 Maine St. in the Fort Andross Mill. 207.725.5222. DON’T TOUCH THE RED BUTTON | To use a disproportionately high- stakes analogy, today’s music- lovers might think of dubstep as previous generations observed the Cold War: a protracted, victimless war of attrition where allied forces battle a mysterious and alien other for the hearts and minds of its followers. It’s far from over, but the result of this one might diverge from historical precedent. Dubstep, particularly its more populist and unsubtle Western iterations, is a tireless and beguiling foe. Its devotees — who beget disorient- ing colors and aromas, rehearse their gesticulations in oversized uniforms, and seemingly only strike at night — appear legion, and have proven to be alarmingly adept at reproducing their thun- derous, unifying hymns in clever, almost imperceptible variations. As the day of reckoning approaches, one such chorale leader, the DJ/ producer known as phutureprImI- tIve from Portland, Oregon, rallies the local delegation tonight at the Empire Dine and Dance, with a set from the native, bass-driven producer of the trees. 9 pm; $12 at 575 Congress St. 207.879.8988. OH, YOU TWO! | Two boy-girl mu- sical projects of considerable ardor, the New York acoustic folk duo two tree and the immaculately restrained outland meditations of arborea, make an attractive pair- ing at Local Sprouts Cooperative. 7 pm; by donation at 649 Congress St. 207.899.3529. friday 25 AND WHAT A VOICE IT IS | The alto saxophonist and performer mataNa roberts turned many heads with her 2011 record COIN COIN Chapter One: Gens de couleur libres. The avant-jazz document represented her first forays into vocalizations — both linguistic and otherwise — and gave birth to many harrowing, poetic, and dizzyingly emotional images of the history of black life in America. Among other unforgettable mo- ments, the politically-charged album contains an a capella gospel blues chant reimagining a slave auction (“libation for Mr. Brown: Bid em in...”), a breathless respin- ning of Albert Ayler-style sax work (“rise”), and a heartwrenchingly bittersweet paean to the life’s work of the artist’s mother (“how much would you cost?”). COIN COIN is a contemporary masterpiece of sorts, and the Chicago-born Roberts, still coming into her own as a performer (her resume includes more formal solo records amid collaborations with Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Sticks and Stones, and TV on the Radio, among oth- ers), is a remarkably compelling draw to Bowdoin College tonight. She leads a sax masterclass at 2 and performs a work-in-progress concert piece called “Prologue” at 7:30 pm. Tickets are free (but reservations recommended) at the college’s Studzinski Recital Hall, Kanbar Auditorium. 207.798.4141. WAY UP THERE | The rise to prominence of Maine psych-rock band coke weed has been nothing short of remarkable. As if catching the US still in the insatiable binge of its post-Nirvana boom, the group busted out two haunting, velvety records in three years and scored a national gig opening for the Walkmen, all the while operating from Bar Harbor, which isn’t exactly the new Brooklyn. They’ve lately been chumming with the singular blues musician mIcah blue smaldoNe, whose folk compositions have evolved over the years from faithful delta ditties to mesmerizing long-form meditations on the macabre. They play sets both separate and to- gether (we’re told), along with the shapeshifting rock act aN eveNINg wIth. 9 pm; $6 at Empire Dine and Dance. READ THE SIGNS | A surfeit of symbolic terms collide so perfectly in Waterville that we can’t help but take note: the rock and roll Americana group called gIrls, guNs, aNd glory play a club called Mainely Brews. Might be the most time capsule-able show in recent memory. 9 pm; by donation at 1 Post Office Sq. 207.873.2457. VERY VERY LOCAL | The latest in a string of attractive shows at Mayo Street Arts, four of the re- gion’s most engaging, slow-burn- ing post-rock acts collect in defiant exhibition. Attend and you’ll get the delicate and ethereal songwork of lIsa/lIza; the heartache-y acoustic tales of wesley alleN hartley; the psych-folk of greg JamIe; and acId smoker, one man’s hypnagogic take on noisy no wave. 8 pm; $5 at 10 Mayo St. 207.615.3609. Down the street, there’s a show that might be this one’s kissing cousin. Avant-folk group sNaex (Chriss Sutherland and Christopher Teret) play with songwriters matt rock and Na- thaN salsburg, the latter known for his revenant early-folk record- ings and curatorship of the Alan Lomax Archive. 8 pm in — get this — Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St. 207.671.7792. STRUm fOR THE HILLS | Re- surfacing above ground, we have the bluesy, soulful, feel-good rock musician martIN sextoN play- ing a show at the State Theatre. Known as an A+ live performer, the songwriter reopens his long love affair with Maine audiences with a set by alterNate routes, a rock orthodox five-piece from Connecti- cut. 8 pm; $25-30 at 609 Congress St., 207.956.6000. saturday 26 STORmING THE TREEfORT | Survey the comedy scene from any angle and you’ll notice the same thing: where are all the women? Local, national, whatever: the fun- ny business is a male-dominated sport. Tonight, the Maine writer, blogger, and comic erIN doNovaN brings us a welcome break from the standard. She reprises a show she calls “I’m Gonna Kill Him,” f mataNa roberts, at Bowdoin College’s Studzinski Recital Hall, in Brunswick on Jan 25. f ethel, at USM’s Abromson Community Center, in Portland on Jan 30. 8 days a WEEK continued on p 16 Get tickets online at statetheatreportland.com , in person at the Cumberland County Civic Center Box Office and charge by phone at 800-745-3000. Tickets available at the State Theatre Box Office on night of show one hour before doors. 609 CONGRESS ST. PORTLAND (207) 956-6000 with MATT and KIM APRIL 7 FEB 10 & 11 FEB 12 & 13 FEB 14 SAT MAR 9 FRI MAR 8 SAT MAR 16 MAR 20 FRI MAR 29 APRIL 24 MAY 8 THIS FRIDAY, JANUARY 25 JANUARY 29 JANUARY 30 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9 FEB 14 SAT MAR 9 ON SALE FRI 10AM! Educate your palate on over 300 beers from both near and far. Portland Pottery & Metalsmithing Studio 118-122 Washington Ave • Portland, ME Vacation Camp for Kids February 18th - 22nd Choose from 5 Classes Daily Wheel throwing, glass, sculpture & metalsmithing. Classes starting at $13/class or $60/day Intro to clay classes beginning February 7th Next Session - Clay & Jewelry Classes starting February 27 - March 5 8-week classes include materials, studio access, firings, and discounted workshops Upcoming Saturday Workshops: February 9th • 1pm-5pm Pottery for the Japanese Tea Ceremony w/ Steve Murphy March 30th •12-5pm Tile Making w/ Jon White 207-772-4334 • www.portlandpottery.com Check out Portland Pottery Cafe for your next meal! We offer homemade baked good, sandwiches, daily specials, & coffee! 16 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f tIft merrItt, at One Longfellow Square, in Portland on Jan 30. a multimedia vent on marital strife (which she performed last summer at the State Theatre), at the Camden Opera House. 7:30 pm; $15 at 29 Elm St. in Camden. 207.236.7963. PLAY DEAD | If your January has been relatively free from pain and strife, you might renew your acquaintanceship with the themes in Augusta, where the thumpy popular metal band dead seasoN, an Oxford County original, play Bridge Street Tavern. 7-ish; small cover if any. 18 Bridge St., 207.623.8561. WE fOUND OUT ABOUT THEm | It’s hardly newsworthy to report that most Americans aged 21 to 45 get a gIN blossoms song caught in their head 2.7 times per week (source redacted), but it might register as news to say that they like it. The long-tenured alt-rock band, author of the ’90s traditional “Hey Jealousy” and many others, play the Asylum tonight with local pop act worrIed well and crash boom baNg, new-breed rock funda- mentalists from DC. 9 pm; $29 at 121 Center St. 207.772.8274. GETTING OUTTA HAND | The pianist chrIstopher o’rIley, who made his mark in 2003 convert- ing Radiohead songs to plaintive, new age-y piano ballads (he’s since done similar with the work of El- liott Smith and Nick Drake, among others), exhibits his craftsmanship at the Franco American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St. in Lewiston. $27 ($15 students under 18), 207.689.2000. sunday 27 mUSIC’S NOT fOR EVERYONE | While it’s rare to find the musi- cian and performer IaN sveNoNIus without at least some of his tongue wedged firmly into cheek, his new book Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ’n’ Roll Group is a satisfying and seriously invigorating read (see this writer’s full review on page 12). He uncovers its themes in a sort of teach-in tonight at SPACE Gallery at 7:30, followed by a DJ set lasting until the magic runs out. NOT THAT BARD EITHER | An annual show of various talents col- lects to celebrate Robert Burns, the 18th-century Scottish lyricist of tremendous cultural import. Speak of “The Bard” in Scotland and expect not some bloated rejoinder on the greatness of Shakespeare, but instead a silent, lips-pursed nod of gratitude in the direction of this man. The Portland version of that, now running six years strong, contains performances by poets aNNIe fINch and betsy sholl, composer daN soNeNberg, piper ray scott, and Cape Breton band hIghlaNd soles. 2 pm; $15 at the Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave. 207.767.6396. monday 28 NOT THAT GENTLEmANLY | If Sunday’s Robert Burns celebration leaves Shakespeare devotees feeling rebuffed, they might counter with a pint at the Press Room, where Seacoast theater troupe Seven Stages Shakespeare Company put on a dramatic reading of Two GenTlemen of Verona at 6:30. 77 Daniel St. in Portsmouth, NH. 603.431.5186. LOCAL DOC | Still haven’t seen last year’s landmark documentary BeTTinG The farm? Filmmakers Cecily Pingree and Jason Mann’s award-winning appraisal of a Maine dairy-farming community’s resistance efforts screens for free at Local Sprouts Cooperative at 7 pm. tuEsday 29 THERE IS NO ENVIRONmENT | The New York Times made the controversial decision to shutter its Environmental section recently, folding the department’s seven re- porters and two editors into other parts of the paper. This happens despite findings that climate- change coverage has declined in national media outlets since 2009. One of those reporters is JustIN gIllIs, the writer who stewards the Green blog about energy and the environment, and who speaks at the College of the Atlantic’s Deer- ing Campus Center at 7 pm. 105 Eden St., Bar Harbor, 207.288.5015. LOW-END THEORY | Or say funk that, a sentiment best handled by local act mama’s boomshack, who tackle Parliament’s fat-bottomed classic Mothership Connection at the club’s Cover to Cover, a series that serves up classic albums whole. 9 pm; $5 at 55 Market St. 207.775.2266. WEdnEsday 30 STRING BEING | The contem- porary classical group ethel, a darkly stirring and dynamic string quartet (one of their projects reinterprets the work of Marvin Gaye), play one of several regional shows tonight at USM’s Abromson Community Center, 93 Bedford St. Tickets are in the $45 range (poke around our classical listings for a free show) for the 7:30 show. Call 207.842.0800. THE HEART Of THE COUNTRY | Because of the era we live in, the presentation of songwriter tIft merrItt has been glossed with a veneer of “indie,” but it’s dyed- in-the-wool alt-country. It’s also quite good, incorporating doses of southern belle charisma, morosely poetic torch songs, and a literary quality resembling Joni Mitchell or Emmylou Harris. Merritt plays One Longfellow Square with “Mexo-Americana” duo davId wax museum. 8 pm; $22 at 181 State St., 207.761.1757. thursday 31 TURN THE PAGE | File another month of life in the archive, and begin to wade into the deep waters of another theater season. Good Theater opens the dark com- edy DeaTh By DesiGn this week, Penobscot in Bangor brings The suGar Bean sisTers, and Mad Horse, reviewed on page 20, takes the muzzle off BenGal TiGer in The BaGhDaD Zoo. SPACE celebrates the written word with a maINe womeN wrIte event while the Portland Public Library honors poet wesley mcNaIr, as another poet sharing his name, wesley hartley, continues the important work of remounting of his band the trav- elINg trees (at One Longfellow). continued from p 14 Summer Session I: May 20–July 1 | Session II: July 5–August 15 Summer Session 2013 Day and Evening Classes Art, Biology, Chemistry, Citizenship, Education, English, Environmental Studies, History, Mathematics, Philosophy, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology and Sports Management Programs for High School Students Scholarships available! Live and study on UNE’s oceanfront campus and earn college credit in one of four programs: • Coastal Marine Ecology • Creative Writing—Poetry • Neuroscience • Pre-Law/Trial Advocacy For more information, call (207) 602-2050 or visit www.une.edu/oce Ask about Art Courses open to high school juniors and seniors. Earn college credit! Chart Your Own Course, Make this Summer Count! 18 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com ‘COW PARSNIP, 1996’ f “Lois Dodd: Catching the Light” is the kind of show that reminds you why you got interested in art in the first place. The paintings are terrific and the big, first-floor gallery at the Portland Mu- seum of Art has never looked better. This is Dodd’s first career retrospective, and it is long overdue. There are more than 50 paintings that span 60 years. Ma- ny are large, the quality is uniformly high, and her method, while it has evolved over the years, has remained steady and consis- tent. Early in her career she found a way to work that suited her own needs and ful- filled her understanding of what art was about, and has followed it ever since with remarkable focus and clarity. I’ve been a fan of Dodd’s for many years, and I’m in good company. She’s had a regular and appreciative audience of crit- ics and other artists who love her work and sometimes learn from her way of seeing, or from her decades-long faith in her rela- tionship to her own vision, or from both. It would be no surprise to see a steady stream of visitors from New York and far- ther coming to Portland for this show. Dodd began her showing career in the early 1950s, right around the high-water mark of New York School abstraction. At the time, modernist ideas had coalesced into something of an imperative toward abstraction, but there were a number of artists who felt that the sense of place and implicit narrative of representation still had powerful valence. There was no going back after the reiterative self-awareness of Cézanne, Malevich, Eliot, Joyce, and Mondrian A brilliAnt exAmple _by Ken Greenleaf lois DoDD’s first career retrospective showcases a briGht abstractionist established conclusively that art was about the relationship between artist and viewer, and not about the subject. But a number of artists felt there was power in the relationship of the artist not so much to the subject, but to the subjective nature of the moment in its presence, and to the act of seeing it. Every day, even in the same spot, is different. Among those art- ists were Fairfield Porter, Alex Katz, Neil Welliver, and, especially, Lois Dodd. Many of them came to Maine from New York for part of the year, and in, say, the 1970s, one could easily walk into a 57th Street gallery and spot a recognizable scene from Lincolnville. But it wasn’t about the scene as subject as much as it was about the artist’s pres- ence at a place as an event. Dodd picks out subjects that will make a painting that reso- nates with her own interests. The rest is up to the viewer, who will take away their own, possibly rather different, experience, not of the place but of the painting. Process is of very little value when dis- cerning an artist’s thinking, but method is useful. The famous William Carlos Wil- liams dictum “No ideas but in things” is at work here. In this show we can take a few of the formal outliers as a entry point for apprehending the pervasive, and inter- esting, underlying thinking that informs Dodd’s whole body of work. Take, for instance the tall, skinny “Woods, 1975” — 14 feet tall by three wide. The white house and yard in the bottom third are framed by tall thin spruce trunks that occupy the whole of the painting, and most of its area is filled by the trees’ art crisscrossing horizontal branching. There is only one reason for such an unlikely framing arrangement: Dodd spotted it, liked it, and worked up the shape and size because she thought it would be interest- ing. It is. Dodd’s color range can be complex and broad, but one particular painting, “Red Gladioli, 2005,” stands as an outer bound- ary of how she works with color. The back- ground is in mostly greens, representing the foliage and stems of the plants. The blossoms, which course up through the painting moving slightly to the left, are brightly and unquestionably red, comple- mentary in a way that makes the image visually unstable. It’s pretty big, four feet high by two wide, and cropped to provide little detail about the subject. This one vibrates and grabs you from a distance — a trick of the color, so to speak. Dodd’s color is strong and coherent, and the effect of this whole group together has a kind of luminosity that suggests the shows title actually makes sense, an exhibitional rarity. She doesn’t choose a subject because it’s inherently interest- ing or luminous; she picks it because she can make what she sees into a compel- ling painting, and that makes the subject interesting. It’s light created, more than light depicted. It’s a subtle but important distinction. The regular geometries of “Door, Stair- case, 1981” and the color fields of “Burn- ing House, Night, Vertical, 2007” and the implied domes of “Cow Parsnip, 1996” are worth looking at because of what she has made of them. She discovers, or uncov- ers, the poetic resonance of her subject. We know it exists because she can see it and has the skills to make it available to others. We like these paintings because of what they are, rather than for what they show us. The ideas are in the things, and they are good ideas. Picture after picture, Dodd’s penetrating pictorial intelligence shows through. They are thought out as pictures in the moment of their execution, not as demonstrations of a pre-conceived thesis. The kinds of things she thinks about could only be done as what they are. The modernist reality of the awareness of the artificiality of any work of art coupled with the emotional and subjective aware- ness of place and circumstance result in a deep philosophical verity. These paintings are very real and very personal. The modernist idea was born in Europe but grew up in the US. Dodd’s paintings, in that sense, are very American. Now in her mid-80s, Dodd has quietly worked her way through a long and productive career without the fanfare and argument that have been characteristic of many of her peers. She is still at the top of her game, and this exhibition shows she has been there for many years. ^ “LOIS DODD: CATCHING THE LIGHT” | at the Portland Museum of Art, 7 Congress Sq, Port- land | through April 7 | portlandmuseum.org ‘RED VINE AND BLANKET, 1979’ New Year, New You Bh akt i in Motion • Yoga • Meditation • Dance • Play • Healing Arts • Studio Rental 155 Brackett st Portland • www.bhaktinmotion.com • 207.233.0966 Contact Improv, Barefoot Boogies, Improvisation, Modern Dance, Kids Hip Hop & more Yoga for Your Life! NEW multi-class/monthly unlimited yoga passes Dancing Eros (for women) w/Kellie Ryan 1/25/13 SPEND A FEW BUCKS. FEEL LIKE A MILLION. $10 PER MONTH* FREE FITNESS TRAINING abs. cardio. upper & lower body WE’VE GOT YOU COVERED. 145 Marginal Way • Portland, ME • 207-879-2200 * NOW OPEN 24/7 for 2013! 8 Thomas Drive • Westbrook, ME • 207-773-7774 264 Civic Center Drive • Augusta, ME • 207-623-0023 *Billed monthly to a checking account. 