June 11–17, 2015 | Vol. 21 Issue 24 | www. flaglive.com | The Giving Tree FLAGSTAFF’S FIREFLY GATHERING CONTINUES TO SPROUT CREATIVITY By Elizabeth Hellstern 10 12 Screen Music Spy Steven Elston 18 Music Steve Earle FREE contents June 11–17 Vol. 21, Issue 24 4 Full Frontal Letter from Home The Mother Load Hot Picks Editor’s Head NewsQuirks 10 Screen 20 Rear View Hightower Bartender Wisdom 20 Pulse On the cover: 14 25 Comics 27 Classifieds Feature Story The Giving Tree: Flagstaff’s Firefly Gathering continues to sprout creativity Music 18 6 E. Route 66 • 928.774.6100 • karmaflagstaff.com Music Former Flagstaff musician Steven Elston returns with a new project and sound Steve Earle plus the Dukes in Flagstaff equals a chance to see a world-class combination By Willie Cross By Douglas McDaniel staff EDITORIAL Editor Andrew Wisniewski andyw@flaglive.com (928) 913-8669 Art Director Keith Hickey Graphic Artists Brian Smith Jim Johnson Kelly Lister Candace Collett Photographers Jake Bacon Taylor Mahoney Film Editor Dan Stoffel Staff Writer TheMoney$hot McDaniel, Willie Cross, Kelly Poe Wilson, Erin Shelley, Sam Mossman, Adrienne Bischoff, Jim Hightower, Roland Sweet, Max Cannon, Jen Sorensen, Drew Fairweather, James Jay by Colleen Cowan Let us acknowledge the evils of alcohol and strive to eliminate the wine cellar ONE GLASS AT A TIME at Cuvee! BUSINESS General Manager Seth Muller sethm@flaglive.com (928) 913-8668 Retail Advertising Colleen Brady, Advertising Director: (928) 913-2294 Kim Duncan, Sales Representative: (928) 556-2287 Diandra Markgraf diandram@flaglive.com (928) 913-8670 Classified Display Ads Words That Work Editor Classified Line Ads James Jay Lydia Smith (928) 556-2272 Contributors Pressroom Foreman Tony Norris, Elizabeth Hellstern, Douglas DRIVE-UP PICK UP EVERY DAY Thurs–Sat 11 am–11 pm • Sun–Wed 11 am–10 pm Happy Hour Specials 3–6 pm & 3–10 pm Sun! By Elizabeth Hellstern 12 FL061115 Rossome of the Jive Joint having fun with a little kiddo at last year’s Firefly Gathering. Photo by Tulasi Devi Mother Tree main stage artist rendering by Owen William Fritts. Marlain French (928) 913-8654 Bill Smith (928) 556-2298 Got a Money Shot? Submit to: #FLAGLIVE on Instagram or email to themoneyshot@flaglive.com Mon-Sat @ 11:30am, Sunday @ 10am-6pm 6 E. Aspen Ave. Flagstaff, AZ, 86001 | 928.214.WINE (9463) June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 3 LetterFromhome Backtrails By Tony Norris Uneasy lies the head S ome of my ancestors on my Daddy’s side came out of Tennessee in the 1700s and for more than 50 years worked their way north across Kentucky to Illinois growing bloody butcher corn and Jacobs beans in patches of rich soil they hacked from the endless forest. They ate game and hunted their own herds of half-wild pigs that ran free and fattened on acorns. Sylvester Norris settled along Crane Crick near where Peoria is today. His wife didn’t long survive giving birth to my grandfather on Jan. 1, 1845. His birthdate dictated his name: Henry “New Years” Norris. Henry was in his teens when the widowed Sylvester’s eye was taken by a young red haired beauty that he courted and wed. Here the family story forks. One version says young Henry got involved with his new stepmother in a socially unacceptable way and he had to leave town in the middle of the night. The alternate story, which I heard when I was older, was that Grandpa found his new stepmother-tobe wicked and cruel. She tried to poison him by putting lye, a very strong alkaline solution which burns like an acid, in his food. He suffered a dreadful wound to his jaw which troubled him for years. This was why he always wore a full beard to cover the scars. Whatever the motivation to leave, he didn’t wait ‘til warm weather, but strapped on his skates and stroked down the ice-coated Illinois River for more than 75 miles to begin his journey to Texas. That’s where people went in those days. He became an accomplished carpenter and furniture maker around Parker County and built homes and churches. He was installing desks at the Harmony School one day when one of the older girls persisted in “making eyes” at him. She would become my grandma Griffith, a stalwart woman who brooked no nonsense; she was known to discipline her children by holding their heads between her knees and delivering blows with her brogan shoe. When Henry Brantley, my father, was 10 he followed the wheat harvest with a thresher crew. With his earnings he told me he bought his mother a good winter coat and for himself a shotgun. He spoke of apprenticing in his uncle’s blacksmith shop when he was 12 and learning to work on wagons and later Model A Fords. He hunted squirrels with a single-shot 4 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 National Geographic’s Geno 2.0 Next Generation test kit, part of their Genographic Project. Photo by the author. .22-caliber rifle. He told of the neighbor’s wife, whose bandaged neck was explained as an injury sustained when she walked into the clothesline in the dark. Her son who was my dad’s age told him he had found his drunken father straddling his mother in the back yard, butcher knife in hand. Mama’s father, Papa Kinser, was a onearmed farmer. He took onions, potatoes and radishes to market in a horse-drawn wagon. He had a fine writing hand and often was asked to decorate the blackboard at church with colored chalk. He chose for his wife a young Cherokee woman who appeared from the east Texas autumn haze. She had led her remnant family out of Missouri and across Arkansas. My mother Alice loved to ramble the woods as a child and knew where the first Johnny Jump Ups appeared in the spring and where all the bird nests were. Sixty years later she would write: “I dreamed of being like the Indians.” She was 15 when Henry Brantley Norris, 21, came courting. She once told my wife that Henry showed up one day in his model T, showed her a marriage license, and told her that because he had the license they had to get married. She might have gotten a second opinion. I was the next youngest and best looking of the 11 children produced by this arrangement. I grew up listening to my parents telling stories of the people and events that came before. My mother grew up in a place between the meetings of two streams, and when they flooded, her home was surrounded by water. She recounted her brothers swimming to the mailbox and returning with the mail tight in their teeth. Her brother Ernest found a baby pig with its head stuck in a can. He raised it and traded it for a horse and then traded the horse for a car. This story had all of the charm of a folk tale for me. I absorbed these stories and they became warp and woof of the fabric of my identity. I could see them as clearly as if they had happened to me. I was shocked the first time I told someone my grandmother was Cherokee and they responded, “I’ll bet she was a princess!” But there were no family records to support the claim, no tribal rolls to reference. It was a time and place before it was cool to be Indian. Through the years individuals in the family have done genealogical research that established some branches extending back to 13th century Germany, and even secured a berth for an ancestor on the Mayflower. Since DNA testing became available on the consumer market I have been intrigued. The ads show colorful maps of the world with arrows indicating migratory routes erupting out of Africa. I settled on National Geographic’s Genographic Project. The kit arrived this week. I vigorously wiped my cheeks with the sterile swab and deposited the tips in little specimen jars labeled with my barcoded stickers. What kind of cocktail of racial DNA am I comprised of? A shot each of English, Irish, German and Cherokee with a twist of Neanderthal and shaken vigorously with family stories? I sent them off by return post and now my job is to patiently wait until I’m notified by email that the results are ready for my scrutiny. Then you may address me as Prince Sweating Tractor. Tony Norris is a working musician, storyteller and folklorist with a writing habit. He’s called Flagstaff home for 30-plus years. Visit his website at www.tonynorris.com. THEMOTHERLOAD Like Cheez-Its in the rain By Kelly Poe Wilson F inally, after nearly 18 years of anticipation, my daughter Clementine is getting a job. This is incredibly exciting for me, and not just because she will finally learn the meaning of hard work. I have never doubted that she knew the meaning of hard work, and I’m sure all of the groups and organizations she has volunteered with over the years would agree with me. No, the reason I am so happy about her finally achieving gainful employment is because I absolutely can’t wait until she brings home her first paycheck. I can’t wait to snatch it out of her hands, rip it up into tiny little shreds, throw it on the ground and then jump up and down on it for good measure, all the while gleefully chanting, “Welcome to my world!” That will be one of the happiest days of my life. OK, so I might have a slightly unhealthy fixation with revenge. But in this case I think it’s justified: Clementine and I have always fought about the best way to spend my money. As in, she just can’t understand why I am so reluctant to spend it, or rather, why I am so reluctant to waste it. Why I get so mad over little things (in her view) like leaving a brand new box of Cheez-Its out in the rain. Granted, I may have gone a little overboard in my response to that one. Taping up a picture of the ruined box inside the cabinet with “This is the only way you’ll ever Understanding the value of money see crackers in this house again,” written across the bottom in red ink might have been just alittle too Mommy Dearest. But still, a brand new box of Cheez-Its … in the rain. Of course I needed to get revenge for that. And with the introduction of a paycheck into her life, hopefully she will begin to understand that feeling. Hopefully she will understand exactly why I kept muttering, “Cheez-Its. Real CheezIts. Not even the store brand.” Now maybe she’ll understand her father’s oft repeated lament of, “Do you know how many holes I had to dig to buy that (fill in the blank)?” Although, in her case, she’ll have to translate it to: “burgers I flipped, macchiatos I made, or pizzas I tossed.” After all, it wasn’t until she got a car of her own and started giving her friends rides that she understood why I didn’t want to drop her off in Baderville “on my way” to picking up her brother from a sleepover in Kachina. Or why I was so irritable when I had to make five trips in one day between our … I absolutely can’t wait until she brings home her �irst paycheck. I can’t wait to snatch it out of her hands, rip it up into tiny little shreds, throw it on the ground and then jump up and down on it for good measure, all the while gleefully chanting, ‘Welcome to my world!’ June 4–10 , 2015 | Vol. 21 Issue 23 | www . flagl ive.c om | downtown home and her school in Cheshire after she forgot both her lunch and her homework, but didn’t realize she had forgotten the one until 45 minutes after I had dropped off the other. Hopefully the same sort of epiphany will occur to her after she realizes, viscerally, that Cheez-Its (and other luxuries) cost more than just money—they cost time. More than that, though, they represent choices about how to spend your time; the choice about how much of your time you are willing to spend doing something you don’t really love in order to get the things you want. I know, I know, it’s just a box of Cheez-Its. Trust me, I heard that plenty after making that box the star of my kitchen’s “Most Wanted” poster. And yet, it’s reallynever just a box of CheezIts. Because it is what we choose to spend our money on (as opposed to our parents’ money) that defines who we are. And Clementine will finally have the chance to start filling in that definition. I’m guessing already that her part of that definition won’t include too may boxes of rain-soaked Cheez-Its. Kelly Poe Wilson has lived in Flagstaff since 1985. She lives with her wonderful husband, Jim, and her dreadful children, Clementine and Clyde. More of her work can be found at www.kellypoewilson.com. Historic BaRRel + BoTTle House NOW OPEN FREE art walk map insid e Coffee and with an amazing food menu from the talented