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Making the world a better place, pose by pose. 20 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f Not too long into Ben-gal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, most of the characters pacing the stage are either dead, near death, or inti- mate enough with it to see ghosts. In an immediately post-Saddam Baghdad, vi- olence and chaos are daily tangibles, and the dead are never truly gone. Between the deeds of a tyrant, two soldiers, a translator, and a tiger, playwright Rajiv Joseph weaves together potent and discomfiting threads in his Pulitzer Prize-nominated drama, produced by Mad Horse Theatre Company under the direction of Nathan Speckman. The agonies here are thick and myriad. Disturb- ingly simple-minded US Marine Kev (Jake Cote) wants pussy, but he also aches to have any kind of friend in fellow Marine Tom (Evan Dalzell). Tommy, however, is preoccupied with protecting his war spoils, a gold-plated semi-automatic and a gold toilet seat looted from Saddam’s dead son Uday (Brent Askari). Tom’s reluctant Arabic inter- preter, Musa (Mark Rubin), once worked as a garden artist for Uday, whom he had every reason to loathe; now he’s disgusted by the ignorant self-interest of his new American boss. Finally, the Tiger (Tootie Van Reenen) — only recently shipped to Baghdad and pretty pissed off about it, and shot by Kev in the very first scene — philosophizes remorse- fully on his life as a killer and the God that made it so. Cote’s unsettling Kev has the most nu- ance and the best-dramatized arc in Bengal Tiger, a play whose characters are sometimes difficult to invest in, perhaps partly because of the allegorical flavor of the script. But Kev inspires a dramatically convincing am- bivalence. Even early on, as he’s creepily ob- sessed with shooting animals and “getting his dick wet,” his deep need for human con- nection is a poignant source of sympathy. There are plenty of reasons to despise his col- league Tom, but it’s harder to crack into this gold-looter’s anguish. In Dalzell’s hands, Tom’s barking aggression nicely bespeaks cultural arrogance and a desperation under- lying it; I’d like to see him brought closer to a more vulnerable breaking point. Askari pulls out the stops in his inimi- table, sarcasm-dripping fashion, portraying an eminently despicable Uday. His psycho- pathic, faux-jovial tormenting of Rubin’s sympathetic, subtle Musa is dark and often quite graphic stuff, and I only wish that the script had employed a little more economy in presenting this relationship: the drawing out of even verbal torture certainly heightens the agony of the victim, but an audience can be presented with only so much sadistic CASUALTIES OF WAR The living evidence of terror and pain. Caging the tiger _by Megan gruMbling Mad Horse puTs on a searing puliTzer-noMinaTed iraq war play imagery and whimpering before we begin to become desensitized. As the Tiger, and as a “guy” tiger at that, Van Reenen is a bit of an odd choice. On Broadway, the role was played by Robin Wil- liams, whose usual barely-contained kinetic energy was probably put to good use as a dangerously constrained cat. Van Reenen hits the Tiger’s wry, languishing anomie compellingly, but could do more to evoke the beast’s frustrated strength and sinews — perhaps in a blocking that better utilized the show’s in-the-round staging to help dra- matize the Tiger’s and others’ philosophical anguish. The writing is both sensational and ex- pository. “The tiger keeps talking about epis- temology and original sin,” complains Kev to Tom, “and it’s annoying as fuck.” It kind of is, sometimes: while the ideas that these characters grapple with — the perpetuation of violence, the relation of the living and the dead — are of vital importance, it’s tiring to hear them told rather than shown, as when Kev mulls, “What happens now that I am aware of and sensitive to the universe?” That said, Joseph writes a few arrestingly lovely, painful, fraught details, and Speck- man and his actors handle them beautifully. One is when an Iraqi prostitute (Allison McCall) inspects Tom’s “bionic hand” and sweetly, candidly laughs to Musa in Arabic that it “smells like milk” — a detail some- how at once humane and deeply strange, and reprised later to haunting effect. Such small details best let us feel the enormity of these creatures’ immeasurable horrors, as well as their glints of absolution. ^ Bengal Tiger aT The Baghdad Zoo | by Rajiv Joseph | Directed by Nathan Speckman | Pro- duced by Mad Horse Theatre Company | though February 3 | 207.730.2389 theater Looking for Love in Biddo New paintings & old favorites by NANCY KURETH At the OAK & the AX 140 Main St. Suite 107 in Biddeford Opening Friday, January 25 5:00-9:00 887 Forest Ave. Portland, ME 04103 (207)773-8808 Open 7 days a week BEER • WINE • SPIRITS Why do people THINK I’m a wine EXPERT, when I’m REALLY a wine IDIOT? Simple… whenever I need a wine for a special dinner or occasion, I head over to RSVP Discount Beverage and peruse their Best Buy wine rack. 40 or more choices, all with high ratings from Wine Spectator and Wine Enthusiast magazines. Plus… almost all of them are under $20 a bottle, and MOST are $10 or under. So I’m virtually guaranteed a great wine, at a value price! For your next wine purchase, visit the Best Buy wine rack at RSVP Discount beverage, Forest Avenue, Portland! Phoenix Studio Have you ever dreamed of beautiful stained glass in your house? Do you love DIY projects? Now you can learn the art of stained glass at the Phoenix Studio. Call 774-4154 or visit us online! 630 Forest Ave. Portland, ME 04101•www.phoenixstudio.com•207.774.4154 Stained Glass Classes: • Stained Glass - Day/Evening (All Levels) • Stained Glass for Kids - Saturdays We also offer a wide selection of tools, glass, and equipment. Art Classes: • Studio Drawing & Painting with guest artist Tomás Baleztena Restoration and Design of Fine Art Glass Since 1976 Serving extraordinary pub fare & pizza from 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. daily 94 Commercial Street, Portland, Maine 207 874.2639 2 Portland Bands 1 Great Weekend at Andy’s Five Finger Discount on Friday night Silent Sam & the Evans on Saturday night 2 Portland Bands 1 Great Weekend Served up with so me of the best food & drink on th e waterfront. 22 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f If these chilly winter days have you dreaming of sunbathing on the beach, a new mystery novel by Maine au- thor Josh Pahigian could be just the thing to turn up the heat. Set in Old Orchard Beach over the course of a summer, Strangers on the Beach is Pahigian’s first work of fiction; the part- time University of New England writing professor has previously written several books about baseball. It’s an impressive debut. This suspenseful thriller, imbued with local flavor (settings include Old Orchard Beach landmarks such as The Brunswick and Beach Bagels), is a page- turner with short, snappy chapters that often end in cliffhangers. It would make a great beach read, come to think of it. Pahigian introduces the reader to a diverse and well-drawn cast of characters, including wealthy foreign adventurer Ferdinand Sevigny, whose arrival in town sets off a deadly chain of events; his beau- tiful younger mistress, Marisol, who has hidden motivations of her own; Billy, the teenaged son of a local alcoholic who simply wants to escape his bleak life; and Sally, a mentally challenged older woman who sees much but says little. All their lives, and more, become intertwined on an early-summer evening before the in- flux of tourists arrives. Skepticism of outsiders — those who are from away as well as those who live outside of accepted boundaries —is a theme explored throughout the book. Of course, the central plot relies on the con- cept of foreign invaders, a/k/a strangers, disrupting a sleepy summer town set in its routines. Additionally, there are several places where Pahigian (who currently lives in Buxton but formerly lived and worked in OOB) makes sharp observations about tensions between locals and tourists, and this undertone of mistrust courses through the novel. It’s Sevigny who is the catalyst for the action — his boat and belongings that wash ashore, prompting in- terest from local law enforcement and inter- national paparazzi, his girlfriend who shows up all but naked on Pine Point Beach, his nephew who attempts to involve young Billy in a murder- ous scheme. Appropriate- ly, the reader learns Se- vigny’s true story in bits and pieces, much as one would by asking around at coffee shops and bars. Painted as larger-than- life at the start, and gradually becoming more sympathetic, Sevigny is an intriguing protagonist in a classic stranger- comes-to-town tale. Despite a gripping plot and smooth writing, there are several sections that would have benefitted from a bit more showing, and little less telling. Particularly, Pahigian has a tendency to overexplain his characters’ emotional rea- soning. Consider this passage: “Marisol did not identify her lover by name, but she told the girls she’d been swept off her feet and taken away,” Pa- higian writes. “She told them he’d been twice her age, and that he’d taken her all over the world. But in time she’d grown lonely and resentful. He’d told her where to go, and how to act, and she’d never had any real say in anything. She’d begun to feel like a kept woman, like she was just there for his pleasure.” Compelling complexity, to be sure, but the reader already knows much of this from earlier scenes. It’s almost like the non-fiction author in Pahigian wants to make absolutely sure his readers un- derstand what’s going on in his fictional characters’ heads — but perhaps he could trust his audience more. Still, none of his interpretations or explanations are off- base, so this quibble is minor. Strangers on the Beach is at its core a very self-contained thriller, leaving few loose ends in its wake. We are left with the impression that even after the Sevigny shake-up, the townies, the year-rounders, will resume their routines in short order. They will be perfectly happy to let the waves wash away the brief, if exciting, in- trusion, and to relish the quiet of winter, when fewer strangers come around. ^ StrangerS on the Beach | by Josh Pahi- gian | 282 pages | Islandport Press | $22.95 | Josh Pahigian reads January 30 @ 6:30 pm at McArthur Public Library, 207 Main St, Bid- deford | February 7 @ 7 pm at North Gorham Public Library, 2 Standish Neck Rd, Gorham | February 9 @ 2 pm at Thomas Memorial Library, 6 Scott Dyer Rd, Cape Elizabeth | all readings are free CoMBING ThE DoRCh Local author Josh Pahigian digs mystery in the sands. Mysterious strangers _by DeirDre FuLton LocaL susPense noveL conJures summertime Books Hair | Waxing | Bridal | Facial & Cosmetic | Massage Now with StyliSt, liz Pelletier! 305 COMMERCIAL STREET #6 PORTLAND MAINE 04101-4668 info@knaughtyhair.com | 207.874.0929 Get Caught Being welcome, StudeNtS! Career placement assistance | Day & evening schedules |Financial aid available for those who qualify One eagle Drive SanfOrD, Me Portland Phoenix PPX21 Call or Click Today! 800-758-7679 seacoastcareerschools.edu Classes Forming now For: Professional Medical assistant HealtH claiMs sPecialist Massage tHeraPy For Seacoast Career School’s Student Consumer Information visit www.seacoastcareerschools.edu/info Health Care - The Smart Career Move in 2013! One visit and you'll see why students choose 24 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com LfCAL MUSIC _by Sam Pfe ifle sam_pfeifl e@yahoo.com Watch the vid at the psych-jazz group’s Vimeo (vimeo.com/57838638) and decide for yourself. F When the music you make fits no social or historical milieu whatsoever, you know you’re on to something. this is the juncture that multi-in- strumentalist RobeRt Stillman finds himself at upon release of the new long-player Station Wagon Interior Perspective (A Requiem for John Fahey). With the record, the portland-born musi- cian takes on the specter (or “spectre,” perhaps — Stillman’s a Briton now) of the american primi- tive guitarist with many instrumental arrange- ments — not one of them involving guitar. Why such deviation from the form? Because though it may appear like a parlor trick, such tortuous routes are necessary to charm and seduce a ghost, especially one as famously curmudgeonly as Fahey. the album, issued locally as a 10-inch on apohadion RecoRdS under the name rob- ert Stillman and the archaic Future players, is a fuzzily familiar mix of pre-jazz american folk, lurching brass toots, and skeletal sound-collage. it’s a creative retelling of a music legend, and one that won’t prompt its spectral muse to emerge from the spiritual plane to issue a corrective. Or so we hope! unearth this particular wax at theapohadion.wordpress.com. F We’ve been meaning to ask: do you drone? yeah, us too. and lately we’ve been doing so, in small doses, with indRe StyRke, a dark ambi- ent project of rural Ghosts’ frontman erik neil- son. the demo track “Good morning Sun” falls somewhere between the meditations of robert rich and a psychotically Twin Peaks-y new age bliss. Will Finest Times, the project’s promised full-length, follow suit? and when? From the mouth of the poet f The delivery is primal, shouted: “I’m as blue as blood before the blood goes red.” It is just one more reminder late in Lady Lamb the Beekeeper’s debut album, Ripely Pine, that she is no meek Lamb to be led around, but rather Queen Bee, very much a force of nature. If you’ve even glanced at Aly Spaltro’s photo (she’s the band, all by herself or otherwise), or seen her five-foot-nothing figure out in public, you know as soon as you hear the opening “Hair to the Ferris Wheel” that she summons her arresting voice from someplace seemingly outside herself, like her spirit is wearing a body three sizes too small. The first bars simmer, moody with a spare electric guitar that will come to seem like Lady Lamb’s fifth limb, and her voice has no huskiness that might indicate even an extra effort to get so low. “Love is selfish,” she leers, “love goes tick tock tick/And love knows Jesus/Apples and oranges.” What the fuck that means I don’t really care because the care with which she lets each word drop is exact- ing, like she’s mulling them over, unsure about them, wanting to view them from every angle, inside and out. Spaltro does this throughout the al- bum, sometimes seeming to actually move in with certain phrases, living with them for months before setting them free. But then, after just a hint of clicking static, late enough in a long song that you’ve forgotten it might happen, there it, sinking her teeth to the gums. Somehow, there’s a bass like a dance track, an old-school soul delivery with energy like Spaltro’s unhinged. Seriously. Listen to the mocking “ha, ha, ha, ha” that helps close the truly rocking “Bird Balloons,” which is otherwise like 6gig with rounded edges, plus a hip-hop bra- vado: “I’m a ghost and you all know it/I’m singing songs and I ain’t slowin’.” And is that Dr. Dre programming the strings af- ter the tempo change into a strut? But we’re talking unhinged. How about “I still need your teeth in my organs” as a repeated lament? It’s what drives “You Are the Apple,” a jazz-punk tune that features a sneaky three-note guitar riff and stalker vamp. She’s magnesium on fire, but you never want to look away. After years of living only with her first demos done in a home set-up, the amount of volume and body Brooklyn-based pro- ducer Nadim Issa delivers from such sparse arrangements (all done by Spaltro) is just so satisfying. It’s every bit an artist com- ing into her own. To see this executed with a full band — to reportedly include bass, drums, trumpets, trombone, violins, viola, cello, tuba, clarinet, keyboards, autoharp, and a choir (maybe not all at once) — will be pretty special, indeed. Often enough, though, Spaltro proves she doesn’t need much accompaniment at all. “Regarding the Ascending Stairs” is a banjo tune like Abigail Washburn’s sorta-goth sister, where you can hear her walk in, sit down, and begin to play, and the sentiment is like this: “You handle me like an infant skull/And I cradle you like a newborn nightmare.” After a whole song’s worth of patience, a playful electric bass line pops in, along with a tambourine. It fades and comes back even better, integrated with the ban- jo plucking so that they bounce off each other like helium atoms in a balloon. How is this woman only 23? Her feel for dynamics, depth of feeling, and general grace are pretty special. To think that this is just the beginning? That’s fairly exciting. ^ Ripely pine | Released by lady lamb the beekeeper | on ba da bing Records, Feb 19 | at Space Gallery, in portland | march 2 | lady- lambthebeekeeper.com A LIoneSS of A LAdy LAMb The Powerful debuT: Ripely pine is a full rock entrance: “It’s a zoo in your room ... and you long to kiss like you won’t exist come the morningtime.” The drums come in rapid-fire bursts and then there is a muscular and grungy distorted guitar solo before we’re alternately ca- ressed and slapped by a cappella vocals and staccato bursts of guitar. From that point forward, you’re on notice to be on your toes. In songs that often sprawl out past five minutes, and sometimes build in chambers of backing strings and horns, Lady Lamb will take you wherever her muse leads and it’s nigh impossible not to follow. “Rooftop” is the “single,” released first to the public as though for a radio station that doesn’t exist, a compact three min- utes. It’s probably the catchiest out of the gate, with a quick snare keeping things lively and an indie-rock plinking of notes moving up and down the fretboard as a central message. But then are there trom- bones that bleed in, just a scratch of high- up fiddle, then a full-on string section laying a backing bed, even clanking pots and pans for God’s sake, so much going on that it’s nearly overwhelming. Overwhelming is Spaltro’s stock and trade. Hearing her live, even if only on the Live at Brighton Music Hall album that was just kind of given life and let wander on the Internet last year, you’ll find she may be even more strident and invested than she is here in the studio, taking a song like “Aubergine” and burying her face in FWAX TAbLeT WAXTAbleT@PhX.cOm Often enough, Spaltro proves she doesn’t need much accompaniment at all. F there’s a debate raging in the Wax Tablet offices about which is more colorful: the sun- shine-and-lollipops imagery of inaugural poet richard Blanco’s “one today,” or the sparkling new video for Jaw GemS’ “Star Visor.” it’s heat- ed. Some are in thrall to Blanco’s lyrical paean to “finishing one more report for the boss on time” and testament to building the “last floor of the Freedom tower.” others are more passionate about the imaginative stanzas of tyler Quist and hassan muhammad’s synth lines. Some quiver at Blanco’s rendering of “one moon like a silent drum tapping on every rooftop;” others at the stilted, jittery meter of dJ moore’s drumwork. Some line up to salute the poet’s “rhythm of traffic lights, fruit stands: apples, limes, and oranges arranged like rainbows begging our praise(,)” while others can’t pull themselves away from the drippily kaleidoscopic visuals of direc- tors Jay Brown and paul mihailoff. While our hQ remains bitterly divided, make sure your personal bureau of creative arts stays well informed. Robert Stillman S h e r V iN l a iN e makinG heR own imaGe lady lamb the beekeeper gets going with a powerful disc. 7:30 PM Refresher Lessons before Saturday dances 1/26/13-American Tango-Deb Roy Marita Kennedy-Castro offers West African Dance Classes Thursdays 7:15-8:30PM Cost: $40 for 4 classes or $12 for Drop-ins (1st class is 1/2 price) Chinese/Taiwanese Cuisine Dine in or Take out 15 Temple Street Portland, Maine (207)773-9559 www.bubblemaineia.com Bubb le Tea , Shav ed Ice , Smoo thies and m ore.... Free WiFi Enjoy the Summer! Monday-Friday 11-4 & Saturday AND Sunday 11-5 65 Market Street in the Old Port 761.4441 LArge bOw L OF SOuP ONLy $3! with this coupon Listings SUNDAY 27 BRIAN BORU | Portland | open tradi- tional Irish session | 3 pm DOBRA TEA | Portland | “Rhythmic Cypher” open mic & poetry slam | 7 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Trap Night,” hip hop with Pensivv + El Shupacabra + Sandbag + Mr Harps + God.Damn.Chan. + Psychologist | 9 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Sean Mencher | 11 am OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | open mic | 6 pm RIRA | Portland | Sly-Chi | noon SPACE GALLERY | Portland | Ian Sve- nonius: “Supernatural Strategies,” book reading & DJ set | 7:30 pm STYXX | Portland | karaoke with Cherry Lemonade | 7 pm MONDAY 28 BIG EASY | Portland | “The Players’ Ball,” funk jam | 9 pm | $3 EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: open jam | 6 pm | downstairs: North of Nashville | 8 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Lord Earth + Builder of the House | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Captain Steve | 9:30 pm TUESDAY 29 BIG EASY | Portland | “Cover to Cov- er,” live album cover night: Mama’s Boomshack perform Parliament’s “Mothership Connection,” with original set | 9 pm | $5 BULL FEENEY’S | Portland | open mic poetry with Port Veritas | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: Will Gattis + Scott Girouard | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Travis James Humphrey | 10 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Mark Dennis | 7 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | open mic with Joint Enterprise | 8-11 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | open mic | 9:30 pm SLAINTE | Portland | karaoke with DJ Ponyfarm | 9 pm WEDNESDAY 30 ASYLUM | Portland | upstairs: kara- oke with DJ Johnny Red | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | “Rap Night,” with Ill By Instinct + Shupe | 9 pm | $3 BINGA’S STADIUM | Portland | down- stairs: DJ Verbatum | 8:30 pm BLUE | Portland | Tim Adam’s Bodhran Spectacular | 7:30 pm | tra- ditional Irish session | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | upstairs: “Clash of the Titans: T Rex vs ELO,” live cover night | 9:30 pm | $6 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Isaiah Bennett | 7:30 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Jennifer Porter | 6 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | old time music jam | 7 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Portland | Tift Merritt + David Wax Museum | 8 pm | $18-22 RIRA | Portland | Jeff Cusack | 8:30 pm !GET LISTED Send an e-mail to submit@phx.com CLUBS GREATER PORTLAND THURSDAY 24 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | karaoke with DJ Billy Young 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Al’s Basement,” with DJ King Alberto | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | Band Beyond Description | 10 pm BLUE | Portland | Katrin | 7 pm | Samu- el James & Dana Gross | 9 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | Heart Shaped Rock | 9 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Ghost of Paul Revere | 8 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | downstairs: Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies | 7:30 pm | upstairs: Phutureprimitive + Of the Trees | 9 pm | $12 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Ben John- son + Kissing Club + Oliver Water- man | 9 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Birdland Jazz Quartet | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Vinyl Tap | 8 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | DJ Boondocks | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Two Tree + Arborea | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | ka- raoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Port- land | Portland Jazz Orchestra | 8 pm | $5-9 PEARL | Portland | Maine Electronic | 10 pm PEPPERCLUB | Portland | Chipped Enamel | 7:30 pm RIRA | Portland | Kilcollins | 10 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Kate | 9 pm FRIDAY 