folks at Proper Meats + Provisions! Mirror, M Fl ag staf , f s Hu lla ba 10 Screen San And reas lo o ke ep s reflec tin g 12 Music Lyrics Bor n irror th e wi ld , weird an By Andr ew Wisn iews d wo nd er 14 Arts On the Wa ll ki fu l r lunch open foiNNer 7 d and k days/wEE Making Craft Beer & Awesomeness www.historicbrewingcompany.com 110 S San Francisco St Suite C Flagstaff, AZ 86001 Sun-Thurs 11-10 Fri-Sat 11-11 TAPROOM OPEN: WED, THURS, FRI 4-9PM & SAT & SUN 2-7PM 4366 E. Huntington Drive Flagstaff, AZ 86004 June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 5 HOTPICKS WEEK OF JUNE 11-17 OG REGULATOR GET TRAIL READY TODAY! Summer Tune-up p SUNDAY | 6.14 Your Bicycle’s Best Friend Since 1972 612 N. Humphreys Street, Flagstaff, AZ www.cosmiccycles.com THU–SAT | 6.11–6.13 IS THAT A FLUTE IN YOUR POCKET? For those of you outside of the “know,” there is an organization out there determined to skyrocket the flute back into the contemporary repertoires of musicians the world over—and not just any ole flute. The North American Flute Foundation naturally wants YOU to consider this classic indigenous instrument at the Fourth Gathering of the North American Flute. To spread that message as gently as sustained, airy notes from a hand-carved woodwind, they’re descending upon Flagstaff like a grip of butterflies with the minds of charging buffalo for three days of music and flute-tastic learning with musician-lead presentations, concerts and workshops like the ever-popular introductory course to flute playing preceding the intermediate How to Play Rim-Blown Flutes. Who knew that was even possible?! But who would know better than the Gathering’s frontrunners: Cornell Kinderknect and his world music style; Rushingwind—Mucklow and the Native Groove; and Rona Yellow Robe and the R. Carlos Nakai Quartet, mix masters specializing in the convergence of jazz and ethnic sensibilities. Preservation and perpetuation are the keys to success with the RNAFF. Hear it all for yourself at Ardrey Auditorium, 1115 S. Knoles Drive, on the NAU campus. Presentations take place from 9 a.m.–3 p.m. with concerts happening from 3–10 p.m. each day. Daily conference passes are $85 and performances are $25 for adults, $15 for students with ID, $15 for groups of 10 or more, and free for kiddos under age 12. 523-5661. www. nau.edu/cto. FRI–SUN | 6.12–6.21 A BUMP IN THE NIGHT Barefoot Cowgirl Dreams of Books Help bring an independent bookstore to downtown Flagstaff A campaign to bring an independent bookstore to downtown Flagstaff has been launched! Please go to our Indiegogo site “BarefootCowgirl” http://igg.me/at/BarefootCowgirl or our Facebook Page: Barefoot Cowgirl Books for more information 6 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 The Regulator Warren G circa the early ‘90s. Courtesy photo L isten up, G-children, the original pioneer of that super smooth G-funk sound, Warren Griffin III, known always and forever as the Regulator, Warren G, is bringing his anniversary party to Flagtown. Griffin built a 1990s empire stacked on stress-free raps and incomparable collaborations with his 213 crew: Lil’ Half Dead, Nate Dogg and Snoop Dogg. To keep the beat he used his extensive musical library soulfully swirling with jazz and funk to hone his true sound, even after 213 called it quits. Griffin flew solo into collaborations with 2Pac, MC Breed and Mista Grimm, which brought him to team up with his step-sib, Dr. Dre, supplying fine-tuned sample work that made a mark on Dre’s ’92 classic The Chronic. But his blood and sweat paid off for real real in 1994, the year that brought certified triple platinum success. With Nate Dogg “Regulator,” and a Grammy nod for his smooth rhymes and funkified cuts on Regulate … G Funk Era, which dropped 21 years ago June 7. The end of the decade saw drooping album sales (he “only” went gold), but there has never been a day when Griffin didn’t use his skills as a mentor or lend licks to the game he helped launch. Watch the Regulator in action at the Orpheum Theater, 15 W. Aspen. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the music kicks off at 7:30 p.m. DJ Quik, Mike Slice, Train City, Downtown 2E and Dub will roll out with Warren G. Tickets are $30 in advance and $32 the day of the show. For more info, call 556-1580 or visit vwww.warreng.com. As the poster for Stephen Sondheim’s and Hugh Wheeler’s 1973 musical baby suggests—with it’s ornate tree adorned with hidden nudie drawings—A Little Night Music is all about sex, sex and did we mention sex? The slightly sullied, yet incredibly talented minds that comprise a hunk of the Flagstaff Light Opera Co. are anxious and completely unafraid to enlighten audiences with their rendition of the musical that sparked legends in its composer and in song. In it, the characters battle each other’s competitive personalities in a lyrical reflection of love of all sorts: deflected, unrequited, misplaced and otherwise. Bawdy humor and language run amok as Desirée and Fredrik finally confront each other about the death of their prior flame. At 40, Fredrik’s finally married—an 18-year-old—who just cannot stand his touch. Anne instead wants to totally bone his son, Henrik, who’s a breath away from joining the priesthood. Desirée’s having an affair with Carl-Magnus and suddenly realizes she’s bored of finding fleeting romance with otherwise married liaisons, and gushes to Fredrik. Oops! She thinks HotPicks breweries like Mother Road, Wanderlust, Lumberyard and more. Don’t worry about picking favorites because admission includes 24 three-ounce samples providing plenty of room to go back for more. The festival of heady brews, music and silent auctions benefits Sun Sounds Arizona, an organization dedicated to providing reading services for people with disabilities, and they want you to have fun and stay safe. At $15 for designated driver entry, there is no excuse to drink and drive. Taste the brewer-backed rainbow from pales to stouts at Pepsi Amphitheater, Exit 337 off the I-17 south of Flagstaff at the Fort Tuthill County Fairgrounds, from 1–5 p.m. Tickets are $45 for general admission and $80 for VIP. Tickets increase $10 at the door, but are available in advance at local retailers. To view the list or purchase online, visit www.azbeer.com/flagstaff. RESIST ANY URGE TO CUT A RUG Courtesy photo from 2014’s Made in the Shade Beer Tasting Festival. as he spurns her advances and she laments, “Send in the Clowns.” More or less it’s a free-for-all that speaks on multiple levels. Take a peek at Sinagua Middle School Auditorium, 3950 E. Butler. Fri and Sat shows begin at 7:30 p.m. while Sunday matinees start at 2:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and $15 for students and seniors. 779-0219. www.thefloc.org. SATURDAY | 6.13 COOL IN THE SHADE, COOLER IN THE CUP With a list of participating breweries as long as these sunny summer days, guests at the 23rd annual Made in the Shade Beer Tasting Festival will have the distinct pleasure of enjoying brews from all over the Four Corners states. Plus we’re going to Vermont. We’re going to Oregon, Alaska, Louisiana and Hawaii. Woohoo! Taps will also flow forth with seasonal favorites from hot local The vast color spectrum of the Southwest paints a vivid masterpiece of ancient tradition and contemporary innovation. The Museum of Northern Arizona’s Navajo Rug Auction will showcase the talents of vintage and up-and-coming Navajo master weavers from all over the Four Corners area—some rugs have survived more than 100 years, demonstrating the quality of these utilitarian-based works of art. Under the expert guidance of auctioneer extraordinaire, R. B. Burnham and Co. out of Sanders, visitors will learn what separates a Teec Nos Pos weaving from a Klagetoh, and where traditional weavers collect the bright dyes that give a Ganado weaving its trademark red tint. The folks at R.B. Burnham and Co. work hard to ensure the weavers are compensated adequately for their delicate artwork and entrancing craftsmanship of hand-carded, -spun and -dyed wool blankets, rugs and tapestries. The auction will also feature live weaving demonstrations and opportunities to meet the weavers. Plus, who in their right mind would turn down fry bread. Enjoy living art at the Museum of Northern Arizona, 3101 N. Ft. Valley Road, from 2–5 p.m. The event is free, but standard admission applies to the rest of the Museum. For more info call 774-5213 or visit www.musnaz.org. SUNDAY| 6.14 HOP ABOARD THE HOMIE EXPRESS It’s been a little more than a year since our old pal Benjamin Laub, aka Grieves, dropped his brainchild, Winter & the Wolves off at the pool of our collective conscious where his catchy rhymes and head-boppin’ beats totally got stuck in our heads. (Peaking at No. 57 on the Billboard Top 200 is pretty rad for an independent hip-hop album, especially one that doesn’t have “Lil’” anybody listed on the cover or in the credits next to “God and my mama” as producer, sampler or laté-getter.) Grieves has built a career on showing a smidgeon of the iceberg that’s his life, as he said Grieves. Courtesy photo on “Shreds” from W&TW. It all started with collaborating with fellow Seattle hometown heroes like producer Budo and the tag-poppin’ Macklemore. In 2010, Rhymesayers swooped in and took the then 20-something Grieves out to lunch with a pen and a contract with a dotted line. Perhaps it wasn’t such a formal interaction, but it was nevertheless fruitful for young Grievesy who’s since been tickin’ off crowd pleasers, most recently with his latest smooth jam “Cougar Catnip.” You know he ain’t got time for that—‘cause the Green Room, 15 N. Agassiz, is calling. Seattle hip-hop duo of the Rhymesayers persuasion, Grayskul, and Mouse Powell out of Phoenix plus Sam Roberts are backing their things up, too. Tickets are $12 and the 18 and over show kicks off at 8 p.m. 226-8669. www. grievesmusic.com. PET OF THE WEEK 11665 N. HWY 89 FLAGSTAFF,AZ 86004 ( 6 MI NORTH OF THE FLAGSTAFF MALL) 928-526-5964 WED-SUN MOUSE SECONDCHANCECENTER.ORG MOUSE WANTS HER FOREVER HOME! Hi there! I am a spayed female domestic short hair brown Tabby. I’m very independent and mild mannered. I have lived with lots of other animals so I can tolerate all types of critters. I am still young, playful and active. I can’t wait to receive the one on one attention that I deserve! FRI SAT SUN STEVEN DREAMS SANTA PACHITA HEARTWOOD 2-5PM 16 East RoutE 66, FlagstaFF, aZ • FlagbREw.com June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 7 EDITOR’SHEAD Moving stride for summer stride By Andrew Wisniewski News Quirks BY ROLAND SWEET Curses, Foiled Again Police in Virginia Beach, Va., identified Dominyk Antonio Alfonseca, 23, as their bankrobbery suspect after he posted video on social media showing the teller stuffing money into a bag and a picture of a note asking for $150,000 (but adding “please”). Alfonseca L ast week, I waxed old-school gamer poetic on the classic NES video game “Arkanoid.” A big part of my childhood considering I grew up in about as parallel a line as any kid could with the advent and eventual boom of video games, they were our source of entertainment when the sun fell, weather was crap or we tired. But the real fun came in the outdoors. School is out, and despite the recently confusing on again/off again rain-play that makes planning the next charge into nature somewhat of a challenge, and the fact that summer is now just a season and no longer an extended proper break from life, I find myself reminiscing about the care-free days of my youth growing up in Flagstaff. It’s a very different place now. By no means bad. In my estimation Flag has more going for it now than ever before. A cultured and tightly woven communal mountain destination nestled ever-so-comfortably in the spotlight of the great American Southwest. As I extend my reach into that wilderness day by day, weekend by weekend, a sense of newness and wonder that has yet to fade is accompanied by lasting memories of me and my buddies hoping on our bikes and peddling off into the woods until darkness brought us home. We searched for whatever crossed our paths and went wherever our imaginations and feet took us. That was the order of things: grab the rotary phone, dial up a few friends (or just show up at their front door), ask for permission to play, and