25 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | VJ Pulse 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Plague,” goth/industrial night with Scavenger + Znuh + Bullet Bill | 9 pm | $2-5 BIG EASY | Portland | “Cover to Cov- er,” live album cover night: When Particles Collide perform Green Day’s “Dookie,” with original set | 9 pm | $5 BLUE | Portland | Bob Rasero | 6 pm | Putnam Murdock | 8 pm | Trapparatus | 10 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | Jason Spoon- er Band | 9 pm | Jumpoff | 9 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “80s Night,” with DJ Jon | 9 pm | $5 BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/FREEPORT | Freeport | Travis James Humphrey & the Honky Tonk Love Machine | 9:30 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Brian Patricks | 5 pm | Travis James Humphrey | 5 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | upstairs: Coke Weed + An Evening With + Micah Blue Smaldone | 9 pm | $6 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Slow & Low,” EDM with Mr. Dereloid + Ed Garrison + Chris Gauthier | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Great Western Plain + MiniBoone + Bunny’s Swine + R.S.O. | 9 pm | $5 GILBERT’S CHOWDER HOUSE/ WINDHAM | Windham | Ralph Arse- nault | 6 pm GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Blue Steel Express | 9 pm GOLD ROOM | Portland | Chance Lang- ton | 8 pm | $10 JAMESON TAVERN | Freeport | Travis James Humphrey | 6 pm JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | Portland | DJ Roy LOCAL BUZZ | Cape Elizabeth | Brian Patricks | 8 pm | Tumbling Bones | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | “Resurgam Records,” show- case | 7 pm MAYO STREET ARTS | Portland | Greg Jamie + Lisa/Liza + Wesley Allen Hart- ley + Acid Smoker | 8 pm | $5 OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Portland | Chad Hollister Trio | 8 pm | $15-20 PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | karaoke with DJ Bob Libby | 9 pm RIRA | Portland | Complaints | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Tony B | 9 pm ZACKERY’S | Portland | Straight Lace | 8:30 pm | $5 SATURDAY 26 51 WHARF | Portland | lounge: DJ Tony B | 9 pm | main floor: DJ Jay-C | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | upstairs: “Strike a Chord: a Music Discovery Fun- house,” interactive music exhibit with Portland Music Foundation | noon | downstairs: “Balance,” house music with Marcus Caine + Jeremy Chaim + VJ Foo + Ed Garrison | 9 pm | upstairs: Gin Blossoms + Worried Well + Crash Boom Bang | 9 pm | $26-29 BAYSIDE BOWL | Portland | “Tiki Freakout,” with Vivisectors + Icepicks + Caught Flies + Zombie Beach | 8 pm | $5 BIG EASY | Portland | Sly-Chi + Ey- enine | 8:30 pm | $8 BLUE | Portland | Marc Chillemi Quartet | 6 pm | Domino Jazz | 8 pm | Wurlibird | 10 pm BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | Portland | “Everything Dance Party,” with DJ Jon | 9 pm THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | Portland | Wetsuits EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Portland | upstairs: All Good Feel Good Collec- tive + Eight Feet Tall + Joint Chiefs | 9 pm | $5 FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | Electro- vangogh + Animal Colors | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Her Majesty’s Cabaret + Wilbur Wilbur Nealbur + A Severe Joy + Chamberlain | 9 pm | $5 GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Rick Miller & His Band | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Chronic Funk JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | Portland | DJ Roy LOCAL BUZZ | Cape Elizabeth | Nick Ludington | 8 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Tumbling Bones | 11 am | Dark Follies + So Sol + Lauren Zuniga | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | club: DJ Lenza | 8 pm | downstairs: DJ Tiny Dancer | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | DJ Tubbs | 9 pm ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | Port- land | Ronnie Earl & the Broadcasters | 8 pm | $27-30 PROFENNO’S | Westbrook | DJ Jim Fahey | 9 pm RIRA | Portland | Tickle | 10 pm SEASONS GRILLE | Portland | karaoke with Long Island Larry | 8:30 pm SLAINTE | Portland | “Dance Night,” with Deejay Tremendous Cream + Deejay Marieke VI | 9 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Mosart212 STYXX | Portland | back room: DJ Chris O | 9 pm | front room: DJ Kate Rock | 9 pm SLAINTE | Portland | open mic | 8 pm | Kwesi Kankam | 10 pm THURSDAY 31 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | Wind- ham | karaoke with DJ Billy Young 51 WHARF | Portland | DJ Revolve | 9 pm ASYLUM | Portland | downstairs: “Al’s Basement,” with DJ King Al- berto | 9 pm BIG EASY | Portland | Band Beyond Description | 10 pm BLUE | Portland | Wesley Hartley & the Traveling Trees + Sorcha + Henry Jamison | 7 pm BRIAN BORU | Portland | North of Nashville | 9:30 pm EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | Port- land | downstairs: Pete Witham & the Cozmik Zombies | 7:30 pm FLASK LOUNGE | Portland | “Blaq- dada,” with Che Ros + Bary Juicy | 9 pm GENO’S | Portland | Diapasyn + KBG | 8 pm | $5 GINGKO BLUE | Portland | Octane | 8 pm GRITTY MCDUFF’S | Portland | Vinyl Tap | 8 pm LOCAL 188 | Portland | DJ Boondocks | 10 pm LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | Portland | Jimmy Dority | 7 pm OASIS | Portland | DJ Lenza | 8 pm OLD PORT TAVERN | Portland | karaoke with DJ Don Cormin + DJ Mike Mahoney | 9 pm PEARL | Portland | Maine Electronic | 10 pm RIRA | Portland | Kilcollins | 10 pm SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORT- LAND | South Portland | karaoke | 10 pm SONNY’S | Portland | Jaw Gems | 10 pm STYXX | Portland | DJ Kate | 9 pm MAINE THURSDAY 24 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | open mic with Coopers | 8:30 pm BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Calibur BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | karaoke BEBE’S BURRITOS | Biddeford | Dan Stevens | 6:30 pm BIG EASY LOUNGE | Bangor | Kevin Bate | 9 pm BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | kara- oke with Pete Powers | 9 pm BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | karaoke with DJ Biggs | 9 pm FRESH | Camden | Lee Sykes | 6 pm FRONTIER CAFE | Brunswick | “Frontiers of Music #7,” with New England Improvisers Orchestra | 7 pm | by donation FUSION | Lewiston | open mic | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 8 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | Red Stripes THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Juke Joint Devils | 7 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | DJ Steady + Dray Sr. + Dray Jr. + Envy MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Mike Rodrigue | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | North of Nashville | 8 pm PHOENIX PUB | Bangor | DJ Reid | 8 pm THE RACK | Kingfield | open mic RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Pitch Black Ribbons | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | Hurry Down Sunshine | 6 pm Continued on p 26 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 25 81 Market St. Portland (across from Tommy's Park) VisiT us aT www.arcanamaine.com To book or To read abouT The oTher serVices ThaT we offer! healing arTs, sTaTemenT Jewelry, local crafT Only $55 your first hour Massage or acupuncture session 248 Saint John Street Portland, ME 04102 (207) 774-2219 Summa Cum LOUD Saddleback is one of only SEVEN ski mountains in New England with a top elevation over 4,000 ft. • Top Elevation: 4,120 ft with summit snowfields • Vertical Drop: 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Listings Continued from p 25 SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau FRIDAY 25 ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | Ken- nebunkport | karaoke | 8:30 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Foxcroft | DJ Knotty Bear BIG EASY LOUNGE | Bangor | Saman- tha Lynn | 9 pm BILLY’S TAVERN | Thomaston | 220s | 9 pm BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Belfast Brogue BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Poke Chop & The Other White Meats | 9 pm THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Tickle | 8:30 pm BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | Dexter | Dee- jay Relykz BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | Bitter Brew | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd- eford | DJ Filthy Rich | 9 pm CRYSTAL FALLS | Chelsea | Almost There | 9 pm FEDERAL JACK’S | Kennebunk | Kilcol- lins | 10:30 pm FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | Wells | Karaoke Annie | 8 pm FRESH | Camden | Mehuman Johnson | 6 pm FUSION | Lewiston | Veggies By Day GATCH’S FOOD & SPIRITS | Rumford | Ragged Jack | 8 pm GUTHRIE’S | Lewiston | A Moment’s Notice | 8 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Rock- in’ Ron | 9 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | Ran- dom Order KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Gorilla Fin- ger Dub Band | 8 pm LEGENDS RESTAURANT | Newry | Denny Breau | 7 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Girls, Guns, & Glory | 9 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | DJ Laser Lou MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | Bethel | Brad Hooper | 8 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Chuck & Jerry | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Last Kid Picked | 9 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | Him & Her | 8 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Dakota PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | Newry | Nick Racciopi | 7 pm THE RACK | Kingfield | Darlin’ Corey | 9 pm RAVEN’S ROOST | Brunswick | Red Sky Mary | 8 pm SHOOTERS BILLIARDS BAR & GRILL | Lincoln | karaoke SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Cow- boy Billy SLIDERS RESTAURANT | Newry | David Mello | 7 pm SPLITTERS | Augusta | karaoke SUDS PUB | Bethel | Dan Stevens | 7:30 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | karaoke TUG’S PUB | Southport | Steve Jones Trio | 5:30 pm VACANCY PUB | Old Orchard Beach | karaoke | 9 pm WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | DJ Roger Collins | 9 pm WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | Kingfield | Ross Livermore Band SATURDAY 26 ALL AMERICAN TAVERN | West Paris | Jordan Kaulback + Frontline BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Maine Event | 9 pm BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | Black Rose BLACK BEAR CAFE | Naples | Paddy Mills BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Pam Baker & the SGs | 9 pm BRIDGE STREET TAVERN | Augusta | Dead Season THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | Old Orchard Beach | Hurri- canes | 8:30 pm BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | Dexter | Richard Cranium BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | Bitter Brew | 8 pm | Bitter Brew | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | DJ Filthy Rich | 9 pm CLUB TEXAS | Auburn | Jeroba Jump | 8 pm THE FOGGY GOGGLE | Newry | Joshua Tree [U2 tribute] | 9 pm FUSION | Lewiston | DJ Kool V | 9 pm THE GREEN ROOM | Sanford | Sun Dog | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 3 pm IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | ForeFront THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | Nikki Hunt Band KERRYMEN PUB | Saco | Lower East Side | 8 pm LEGENDS RESTAURANT | Newry | Jim Gallant | 7 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Mud- dy Marsh Ramblers | 9 pm LOMPOC CAFE | Bar Harbor | Forget Forget MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | DJ Ken | 9 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Sam Shain & the Scolded Dogs | 9 pm MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | Standish | Back in Black [AC/DC Tribute] MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | Bethel | Pete Kilpatrick | 8:30 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | Ron Durgin Trio | 6 pm MOOSE ALLEY | Rangeley | Last Kid Picked | 9 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | Kevin Bate | 8 pm THE OAK AND THE AX | Biddeford | O’Death + “Little” Timmy Findlen & His Aroostook Hillbillies | 8 pm | $10 PEAK LODGE | Newry | Poke Chop & The Other White Meats | 7 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | Dakota PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | Newry | Deepshine | 4 pm | Shut Down Brown | 9 pm RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Girls, Guns, & Glory | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | “Young Musician Showcase” | 6 pm SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | karaoke with DJ Stormin’ Norman | 10 pm SILVER SPUR | Mechanic Falls | Re- cord Family | Record Family SLIDERS RESTAURANT | Newry | Adam Waxman | 7 pm STUDIO BISTRO AND BAR | Bethel | Caroline Cotter | 7:30 pm TUCKER’S PUB | Norway | Denny Breau + Arlo West WATER STREET GRILL | Gardiner | Rock Street Refugees | 9 pm WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | Kingfield | Ross Livermore Band YORK HARBOR INN | York Harbor | Dan Stevens | 8 pm SUNDAY 27 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | Tom Rebmann | 11 am BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | open mic | 8 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | karaoke with DJ Don Corman | 9:30 pm FRESH | Camden | Blind Albert | 6 pm THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Bobby do J-Max | 5 pm MAINE STREET | Ogunquit | karaoke | 9 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | karaoke with DJ Ed McCurdy | 7 pm TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | Gray | open mic blues jam | 4 pm MONDAY 28 FRESH | Camden | Paddy Mills | 6 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | open mic | 8:30 pm MARGARITA’S/AUBURN | Auburn | karaoke | 8 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | kara- oke | 9:30 pm PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | Lewiston | open mic SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAK- ERY | Hallowell | Denny Breau + Paul Melynn + Ann Breau | 8:15 pm | $15 TUESDAY 29 CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | karaoke | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bid- deford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm THE END ZONE | Waterville | open mic | 5 pm MAINELY BREWS | Waterville | Dave Mello | 6 pm | open mic blues jam with Dave Mello | 9 pm MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | Wool- wich | open mic | 7 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | jazz jam with G Majors | 7 pm PADDY MURPHY’S | Bangor | open mic | 9:30 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | DJ Tew Phat | 7 pm WEDNESDAY 30 BACK BURNER TAVERN | Brownfield | open acoustic jam CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Biddeford | Travis James Humphrey | 9 pm CHARLAMAGNE’S | Augusta | open mic DAVIS ISLAND GRILL | Edgecomb | open mic FAST BREAKS | Lewiston | open blues jam with Denny Breau FUSION | Lewiston | VJ Pulse | 9 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | karaoke IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | ka- raoke THE KENNEBEC WHARF | Hallowell | open jam with Derek Savage | 9 pm PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | Bangor | karaoke with DJ Ed McCurdy | 7 pm SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | Topsham | open mic | 9:30 pm WOODMAN’S BAR & GRILL | Orono | open mic | 10 pm THURSDAY 31 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | Fryeburg | open mic with Coopers | 8:30 pm BEAR BREW PUB | Orono | DJ Cali- bur BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | Dover Fox- croft | karaoke BRAY’S BREWPUB | Naples | Gorilla Finger Dub Band | 9 pm BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | Brunswick | karaoke | 8:30 pm CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | Buckfield | open mic | 7 pm CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | Bidd- eford | karaoke with DJ Biggs | 9 pm THE DEPOT PUB | Gardiner | Nikki Hunt Band FUSION | Lewiston | open mic | 9 pm HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | Bangor | Dan- iel Taylor | 8 pm IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | Bangor | Red Stripes IRISH TWINS PUB | Lewiston | Mike Krapovicky THE LIBERAL CUP | Hallowell | Steve Jones Band | 7 pm NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | Bangor | DJ Baby Bok Choy + DJ T Coz | 8 pm 26 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Continued on p 28 THE RACK | Kingfield | open mic RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | Saco | Pat Foley | 8 pm SAVORY MAINE | Damariscotta | Hurry Down Sunshine | 6 pm SEA DOG BREWING/BANGOR | Bangor | karaoke | 9 pm SUDS PUB | Bethel | Denny Breau NEW HAMPSHIRE THURSDAY 24 BARLEY PUB | Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes Trio CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | James McGarvey | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Maganahan’s Revival THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Chris O’Neil | 8:30 pm MARTINGALE WHARF | Ports- mouth | B-Cap | 8 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Bob Halperin | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Joel Cage | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Chris Klaxton | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Tim Theriault | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Irish session | 6 pm | Lady Soul + Wave/ Decay + Blacklight Ruckus | 9 pm | $5 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Bad Baby | 8 pm FRIDAY 25 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | Seth Gooby + Peter Squires CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs | 9 pm DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Charlotte Locke + Nemes | 9 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim McCoy & the Papercuts HILTON GARDEN INN | Portsmouth | Wellfleet THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Side Car | 8:30 pm HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | Seabrook | Ghosts of Rory + A Minor Revolution KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Livin’ the Dream | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm THE LOFT AT STRAFFORD FARMS | Dover | Dan Walker MARTINGALE WHARF | Ports- mouth | Marina Davis & Dave Brown | 8 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Bob Arens & Margo Reola | 8 pm PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Ports- mouth | grill: Sev | 9:30 pm | pub: Brooks Hubbard | 10 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Juliet & the Lonesome Romeos | 9 pm | $5 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | George Vala + Audioprophecy | 9 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Duke Snyder | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Brickyard Blues | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Big Ol’ Dirty Bucket + Eight Feet Tall | 9 pm | $5-7 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Old Abode | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Old Bas- tards | 9 pm SATURDAY 26 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | Jamsterdam CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Drama Squad DJs | 9 pm CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | Double Shot DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | A Simple Complex + East is East | 9 pm FAT BELLY’S | Portsmouth | DJ Provo | 7 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Watkinsonics HILTON GARDEN INN | Portsmouth | Rick Watson THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Robert Charles | 8:30 pm KELLEY’S ROW | Dover | Gazpacho | 9 pm KJ’S SPORTS BAR | Newmarket | karaoke | 9 pm THE OAR HOUSE | Portsmouth | Don Severance | 8 pm PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | Portsmouth | grill: Dave Clark | 9:30 pm | pub: Jimmy D | 10 pm PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Larry Garland & Friends | 1 pm | Jim Dozet Group | 9 pm | $5 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Matt McNeill | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Tim Theriault | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Chris Klaxton | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Rhythm Method | 9:30 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Para- noid Social Club | 9 pm | $10 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Todo Bien | 9 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Rage | 9 pm SUNDAY 27 DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | karaoke | 9 pm DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | kara- oke with DJ Erich Kruger | 8 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Jon Lorentz Quartet | 6 pm | $10 THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Green Lion Crew | 9 pm | $5 RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Sharon Jones | 11 am SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Jim Gallant | 7 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | open mic with Dave Ogden | 7 pm WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | Rob Ben- ton | 9 pm MONDAY 28 CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke with Davey K | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | karaoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Jim Dozet Trio | 8 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | “Hush Hush Sweet Harlot,” with Jay Psaros + GramaFoma | 8 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Oran Mor | 7 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Old School | 9 pm TUESDAY 29 103 RESTAURANT | Rochester | ka- raoke | 8 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | karaoke with Nick Papps | 10 pm COUSIN SAM’S PIZZERIA AND BREW | Rochester | Tony Santesse | 5 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | Tim Theriault | 9 pm MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | ka- raoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | jazz jam with Larry Garland | 5:30 pm | “Hoot,” open mic | 9 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | George Belli | 8 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | blue- grass jam with Dave Talmage | 9 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm WEDNESDAY 30 BLUE MERMAID | Portsmouth | open mic | 8:30 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | DJ Bobby Freedom CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DANIEL STREET TAVERN | Ports- mouth | open mic | 8 pm FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | Dover | All Good Feel Good Collective MILLIE’S TAVERN | Hampton | ka- raoke PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Ross Robinson | 9 pm THE RED DOOR | Portsmouth | Eva- redy | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | open mic | 8 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | Dimitri Yian- nicopulus | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Kate Redgate | 8 pm THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Reverie Machine WALLY’S PUB | Hampton | “Hip Hop Wednesdays,” with DJ Provo + Hustle Simmons | 9 pm THURSDAY 31 BARLEY PUB | Dover | bluegrass jam with Steve Roy | 9 pm CENTRAL WAVE | Dover | Ken Ormes Trio CHOP SHOP PUB | Seabrook | ka- raoke DOVER BRICK HOUSE | Dover | Southbound Outlaws | 9 pm THE HOLY GRAIL | Epping | Dave Gerard | 8 pm HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | Seabrook | Granite Planet PRESS ROOM | Portsmouth | Back on the Train | 9 pm RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | Portsmouth | Fil Pacino | 10 pm RUDI’S | Portsmouth | John Franzosa | 6 pm SPRING HILL TAVERN | Portsmouth | Frank Drake Trio | 9 pm STONE CHURCH | Newmarket | Irish session | 6 pm | “Tightgroove Record- ings Takeover,” EDM night | 9 pm | $3-5 THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | Portsmouth | Eddie Japan + Kingsley Flood | 9 pm COMEDY THURSDAY 24 OPEN MIC | 8 pm | Slainte, 24 Preble St, Portland | 207.828.0900 FRIDAY 25 FOCUS GROUP | improv comedy | 8 pm | Next Generation Theatre, 39 Center St, Brewer | 207.989.7100 or nextgenerationtheatre.com TOM HAYES + JAY GROVE + TAMMY POOLER | 8 pm | Franco- American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $10-12 | 207.689.2000 SATURDAY 26 ERIN DONOVAN: “I’M GONNA KILL HIM” | 7:30 pm | Camden Opera House, 29 Elm St, Camden | $15 | 207.236.7963 or www.camdenopera- house.com SUNDAY 27 ”OFFBEAT COMEDY,” OPEN MIC | 9 pm | Mama’s Crowbar, 189 Congress St, Portland | 207.773.9230 THURSDAY 31 OPEN MIC | See listing for Thurs CONCERTS CLASSICAL THURSDAY 24 ROY MACNEIL | 7:30 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Cor- thell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gorham | 207.780.5256 FRIDAY 25 ”THE GOLD RUSH,” FILM SCREEN- ING & LIVE SCORE BY TEMPO | 7 pm | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ells- worth | $15, $10 youth 12 & under | 207.667.9500 or grandonline.org SATURDAY 26 CHRISTOPHER O’RILEY: “OUT OF MY HANDS” | 7:30 pm | Franco- American Heritage Center, 46 Cedar St, Lewiston | $27, $15 students un- der 18 | 207.689.2000 UNH CHORAL GALA | 7 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html SUNDAY 27 BANGOR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: “BACH, MOZART, MAHLER” | 3 pm | Collins Center for the Arts, Univer- sity of Maine, 5746 Collins Center for the Arts, Orono | $19-43 | 207.581.1755 PORTLAND SYMPHONY OR- CHESTRA: “HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOZART” | 2:30 pm | Merrill Audito- rium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | $26-64 | 207.842.0800 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 27 Greater Portland’s only conservatory-style acting school “We grow great performances” ACTING CLASSES www.acorn-productions.org 854-0065 It’s not too late to sign up! Winter classes for adults and children began this week, but we still have room in many classes. No experience necessary - visit our website to sign up! AtlAntis MAssAge $50/hour Specializing in repetitive use injuries & Japanese hot stones. Jennifer Lague LMT & AMTA Member State Theater Building 615 Congress St. Suite 601-i 409.4370 atlantismassage@yahoo.com facebook: atlantis Massage Listings Continued from p 27 MONDAY 28 ”DECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MUSIC SEASON 5 - CONCERT 1” | 6 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $12-15 | 207.761.1757 TUESDAY 29 ETHEL: “FLASH CONCERT” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org WEDNESDAY 30 ETHEL: “PRESENT BEAUTY” | 7:30 pm | Portland Ovations, Hannaford Hall, Abromson Community Cen- ter, 93 Bedford St, Portland | $46, $42 seniors | 207.842.0800 THURSDAY 31 PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHES- TRA: “KINDERKONZERT” | 9:30 &10:30 am | Crooker Theater, Bruns- wick High School, 116 Maquoit Rd, Brunswick | 207.319.1910 POPULAR FRIDAY 25 AUDIOBODY | 7 pm | Fryeburg Acad- emy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | $15, $10 students | 207.935.9232 or frye- burgacademy.org ”HEAR MY SONG: THE BEST OF BROADWAY & BEYOND,” WITH MARIE PRESSMAN & ED REICHERT | 8 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Corthell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gor- ham | 207.780.5256 JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER OR- CHESTRA | 8 pm | Portland Ova- tions, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | sold out | 207.842.0800 MARTIN SEXTON + ALTERNATE ROUTES | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $25-30 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreport- land.com MATANA ROBERTS: “PROLOGUE” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Studz- inski Recital Hall, Kanbar Audito- rium, 3900 College Station, Bruns- wick | 207.798.4141 OLD SOUL | 6 pm | Motorland Vin- tage America, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | 207.710.6699 PAUL BYROM | 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllon- donderry.com SHANNA UNDERWOOD | Fri-Sat 7 pm | Samoset Resort, 220 Warrenton St, Rockport | 207.596.6055 SNAEX + MATT ROCK + NATHAN SALSBURG | 8 pm | Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St, Portland | $5 | 207.671.7792 SATURDAY 26 BONEHEADS | 8 pm | Boothbay Har- bor Opera House, 86 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | $10 | 207.633.6855 CHRIS SMITHER | 7:30 pm | Choco- late Church Arts Center, 804 Wash- ington St, Bath | $22-25 | 207.442.8455 or chocolatechurcharts.org DON CAMPBELL: “AN EVENING OF DAN FOGELBERG MUSIC” | 7:30 pm | Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer St, South Portland | $22 | 207.799.1421 or lyricmusictheater.com JP JOFRE HARD TANGO CHAMBER BAND | 7 pm | Strand Theatre, 345 Main St, Rockland | $35, $25 adults 21-35, $10 youth under 21 | 207.594.0070 SHANNA UNDERWOOD | See list- ing for Fri WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | Sat 7 pm; Sun 4 pm | Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodford St, Portland | $15, $10 seniors/students | 207.774.8243 or woodfordschurch.org SUNDAY 27 ANNI CLARK & DOUG BENNETT BAND | 3 pm | York Public Library, 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 HIGHLAND SOLES + DAN SONEN- BERG + ANNIE FINCH + RAY SCOTT | 2 pm | Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave, Portland | $15, $10 youth 18 & under | 207.772.8277 WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | See listing for Sat MONDAY 28 FRED BUDA QUINTET | 8 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html WEDNESDAY 30 ENGLISH BEAT | 8 pm | Tupelo Mu- sic Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $35-40 | 603.437.5100 or tupelo- halllondonderry.com KEANE + YOUNGBLOOD HAWKE | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $30-35 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreportland.com DANCE PARTICIPATORY FRIDAY 25 SACRED CIRCLE DANCE | 7 pm | Portsmouth Center for Yoga and the Arts, 95 Albany St #9, Portsmouth, NH | $5 | 603.431.4755 | www.ports- mouthyoga.com SATURDAY 26 BALLROOM DANCE PARTY | 8 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $7 | 207.439.0114 CONTRA DANCE WITH JENNY VAN WEST & FRIENDS | 8 pm | Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St, Portland | $7 | 207.615.3609 SUNDAY 27 ECSTATIC DANCE | 10 am | Ecstatic Dance Maine, 408 Broadway, South Portland | $10-15 sugg. donation | 207.408.2684 | ecstaticdanceme.com PERFORMANCE FRIDAY 25 TAP TAP JAZZ | Fri 7 pm; Sat 1 & 4 pm | Maine State Ballet, 348 Rte 1, Falmouth | $15-20 | 207.781.7672 | www.mainestateballet.org SATURDAY 26 DARK FOLLIES + SO SOL + LAUREN ZUNIGA | 7 pm | Local Sprouts Coop- erative, 649 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 | localsproutscoopera- tive.com RED, HOT, & LADYLIKE + SO- NARDANCE + DJ ASIA + JESSANI BELLYDANCE | 6:30 pm | Avant Dance & Event Center, 865 Spring St, Westbrook | $15 | 207.899.4211 | avantmaine.com TAP TAP JAZZ | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 SOUL STREET DANCE: “TAKIN’ IT TO THE STREET” | Soul Street Dance | 10 & 11:30 am | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ellsworth | $3 | 207.667.9500 | grandonline.org EVENTS FRIDAY 25 ”SUSTAIN MAINE,” PEP RALLY FOR “NO TAR SANDS RALLY” | with performance by Substitutes | 5 pm | Empire Dine And Dance, 575 Congress St, Portland | 207.879.8988 SATURDAY 26 ”SAME-SEX MARRIAGE ‘WED- DING RECEPTION,’” COMMUNITY CELEBRATION | 6 pm | St Ansgar Lutheran Church, 515 Congress St, Portland | free | 207.774.8740 ”TAR SANDS FREE NORTHEAST DAY OF ACTION,” TAR SANDS OIL PROTEST & AWARENESS RALLY | 11:30 am | Monument Square, Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.9979 WEDNESDAY 30 WINTER BIRD WALK | with Anna Stunkel | 1 pm | College of the Atlan- tic, Dorr Museum, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5395 THURSDAY 31 ”WESTBROOK FEUD,” LIVE GAME SHOW | benefit | 6:30 pm | West- brook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St, Westbrook | $7, $5 students | 207.857.3860 FAIRS & FESTIVALS FRIDAY 25 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHTLIFE CELEBRATION | vari- ous locations | downtown Portland | 207.772.6828 | www.portlandmaine. com/cornerstone-events/ SATURDAY 26 ”CAMDEN WINTERFEST” | with crafts, face painting, & activities | noon | Camden Public Library, 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.3440 | mainedreamvacation.com/event/ camden-winterfest ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri SUNDAY 27 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri TUESDAY 29 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri WEDNESDAY 30 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | downtown Biddeford | 207.284.8520 | www.heartofbiddeford.org/ ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri THURSDAY 31 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | See listing for Wed ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri FOOD SATURDAY 26 FARMERS’ MARKET | 9:30 am | Saco River Market, Saco Island, 110 Main St, Biddeford WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET | 9 am | Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St, Portland | 207.780.0118 or maineirish.com TUESDAY 29 4-COURSE LASAGNA DINNER | 6 pm | Wellness Forum, Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland | 207.409.7778 WEDNESDAY 30 CUMBERLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 10 am | Allen, Sterling, & Lothrop, 191 US Rte 1, Falmouth POETRY & PROSE THURSDAY 24 KATRINA KENISON | discusses Magical Journey: an Apprenticeship in Contentment | 6:30 pm | The Mu- sic Hall Loft, 131 Congress St, Ports- mouth, NH | $39 | 603.436.2400 FRIDAY 25 JOHN BOVE | discusses Two Weeks Notice...Aloha | noon | Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Sq, Portland | 207.871.1758 or portlandli- brary.com SATURDAY 26 ”LOCAL WRITERS” | poetry & prose readings | 4 pm | Local Buzz, 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth | 207.541.9024 STEVE ALMOND: “IF SEX SELLS, I’M BUYING: A NIGHT OF RED HOT EROTICA” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gal- lery, 538 Congress St, Portland | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538.org SUNDAY 27 IAN SVENONIUS: “SUPERNATU- RAL STRATEGIES” | with discus- sion of Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ‘n’ Roll Group, & DJ set | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org ”NEW HAMPSHIRE AUTHORS SERIES,” WITH REBECCA RULE | Joe Monninger discusses his non- fiction work | 2 pm | University of New Hampshire, Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | 603.862.1535 ”RHYTHMIC CYPHER” OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with Sarah Lynn Herklots + Mark Dennis | 7 pm | Dobra Tea, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.370.1890 MONDAY 28 MOSTLY HARMLESS BOOK GROUP | discuss Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com TUESDAY 29 INTERNATIONAL BOOK GROUP | discuss Barbara Nadel’s Belshaz- zar’s Daughter | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com JASON ANTHONY | discusses Hoosh: Roast Penguin, Scurvy Day, & Other Stories of Antarctic Cuisine | noon | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org JUSTIN GILLIS | New York Times reporter | 7 pm | College of the At- lantic, Deering Campus Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 OPEN MIC POETRY WITH PORT VERITAS | 9:30 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 ”SUPER BOWL POETRY SLAM,” WITH PORT VERITAS | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 THURSDAY 31 ”MAINE WOMEN WRITE” | with readings from Monica Wood + Bar- bara Walsh + Debra Spark + Morgan C. Rogers + Annie Finch | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Port- land | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538. org WESLEY MCNAIR | discusses his poetry volume, The Words I Chose: a Memoir of Family & Poetry | 6 pm | Portland Public Library, Rines Audi- torium, 5 Monument Sq, Portland TALKS THURSDAY 24 ”CLIMATE CHANGE ARRIVED -- NOW WHAT?” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.775.3321 ”DEEP THINGS OUT OF DARKNESS: A HISTORY OF NATURAL HISTO- RY” | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, Gates Community Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 steve almond presents ‘If Sex Sells, Then I’m Buying: A Night of Red Hot Erotica’ | SPACE Gallery, Jan 26 @ 7:30 pm 28 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Fresh Maine seaFood – done right IT’S HERE! LATE NIGHT HAPPY HOUR THURSDAY - SATURDAY TRIVIA NIGHT - LADIES NIGHTS - DART LEAGUES NOW SERVING SUNDAY BRUNCH 10AM - 2PM OPEN ALL WINTER! WED. - SUN 175 Lower main St. Freeport, Maine 04032 207 865 9105 freeportseafoodco.com ”DIRIGO NORTH & SOUTH: MAINE’S LONG & VARIED CONNEC- TION FROM THE POLAR WORLD” | with Charles H. Lagerbom | 7 pm | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org FRIDAY 25 ”CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE: THE IMPACT OF WAR ON THE LIVES OF CHILDREN” | with Dan Muller | 7 pm | Meg Perry Center, 644 Congress St, Portland | 207.772.0680 or meg- perrycenter.com MONDAY 28 ”THE TROUBLE WITH MALARIA IN AFRICA” | with James L.A. Webb, Jr | 6 pm | University of New England - Portland, WCHP Lecture Hall, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | 207.221.4375 TUESDAY 29 ”ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLAN- NING” | 9 am | Midcoast Center for Higher Education, 9 Park St, Bath | 877.282.2182 ”ESSENTIALS OF COLLEGE PLAN- NING” | 1 pm | Southern Midcoast CareerCenter, 275 Bath Rd, Bruns- wick | 800.281.3703 ”MAKING PARAGUAY REAL: THE POLITICS OF MEASUREMENT IN THE AGE OF REGULATION” | with Kregg Hetherington | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, McCormick Lecture Hall, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 or coa.edu WEDNESDAY 30 ”BUILDING HEALTHY COMMUNI- TIES: A PATHWAY TO HEALTH EQ- UITY” | with Georges C. Benjamin | noon | University of New England - Portland, Ludcke Auditorium, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | 207.221.4950 or une.edu THURSDAY 31 ”MANAGING YOUR ONLINE REPU- TATION” | with Matt Ivester | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Memorial Hall, Libra Theater Studio, Bruns- wick | 207.725.3225 ”NUCLEAR ARCHITECTURE IN CANCER & AGING-RELATED DIS- EASES” | with Lindsay Shopland | noon | University of New England - Biddeford, Alfond Hall, 11 Hills Beach Rd, Biddeford | 207.602.2888 THEATER BATES COLLEGE | | Schaeffer Black Box Theater, 329 College St, Lewiston | Jan 25-26: “Asia Night,” variety show | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm CASCO BAY HIGH SCHOOL | | 196 Allen Ave, Portland | Jan 25-27: Pippin | Fri-Sat 7 pm; Sun 2 pm FRYEBURG ACADEMY | 207.935.9232 | fryeburgacademy.org | Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | Jan 25: Audiobody | 7 pm | $15, $10 students GOOD THEATER | 207.885.5883 | goodtheater.com | St. Lawrence Arts Center, 76 Congress St, Portland | Jan 30-Feb 24: Death by Design | Wed- Thurs 7 pm | $15-25 HEARTWOOD YOUTH ENSEMBLE | 207.563.1373 | heartwoodtheater.org | Parker B. Poe Theater, Lincoln Acad- emy, Academy Hill Rd, Newcastle | Jan 25-27: Ghost-Writer | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 3 pm HUSSON UNIVERSITY | 207.941.7051 | Gracie Theatre, 1 College Circle, Bangor | Jan 27: “Potted Potter! The Unauthorized Harry Experience: A Parody” | 3 & 8 pm | $25, $15 youth under 12 LAKE REGION COMMUNITY THE- ATRE | 207.838.3846 | Lake Region High School Auditorium, 1877 Roos- evelt Trail, Naples | Jan 25-26: Lovers & Other Strangers | Fri 7:30 pm; Sat 1 & 7:30 pm | $9 MAD HORSE THEATRE COMPANY | 207.730.2389 | Hutchins School, 24 Mosher St, South Portland | Jan 24-Feb 3: Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo | Thurs-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $22 MYSTERY FOR HIRE | 207.782.2088 | DaVinci’s Eatery, 150 Mill St, Lewiston | Jan 26: “Mystery at My Family Re- union,” dinner theater | 7 pm | $39 (incl. meal) NEXT GENERATION THEATRE | 207.989.7100 | nextgenerationtheatre. com | 39 Center St, Brewer | Jan 30: “The Nite Show with Dan Cash- man,” variety show | 6 pm O’BRIEN EVENTS CENTER | 207.873.0111 | 375 Main St, Waterville | Jan 26: Ray Santos, hypnotist | 8 pm PENOBSCOT THEATRE COMPANY | 207.942.3333 | penobscottheatre.org | Bangor Opera House, 131 Main St, Ban- gor | Jan 30-Feb 17: The Sugar Bean Sisters | Wed-Thurs 7 pm | $22 PLAYERS’ RING | 603.436.8123 | playersring.org | 105 Marcy St, Ports- mouth, NH | Jan 25-Feb 10: The Odd Couple | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 7 pm | $15, $12 seniors/students PORTLAND PLAYERS | 207.799.7337 | 420 Cottage Rd, Portland | Jan 25-Feb 10: Arsenic & Old Lace | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $20 PORTLAND STAGE COMPANY | 207.774.0465 | portlandstage.com | 25A Forest Ave, Portland | Through Feb 17: Greater Tuna | Thurs-Fri + Wed 7:30 pm; Sat 4 & 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $34-44 PUBLIC THEATRE | 207.782.3200 | thepublictheatre.org | 31 Maple St, Lewiston | Jan 25-Feb 3: The Hound of the Baskervilles | Fri + Thurs 7:30 pm; Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $18, $5 youth 18 & under ROCHESTER OPERA HOUSE | 603.335.1992 | 31 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | Jan 24-Feb 2: All Shook Up | Thurs-Fri 8 pm; Sat 2 & 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | $8-15 SANDY RIVER PLAYERS | 207.779.7084 | University of Maine - Farmington, Emery Community Arts Center, Farmington | Jan 25-27: Once Upon a Mattress | Fri-Sat 7:30 pm; Sun 2 pm | $17, $15 students SEVEN STAGES SHAKESPEARE COMPANY | | 7stagesshakes.word- press.com | Press Room, 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH | Jan 28: “Shakes- BEERience: Two Gentlemen of Ve- rona” | 6:30 pm STATE THEATRE | 207.956.6000 | statetheatreportland.com | 609 Con- gress St, Portland | Jan 29: “Spank! The 50 Shades Parody” | 8 pm | $27.50-32.50 THEATER PROJECT | 207.729.8584 | theaterproject.com | 14 School St, Brunswick | Jan 25-Feb 10: “Winter Cabaret” | Fri-Sat 8 pm; Sun 2 pm | pay-what-you-want ART GALLERIES 3 FISH GALLERY | 772.342.6467 | 377 Cumberland Ave, Portland | 3fishgal- lery.com | Thurs-Sat 1-4 pm & by ap- pointment | Through Jan 31: “Smoke Stack Series,” works by Neill Ewing Wegmann 45 MEMORIAL CIRCLE | 207.622.3813 | Lobby Gallery, 45 Memorial Circle, Augusta | Through Jan 25: “Mapping the Air,” instal- lation by Donna Parkinson & Sarah Vosmus AARHUS GALLERY | 207.338.0001 | 50 Main St, Belfast | aarhusgallery. com | Thurs-Sun noon-6 pm | Jan 31- Feb 24: “Heart,” mixed media group exhibition ADDISON WOOLLEY GALLERY | 207.450.8499 | 132 Washington Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat noon-5 pm | Through Jan 26: “Travels With Eddie & Other Surprises,” photography by Diane Hudson + “Visual Whispers,” photography by Dan Dow ARTSTREAM STUDIO GALLERY | 603.330.0333 | 56 North Main St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Fri noon-6 pm; Sat 10 am-2 pm | Through Jan 30: “Prints of the Year,” group print- making exhibition AUCOCISCO GALLERIES | 207.775.2222 | 89 Exchange St, Port- land | aucocisco.com | Wed-Sat 11 am-5 pm, and by appointment | Through March 30: “Winter Salon,” mixed media group exhibition BUOY GALLERY | 207.450.2402 | 2 Government St, Kittery | Wed-Sat 5-9 pm | Through Jan 26: “Patterned Continued on p 30 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 29 Listings Continued from p 27 MONDAY 28 ”DECOMPRESSION CHAMBER MUSIC SEASON 5 - CONCERT 1” | 6 pm | One Longfellow Square, 181 State St, Portland | $12-15 | 207.761.1757 TUESDAY 29 ETHEL: “FLASH CONCERT” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org WEDNESDAY 30 ETHEL: “PRESENT BEAUTY” | 7:30 pm | Portland Ovations, Hannaford Hall, Abromson Community Cen- ter, 93 Bedford St, Portland | $46, $42 seniors | 207.842.0800 THURSDAY 31 PORTLAND SYMPHONY ORCHES- TRA: “KINDERKONZERT” | 9:30 &10:30 am | Crooker Theater, Bruns- wick High School, 116 Maquoit Rd, Brunswick | 207.319.1910 POPULAR FRIDAY 25 AUDIOBODY | 7 pm | Fryeburg Acad- emy, Eastman Performing Arts Center, 745 Main St, Fryeburg | $15, $10 students | 207.935.9232 or frye- burgacademy.org ”HEAR MY SONG: THE BEST OF BROADWAY & BEYOND,” WITH MARIE PRESSMAN & ED REICHERT | 8 pm | University of Southern Maine - Gorham, Corthell Concert Hall, 37 College Ave, Gor- ham | 207.780.5256 JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER OR- CHESTRA | 8 pm | Portland Ova- tions, Merrill Auditorium, 20 Myrtle St, Portland | sold out | 207.842.0800 MARTIN SEXTON + ALTERNATE ROUTES | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $25-30 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreport- land.com MATANA ROBERTS: “PROLOGUE” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Studz- inski Recital Hall, Kanbar Audito- rium, 3900 College Station, Bruns- wick | 207.798.4141 OLD SOUL | 6 pm | Motorland Vin- tage America, North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | 207.710.6699 PAUL BYROM | 8 pm | Tupelo Music Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $30 | 603.437.5100 or tupelohalllon- donderry.com SHANNA UNDERWOOD | Fri-Sat 7 pm | Samoset Resort, 220 Warrenton St, Rockport | 207.596.6055 SNAEX + MATT ROCK + NATHAN SALSBURG | 8 pm | Pistol Pete’s Upholstery Shop, 219 Anderson St, Portland | $5 | 207.671.7792 SATURDAY 26 BONEHEADS | 8 pm | Boothbay Har- bor Opera House, 86 Townsend Ave, Boothbay Harbor | $10 | 207.633.6855 CHRIS SMITHER | 7:30 pm | Choco- late Church Arts Center, 804 Wash- ington St, Bath | $22-25 | 207.442.8455 or chocolatechurcharts.org DON CAMPBELL: “AN EVENING OF DAN FOGELBERG MUSIC” | 7:30 pm | Lyric Music Theater, 176 Sawyer St, South Portland | $22 | 207.799.1421 or lyricmusictheater.com JP JOFRE HARD TANGO CHAMBER BAND | 7 pm | Strand Theatre, 345 Main St, Rockland | $35, $25 adults 21-35, $10 youth under 21 | 207.594.0070 SHANNA UNDERWOOD | See list- ing for Fri WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | Sat 7 pm; Sun 4 pm | Woodfords Congregational Church, 202 Woodford St, Portland | $15, $10 seniors/students | 207.774.8243 or woodfordschurch.org SUNDAY 27 ANNI CLARK & DOUG BENNETT BAND | 3 pm | York Public Library, 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 HIGHLAND SOLES + DAN SONEN- BERG + ANNIE FINCH + RAY SCOTT | 2 pm | Portland New Church, 302 Stevens Ave, Portland | $15, $10 youth 18 & under | 207.772.8277 WOMEN IN HARMONY: “NEVER GONNA STOP” | See listing for Sat MONDAY 28 FRED BUDA QUINTET | 8 pm | Uni- versity of New Hampshire, Johnson Theatre, 30 College Rd, Durham, NH | 603.862.2404 or unh.edu/the- atre-dance/productions.html WEDNESDAY 30 ENGLISH BEAT | 8 pm | Tupelo Mu- sic Hall, 2 Young Rd, Londonderry, NH | $35-40 | 603.437.5100 or tupelo- halllondonderry.com KEANE + YOUNGBLOOD HAWKE | 8 pm | State Theatre, 609 Congress St, Portland | $30-35 | 207.956.6000 or statetheatreportland.com DANCE PARTICIPATORY FRIDAY 25 SACRED CIRCLE DANCE | 7 pm | Portsmouth Center for Yoga and the Arts, 95 Albany St #9, Portsmouth, NH | $5 | 603.431.4755 | www.ports- mouthyoga.com SATURDAY 26 BALLROOM DANCE PARTY | 8 pm | The Dance Hall, 7 Walker St, Kittery | $7 | 207.439.0114 CONTRA DANCE WITH JENNY VAN WEST & FRIENDS | 8 pm | Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St, Portland | $7 | 207.615.3609 SUNDAY 27 ECSTATIC DANCE | 10 am | Ecstatic Dance Maine, 408 Broadway, South Portland | $10-15 sugg. donation | 207.408.2684 | ecstaticdanceme.com PERFORMANCE FRIDAY 25 TAP TAP JAZZ | Fri 7 pm; Sat 1 & 4 pm | Maine State Ballet, 348 Rte 1, Falmouth | $15-20 | 207.781.7672 | www.mainestateballet.org SATURDAY 26 DARK FOLLIES + SO SOL + LAUREN ZUNIGA | 7 pm | Local Sprouts Coop- erative, 649 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 | localsproutscoopera- tive.com RED, HOT, & LADYLIKE + SO- NARDANCE + DJ ASIA + JESSANI BELLYDANCE | 6:30 pm | Avant Dance & Event Center, 865 Spring St, Westbrook | $15 | 207.899.4211 | avantmaine.com TAP TAP JAZZ | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 SOUL STREET DANCE: “TAKIN’ IT TO THE STREET” | Soul Street Dance | 10 & 11:30 am | The Grand, 165 Main St, Ellsworth | $3 | 207.667.9500 | grandonline.org EVENTS FRIDAY 25 ”SUSTAIN MAINE,” PEP RALLY FOR “NO TAR SANDS RALLY” | with performance by Substitutes | 5 pm | Empire Dine And Dance, 575 Congress St, Portland | 207.879.8988 SATURDAY 26 ”SAME-SEX MARRIAGE ‘WED- DING RECEPTION,’” COMMUNITY CELEBRATION | 6 pm | St Ansgar Lutheran Church, 515 Congress St, Portland | free | 207.774.8740 ”TAR SANDS FREE NORTHEAST DAY OF ACTION,” TAR SANDS OIL PROTEST & AWARENESS RALLY | 11:30 am | Monument Square, Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.9979 WEDNESDAY 30 WINTER BIRD WALK | with Anna Stunkel | 1 pm | College of the Atlan- tic, Dorr Museum, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5395 THURSDAY 31 ”WESTBROOK FEUD,” LIVE GAME SHOW | benefit | 6:30 pm | West- brook Performing Arts Center, 471 Stroudwater St, Westbrook | $7, $5 students | 207.857.3860 FAIRS & FESTIVALS FRIDAY 25 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHTLIFE CELEBRATION | vari- ous locations | downtown Portland | 207.772.6828 | www.portlandmaine. com/cornerstone-events/ SATURDAY 26 ”CAMDEN WINTERFEST” | with crafts, face painting, & activities | noon | Camden Public Library, 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.3440 | mainedreamvacation.com/event/ camden-winterfest ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri SUNDAY 27 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri MONDAY 28 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri TUESDAY 29 ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri WEDNESDAY 30 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | downtown Biddeford | 207.284.8520 | www.heartofbiddeford.org/ ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri THURSDAY 31 ”BIDDEFORD WINTERFEST” | See listing for Wed ”PORTLAND ON ICE,” CITY NIGHT- LIFE CELEBRATION | See listing for Fri FOOD SATURDAY 26 FARMERS’ MARKET | 9:30 am | Saco River Market, Saco Island, 110 Main St, Biddeford WINTER FARMERS’ MARKET | 9 am | Maine Irish Heritage Center, 34 Gray St, Portland | 207.780.0118 or maineirish.com TUESDAY 29 4-COURSE LASAGNA DINNER | 6 pm | Wellness Forum, Masonic Lodge, 102 Bishop St, Portland | 207.409.7778 WEDNESDAY 30 CUMBERLAND FARMERS’ MARKET | 10 am | Allen, Sterling, & Lothrop, 191 US Rte 1, Falmouth POETRY & PROSE THURSDAY 24 KATRINA KENISON | discusses Magical Journey: an Apprenticeship in Contentment | 6:30 pm | The Mu- sic Hall Loft, 131 Congress St, Ports- mouth, NH | $39 | 603.436.2400 FRIDAY 25 JOHN BOVE | discusses Two Weeks Notice...Aloha | noon | Portland Public Library, 5 Monument Sq, Portland | 207.871.1758 or portlandli- brary.com SATURDAY 26 ”LOCAL WRITERS” | poetry & prose readings | 4 pm | Local Buzz, 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth | 207.541.9024 STEVE ALMOND: “IF SEX SELLS, I’M BUYING: A NIGHT OF RED HOT EROTICA” | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gal- lery, 538 Congress St, Portland | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538.org SUNDAY 27 IAN SVENONIUS: “SUPERNATU- RAL STRATEGIES” | with discus- sion of Supernatural Strategies for Making a Rock ‘n’ Roll Group, & DJ set | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 or space538.org ”NEW HAMPSHIRE AUTHORS SERIES,” WITH REBECCA RULE | Joe Monninger discusses his non- fiction work | 2 pm | University of New Hampshire, Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | 603.862.1535 ”RHYTHMIC CYPHER” OPEN MIC & POETRY SLAM | with Sarah Lynn Herklots + Mark Dennis | 7 pm | Dobra Tea, 151 Middle St, Portland | 207.370.1890 MONDAY 28 MOSTLY HARMLESS BOOK GROUP | discuss Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com TUESDAY 29 INTERNATIONAL BOOK GROUP | discuss Barbara Nadel’s Belshaz- zar’s Daughter | 6 pm | Longfellow Books, 1 Monument Way, Portland | 207.772.4045 or longfellowbooks. com JASON ANTHONY | discusses Hoosh: Roast Penguin, Scurvy Day, & Other Stories of Antarctic Cuisine | noon | Maine Historical Society, 489 Con- gress St, Portland | 207.774.1822 or mainehistory.org JUSTIN GILLIS | New York Times reporter | 7 pm | College of the At- lantic, Deering Campus Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 OPEN MIC POETRY WITH PORT VERITAS | 9:30 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 ”SUPER BOWL POETRY SLAM,” WITH PORT VERITAS | 7 pm | Bull Feeney’s, 375 Fore St, Portland | 207.773.7210 THURSDAY 31 ”MAINE WOMEN WRITE” | with readings from Monica Wood + Bar- bara Walsh + Debra Spark + Morgan C. Rogers + Annie Finch | 7:30 pm | SPACE Gallery, 538 Congress St, Port- land | $5 | 207.828.5600 or space538. org WESLEY MCNAIR | discusses his poetry volume, The Words I Chose: a Memoir of Family & Poetry | 6 pm | Portland Public Library, Rines Audi- torium, 5 Monument Sq, Portland TALKS THURSDAY 24 ”CLIMATE CHANGE ARRIVED -- NOW WHAT?” | 7:30 pm | Bowdoin College, Kresge Auditorium, Visual Arts Center, 3900 College Station, Brunswick | 207.775.3321 ”DEEP THINGS OUT OF DARKNESS: A HISTORY OF NATURAL HISTO- RY” | 4 pm | College of the Atlantic, Gates Community Center, 105 Eden St, Bar Harbor | 207.288.5015 steve almond presents ‘If Sex Sells, Then I’m Buying: A Night of Red Hot Erotica’ | SPACE Gallery, Jan 26 @ 7:30 pm 28 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com • Water pipes from Illadelph, HBG, MGW, Delta 9, and Medicali • Local hand blown glass from around the country • Tapestries and Posters • ONLY authorized Illadelph in the area. Northern Lights 1140 Br ighton Ave, Por t land , ME • (207) 772-9045 Mon-Sat 9am-9:30pm/Sun 10am-8pm MUST BE 18 TO PURCHASE TOBACCO PRODUCTS. Photo ID required. THE BEST selection of hookahs & accessories including Fantasia Shisha THE LARGEST selection of vaporizers (including parts and accessories) Enter to win our monthly raffle ($200 Value) hot dates 24/7 Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2012 PC LLC 234824/7 Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2012 PC LLC 1886 1-888-MegaMatesTM 1-888- MegaMatesTM 207.253.5200 For other local numbers call Tell-A- Friend REWARDSREWARDS (207) 828.0000 FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE TO LISTEN & REPLY TO ADS! Portland 207.253.5200 For other local numbers call: FREE CODE: Portland Phoenix FREE to listen & reply to ads! Portland (207) 828.0000 Tickets: 207.774.0465 | www.portlandstage.org PROFESSIONAL THEATER MADE IN MAINE Ill us tr at io n by R us se ll C ox “The third smallest town in Texas,” where the Lions Club is too liberal and Patsy Cline never dies. A hysterical, off-beat comedy. Versatile performers Tom Ford and Dustin Tucker –both West Texas natives – team up to play over 20 of Tuna’s eccentric inhabitants, from gun-clubbers to church ladies, in a quick-changing two-man tour-de-force that celebrates and satirizes the quirks of small-town life. Sponsored by: L.L.Bean | Maine Home + Design | maine | Wright-Ryan Homes Wright Express | The Portland Press Herald / Maine Sunday Telegram 72 Oak St. LOftS Arts District Living featuring Artist Workspace, Art Gallery, Large Windows, Natural Sunlight, Onsite Laundry, and Heat, Hot Water, and WiFi included. Income Limits Apply. fMI: avestahousing.org or 553-7780 x.253 Time to clean out. Time to get organized. Time to box up the no-longer used, worn, played with or needed. Time to donate to Goodwill - bringing order back to your home, while creating jobs, reducing landfills and putting clothes on your neighbor’s back. In fact, Goodwill has been reducing, recycling, repurposing and retraining for over 100 years. Now that’s just a bit of time creating a healthy, sustainable community where nothing goes to waste. Not a shirt. Not a shoe. Not a person. Goodwill. Seeking solutions that work. Join us. FALMOUTH Shaw’s Plaza follow us accredited committed GORHAM 102 Main St. PORTLAND 1104 Forest Ave. S. PORTLAND 555 Maine Mall Rd. S. PORTLAND Millcreek Plaza TOPSHAM 106 Park Dr. WINDHAM 31 Landing Rd. GORHAM BUY THE POUND 34 Hutcherson Dr. It’s time. goodwillnne.org Listings Continued from p 29 Vernacular,” works by Jenny McGee Dougherty + Katrine Hildebrant- Hussey CHOCOLATE CHURCH ARTS CEN- TER | 207.442.8455 | 804 Washington St, Bath | chocolatechurcharts.org | Tues-Wed 10 am-4 pm; Thurs noon-7 pm; Fri 10 am-4 pm; Sat noon-4 pm | Jan 25-March 16: “Winter Wonder- land,” mixed media group exhibi- tion | reception Jan 25 6-8 pm COFFEE BY DESIGN/CONGRESS ST | 207.772.5533 | 620 Congress St, Portland | Mon-Wed 6:30 am-8 pm; Thurs-Sat 6:30 am-9 pm; Sun 7 am-8 pm | Through Jan 31: “Lori Austill: New Encaustics...Dancers, Florals, & Abstracts” COFFEE BY DESIGN/INDIA ST | 207.879.2233 | 67 India St, Portland | Mon-Fri 6:30 am-7 pm; Sat-Sun 7 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Lori Austill: New Encaustics...Dancers, Florals, & Abstracts” COLEMAN BURKE GALLERY/ BRUNSWICK | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | Mon-Sat 10 am-7 pm | Through March 16: “Standing Navigation on End of a Needle,” installation by Cynthia Davis COLEMAN BURKE GALLERY/PORT- LAND | 207.725.3761 | 504 Congress St, Port City Music Hall Window, Port- land | Through March 24: “Looking In | Looking Out,” installation by Amy Jorgenson CONSTELLATION ART GALLERY | 207.409.6617 | 511 Congress St, Port- land | constellationgallery.webs.com | Mon-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-4 pm & 6-8 pm; Sat 2-8 pm | Jan 25-Feb 20: “Occupy Gallery,” mixed media group exhibition DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland | Mon-Thurs 11 am-10 pm; Fri-Sat 11 am-11 pm; Sun 11 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Eclipse: Works of Art in Pen & Ink,” by Travis Graslie EDWARD T. POLLACK FINE ARTS | 617.610.7173 | 25 Forest Ave, Portland | Wed-Sat 11 am-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “Mallarme Suite,” works by Ells- worth Kelly ELIZABETH MOSS GALLERIES | 207.781.2620 | 251 Rte 1, Falmouth | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through March 10: “Despite Winter, Gar- dens,” works by Martha Burkert + Sue Hammerland + Andrea Rouda + Alysia C. Walker + Angel Braestrup FRANKLIN GALLERY | 603.332.2227 | 60 Wakefield St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Fri 9 am-8 pm; Sat 9 am-6 pm; Sun 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 27: “From the Many, One,” mixed me- dia group exhibition FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick | explorefrontier.com | Tues-Thurs 11 am-9 pm; Fri-Sat 11 am-10 pm; Sun 9 am-3 pm | Through Feb 24: “CSA: Community Supporting Arts,” mixed media group exhibition GALLERY AT 100 MARKET STREET | 603.436.4559 | 100 Market St, Ports- mouth, NH | Floors One & Two 8 am-8 pm; Floors Three & Four 9-11 am & 2-4 pm | Through April 27: “Regional & State Invitational,” juried mixed media exhibit GREEN HAND BOOKSHOP | 207.450.6695 | 661 Congress St, Port- land | greenhandbooks.blogspot.com | Tues-Fri 11 am-6 pm; Sat 11 am-7 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Through Jan 31: “Fancy Food Chains,” drawings by Jada Fitch HANSON STREET GALLERY | 603.948.2035 | Portable Pantry, 12 Hanson St, Rochester, NH | Mon-Wed 7:30 am-2:30 pm; Fri-Sat 7:30 am-8 pm; Sun 7:30 am-4 pm | Through Jan 27: works by Nate Twombly HARLOW GALLERY | 207.622.3813 | 160 Water St, Hallowell | harlowgal- lery.org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun- Tues by appointment | Through Feb 9: “Ingrained,” printmaking show by Sarah Vosmus + Willy Reddick + Donna Parkinson + Tony Kulik + Martha Briana HARMON & BARTON’S | 207.650.3437 | 584 Congress St, Portland | harmonsbartons.com | 8 am-5:30 pm | Through Jan 31: “Why I Moved to Maine: Photographs & Cyanotypes of Maine & Beyond,” photography by Michael Heiko INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN ART | | 45 Smith St, #1, Portland | institute- foramericanart@gmail.com | Sat 4-8 pm | Through Feb 16: print by Mars- den Hartley JENNY WREN GALLERY | 603.335.3577 | 107 N Main St, Roch- ester, NH | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 27: works by Chad Kouri JUNE FITZPATRICK GALLERY AT MECA | 207.699.5083 | 522 Congress St, Portland | junefitzpatrickgallery. com | Tues-Sat noon-5 pm | Through Feb 15: “From the Inside,” MECA staff exhibition | Through Jan 27: “MECA Painters 10 Years Later,” paintings by John Capello + Jason Cornell + Michael Marks + Nolan Stewart + Sage Tucker-Ketcham + Stacey Vallerie JUST US CHICKENS GALLERY | 207.439.4209 | 9 Walker St, Kittery | call for hours | Through Feb 16: silk paintings, scarves, pillows, & other works by Sue Wierzba KENNEBUNK FREE LIBRARY | 207.985.2173 | 112 Main St, Kennebunk | kennebunklibrary.org | Mon-Tues 9:30 am-8 pm; Wed 12:30-8 pm; Thurs-Sat 9:30 am-5 pm | Through Jan 31: “Honest & Catkins - a Life’s Work of Beauty,” retrospective ex- hibit by Florence Nellie Holland KENNEDY GALLERY | 603.436.7007 | 41 Market St, Portsmouth, NH | Mon- Tues 9:30 am-6 pm; Wed-Thurs 9:30 am-6:30 pm; Fri-Sat 9:30 am-7 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Feb 3: works by Dave Petengill KITTERY ART ASSOCIATION | 207.967.0049 | 8 Coleman Ave, Kittery | kitteryartassociation.org | Sat noon- 6 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Jan 26-Feb 17: “Waste Not, Want Not,” member exhibition LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland | local188.com | Mon-Fri 5:30 pm-1 am; Sat-Sun 9 am-2 pm & 5:30 pm-1 am | Through Jan 31: works by Kimberly Convery + Meg K Walsh LUCY’S ART EMPORIUM | 603.740.9195 | 303 Central Ave, Dover, NH | lucysartemporium.com | Mon-Fri 11 am-6 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 2: “Holiday Small Works Show,” group exhibition MAINE FARMLAND TRUST GAL- LERY | 207.338.6575 | 97 Main St, Belfast | Through Feb 28: “CSA: Com- munity Supporting Arts,” mixed media group exhibition MAINE FIBERARTS | 207.721.0678 | 13 Main St, Topsham | mainefiberarts. org | Tues-Fri 10 am-4 pm; Sat 11 am-2 pm | Through Feb 15: “Tools to Equip the Shaman for Night Trav- els,” installation by Susan Mills MAINELY FRAMES AND GALLERY | 207.828.0031 | 541 Congress St, Portland | Mon-Wed 10 am-6 pm; Thurs-Fri 10 am-8 pm; Sat 10 am-6 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Through Jan 31: “Collection of a Maine Top Selling Artist: Bill Paxton,” watercolors, acrylics, & oils MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland | call for hours | Through Jan 31: works by Pat Cor- rigan + Jennifer Gardiner MCLAUGHLIN-HILLS GALLERY | 603.319.8306 | 110 State St, Ports- mouth, NH | Tues-Sun 1-6 pm | Through Jan 27: “Oblivion,” works by Fernando M. Diaz MEG PERRY CENTER | 207.772.0680 | 644 Congress St, Portland | megper- rycenter.com | Tues-Sat noon-6 pm | Through Jan 31: “A Child’s View from Gaza,” youth drawings | recep- tion Jan 25 5-9 pm MONKITREE GALLERY | 207.512.4679 | 263 Water St, Gardiner | Tues-Fri 10 am-6 pm;Sat noon-6 pm | Through Jan 26: “Local Color,” works by Nancy Barron + Megan Bastey + Johanna Moore MOTORLAND VINTAGE AMERICA | 207.710.6699 | North Dam Mill, 2 Main St, Ste 37-101, Biddeford | Mon-Fri 10 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-3 pm | Jan 25: works by Peter Dugovic | reception 5-8 pm NEW HAMPSHIRE ART ASSOCIA- TION | 603.431.4230 | 136 State St, Portsmouth, NH | Wed-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 26: “50 Shades of Gray,” mixed me- dia group exhibition NORTH DAM MILL | 207.229.3560 | Pepperell Mill, 2 Main St, Biddeford | northdammill.com | Daily noon-5 pm | Jan 25: works by Alternative Pro- gram students | reception 5-8 pm PORTLAND PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.871.1700 | Lewis Art Gallery, 5 30 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com Monument Sq, Portland | portland- library.com/programs/LewisGallery. htm | Mon-Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Fri 10 am-7 pm; Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 23: “Prints: Breaking Boundar- ies,” group printmaking exhibit | Through June 13: “The Sea Within Us: Iconically Maritime in Fashion & Design” RICHARD BOYD GALLERY | 207.792.1097 | Island Ave. & Epps St., Peaks Island | Thurs-Sun 10 am-5 pm | Through Feb 17: “New Year,” mixed media works by Jay LaBrie + Bob Salandrea + Wyn Foland + Pam Ca- banas + Jeanne O’Toole Hayman RIVER ARTS | 207.563.1507 | 241 Rte 1, Damariscotta | Tues-Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 25: “Black, White, Grey,” mixed me- dia group exhibition ROSE CONTEMPORARY | 207.780.0700 | 492 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sat noon-4:30 pm | Through Jan 26: “Emergent,” in- stallation by Rebecca Fitzpatrick + Petra Simmons + Andrew Frederick | reception Jan 26 6-9 pm SALAZAR GALLERY | | 265 Main St, 3rd Floor, Biddeford | salazargallery. com | call for hours | Jan 25: “Maine Seascapes & Landscapes,” paintings by Roland Salazar Rose | reception 5-8 pm SAVORY MAINE | 207.563.2111 | 11 Water St, Damariscotta | call for hours | Through Feb 5: “CSA: Com- munity Supporting Arts,” group exhibit SEACOAST ARTIST ASSOCIATION GALLERY | 603.778.8856 | 225 Water St, Exeter, NH | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through Jan 31: works by Terry Donsker | Through Feb 2: “Black & White,” juried art exhibition SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland | space538. org | Wed-Sat noon-6 pm; by ap- pointment | Through Feb 15: “itiswhatitis,” ambrotype photo- graphs by Michael Kolster | Through Feb 16: “Creator / Creations,” prints by Edwige Charlot SPINDLEWORKS | 207.725.8820 | University College, 9 Park St, Bath | call for hours | Through Feb 28: “Un- expected Thaw,” works by Donald Freeman + Dana Albright + Kevin Babine + Michelle Rice THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland | thedogfishbarandgrille.com | Mon-Sat 11:30 am-12:30 am; Sun noon-8 pm | Through Jan 31: photography by Patti Genest THE OAK AND THE AX | | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford | theoakandtheax.blogspot.com | Daily 11 am-8 pm | Jan 25-Feb 16: “Look- ing for Love in Biddo,” paintings by Nancy Kureth | reception Jan 25 5-9 pm THOS. MOSER SHOWROOM | 