hightail it. Go. All day. The one condition was to be back for supper, and hopefully not in the other type of condition that required the feared brown bottle of hydrogen peroxide to be pulled from the medicine cabinet and cracked open. Not so long ago a link to MSN’s lifestyle section crossed my Inbox. On the web page read the title, “The Years of Living Dangerously,” followed by 12 slides with descriptions of things kids did or had access to back in the day that would have parents today gasping in horror. Stuff like not wearing bike helmets, easy access to poison, toys such as the Easy Agent Zero M Sonic Blaster that stemmed from the James Bond craze of the mid-’60s, Gilbert Chemistry Sets, being left unattended, Jarts and deathtrap playgrounds. The majority of these were pre-1970s, though all of them still existed in some form or another when I was a kid. Take the one about 8 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 insisted that posting the video proves it wasn’t robbery. “I don’t think I would videotape the playgrounds, for example. The main image shows one of those giant threetiered metal rocket ships outfitted with a car steering wheel at the top to help kids conquer the vast reaches of space, and a slide in the middle for a quick escape when things went south. Thorpe Park had one. Now it’s all ultra-safe, ultra-stunting playground equipment. We killed bugs with toxic chemicals straight out of the garage. We lit damn near everything on fire just ‘cause. We made homemade bombs. We had the Super Soaker CPS 2000—the most powerful water gun ever manufactured. It only left bruises and tears. We rode everywhere, and never with helmets on our heads. We got in trouble. In my older mind it feels like my ’90s summer childhood reflected that of summers in the ’60s. I suppose I have my folks to thank for that. They were cool with most everything. If we got in trouble or hurt or whatever, it was our own damn faults. They let us go and do our thing. They gave us our independence. That’s actually the last slide on the web page: “Going without a cell phone.” We weren’t tethered to our parents electronically. Miraculously, we survived. Today, the picture is interchangeable. The only difference is that the adventures are bigger and stretch farther. The things I call hobbies are a new sort of risky, and therefore more calculated. This summer will hopefully see me back to one of my favorite spots on the map, the San Juan Mountains, for a bit of backpacking and peace of mind, and to the Grand Tetons for some welcomed elevation gain. Then there’s West Clear Creek for a refreshing summer dip, setting up a cozy camp next to the Little Colorado River, and all of the spontaneous weekend warrior trips into the wild Southwest with friends that have yet to be thought up. As adults I like to think we never lose that wonder that kept us going as kids. The search for things that inspire us and blow our minds. The ability to see beauty in everything and constantly be amazed. And not get totally caught up in all of life’s stupid bulls**t. Today, level four of “Arkanoid” still eludes me. But I couldn’t care less; I’m going outside. It’s summertime. it, post the picture of the letter and do that all to come to jail,” he said, adding, “There are a lot of things on my Instagram that have nothing to do with what happened.” (Portsmouth’s WAVY-TV) Deputies investigating the theft of a cash register at the Build-A-Burger restaurant in Mount Morris, N.Y., said they caught up with suspects Matthew P. Sapetko, 34, James P. Marullo, 35, and Timothy S. Walker Jr., 23, by following “a steady trail of macaroni salad,” which they’d also stolen and “took turns eating along their escape route.” After the suspects’ arrest, the restaurant posted a sign claiming it had, “The best burgers and mac salad worth stealing for.” (Rochester’s Democrat & Chronicle and WHAM-TV) Digital Follies Canadians now have shorter attention spans than goldfish, thanks to widespread use of mobile digital devices. Microsoft Corp. researchers, who reviewed surveys of more than 2,000 Canadians, determined that attention spans have fallen from an average of 12 seconds in 2000 to eight seconds today. They noted that goldfish average a nine-second attention span. (Ottawa Citizen) Slightest Provocation Thirty people were asked to leave an America’s Best Value Inn in Mason County, Mich., after a disagreement over the waffle maker in the buffet-style breakfast area. “It sounded like one lady walked up and asked the other lady if she was in line for the waffle maker,” Sheriff Kim Cole said. “She didn’t answer, so this lady started to make her waffle. The other confronted her and said, ‘That was my waffle,’ and the other lady said, ‘No, it’s mine,’ and then it went downhill from there.” Cole said that deputies arrived to find “a large group of people arguing over the waffle maker” and “a lot of yelling and screaming, but no one was assaulted.” (MLive.com) Authorities blamed the shooting death of a 19-year-old college student on a dispute over the rules of a beer-pong game. Police said Ronald McNeil, 39, and others attending a graduation party in College Station, Texas, argued until they eventually came to blows. The host asked McNeil to leave. He did but returned with a handgun and fired 14 times. He told police he intended only to scare the guests, but his gunshots injured two and killed the 19-year-old, a bystander. (Houston Chronicle) One Is the Loneliest Number Minorities may perceive entering a room full of white people as “microaggression,” according to a report by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “Students of color reported feeling uncomfortable and unwelcomed just walking into or sitting in the classroom, especially if they were the only person of color, or one of a few,” the report stated. Academics define “microaggressions” as “brief, everyday exchanges that send denigrating messages to certain individuals because of their group membership.” (National Review) Quirks News Aroma Therapy American law-enforcement agencies seeking ways to disperse rioters without killing or injuring them are considering importing a chemical product that Israeli police insist “prevents casualties to protesters and security personnel.” Called Skunk, it smells like raw sewage mixed with putrefying cow’s carcass. Israeli soldiers regularly spray Skunk from water cannons at Palestinian protestors. The mixture of yeast and protein is non-toxic, according to its manufacturer, pesticide specialist Odortec, and the only reported side effect is difficulty getting the stench out of clothing and off bodies. (The Economist) Love Hurts At the trial of Philip Lyle Hansen in New Zealand’s Wellington District Court on assault and sex charges, dating from 1988 to 2011, Crown Prosecutor Sally Carter told the jury that the defendant liked “gummy ladies.” She bolstered her case by playing a video in which a woman who dated Hansen explained that when they moved to the back seat of his car to have sex, he produced a pair of pliers and pulled out six of her bottom teeth. “After that sixth tooth came out, I got him to stop,” she said. At his request, the woman had a dentist remove her remaining teeth and fit her with dentures, which Hansen destroyed by flushing them down the toilet and blaming the cat. When her wisdom teeth started to come through, she said he dug them out of her gums with a screwdriver. (The New Zealand Herald) Flagstaff Aerial Arts and Flagstaff Arts Council Present Funt own s C u a c m r i p C Coconino at the Center for the Arts When Tupperware Parties Aren’t Enough While Lucy Filipov served as acting director of the Veterans Affairs office in Philadelphia, she “misused her title” to coerce her subordinates to attend a party at her house and pay for psychic readings by the wife of a VA colleague, according to the agency’s inspector general. Filipov’s email invitation said the wife, who goes by the name “The Angel Whisperer,” would be charging $35 for private readings to “talk to dead people.” Federal investigators who interviewed all the employees who attended said that most seemed unimpressed by the experience. (The Washington Times) About Those Batteries You Bought Among the assets for sale as part of RadioShack’s bankruptcy are customer data that the retailer collected over decades. The records include names, email addresses and phone numbers for 117 million people. Hedge fund Standard General, which bought 1,743 RadioShack store leases to co-brand with Sprint, is the leading bidder for the customer data. (The Washington Post) Ages 7 - 18 All skill levels! For more information or to sign up visit: flagartscouncil.org For questions call: 970.560.9485 Little Things Mean a Lot Following the world’s first penis transplant in South Africa in December, on a 21-year-old man whose penis was amputated following a botched ritual circumcision three years earlier, the head of the surgical team, urologist Dr. Andre van der Merwe, 46, said nine more patients are waiting for the same surgery after losing their penises in similar circumstances. He has also been flooded with requests from around the world. “I’ve had someone email from America who wants his penis removed,” van der Merwe said. “He wants to be genderless and donate his penis to somebody.” He said he was wary of such a donor, who might later change his mind and hunt down “the person who has his penis.” Meanwhile, van der Merwe said he had anticipated that his patient would need two years for sex to be viable, but it took only five weeks. (South Africa’s Times and Britain’s The Guardian) REGISTRATION NOW OPEN! JULY 20 - AUGUST 7 Monday - Friday 9am - 1pm Daily, weekly, and bi-weekly sign up options available Flagstaff Aerial Arts info: flagstaffaerial.org Coconino Center for the Arts 2300 N. Fort Valley Road, Flagstaff, AZ flagartscouncil.org • (928) 779-2300 June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 9 Screen A GoldenEye for comedy Reviewed by Dan Stoffel W The Heat (2013), but her two lead roles, 2013’s e open with a sweeping helicopter Identity Thief and 2014’s Tammy, fell flat with shot over a beautiful Bulgarian lake, both critics and audiences. Well, it appears a lavish mansion brought into the she may want to stick with Paul Feig, who not foreground. Inside, tuxedo-clad Special Agent only directed but also wrote Spy. It’s an ideal Bradley Fine (Jude Law), evaluates his envishowcase for McCarthy’s brand of physironment and then leaps into action. cal comedy mixed with just a little While ominous spy music further raunchiness. sets the scene, Fine makes his way SPY From the opening credits, toward the villain. All the while, Directed by Paul Feig featuring the very Bond-like he’s being talked through the Rated R theme song “Who Can You Trust” mission, given directions and HARKINS THEATRES by Ivay Levan over a silhouette warned of threats, by his teammontage, we know that we’re mate back at CIA headquarters in for a spoof that is willing to in Langley—Special Agent Susan put some care into its authenticity. Cooper (Melissa McCarthy) is on the Indeed, we’re taken on a globe-trotting case. And when Fine runs into trouble adventure from Paris to Rome to Budapest as on a subsequent mission, Cooper lobbies her Cooper, in true superspy fashion, insinuates boss (Allison Janney) to be sent into the field herself into the realm of her mortal enemy, for the first time in her career. Rayna Boyanov (played with delicious evil and Ever since she stole every scene in which very tall hair by Rose Byrne). At the same time, she was featured in director Paul Feig’s 2011 she has to deal with the over-enthusiastic ego hit Bridesmaids, Melissa McCarthy has seemof fellow agent Rick Ford (a hilarious Jason ingly been waiting for the perfect vehicle to Statham) while getting a bit of help from felshowcase her considerable comedic talents. low desk jockey Miranda (Nancy B. Artingstall). She was decent alongside Sandra Bullock in B+ Going sotto voce Spy provides belly laughs throughout, but it’s not perfect. The last third starts to fall apart as if Feig and company had too many gags and plot points to fit in, and couldn’t quite decide what to focus on and what to sacrifice. At two hours exactly, a good 20 minutes could have been trimmed. That being said, it’s