207.865.4519 | 149 Main St, Freeport | Mon-Sat 10 am-6 pm; Sun 11 am-5 pm | Jan 31-April 15: “Paintings & Prints,” by Laurie Hadlock + Carrie Lonsdale | reception Jan 31 6-8 pm TOPSHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.725.1727 | 25 Foreside Rd, Top- sham | topshamlibrary.org | Mon + Wed 10 am-6 pm; Tues + Thurs 10 am-8 pm; Fri noon-6 pm; Sat 9:30 am-2:30 pm | Through Feb 16: “Joy of Art,” mixed media group show YARMOUTH ARTS | | 317 Main St Community Music Center, Yarmouth | yarmoutharts.org | Mon-Fri noon-6 pm | Through Feb 7: “Small Works Holiday Show,” mixed media group exhibition YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY | 207.363.2818 | 15 Long Sands Rd, York | Fri 10 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-1 pm; Mon-Tues + Thurs 10 am-6 pm; Wed noon-8 pm | Through March 26: “Alumni Show,” mixed media group exhibition MUSEUMS BATES COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.786.6158 | 75 Russell St, Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | bates.edu/muse- um-about.xml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Through March 22: “Max Klinger (German, 1857-1920), The Intermezzo Portfolio” + Robert S. Neuman’s “Ship to Paradise,” paintings | Jan 25-March 22: Fransje Killaars: “Color at the Center,” textile installation BOWDOIN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.725.3275 | Bowdoin College, 9400 College Station, Brunswick | bowdoin.edu/art-museum | Tues-Wed + Fri-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Thurs 10 am- 8:30 pm; Sun 1-5 pm | Free admis- sion; donations welcome | Through Feb 24: “Real/Ideal: Transforma- tions in 19th Century Painting” | Through March 3: “The Fixed Im- age: History & Process in American Photography” | Through March 5: “Fantastic Stories: the Supernatural in 19th Century Japanese Prints” | Through March 10: “A Printmaking ABC: In Memorium David P. Becker” | Jan 31-Feb 1: “Reading Prints: David P. Becker’s Legacy at the Bowdoin Museum of Art,” printmaking symposium | Ongoing: “The Re- naissance & the Revival of Classical Antiquity” + “In Dialogue: Art from Bowdoin & Colgate Collections” + “In a New Light: American & Eu- ropean Masters” + “Simply Divine: Gods & Demigods in the Ancient Mediterranean” COLBY COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.859.5600 | 5600 Mayflower Hill Dr, Waterville | colby.edu/museum | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 31: “Rediscoveries 4: Comedy, Seriously” | Ongoing: “Process & Place: Exploring the Design Evolu- tion of the Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion” + “Alex Katz Collection” DYER LIBRARY/SACO MUSEUM | 207.283.3861 | 371 Main St, Saco | sacomuseum.org | Tues-Thurs noon-4 pm; Fri noon-8 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun noon-4 pm | Through Jan 31: “Watercolors: Beginners & Beyond,” group exhibit | Through March 2: “I My Needle Ply With Skill: Samplers of the Federal Period,” historical needlework exhibit | Jan 25 | gallery talk with Leslie Rounds | 6:30 pm FARNSWORTH ART MUSEUM | 207.596.6457 | 16 Museum St, Rock- land | farnsworthmuseum.org | 10 am-5 pm, open until 8 pm with free admission Wed | $12, seniors & students $10; under 17 free and Rockland residents free | Admission $12; $10 seniors and students; free for youth under 17 and Rockland residents | Through March 10: “Re- cent Acquisitions” | Through April 7: “Andrew Wyeth: Pencil Drawings & Watercolor Sketches” | Through Sept 22: “Decorating the Everyday: Popu- lar Art from the Farnsworth” ICA AT MECA | 207.879.5742 | 522 Congress St, Portland | Wed-Sun 11 am-5 pm; Thurs 11 am-7 pm | Through March 3: “This Will Have Been: Art, Love, & Politics in the 1980s,” mixed media | Through April 7: “Ander Mikalson: Score for Two Dinosaurs” + “Whales & Nails,” in- stallation by Dan DenDanto MAINE COLLEGE OF ART | 207.775.3052 | 522 Congress St, Port- land | meca.edu | Mon-Fri 8 am-8 pm; Sat-Sun 12 pm-5 pm | Through Feb 3: “Create: an Exhibition of Works by Continuing Studies Students” | Through Feb 10: “Process & Place: MECA 2013 Residency Exhibition” MAINE JEWISH MUSEUM | 207.329.9854 | 267 Congress St, Portland | treeoflifemuseum.org | Through Feb 25: “Dorothy Schwartz: Evolution of a Printmaker” MUSEUM OF AFRICAN CULTURE | 207.871.7188 | 13 Brown St, Portland | museumafricanculture.org | Tues- Fri 10:30 am-4 pm; Sat noon-4 pm | $5 suggested donation | Through Jan 30: “The Incarnation of Earthly Creations,” mixed media Haitian art exhibit | Ongoing: “An Exhibition of Bronze” PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY | 603.777.3461 | Lamont Gallery, Freder- ick R Mayer Art Center, Tan Ln, Exeter, NH | exeter.edu/art/visit_Lamont.ht- ml | Mon 1-5 pm; Tues-Sat 9 am-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 2: “Pop Paradise,” works by Dave Lefner + Kelly Reemtsen + Robert Townsend | reception Jan 25 6:30-8 pm | gallery talk Jan 26 10 am PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART | 207.775.6148 | 7 Congress Square, Portland | portlandmuseum.org | Tues-Thurs + Sat-Sun 10 am-5 pm; Fri 10 am-9 pm | Admission $12; $10 students, seniors; $6 youth 13-17; free for youth 12 & under and for all Fri 5-9 pm | Through Feb 3: “The Portland Society of Art & Winslow Homer’s Legacy in Maine” | Through Feb 17: “Between Past & Present: Historic Photographic Processes & the Winslow Homer Studio” | Through April 7: Lois Dodd: “Catch- ing the Light,” plein-air painting retrospective SALT INSTITUTE FOR DOCUMEN- TARY STUDIES | 207.761.0660 | 561 Congress St, Portland | salt.edu | Tues- Fri noon-4:30 pm | Through Feb 8: “Tinder,” mixed media documen- tary exhibit Continued on p 32 portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 31 Open 5PM to 1AM Great new menu served until 12:30 am every night Facebook.com/SlainteWineBar Twitter.com/SlainteME 2012 1/23 @8 Open Mic 1/24 @8 Open Mic Comedy 1/25 FREE @9 Reggae Winter Showdown featuring DJ Geofferson & Lukaduke 1/26 @9 FREE Matt Brown’s Soul Dance Party 1/29 FREE @9 DJ Ponyfarm’s Karaoke Party SPARETIME PORTLAND 867 Riverside Street 207.878.2695 GALACTIC BOWLING Call to make reservations! 4 person minimum 1030pm—1 am Fri $15 Sat $17 KARAOKE FRIDAYS 9pm to 1am 1/8 Page R 3.25x4 JANUARY 24-30 COMING UP: ST. PATTY’S WEEKEND HUGE EVENT b r i a n b o r u p o r t l a n d . C O M 2 0 7 . 7 8 0 . 1 5 0 6 Thu. 24: HEART SHAPED ROCK 9:30pm Fri. 25: THE JASON SPOONER BAND 9:30pm Sat. 26: THE JUMPOFF 9:30pm Sun. 27: IRISH SESSIONS 3-6pm Tue. 29: GAME NITE 6pm Wed. 30: TRIVIA NITE 7pm AtlAntis MAssAge $50/hour Specializing in repetitive use injuries & Japanese hot stones. Jennifer Lague LMT & AMTA Member State Theater Building 615 Congress St. Suite 601-i 409.4370 atlantismassage@yahoo.com facebook: atlantis Massage UNIVERSITY OF MAINE - FARM- INGTON | 207.778.7072 | Art Gallery, 246 Main St, Farmington | Tues-Sun noon-4 pm | Jan 31-March 7: “Beauty & the Political Body,” works by Har- riet Casdin-Silver UNIVERSITY OF MAINE - ORONO | 207.581.3245 | Lord Hall Gallery, 5743 Lord Hall, Orono | Mon-Fri 9 am-4:30 pm | Through Jan 25: “UM Department of Art Senior Studio Exhibition” UNIVERSITY OF MAINE MUSEUM OF ART | 207.561.3350 | Norumbega Hall, 40 Harlow St, Bangor | umma. umaine.edu | Mon-Sat 10 am-5 pm | Free admission | Through March 21: “Michael Crouser: Dog Run,” print photography + “Robert Rivers: The Promised Land,” drawings + “Candice Ivy: Honey from the Belly of the Lion,” installation | Ongoing: “Selections from the Permanent Collection” UNIVERSITY OF NEW ENGLAND - PORTLAND | 207.221.4499 | Art Gal- lery, 716 Stevens Ave, Portland | une. edu/artgallery | Wed 1-4 pm; Thurs 1-7 pm; Fri-Sun 1-4 pm | Through March 3: “Maine Women Pioneers III: Homage” | Ongoing: paintings & photography by Maine artists + labyrinth installation UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.862.1535 | Dimond Library, 18 Library Way, Durham, NH | call for hours | Through March 22: “Embel- lishments: Constructing Victorian Detail” UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE MUSEUM OF ART | 603.862.3712 | Paul Creative Arts Center, Durham, NH | unh.edu/moa | Mon-Wed 10 am-4 pm; Thurs 10 am-8 pm; Sat- Sun 1-5 pm | Free admission | Jan 26-March 28: “California Impres- sionism: Paintings from the Irvine Museum” + “Sacred Landscapes of Peru: the Photographs of Carl Aus- tin Hyatt” | reception Jan 25 6-8 pm UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - GORHAM | 207.780.5008 | Art Gallery, USM Campus, Gorham | usm.maine.edu/~gallery | Tues-Fri 11 am-4 pm; Sat-Sun 1-5 pm | Through March 6: “Everything,” installation by Astrid Bowlby UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - LEWISTON | 207.753.6500 | Atrium Gallery, 51 Westminster St, Lewiston | usm.maine.edu/lac/art/ex- hibits.html | Mon-Thurs 8 am-8 pm; Fri 8 am-4:30 pm | Free admission | Through March 23: “Area Artists 2013,” open juried biennial exhibit UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN MAINE - PORTLAND | 207.780.5008 | Area Gallery, Woodbury Campus Center, Bedford St, Portland | Mon- Fri 7 am-10 pm | Through April 3: “USM Art Faculty Exhibition,” mixed media | reception Jan 24 4-6 pm OTHER MUSEUMS ABBE MUSEUM | 207.288.3519 | 26 Mount Desert St, Bar Harbor | ab- bemuseum.org | Through Oct 31: “N’tolonapemk: Our Relatives’ Place” | Ongoing: “Layers of Time: Archaeology at the Abbe Museum” + “Dr. Abbe’s Museum” CHILDREN’S MUSEUM & THEATRE OF MAINE | 207.828.1234 | 142 Free St, Portland | kitetails.com | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm; Mon during school vacations | $10, $9 seniors, $7 youth under 17, free under 6; first Friday of the month is free 5-8 pm | Jan 24: Tiny Tots: Instrument Exploration 10:30 am; “Bouncing Birds,” creative move- ment class 11-11:45 am; Star Show 11:30 am; Dominoes Deluxe 3:30 pm | Jan 25: Llama Llama Puppet Show 10:30 am; Touch Tank 11:30 am; Cloud Dough 3:30 pm | Jan 26: Natural Artifact Exploration 11 am; Camera Obscura Presentation noon; Kids on the Block 1 pm; Open Art Studio 2-3 pm; DIY Perfume Work- shop 3:30 pm ($8) | Jan 27: Trash to Treasure: Amazing Aquariums 1 pm; Music & Dance Afternoon 2:30 pm | Jan 29: Let’s Play: Fast & Slow 11 am; Paper Mache Play: Birds! 3:30-4:30 pm | Jan 30: Open Art Stu- dio 11 am-noon; Cocoa Storytime: Madeline 3:30 pm | Jan 31: Tiny Tots: Shape Scavenger Hunt 10:30 am; Star Show 11:30 am; Dollar-Go- Round 3:30 pm CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF NEW HAMPSHIRE | 603.742.2002 | 6 Washington St, Dover, NH | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun noon-5 pm | Admission $7, seniors $6 | Through March 1: “Toys,” oil paintings by Anne Scheer DISCOVER PORTSMOUTH CEN- TER | 603.436.8420 | 10 Middle St, Portsmouth, NH | portsmouthhistory. org | 10 am-5 pm | Through March 31: “Nancy Lyon: Weaving the New Hampshire Landscape,” textiles MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY | 207.774.1822 | 489 Congress St, Portland | mainehistory.org | Tues- Sat 10 am-5 pm | $8, $7 seniors/ students, $2 children, kids under 6 free | Through May 26: “Wired! How Electricity Came to Maine,” histori- cal exhibit MAINE MARITIME MUSEUM | 207.443.1316 | 243 Washington St, Bath | mainemaritimemuseum.org | Daily 9:30 am-5 pm | Admission $10, $9 seniors, $7 for children seven through 17, free for children six and under | Through May 26: “Ahead Full at Fifty: 50 Years of Collecting at Maine Maritime Mu- seum” | Through Oct 25: “Honing the Edge: the Apprenticeshop at 40” | Ongoing: “A Maritime History of Maine” + “A Shipyard in Maine: Percy & Small & the Great Schoo- ners” + “Snow Squall: Last of the American Clipper Ships” + “The Sea Within Us: Iconically Maritime in Fashion & Design” MAINE STATE MUSEUM | 207.287.2301 | 83 State House Stn, Augusta | mainestatemuseum.org | Mon-Fri 9 am-5 pm; Sat 10 am-4 pm; Sun 1-4 pm | Admission $2, $1 for seniors and children ages 6-18, under 6 free | Through May 18: “Malaga Island, Fragmented Lives” | Ongoing: 12,000-plus years of Maine’s history, in homes, nature, shops, mills, ships, & factories MUSEUM L-A | 207.333.3881 | Bates Mill Complex 1, 35 Canal St, Lewiston | museumla.org | Mon-Sat 10 am-4 pm | Admission $5, students and seniors $4 | Jan 26-March 22: Fransje Killaars: “Color at the Center,” textile installation | Ongoing: “Por- traits & Voices: Shoemaking Skills of Generations” OSHER MAP LIBRARY | 207.780.4850 | University of South- ern Maine, Glickman Family Library, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | usm. maine.edu/maps | Tues-Thurs 1-4 pm | Free admission | Through Feb 28: “Iconic America: the United States Map as a National Symbol” PEARY-MACMILLAN ARCTIC MUSEUM | 207.725.3416 | Bowdoin College, Hubbard Hall, 5 College St, Brunswick | bowdoin. edu/arctic-museum/index.shtml | Tues-Sat 10 am-5 pm; Sun 2-5 pm | Free | Through April 6: “Animal Allies: Inuit Views of the Natural World” | Through April 16: “In a State of Becoming: Inuit Art from the Collection of Rabbi Harry Sky” | Ongoing: “Chilling Discoveries About Global Warming” + “The Roosevelt: a Model of Strength” + “The North Pole” + “Permanent Collection” PORTSMOUTH ATHENAEUM | 603.431.2538 | 9 Market Sq, Ports- mouth, NH | Tues, Thurs, & Sat 1-4 pm | Through Feb 28: “17th Annual Proprietors Art Show” SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM | 207.780.4249 | Science Building, 70 Falmouth St, University of Southern Maine - Portland, | usm.maine.edu/ planet | call for hours | free | Jan 25: Two Small Pieces of Glass 7 pm; Eight Planets & Counting 8:30 pm | Jan 26: Rusty Rocket 3 pm | Jan 27: Full Dome: The Little Star That Could 3 pm Listings Continued from p 31 32 January 25, 2013 | the portLand phoenix | portLand.thephoenix.com What Portland needs is a board game theme restaurant. If you’ve got a great idea, you need a great Web presence. We can help. Eunice Pomfret Media . Portland, Maine (207) 619-2143 . patricia@eunicepomfret.com Rippleffect Gala 2013 at Space Gallery in Portland, Maine February 28, 2013 6:30pm doors open & 7:30pm live auction live music * live auction * cool people beverages & heavy hors d’oeuvres details and registration: www.rippleffect.net/events 207.791.7870 Proudly Featuring Head Chef John Dugans and Head Brewer Rob Prindall Hand-Crafted ales • Great food • eCleCtiC Beer seleCtion 678 Roosevelt Trail, At the Light in Naples, ME • (207) 693-6806 • www.braysbrewpub.com P U B BREWERY BRAY’s ALE Causeway Cream Ale old Church GUEsT TAP Aventinus eisbock January 26: Gorilla FinGer @ 9pm BRAY’S SHOWCASE FeaturinG olD CHurCH anD roCKn rolanD BlaCK rye FeBruary 7@5pm@ tHe Great loSt Bear See you tHere! 103 RESTAURANT | 603.332.7790 | 103 N Main St, Rochester, NH 302 SMOKEHOUSE & TAVERN | 207.935.3021 | 636 Main St, Fryeburg 302 SPORTS BAR & GRILLE | 207.894.5730 | 765 Roosevelt Trail, Windham 51 WHARF | 207.774.1151 | 51 Wharf St, Portland ALISSON’S RESTAURANT | 207.967.4841 | 5 Dock Sq, Ken- nebunkport ALL AMERICAN TAVERN | 207.674.3800 | 64 Bethel Rd, West Paris ANDY’S OLD PORT PUB | 207.874.2639 | 94 Commercial St, Portland ASYLUM | 207.772.8274 | 121 Center St, Portland BACK BURNER TAVERN | 207.935.4444 | 109 Main St, Brownfield BARLEY PUB | 603.742.4226 | 328 Central Ave, Dover, NH BAYSIDE BOWL | 207.791.2695 | 58 Alder St, Portland BEACHFIRE BAR AND GRILLE | 207.646.8998 | 658 Main St., Ogunquit BEAR BREW PUB | 207.866.2739 | 36 Main St, Orono BEAR’S DEN TAVERN | 207.564.8733 | 73 North St, Dover Foxcroft BEBE’S BURRITOS | 207.283.4222 | 140 Main St, Biddeford BIG EASY | 207.775.2266 | 55 Market St, Portland BIG EASY LOUNGE | 207.992.2820 | Charles Inn, 20 Broad St, Bangor BILLY’S TAVERN | 207.354.1177 | 1 Starr St, Thomaston BINGA’S STADIUM | 207.347.6072 | 77 Free St, Portland BLACK BEAR CAFE | 207.693.4770 | 215 Roosevelt Trail, Naples BLUE | 207.774.4111 | 650A Congress St, Portland BLUE MERMAID | 603.427.2583 | 409 The Hill, Portsmouth, NH BRAY’S BREWPUB | 207.693.6806 | Rte 302 and Rte 35, Naples BRIAN BORU | 207.780.1506 | 57 Center St, Portland BRIDGE STREET TAVERN | 207.623.8561 | 18 Bridge St, Augusta THE BRUNSWICK OCEANSIDE GRILLE | 207.934.2171 | 39 West Grand Ave, Old Orchard Beach BUBBA’S SULKY LOUNGE | 207.828.0549 | 92 Portland St, Portland BUCK’S NAKED BBQ/FREEPORT | 207.865.0600 | 581 Rte 1, Freeport BULL FEENEY’S | 207.773.7210 | 375 Fore St, Portland BULL MOOSE LOUNGE | 207.924.7286 | Moosehead Trail Mo- tor Lodge, 300 Corrina Rd, Dexter BUXTON TAVERN | 207.929.8668 | 1301 Rte 22, Buxton BYRNES IRISH PUB/BATH | 207.443.6776 | 98 Center St, Bath BYRNES IRISH PUB/BRUNSWICK | 207.729.9400 | 16 Station Ave, Brunswick THE CAGE | 207.783.0668 | 97 Ash St, Lewiston CAMPFIRE GRILLE | 207.803.2255 | 656 North High St, Bridgton CAPTAIN BLY’S TAVERN | 207.336.2126 | 371 Turner St, Buckfield CENTRAL WAVE | 603.742.9283 | 368 Central Ave, Dover, NH CHAMPIONS SPORTS BAR | 207.282.7900 | 15 Thornton St, Biddeford CHARLAMAGNE’S | 207.242.2711 | 228 Water St, Augusta CHOP SHOP PUB | 603.760.7706 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH CLUB TEXAS | 207.784.7785 | 150 Center St, Auburn COUSIN SAM’S PIZZERIA AND BREW | | 160 Washington St, Rochester, NH CRYSTAL FALLS | 207.582.8620 | 1280 Eastern Ave, Chelsea CURVA ULTRA LOUNGE | 207.866.3600 | 103 Park St, Orono DANIEL STREET TAVERN | 603.430.1011 | 111 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH DAVIS ISLAND GRILL | 207.687.2190 | 318 Eddy Rd, Edgecomb DEER RUN TAVERN | 207.846.9555 | 365 Main St, Yarmouth THE DEPOT PUB | 207.588.0081 | 20 Maine St, Gardiner DOBRA TEA | 207.370.1890 | 151 Middle St, Portland THE DOGFISH BAR AND GRILLE | 207.772.5483 | 128 Free St, Portland DOOBIE’S BAR & GRILL | 207.623.7625 | 349 Water St, Augusta DOVER BRICK HOUSE | 603.749.3838 | 2 Orchard St, Dover, NH EASY STREET LOUNGE | 207.622.3360 | 7 Front St, Hallowell EMPIRE DINE AND DANCE | 207.879.8988 | 575 Congress St, Portland THE END ZONE | 207.861.4435 | 26 Elm St, Waterville THE FARM BAR & GRILLE | 603.516.3276 | 25A Portland Ave, Dover, NH FAST BREAKS | 207.782.3305 | 1465 Lisbon St, Lewiston FAT BELLY’S | 603.610.4227 | 2 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH FEDERAL JACK’S | 207.967.4322 | 8 Western Ave, Kennebunk FEILE IRISH RESTAURANT AND PUB | 207.251.4065 | 1619 Post Rd, Wells FLASK LOUNGE | 207.772.3122 | 117 Spring St, Portland THE FOGGY GOGGLE | 207.824.5056 | South Ridge Lodge, Sunday River, Newry FORE PLAY | 207.780.1111 | 436 Fore St, Portland FRESH | 207.236.7005 | 1 Bay View Landing, Camden FRONTIER CAFE | 207.725.5222 | Fort Andross, 14 Maine St, Brunswick THE FUNKY RED BARN | 207.824.3003 | 19 Summer St, Bethel FURY’S PUBLICK HOUSE | 603.617.3633 | 1 Washington St, Dover, NH FUSION | 207.330.3775 | 490 Pleasant St, Lewiston GATCH’S FOOD & SPIRITS | 207.364.2050 | 137 Rumford Ave, Rumford GELATO FIASCO | 207.607.4002 | 74 Maine St., Brunswick GENO’S | 207.221.2382 | 625 Congress St, Portland THE GIN MILL | 207.620.9200 | 302 Water St, Augusta GINGKO BLUE | 207.541.9190 | 2 Portland Sq, Portland GOLD ROOM | 207.221.2343 | 510 Warren Ave, Portland THE GREEN ROOM | 207.490.5798 | 898 Main St, Sanford GRITTY MCDUFF’S | 207.772.2739 | 396 Fore St, Portland GRITTY MCDUFF’S/AUBURN | 207.782.7228 | 68 Main St, Auburn GUTHRIE’S | 207.376.3344 | 115 Middle St, Lewiston HANNA’S TAVERN | 207.490.5122 | 324 Country Club Rd, Sanford HIGHER GROUNDS COFFEEHOUSE AND TAVERN | 207.621.1234 | 119 Water St, Hallowell HILTON GARDEN INN | 603.431.1499 | 100 High St, Portsmouth, NH HOLLYWOOD SLOTS | 877.779.7771 | 500 Main St, Bangor THE HOLY GRAIL | 603.679.9559 | 64 Main St, Epping, NH HONEY POT BAR & LOUNGE | 603.760.2013 | 920 Lafayette Rd, Seabrook, NH HOOLIGAN’S IRISH PUB | 207.934.4063 | 2 Old Orchard Rd, Old Orchard Beach HOXTER’S BAR & BISTRO | 207.629.5363 | 122 Water St, Hallowell IPANEMA BAR & GRILL | 207.942.5180 | 10 Broad St, Bangor IRISH TWINS PUB | 207.376.3088 | 743 Main St, Lewiston JACK’S PLACE | 207.797.7344 | 597 Bridgton Rd, Westbrook JAMESON TAVERN | 207.865.4196 | 115 Main St, Freeport JIMMY THE GREEK’S/ OLD ORCHARD BEACH | 207.934.7499 | 215 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach JIMMY THE GREEK’S/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.774.7335 | 115 Philbrook Rd, South Portland JOE’S NEW YORK PIZZA | 207.699.5559 | 420 Fore St, Portland JONATHAN’S | 207.646.4777 | 92 Bourne Ln, Ogunquit JUMPIN’ JAKE’S SEAFOOD CAFE & BAR | 207.937.3250 | 181 Saco Ave, Old Orchard Beach KELLEY’S ROW | 603.750.7081 | 421 Central Ave, Dover, NH THE KENNEBEC WHARF | 207.622.9290 | 1 Wharf St, Hallowell KERRYMEN PUB | 207.282.7425 | 512 Main St, Saco KJ’S SPORTS BAR | 603.659.2329 | North Main St, Newmarket, NH LEGENDS RESTAURANT | 207.824.3500 | Grand Summit Resort Hotel, 97 Summit Dr, Newry THE LIBERAL CUP | 207.623.2739 | 115 Water St, Hallowell LOCAL 188 | 207.761.7909 | 685 Congress St, Portland LOCAL BUZZ | 207.541.9024 | 327 Ocean House Rd, Cape Elizabeth LOCAL SPROUTS COOPERATIVE | 207.899.3529 | 649 Congress St, Portland THE LOFT | 207.541.9045 | 865 Forest Ave, Portland THE LOFT AT STRAFFORD FARMS | 603.742.7012 | 58 New Rochester Rd, Dover, NH LOMPOC CAFE | 207.288.9392 | 36 Rod- ick St, Bar Harbor MAINE STREET | 207.646.5101 | 195 Maine St, Ogunquit MAINELY BREWS | 207.873.2457 | 1 Post Office Sq, Waterville MAMA’S CROWBAR | 207.773.9230 | 189 Congress St, Portland MARGARITA’S/AUBURN | 207.782.6036 | 180 Center St, Auburn MARK’S PLACE | 207.899.3333 | 416 Fore St, Portland MARTINGALE WHARF | 603.431.0091 | 99 Bow St, Portsmouth, NH MATHEW’S | 207.253.1812 | 133 Free St, Portland MAXWELL’S PUB | 207.646.2345 | 243 Main St, Ogunquit MAYO STREET ARTS | 207.615.3609 | 10 Mayo St, Portland MEMORY LANE MUSIC HALL | 207.642.3363 | 35 Blake Rd, Standish MILLBROOK TAVERN & GRILLE | 207.824.2175 | Bethel Inn, On the Com- mon, Bethel MILLIE’S TAVERN | 603.967.4777 | 17 L St, Hampton, NH MONTSWEAG ROADHOUSE | 207.443.6563 | Rte 1, Woolwich MOOSE ALLEY | 207.864.9955 | 2809 Main St, Rangeley MY TIE LOUNGE | 207.406.2574 | 94 Maine St, Brunswick NOCTURNEM DRAFT HAUS | 207.907.4380 | 56 Main St, Bangor NONANTUM RESORT | 207.967.4050 | 95 Ocean Ave, Kennebunkport THE OAK AND THE AX | 140 