the best big-release comedy of the year so far, and if it keeps McCarthy’s star on track, that can only be good for comedy lovers in the years to come. Reviewed by Erin Shelley D his wife many years ago. Cissy is dealing with senile demenustin Hoffman’s career in films started in 1967. That was tia, but remains happy. Wilf is the dirty old man who makes the year the first Super Bowl was played, the first issue indecent proposals to all the nurses and staff. When a new of Rolling Stone magazine was published and Americans retiring singer—one of the great opera stars—joins the hit the streets to protest against the Vietnam War. household, things change, for it is Reginald’s ex-wife, It’s been a long career. Hoffman has been involved Jean (Smith). in more than 50 films since his film debut in The QUARTET The plot is slight, but it doesn’t matter. Tiger Makes Out. In all these years, we have Directed by Watching the stars deal with resentments and known Hoffman as an award-winning actor; Dustin Hoffman romance is still worthwhile, even with a minimal now we can discover his ability to be a movie Rated PG-13 plot. Plus, it has Gambon as the director of the director. Quartet is his directorial debut and NETFLIX fundraising performance, who has no problems shows that he could also have quite a career as with yelling at everyone. It ends up charming a director. us with its story, performances and music (there Quartet is not the most action-packed film, are lots of wonderful moments of music, with actual but it is lovely to watch, and with a cast that includes retired musicians performing). Maggie Smith, Tom Courtenay, Billy Connolly, Pauline Collins Hoffman takes his time with the scenes, giving his actors and Michael Gambon, the acting is topnotch. The setting is room to inhabit their characters. The cast is marvelous; all have a home for retired musicians, and the movie begins with all their good scenes, with Connolly getting most of the laughs. residents preparing for their annual fundraising performance. Wilf blames his lack of a filter when speaking on a previous Reginald (Courtenay), Cissy (Collins), and Wilf (Connolly) are stroke, but it sure seems that he enjoys being the profane and retired opera singers who have performed together. Reginald is sex-obsessed retiree of the home. a quiet gentleman who never found love again after divorcing B 10 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 The setting and scenery is beautiful. Hoffman isn’t making a dark and sad film about aging, but there is a melancholic acknowledgment that the characters are no longer in their prime. Though not a great film, it all makes Quartet a charming little cinematic experience, and one that shows Hoffman should continue directing. Extra Butter Clever girl The dinos are back on the big screen N ovelist and screenwriter Michal Crichton had a wonderfully creative mind. He wrote some real doozies: the 1971 film The Andromeda Strain, based on Crichton’s novel, is one of my favorite old-school sci-fi movies, focused on real science and interesting characters. And 1973’s Westworld, which he wrote for the screen, is a beloved cult favorite; those scenes of Yul Brynner as Gunslinger, coming after Richard Benjamin and James Brolin, are just classic. He certainly didn’t hit it out of the park all of the time … If you’re lucky, you’ve forgotten all about Congo (1995) and Sphere (1998). But who can forget the groundbreaking 1993 monster mash Jurassic Park? Based on Crichton’s 1990 novel and directed by Steven Spielberg from a screenplay by Crichton and David Koepp, Jurassic Park featured computer-generated dinosaurs created by Industrial Light & Magic alongside full-sized animatronics crafted by legendary creature creator Stan Winston; the beasts were just as jaw-droppingly awesome to theater-goers as they were to the characters in film. Add a cast of quirky adults with some issues of their own, a couple of endangered tykes, memorable music by John Williams, a touch of Samuel L. Jackson, and of course some vicious raptors and a huge T-Rex, and you have an instant classic on your hands. That formula worked to make Jurassic Park the highest-grossing film to date (surpassed by By Dan Stoffel Titanic in 1997), with almost $1 billion in its first run, and that doesn’t include merchandising, DVD (and VHS!) sales, etc. It was even a critical success, maintaining a 93 percent Tomatometer rating (due in large part to the special effects). And nothing succeeds like excess, so sequels were inevitable. 1997’s The Lost World: Jurassic Park brought Jeff Goldblum and Richard Attenborough back from the first park (again with Spielberg directing), and threw in Julianne Moore and Vince Vaughn to do battle on a second dinosaur-filled island. While the effects were as good if not better than the first, the screenplay (based on Crichton’s sequel novel) was lethargic, and though it still raked in a boatload of cash, critics weren’t impressed. Still, when people are throwing all that money at you, why not go for three? Jurassic Park III (2001) got lazy with their title as well as their story, and despite bringing Sam Neill back and adding William H. Macy, it pretty much sucked. Director Joe Johnston couldn’t do much with a poor script, this time one that wasn’t based on a Crichton book. Finishing under 50 percent on the Tomatometer, it seemed to be an extinction-level event for the series. But we all know better than to give up on something trapped in amber. Check out the fourth installment, Jurassic World, this Friday, and our review to follow in next week’s issue of Flag Live. For �ilm times check these sites HARKINS: www.harkinstheaters.com MOVIES ON THE SQUARE: www.flagdba.com/movies-on-the-square MONTHLY HARKINS INDIE SERIES & SEDONA FILMS: www.sedonafilmfestival.org June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 11 music BY WILLIE CROSS In the veins Former Flagstaff musician Steven Elston returns with a new project and sound T he human brain is an imperfect device. We experience everything from tragedy to nirvana, but somehow most of our experiences do not exist beyond the moment they occur. As a system