Main St, Ste 107-Back Alley, Biddeford THE OAR HOUSE | 603.436.4025 | 55 Ceres St, Portsmouth, NH OASIS | 207.370.9048 | 42 Wharf St, Portland OLD PORT TAVERN | 207.774.0444 | 11 Moulton St, Portland THE OLDE MILL TAVERN | 207.583.9077 | 56 Main St, Harrison ONE LONGFELLOW SQUARE | 207.761.1757 | 181 State St, Portland PADDY MURPHY’S | 207.945.6800 | 26 Main St, Bangor THE PAGE | 603.436.0004 | 172 Hanover St, Portsmouth, NH PEAK LODGE | 800.543.2754 | Sunday River, Newry PEARL | 207.653.8486 | 444 Fore St, Portland PEDRO O’HARA’S/LEWISTON | 207.783.6200 | 134 Main St, Lewiston PENOBSCOT POUR HOUSE | 207.941.8805 | 14 Larkin St, Bangor PEPPERCLUB | 207.772.0531 | 78 Middle St, Portland PHOENIX HOUSE & WELL | 207.824.2222 | 9 Timberline Dr, Newry PHOENIX PUB | 207.404.4184 | 123 Franklin St, Bangor PORT CITY MUSIC HALL | 207.899.4990 | 504 Congress St, Portland PORTLAND EAGLES | 207.773.9448 | 184 Saint John St, Portland PORTLAND LOBSTER CO | 207.775.2112 | 180 Commercial St, Portland PORTSMOUTH BOOK AND BAR | 617.908.8277 | 40 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, NH PORTSMOUTH GAS LIGHT | 603.430.9122 | 64 Market St, Portsmouth, NH POST ROAD TAVERN | 207.641.0640 | 705 Main St, Ogunquit PRESS ROOM | 603.431.5186 | 77 Daniel St, Portsmouth, NH PROFENNO’S | 207.856.0011 | 934 Main St, Westbrook PUB 33 | 207.786.4808 | 33 Sabattus St, Lewiston THE RACK | 207.237.2211 | Sugarloaf Mountain A, Kingfield RAVEN’S ROOST | 207.406.2359 | 103 Pleasant St, Brunswick THE RED DOOR | 603.373.6827 | 107 State St, Portsmouth, NH CLUB DIRECTORY RIRA | 207.761.4446 | 72 Commercial St, Portland RIRA/PORTSMOUTH | 603.319.1680 | 22 Market St, Portsmouth, NH RJ’S BAR AND GRILL | 83 Washington St, Dover, NH THE ROOST | 207.799.1232 | 62 Chicopee Rd, Buxton RUDI’S | 603.430.7834 | 20 High St, Portsmouth, NH RUN OF THE MILL BREWPUB | 207.571.9648 | 100 Main St, Saco Island, Saco RUSTY HAMMER | 603.436.9289 | 49 Pleasant St, Portsmouth, NH SAVORY MAINE | 207.563.2111 | 11 Water St, Damariscotta SCHEMENGEES BAR AND GRILL | 207.777.1155 | 551 Lincoln St, Lewiston SEA 40 | 207.795.6888 | 40 East Ave, Lewiston SEA DOG BREWING/SOUTH PORTLAND | 207.871.7000 | 125 Western Ave, South Portland SEA DOG BREWING/TOPSHAM | 207.725.0162 | 1 Maine St, Great Mill Island, Topsham SEASONS GRILLE | 207.775.6538 | 155 Riverside St, Portland SEBAGO BREW PUB/KENNEBUNK | 207.467.8107 | 67 Portland Rd, Ken- nebunk SHOOTERS BILLIARDS BAR & GRILL | 207.794.8585 | 222B West Broadway, Lincoln SILVER HOUSE TAVERN | 207.772.9885 | 123 Commercial St, Portland SILVER SPUR | 207.345.3211 | 272 Lewiston St, Mechanic Falls SILVER STREET TAVERN | 207.680.2163 | 2 Silver St, Waterville SLAINTE | 207.828.0900 | 24 Preble St, Portland SLATES RESTAURANT AND BAKERY | 207.622.4104 | 169 Water St, Hallowell SLIDERS RESTAURANT | 207.824.5300 | Jordan Grand Resort Hotel, Sunday River, Newry SOLO BISTRO | 207.443.3378 | 128 Front St, Bath SONNY’S | 207.772.7774 | 83 Exchange St, Portland SPACE GALLERY | 207.828.5600 | 538 Congress St, Portland SPARE TIME | 207.878.2695 | City Sports Grille, 867 Riverside St, Portland SPECTATORS | 207.324.9658 | Rte 4, Sanford SPLITTERS | 207.621.1710 | 2246 N Bel- fast Ave, Augusta SPRING HILL TAVERN | 603.431.5222 | Dolphin Striker, 15 Bow St, Ports- mouth, NH SPRING POINT TAVERN | 207.733.2245 | 175 Pickett St, South Portland STONE CHURCH | 603.659.6321 | 5 Granite St, Newmarket, NH STUDIO BISTRO AND BAR | 207.824.3241 | Mill Hill Inn, 24 Mill Hill Rd, Bethel STYXX | 207.828.0822 | 3 Spring St, Portland SUDS PUB | 207.824.6558 | Sudbury Inn Main St, Bethel TAILGATE BAR & GRILL | 207.657.7973 | 61 Portland Rd, Gray T&B’S OUTBACK TAVERN | 207.877.7338 | 6 Jefferson St, Waterville THATCHER’S PUB | 207.887.3582 | 10 Cumberland St, Westbrook THIRSTY MOOSE TAPHOUSE | 603.427.8645 | 21 Congress St, Portsmouth, NH THE THIRSTY PIG | 207.773.2469 | 37 Exchange St, Portland TORTILLA FLAT | 207.797.8729 | 1871 Forest Ave, Portland TUCKER’S PUB | 207.739.2200 | 290 Main St, Norway TUG’S PUB | 207.633.3830 | Robinson Wharf, Southport UNION STATION BILLIARDS | 207.899.3693 | 272 St. John St, Portland VACANCY PUB | 207.934.9653 | Ocean Park Rd, Old Orchard Beach WALLY’S PUB | 603.926.6954 | 144 Ashworth Ave, Hampton, NH WATER STREET GRILL | 207.582.9464 | 463 Water St, Gardiner WIDOWMAKER LOUNGE | 207.237.6845 | Sugarloaf Mtn, Kingfield YORK HARBOR INN | 800.343.3869 | Rte 1A, York Harbor ZACKERY’S | 207.774.5601 | Fireside Inn & Suites, 81 Riverside St, Portland portLand.thephoenix.com | the portLand phoenix | January 25, 2013 33 155 Brackett St. Portland 774-7250 www.freShaPProachmarket.com Mon-Fri 8-7 • Sat 9-7 • Sun 9-5 a Cut aBoVE uSDa PriME, choice & Select ten quality standards ensure the brand’s premium name. thiS week’S SPecialS All-nAturAl, boneless, skinless chicken breAst 10lB. Bag-$19.90 center-cut, boneless pork roAst $2.29/lB. usDA choice lonDon broil steAk $3.99/lB. Deli-sliceD oven-roAsteD turkey breAst $3.99/lB. P E P P E R C L U B dinner 7 nights The Good Egg Café six mornings two favorites in one location Thursday, 1/24: Chipped Enamel @ 7:30 Music, Food, Drinks and No Cover! Private room available 78 Middle Street Portland, Maine 04101 207.772.0531 www.pepperclubrestaurant.com Installations Network Support Wa rra nti es Consulting Re mo te Of fsi te Ba ck up Break/Fix PC’s & Printers (office) 207-774-5821 (fax) 207-774-5840 107 Elm St. Portland, ME 04101 info@menhcomputers.com www.menhcomputers.com 34 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com room to emerge. And Zen is getting many little things right: The sour soup, too of- ten an afterthought, has been given some care. It has a real sour zing and the bite of fresh scallion. Even a ramekin of sweet house-made duck sauce was a pleasant surprise, as it was cloudy with the pulp of actual fruit. Zen has a chatty owner, usually be- hind the bar. He will give you work-out tips, and perhaps lead you to off- menu dishes once you are a regular. I wouldn’t be surprised if the best dishes are there, since someone in the kitchen knows their stuff. Zen, the concept, is about the elimi- nation of suffering, and if we patronize quality Chinese places like Zen, or China Taste across town, it might go some way toward eliminating the incen- tive for cruel labor prac- tices at some other Chinese spots in Maine. ^ Our Ratings $ = $15 or less $$ = $16-$22 $$$ = $23-$30 $$$$ = $31 and up Based on average entrée price MOvie Review Dining Review dinner + movie The koan of Chinese food Where can We find our moment of Zen? _By Brian duff f It seems every time I check out a promising new Chinese place in Portland, federal officials arrest someone at a dismal Chinese restaurant elsewhere in Maine (this week it was the Twin Super Buffet in Brewer that was raided by the feds). Is this the Chinese-food uni- verse maintaining some kind of spiritual balance? Is it karma? In this case it’s Zen. Zen Chinese Bistro to be exact, which has taken over the west-Old Port space formerly occupied by District. Zen the concept is not about transcen- dence, but rather about deepening the quality of our worldly presence. Zen the Chinese Bistro is not exactly transcendent, but it does enhance the quality of Chinese cuisine in Portland. The menu does not veer far from the beaten path of American- ized-Chinese, but it executes those classic dishes well, with fresh ingredients. That is enough to put Zen among the upper tier of Chinese restaurants in town. In taking the space over from District, they have not changed it much. There is minimal Asian kitsch. Downstairs is the same bar, with dark wood, black leather booths, and a few tables. And they are taking the bar seriously: they have a nice Asian-tinged cocktail list, some good beer on draft, and a genuine wine list. Upstairs they have brightened the large dining room a bit, mostly with a vibrant blue paint. Many dishes at this sort of restaurant depend on the quality of the brown sauce that forms the base for so many entrées. Zen has a good one: neither too thick nor too thin, with a nice base of garlic and soy. It’s used to good effect in a number of dishes, like Hunan beef, where it had a mild chili heat. It coated big tender pieces of meat and diced veggies — piping hot from the wok, but still with plenty of crunch. The same basic sauce was leant a sharper garlic bite and more aggressive pepper heat in a dish of vegetables with garlic sauce. Cashew chicken started with a different, lighter, sauce that offered a nice balance of sugars and heat. There were plenty of springy button mushrooms, along with a crunchy mix of celery, carrots, and green bell peppers that were on the edge of red, and thus not too bitter. Sesame chicken was sweet but not candy-sweet like you often get, and the breading stayed crisp rather than getting sauce-soaked. An udon noodle dish was good as well. The noodles were soft but not mushy, and the pork tender. The dish had that sort of mildness that isn’t bland, but allows the quieter umami flavors of onion and mush- $ ZEN CHINESE BISTRO | 45 Danforth St, Portland | 11:30 am-10:30 pm (bar open later weekends) Visa/MC/Amex/Disc | 207.775.6888 outstanding excellent good average poor xxxx xxx xx x z FShort Takes movie reviews in brief xxxw gRegORY CRewDSOn: BRieF enCOUnTeRS 77 minutes | pma movies Photographer Gregory Crewdson makes pictures that do every- thing a movie does except move. Focused on the depressed towns of Western Massachusetts, he puts together a meticulously detailed scene, engages a crew of up to 60, arranges dozens of lights, waits for the right mo- ment, snaps the photo, and then subjects it to a rigorous post- production process. When they succeed, the images transcend the lower-class world that is their subject and touch on an otherworldliness reminiscent of David Lynch, Edward Hopper, or Andrei Tarkovsky. Ben Shapiro shot this documentary over 10 years and not only achieves a portrait of the artist but also captures the artistic process itself, following Crewdson from initial inspiration to finished product. “It’s a sign,” Crewdson says when a garbage picker mys- teriously appears on a somber street scene in Lee, Massachu- setts, perfecting the shot. Just one more epiphany in a body of work that shimmers with im- manent revelation. _peter Keough xx HYDe PARK On HUDSOn 94 minutes | eveninGstar + railroad sQuare + wells Lurking beneath Hyde Park on Hud- son, the latest film to repurpose historical icons for Oscar-bait melodrama, is a screwball com- edy trying desperately to break though. Franklin D. Roosevelt, played by Bill Murray, seems chiefly interested in escaping his motorcade so he can score a handjob from his distant cousin (Laura Linney). King George and Queen Elizabeth visit in hopes of securing help for England during WWII, but spend most of their xx BROKen CiTY 109 minutes | auburn + oxford + smitty’s biddeford + smitty’s sanford + spotliGht + wells To paraphrase Roman Polanski’s masterful noir, it’s not China- town. Not for lack of trying, though, as burly gumshoe and disgraced ex-cop Billy Tag- gart (Mark Wahlberg) initiates a creaky, convoluted plot by taking 50 grand from lubri- cious New York mayor Hostetler (Russell Crowe) to find out who’s shtupping Hizzoner’s wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Before you can say Noah Cross, Billy finds himself drawn into a maelstrom of corruption, shady real estate deals, extor- tion, murder, and half-baked dialogue. This, plus the ordeal of watching his actress wife get humped in an “indie” movie, drives the recovering alcoholic Taggert back to the Jameson bottle, allowing Wahlberg to stir from his inertia and draw on his explosive physicality. Mean- while, director Allen Hughes tries to be “indie” himself by pointlessly circling the camera around random scenes. Jeffrey Wright distinguishes himself in the star-heavy cast as the mor- ally ambiguous police commis- sioner; for his reward he gets the best line in the film. _peter Keough time fretting about the social implications of being served hot dogs at a picnic. The First Lady (Olivia Williams) spends her time debating whether it’s impo- lite to refer to Her Royal High- ness as “Elizabeth.” Sometimes it’s all played for droll, knowing laughs. But most of the time it feels like an SNL sketch with all the punchlines removed. _Jake mulligan Broken City ATTENTION TO DETAIL often an afterthought at other restaurants, Zen’s sour soup is made with care. 2.7 Barrington Levy w Mighty Mystic & Soul Rebel Project 2.17 Punch Brothers 2.6 Jukebox The Ghost 2.16 The Dunwells 1.25 Private Event Book your next event at PCMH Just Added 2.28 Talib Kweli FRIDAY 1/25 SATURDAY 1/26 FRIDAY 2/1 WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE PRESENTS GREEN DAY/DOOKIE SLY-CHI W/ EYENINE MAMA’S BOOMSHACK PRESENTS PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION 6TH ANNUAL RUCKUS CUP MC BATTLE LYLE DIVINSKY & THE VELVET VAGABONDS / THE NAT OSBORN BAND w/ ALICIA LEMKE JAN 29 JAN 25 JAN 26 FEB 01 FEB 02 $5 COVER Tuesday nights! CLASSIC ALBUM NIGHT cover to cover And original music showcase GREEN DAY/DOOKIE WHEN PARTICLES COLLIDE GREEN DAY AFTER PARTY! JAN 25 FRIDAY PARLIAMENT/MOTHERSHIP CONNECTION MAMA’S BOOMSHACK JAN 29 TORI AMOS/BOYS FOR PELE The CHILDREN OF TREES FEB 5 BRIGHT EYES/LIFTED BUILDER OF THE HOUSE OR The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground FEB 26 THE DEAD MILKMEN/BEELZEBUBBA COVERED IN BEES FEB 19 SATURDAY 2/2 TUESDAY 1/29 36 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Portland ClarKS Pond CInEMaGIC Grand 333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023 Call for shows & times. nICKElodEon CInEMaS 1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.9751 Call for shows & times. PMa MoVIES 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 GrEGorY CrEWdSon: BrIEF En- CoUntErS | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2 WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC 183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456 Call for shows & times. MaInE alaMo tHEatrE 85 Main St, Bucksport | 207.469.0924 lES MISEraBlES | Fri-Sat: 6:30 | Sun: 2 aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10 746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605 BroKEn CItY | 4:10, 6:55, 9:15 GanGStEr SQUad | 7:25, 9:45 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | 4:35 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | 12:20, 2:30, 7:30, 9:35 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY 3d | 12:40, 4:05 tHE laSt Stand | 9:50 lInColn | 12:30, 3:50, 7:10 MaMa | 1:30, 4:25, 7:05, 9:20 lES MISEraBlES | noon, 3:30, 6:45 MoVIE 43 | 1:20, 4:15, 7, 9:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | 1:10 ParKEr | 12:50, 4, 7:15, 9:40 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | 1, 3:55, 6:50, 9:25 ZEro darK tHIrtY | 12:10, 3:40, 7:20 CEntEr tHEatrE 20 E Main St, Dover-Foxcroft | 207.564.8943 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri: 7 | Sat: 2, 7 | Sun: 2 | Mon-Tue: 7 ColonIal tHEatrE 163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times. EVEnInGStar CInEMa Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Bruns- wick | 207.729.5486 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri-Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 8:30 | Mon-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30 FrontIEr CInEMa 14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222 CHaSInG ICE | Sun: 2, 6, 8 | Tue: 2 | Wed: 2, 6, 8 | Thu: 2 lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10 855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010 Call for shows & times. narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877 dJanGo UnCHaInEd | Fri-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Tue: 7:20 | Wed: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Thu: 7:20 dinner + movie movie TheaTer lisTings Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday,January 25 through Thurs- day, January 31. Times can and do change without notice, so do call the theater before heading out. For up-to-date film-schedule in- formation, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at thePhoenix.com. SMIttY’S CInEMa- BIddEFord 420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 7, 10 | Sun- Thu: 7 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sun: noon, 7 | Mon-Thu: 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon- Thu: 3:30 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 7:15 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 3:30, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 MonStErS, InC 3d | Fri-Sun: 12:30 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon-Thu: 4 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:45, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 SMIttY’S CInEMa- SanFord 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 6:30, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 6:30 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri: 12:30, 7:30 | Sat-Sun: 12:30, 6:30 | Mon- Thu: 6:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fr-Sati: 3:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: 11:45 am, 3:15 | Mon-Thu: 3:15 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 7 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Mon: 3:50, 6:40 | Tue: 6:40 | Wed: 3:50, 6:40 | Thu: 6:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri-Mon: 4:30, 9:30 | Tue: 9:30 | Wed: 4:30, 9:30 | Thu: 9:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Mon: 1:30, 7 | Tue: 7 | Wed: 1:30, 7 | Thu: 7 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 7:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Mon: 1:20 | Wed: 1:20 ParKEr | Fri-Mon: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Tue: 6:50, 9:20 | Wed: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Thu: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri- Mon: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Tue: 9:10 | Wed: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Thu: 9:10 tHIS IS 40 | 9 WrECK-It ralPH | Fri-Mon: 1:10, 4:20 | Wed: 1:10, 4:20 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Mon: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Tue: 7:30 | Wed: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Thu: 7:30 nordICa tHEatrE 1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Sat: 3:40, 10 | Mon-Thu: 3:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:20, 9:50 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4:15, 7:20 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 12:10, 6:30 lInColn | 12:30, 4, 7:30 lES MISEraBlES | 12:45, 3:50, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: noon, 3:15, 6:30 oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 1:10, 4:05, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10, 9:20 | Sun-Thu: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 2, 6:45 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20, 9:35 | Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sat: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50, 9:15 | Sun-Thu: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50 ParKEr | Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 6:55, 9:30 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4, 6:55 raIlroad SQUarE 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 3, 7:10, 9 | Sat: 1, 3, 7:10, 9 | Sun-Mon: 1, 3, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 3, 7:10 tHE IMPoSSIBlE | Fri: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sat: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sun: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 lIFE oF PI | Fri-Sat: 2:40, 7:10, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 2:40, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Mon- Tue: 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Wed: 4:40, 7 | Thu: 2:20, 4:40, 7 SIStEr | Sat-Sun: 10 am rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times. SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX 783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234 Call for shows & times. MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: noon, 4, 7, 10 | Sun: noon, 4, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:30 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: 11:45 am, 3, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 11:45 am, 3:30, 7 | Mon-Thu: 3:15, 7 SPaCE GallErY 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 CHaSInG ICE | Fri: 7:30 onlY tHE YoUnG | Wed: 7:30 SPotlIGHt CInEMaS 6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 BroKEn CItY | 12:35, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35, 9:55 tHE laSt Stand | 12:25, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 MaMa | 12:40, 3:20, 5:25, 7:40, 9:50 StonInGton oPEra HoUSE Main St, Stonington | 207.367.2788 ProMISEd land | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 4 Strand tHEatrE 345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070 tHE BIG PICtUrE | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sun: 1, 6 | Mon-Thu: 7 HoW to SUrVIVE a PlaGUE | Sun: 3:30 tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10 9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times. WEllS FIVE Star CInEMa 75 Wells Plaza, Rte 1, Wells | 207.646.0500 BroKEn CItY | Fri: 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sat: 1:15, 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sun: 1:15, 4:15, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4:15, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri: 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sat: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 | Mon- Thu: 4:10, 7:10 Chasing Ice HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sat: 1, 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sun: 1, 4, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:45 lInColn | Fri: 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:30 lES MISEraBlES | Fri: 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sat: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sun: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25 | Mon-Thu: 3:25, 6:25 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sat: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sun: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 4:05, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri: 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sat: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sun: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35 | Mon-Thu: 3:35, 6:35 nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall 28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900 a latE QUartEt | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 3, 7 | Tue-Thu: 7 lIVE BroadCaSt oF tHE MaGIStratE BY tHE natIonal tHEatrE oF london | Sat: 1 rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15 45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times. FIlM SPECIalS BatES CollEGE Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | 207.786.6255 arGo | Fri: 7:30 | Sat: 2, 7:30 | Sun: 2 | Mon: 4:30 BoWdoIn CollEGE Visual Arts Center, Brunswick | 207.725.3000 CHICo Y rIta | Thu: 7 a ContraCorrIEntE | Wed: 7 loPE | Mon: 7:30 taMBIEn la llUVIa | Tue: 7 CaMdEn PUBlIC lIBrarY 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.2823 aMErICa’S MUSIC: SWInG JaZZ | Sun: 3 CatHolIC CHarItIES USM - Portland, Glickman Library, 7th Floor, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | 207.781.8550 UProotEd | Tue: 6 drEaMland tHEatEr Winter Street Center, 880 Washing- ton St, Bath | 207.443.2174 Man on a WIrE | Thu: 7 tHE Grand 165 Main St, Ellsworth | 207.667.9500 tHE Gold rUSH (WItH lIVE SCorE BY tEMPo) | Fri: 7 lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater Rd, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424 EUroPa KonZErt FroM naPolI | Sun: 2 lEd ZEPPElIn: CElEBratIon daY | Thu: 7 loCal SProUtS CooPEratIVE 653 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 BEttInG tHE FarM | Mon: 7 UnItY CollEGE Center for the Performing Arts, 42 Depot St, Unity | 207.948.7469 tHE atoMIC StatES oF aMErICa | Mon: 7 YorK PUBlIC lIBrarY 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 aIMEE & JaGUar | Sat: 7 36 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com Portland ClarKS Pond CInEMaGIC Grand 333 Clarks Pond Parkway, South Portland | 207.772.6023 Call for shows & times. nICKElodEon CInEMaS 1 Temple St, Portland | 207.772.9751 Call for shows & times. PMa MoVIES 7 Congress Square, Portland | 207.775.6148 GrEGorY CrEWdSon: BrIEF En- CoUntErS | Fri: 6:30 | Sat-Sun: 2 WEStBrooK CInEMaGIC 183 County Rd, Westbrook | 207.774.3456 Call for shows & times. MaInE alaMo tHEatrE 85 Main St, Bucksport | 207.469.0924 lES MISEraBlES | Fri-Sat: 6:30 | Sun: 2 aUBUrn FlaGSHIP 10 746 Center St, Auburn | 207.786.8605 BroKEn CItY | 4:10, 6:55, 9:15 GanGStEr SQUad | 7:25, 9:45 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | 4:35 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | 12:20, 2:30, 7:30, 9:35 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY 3d | 12:40, 4:05 tHE laSt Stand | 9:50 lInColn | 12:30, 3:50, 7:10 MaMa | 1:30, 4:25, 7:05, 9:20 lES MISEraBlES | noon, 3:30, 6:45 MoVIE 43 | 1:20, 4:15, 7, 9:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | 1:10 ParKEr | 12:50, 4, 7:15, 9:40 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | 1, 3:55, 6:50, 9:25 ZEro darK tHIrtY | 12:10, 3:40, 7:20 CEntEr tHEatrE 20 E Main St, Dover-Foxcroft | 207.564.8943 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri: 7 | Sat: 2, 7 | Sun: 2 | Mon-Tue: 7 ColonIal tHEatrE 163 High St, Belfast | 207.338.1930 Call for shows & times. EVEnInGStar CInEMa Tontine Mall, 149 Maine St, Bruns- wick | 207.729.5486 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri-Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 8:30 | Mon-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30 FrontIEr CInEMa 14 Maine St, Brunswick | 207.725.5222 CHaSInG ICE | Sun: 2, 6, 8 | Tue: 2 | Wed: 2, 6, 8 | Thu: 2 lEWISton FlaGSHIP 10 855 Lisbon St, Lewiston | 207.777.5010 Call for shows & times. narroW GaUGE CInEMaS 15 Front St, Farmington | 207.778.4877 dJanGo UnCHaInEd | Fri-Mon: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Tue: 7:20 | Wed: 12:30, 3:30, 7:20 | Thu: 7:20 dinner + movie movie TheaTer lisTings Unless otherwise noted, all film listings this week are for Friday,January 25 through Thurs- day, January 31. Times can and do change without notice, so do call the theater before heading out. For up-to-date film-schedule in- formation, check the Portland Phoenix Web site at thePhoenix.com. SMIttY’S CInEMa- BIddEFord 420 Alfred St, Five Points Shopping Center, Biddeford | 207.282.2224 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 7, 10 | Sun- Thu: 7 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sun: noon, 7 | Mon-Thu: 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon- Thu: 3:30 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7:30, 10 | Sun-Thu: 7:15 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 3:30, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 3:30, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 MonStErS, InC 3d | Fri-Sun: 12:30 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:15, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7:15 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7:15 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:45 | Mon-Thu: 4 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:45, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 10 | Sun: noon, 3:15, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:45 SMIttY’S CInEMa- SanFord 1364 Main St, Sanford | 207.490.0000 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 6:30, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 6:30 GnoMEo & JUlIEt | Wed: 11:30 am HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri: 12:30, 7:30 | Sat-Sun: 12:30, 6:30 | Mon- Thu: 6:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fr-Sati: 3:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 3:30 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | Fri-Sun: 11:45 am, 3:15 | Mon-Thu: 3:15 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 7, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: 7 MaMa | Fri-Sat: 12:30, 4, 7:30, 10 | Sun: 12:30, 4, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4, 7 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Mon: 3:50, 6:40 | Tue: 6:40 | Wed: 3:50, 6:40 | Thu: 6:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUntErS | Fri-Mon: 4:30, 9:30 | Tue: 9:30 | Wed: 4:30, 9:30 | Thu: 9:30 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS 3d | Fri-Mon: 1:30, 7 | Tue: 7 | Wed: 1:30, 7 | Thu: 7 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 7:10 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Mon: 1:20 | Wed: 1:20 ParKEr | Fri-Mon: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Tue: 6:50, 9:20 | Wed: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 | Thu: 1, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri- Mon: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Tue: 9:10 | Wed: 12:50, 3:30, 6:30, 9:10 | Thu: 9:10 tHIS IS 40 | 9 WrECK-It ralPH | Fri-Mon: 1:10, 4:20 | Wed: 1:10, 4:20 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Mon: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Tue: 7:30 | Wed: 12:40, 4:10, 7:30 | Thu: 7:30 nordICa tHEatrE 1 Freeport Village Station, Suite 125, Freeport | 207.865.9000 GanGStEr SQUad | Fri-Sat: 3:40, 10 | Mon-Thu: 3:40 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:20, 9:50 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4:15, 7:20 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 12:10, 6:30 lInColn | 12:30, 4, 7:30 lES MISEraBlES | 12:45, 3:50, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri-Sat: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50, 9:30 | Sun-Thu: 12:15, 3:30, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:45 | Sun-Thu: noon, 3:15, 6:30 oXFord FlaGSHIP 7 1570 Main Street, Oxford | 207.743.2219 BroKEn CItY | Fri-Sat: 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:25 | Sun-Thu: 1:10, 4:05, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri-Sat: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10, 9:20 | Sun-Thu: 1:50, 4:20, 7:10 tHE HoBBIt: an UnEXPECtEd JoUrnEY | 2, 6:45 tHE laSt Stand | Fri-Sat: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 1:40, 4:25, 7:05 MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20, 9:35 | Sun-Thu: 1:30, 4:10, 7:20 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sat: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50, 9:15 | Sun-Thu: 1:20, 4:15, 6:50 ParKEr | Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 6:55, 9:30 | Sun- Thu: 1, 4, 6:55 raIlroad SQUarE 17 Railroad Sq, Waterville | 207.873.6526 HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 3, 7:10, 9 | Sat: 1, 3, 7:10, 9 | Sun-Mon: 1, 3, 7:10 | Tue-Thu: 3, 7:10 tHE IMPoSSIBlE | Fri: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sat: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50, 9 | Sun: noon, 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 lIFE oF PI | Fri-Sat: 2:40, 7:10, 9:40 | Sun-Thu: 2:40, 7:10 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sat: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:15 | Sun: noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Mon- Tue: 2:20, 4:40, 7 | Wed: 4:40, 7 | Thu: 2:20, 4:40, 7 SIStEr | Sat-Sun: 10 am rEGal BrUnSWICK 10 19 Gurnet Rd, Brunswick | 207.798.3996 Call for shows & times. SaCo CInEMaGIC & IMaX 783 Portland Rd, Rte 1, Saco | 207.282.6234 Call for shows & times. MoVIE 43 | Fri-Sat: noon, 4, 7, 10 | Sun: noon, 4, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:30 ParEntal GUIdanCE | Fri-Sun: noon, 3:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30 PEEWEE’S BIG adVEntUrE | Wed: 7 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri-Sat: 11:45 am, 3, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 11:45 am, 3:30, 7 | Mon-Thu: 3:15, 7 SPaCE GallErY 538 Congress St, Portland | 207.828.5600 CHaSInG ICE | Fri: 7:30 onlY tHE YoUnG | Wed: 7:30 SPotlIGHt CInEMaS 6 Stillwater Ave, Orono | 207.827.7411 BroKEn CItY | 12:35, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35, 9:55 tHE laSt Stand | 12:25, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 MaMa | 12:40, 3:20, 5:25, 7:40, 9:50 StonInGton oPEra HoUSE Main St, Stonington | 207.367.2788 ProMISEd land | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 4 Strand tHEatrE 345 Main St, Rockland | 207.594.0070 tHE BIG PICtUrE | Fri: 5:30, 8 | Sun: 1, 6 | Mon-Thu: 7 HoW to SUrVIVE a PlaGUE | Sun: 3:30 tHoMaSton FlaGSHIP 10 9 Moody Dr, Thomaston | 207.594.2100 Call for shows & times. WEllS FIVE Star CInEMa 75 Wells Plaza, Rte 1, Wells | 207.646.0500 BroKEn CItY | Fri: 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sat: 1:15, 4:15, 7, 9:45 | Sun: 1:15, 4:15, 7 | Mon-Thu: 4:15, 7 HanSEl & GrEtEl: WItCH HUnt- ErS | Fri: 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sat: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 9:45 | Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 | Mon- Thu: 4:10, 7:10 Chasing Ice HYdE ParK on HUdSon | Fri: 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sat: 1, 4, 6:45, 9:25 | Sun: 1, 4, 6:45 | Mon-Thu: 4, 6:45 lInColn | Fri: 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 | Sun: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 | Mon-Thu: 3:30, 6:30 lES MISEraBlES | Fri: 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sat: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25, 9:35 | Sun: 12:15, 3:25, 6:25 | Mon-Thu: 3:25, 6:25 SIlVEr lInInGS PlaYBooK | Fri: 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sat: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50, 9:35 | Sun: 1:05, 4:05, 6:50 | Mon-Thu: 4:05, 6:50 ZEro darK tHIrtY | Fri: 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sat: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 | Sun: 12:35, 3:35, 6:35 | Mon-Thu: 3:35, 6:35 nEW HaMPSHIrE tHE MUSIC Hall 28 Chestnut St, Portsmouth | 603.436.9900 a latE QUartEt | Fri-Sat: 7 | Sun: 3, 7 | Tue-Thu: 7 lIVE BroadCaSt oF tHE MaGIStratE BY tHE natIonal tHEatrE oF london | Sat: 1 rEGal FoX rUn StadIUM 15 45 Gosling Rd, Portsmouth | 603.431.6116 Call for shows & times. FIlM SPECIalS BatES CollEGE Olin Arts Center, Lewiston | 207.786.6255 arGo | Fri: 7:30 | Sat: 2, 7:30 | Sun: 2 | Mon: 4:30 BoWdoIn CollEGE Visual Arts Center, Brunswick | 207.725.3000 CHICo Y rIta | Thu: 7 a ContraCorrIEntE | Wed: 7 loPE | Mon: 7:30 taMBIEn la llUVIa | Tue: 7 CaMdEn PUBlIC lIBrarY 55 Main St, Camden | 207.236.2823 aMErICa’S MUSIC: SWInG JaZZ | Sun: 3 CatHolIC CHarItIES USM - Portland, Glickman Library, 7th Floor, 314 Forest Ave, Portland | 207.781.8550 UProotEd | Tue: 6 drEaMland tHEatEr Winter Street Center, 880 Washing- ton St, Bath | 207.443.2174 Man on a WIrE | Thu: 7 tHE Grand 165 Main St, Ellsworth | 207.667.9500 tHE Gold rUSH (WItH lIVE SCorE BY tEMPo) | Fri: 7 lInColn tHEatEr 2 Theater Rd, Damariscotta | 207.563.3424 EUroPa KonZErt FroM naPolI | Sun: 2 lEd ZEPPElIn: CElEBratIon daY | Thu: 7 loCal SProUtS CooPEratIVE 653 Congress St, Portland | 207.899.3529 BEttInG tHE FarM | Mon: 7 UnItY CollEGE Center for the Performing Arts, 42 Depot St, Unity | 207.948.7469 tHE atoMIC StatES oF aMErICa | Mon: 7 YorK PUBlIC lIBrarY 15 Long Sands Rd, York | 207.363.2818 aIMEE & JaGUar | Sat: 7 AVAILABLE NOW © 2012 FOX. All Rights Reserved. “Taken 2 is slick, professional action… 3 stars out of 4 “ - Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times AvAilAble JAnuAry 29th © 2012 Sony Pictures Animation Inc. All Rights Reserved. © 2013 Layout and Design Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. “Fantastic Fun For The Entire Family.” -Joel Amos, moviefanatic.com 38 January 25, 2013 | the portland phoenix | portland.thephoenix.com f This week the moon is waxing and waning, and that all-important full moon happens on Saturday. Full moons are useful for taking a crisis to a breaking point, or bringing random people together to make a “team.” Since this moon is in child-centered Leo, you may find an urge to procreate somehow blends with a desire to get a whole new set of toys (hey, it happens). If you need to make a decision, and you feel it’s all too confusing right now, you do have another two weeks until the new moon, when deci- siveness comes more easily. For more, visit moonsigns. net or friend me as “Symboline Dai” on Facebook. thursday january 24 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waxing moon in cancer. protection and defense are today’s themes, particularly for cancer, Scorpio, aries, libra, capricorn, and pisces — you folks may feel the walls aren’t high enough to shield you. taurus, Virgo, Gemini, aquarius, Sagittarius, and leo may feel a domestic urge, and a recipe that requires complicated ingredients will be more ap- pealing than usual. however, the homebody instinct will prevail for all! Friday january 25 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waxing moon in cancer; moon void-of-course 3:35 pm until 9:20 am Saturday. We should have a term for the “light of the moon,” the day before the full moon when everything’s a little nuts. Big fat cancer moons generally signify turf-wars. “Where’s mine?” comes naturally to many, particularly cancer, Scorpio, aries, libra, capricorn, and pisces. Sensitive yet insightful could be the default mode for taurus, Virgo, Gemini, aquarius, Sagittarius, and leo. saturday january 26 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Full moon in leo; moon void-of-course in cancer before 9:20 am. have a new year’s party now! also a fine day for promoting your- self and/or acting like a child. how about having fun with your toys? are you still charmed by what Santa left under the tree? moon and mars are at odds, so domesticity and bliss may be at odds, particularly for aquari- us, taurus, and Scorpio. Gemini, cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, aries, capri- corn, pisces, and Sagittarius: speak up for what you need. sunday january 27 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in leo. another fine day for an impromptu party. leo, taurus, Scorpio, and aquarius: what’s up with your exercise regimen? talk is cheap, and gym memberships are cheaper. Gemini, can- cer, leo, Virgo, libra, aries, capricorn, pisces, and Sagittarius: take action if you feel confined. others will admire you for it. leo moons bring out the boasting impulse, which can be amusing to behold. Monday january 28 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in leo; moon void-of-course 11:59 am until 6:27 pm, when it moves into Virgo. an all-day void-of-course moon makes for missing information, misfiled data, and communication confusion, particularly for taurus, Gemini, Scorpio, Sagittarius, aquar- ius, and pisces. however, there’s excellent ingredients for a “do-over” for cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, capricorn, and aries. tuesday january 29 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in Virgo. personally, i find Virgo moons useful (de- spite the phase) for cleaning and organizing. Seeing what you don’t need, or what you can live without, is a good exercise today. Finding fault with others’ microscopic errors is far more fun that facing huge gaps in one’s own understanding. Virgo’s insights are worth listening to — even on a Friday. pisces, self-doubt is natural right now. taurus and capricorn: enjoy being efficient, even if your tasks take longer than anticipated. Wednesday january 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Waning moon in Virgo; moon void-of-course 8:59 pm until 1:36 am thursday. Jupiter moves direct. an evening void-of-course moon means you may doubt your judgment, but during the day, follow your in- stincts, even if you’re going to monkey with others’ choices (“you’re wear- ing that again?”). moving in circles is safer than forward momentum into “the void.” cancer, leo, Virgo, libra, Scorpio, taurus, capricorn, aries, aquarius: finish the project. pisces, Gemini, and Sagittarius: pay attention to interruptions, which may save you from a poor choice. jonesin’ _by Matt Jones Moonsigns _by syMboline Dai Back page Moon Keys This horoscope traces the passage of the moon, not the sun. Simply read from day to day to watch the moon’s influence as it moves through the signs of the zodiac. | When the moon is in your sun sign, you are beginning a new 28-day emotional cycle, and you can expect increased insight and emotionality. When the moon moves into the sun sign opposite yours (see below), expect to have difficulties dealing with the opposite sex, family, or authority figures; social or romantic activities will not be at their best. | When the moon is in Aries, it opposes Libra, and vice versa. Other oppositions are Taurus/Scorpio, Gemini/Sagittarius, Cancer/Capricorn, Leo/Aquarius, and Virgo/Pisces. The moon stays in each sign approximately two and a half days. | As the moon moves between signs, it will sometimes become “void of course,” making no major angles to planets. Consider this a null time and try to avoid making or implementing decisions if you can. But it’s great for brainstorming. | For Symboline Dai’s sun-sign horoscopes and advice column, visit our Web site at thePhoenix.com. Symboline Dai can be reached at sally@moonsigns.net. Across 1 mosque officials 6 Stop, drop or roll 10 agents of change? 14 tag cry 15 olympic figure skater Kulik 16 trade 17 “our movies are so riveting they contain ___” 19 one of marlon’s brothers 20 immigrant’s class, briefly 21 horse with whitish hairs 22 mineral used in sandpaper 24 Sugar alternative in chewing gum 26 Block, as a river 27 dog doc 28 Where press releases arrive 31 Kartik Seshadri’s instrument 34 Bean whose top producer is cote d’ivoire 35 one of George of the Jungle’s pals 36 it’s got an outskirts 37 hard to see through 38 play like a bad cd 39 lance on the bench “buy one, get one free” — you can’t afford *not* to own these! ©2013 Jonesin’ CrossworDs | eDitor@JonesinCrossworDs.CoM 40 Frivolous decisions 41 Stopped existing 42 Strands in the back 44 2013 Golden Globes cohost tina 45 Say without saying 46 it opens many doors 50 Bitter end 52 cafe au ___ 53 lofty poem 54 candid 55 “our pillows are extra full because we ___!” 58 half-owner of lake titicaca 59 “disappear” band 60 ___ in the bud 61 overly emphatic assent said with a fist pump 62 nair competitor 63 “Strawberry Wine” singer carter Down 1 textbook section 2 Shy and quiet 3 in any way 4 alternative to gov, edu or com 5 Word before pistol or kit 6 totally necessary 7 tiger’s ex 8 2016 olympics city 9 type and type and type 10 Samba singer ___ Gilberto 11 “our meringues stand up so well that you’ll see ___” 12 Win at chess 13 dalmatian feature 18 cantankerous old guy 23 “i ___ over this...” 25 “terrible” ruler 26 dealer’s packets 28 dea figures: var. 29 music magazine 30 held onto 31 Word on a Kool-aid packet 32 Greek vowel 33 “our races are scrutinized down to the millisecond because we use ___” 34 his nose was tweaked many times 37 Submitted a ballot, perhaps 38 Simon ___ 40 auto race units 41 london entertainment district 43 Words at the start of a countdown 44 epic ___ 46 the p in pBr 47 King in the Super mario Bros. series 48 hubble of the hubble telescope 49 Gossip 50 not quick to catch on: var. 51 Fencing sword 52 de ___ 56 “a chorus line” hit 57 Go kaput F Puzzle solution at thePhoenix.coM/recro oM Big Fat Whale _by brian McFaDDen PORTLAND’S ORIGINAL UNORIGINAL MUSIC NIGHT 311 vs. INCUBUS JAN 23 T. REX vs. ELO JAN 30 TOOL vs. RUSH FEB 6 BILL WITHERSvs. AL GREEN FEB 13 ARCADE FIRE vs. VAMPIRE WEEKEND FEB 20 80’s TVvs. 90’s TV FEB 27 TOM WAITSvs. LEONARD COHEN MAR 6 QOTSA vs. BLACK SABBATH MAR 13 SNOOP DOGG vs. CYPRESS HILL MAR 20 JUSTIN TIMBERLAK E vs. BEYONCE MAR 27 EMPIRE • WEDNESDAYS • 9PM DOORS 575 CONGRESS STREET PORTLAND ME PORTLANDEMPIRE.COM 207.879.8988 presented by
2017-03-15T19:39:07.574Z
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