of cataloging memories, the brain is a rudimentary tool. Luckily we have developed art, among other devices, as a way to compensate for our lack of organic storage capacity. Music in particular serves as a way to sonically translate experience and make reference to a certain time and place. For former Flagstaff resident Steven Elston, music has been a language he has spoken for quite some time, and in many different dialects. From the digital landscape of electronic dance music to metal and hardcore, Elston has exposed himself to the gamut of musical genres. Among his other projects, Elston has been writing music for another venture that he has labeled Steven Dreams. After many careful and quiet years in development, Elston is ready to unveil Steven Dreams to Flagstaff this weekend with a special set at the Sixth annual Firefly Gathering. Around that same time, Elston will be releasing a new collection of his recordings, titled Mountain Blood. In a recent email interview with Flag Live, Elston refers to this album as “a way to discuss a side of Flagstaff that I think is under-documented.” Elston spent almost a decade living in Flagstaff from the early 2000s to 2012. His journey began with providing vocals in a hardcore band that eventually split up. This experience inspired Elston to endeavor to bring intensity and power to his performances, and EDM was his answer to that need. Elston spent years DJing as the Shape of Us to Go, and was able to observe the rise of EDM in America from behind the decks onstage. “I had an opportunity to get up close and personal with touring DJs and producers, figuring out what makes them so powerful and how they can control the movement of crowds,” Elston says. During his time performing in Flagstaff, Elston was exposed to the best and worst the town has to offer. From the warm and welcoming nature of the town for artists, 12 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 Steven Elston (right) and guitarist Phillip Adkins. Photo by Chris Elston to some less than savory music promotional tactics, the town inspired Elston to push himself as an artist. Halfway through his tenure in Flagstaff, he found it can be easy to lose oneself in keeping up with the audience and trends. But he says he learned to “trust my instincts and follow my own ethics on artistry.” This realization and many others became fuel and inspiration when he began writing material for Steven Dreams in 2006. Elston had begun to see Flagstaff from “the eyes of a giver, and not a taker.” He began to consider what ways he could give back to the town’s vitality. Mountain Blood is, among other things, “a voice for the people without a voice to complete the puzzle and complement the anatomy of Flagstaff,” Elston says. He utilizes personal accounts of life in Flagstaff as well as allegory to relay his message. “Run Away,” the second song and first single off of the album, “conveys the perspective of a mentor speaking to a physically abused individual,” Elston says. This motif is undoubtedly drawn from his time working at a women’s shelter in town. Throughout the rest of the album he explores themes of social anxiety and lost love. Beyond lyrical themes, the album’s sound is also largely drawn from Elston’s past. “I started getting into music in the ’90s,” he says, “And I will forever be influenced by that culture.” The album is rife with rich inspiration, all with Elston’s personal and intricate touch applied. From the charging, powerful sound of “Run Away” to the quieted build on “See You on the Other Side,” Elston’s long history with music is more than evident on Mountain Blood. With the music finally ready to be shared with the masses, Elston has set about preparing to perform it live. After performing at Flagstaff Brewing Co. on Friday night, Steven Dreams will head to the forest for a Saturday afternoon performance at this year’s Firefly Gathering. Elston has performed at Firefly in the past as a DJ, but he is proud to bring his new project to the festival for the first time. Although Steven Dreams will be a unique performance among the other artists and DJs, Elston is excited to bring even more diversity to the lineup. “It won’t sound or look anything like the other performances, but that’s the beauty of it,” Elston says. His band is a group of musicians culled from his past including Cal Campbell, son of country music legend Glen Campbell, on drums. Elston’s longtime friend Phillip Adkins will perform on guitar, and Kate Keogh will round out the group on bass. Elston promises that the band will sound “dreamy, heavy, emotional, beautiful … just how I wanted it.” Releasing Mountain Blood to the world and performing this music in Flagstaff for the first time is the conclusion of a chapter in Elston’s life. “Mostly, this album was written for me to put a nail in the coffin,” he says. “I’m very happy to be done with this album, share it, put it to wax, and move on to the next one.” For those of us who share memories of the time period that Elston refers to throughout the album, it will surely serve as therapeutic recollection. For others, Mountain Blood is an important piece of history told from an intimate perspective. Either way, Elston has captured his memories and presented them to the world for observation. Steven Elston will perform at Flagstaff Brewing Co., 16 E. Rte. 66, on Fri, June 12. The show is free and starts at 10 p.m. He will also perform at the Sixth annual Firefly Gathering at Soggy Bottom Ranch on Sat, June 13 at 12:45 p.m. on the Firefly Stage. Elston’s music is available for listening at www.soundcloud.com/stevendreams, and will be available for purchase during his performances in Flagstaff. To learn more about Steven’s music or to order Mountain Blood, email him directly at [email protected]. WEDNES PINT $4.99 BEERTAILS LY FRI D AL $3.99 Beaver Street Moscow Mules TURDAY SA NDAY SU BOTTOM OF THE BARREL $4.99 SRIRACHA-LADA’s & BEERMOSAS Come see what our bartendars make! 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OPEN DAILY 11AM LUNCH - DINNER - LATE NIGHT MICROBREWERY TOURS AVAILABLE STAY CONNECTED 5 S SAN FRANCISCO ST | 928.779.2739 www.lumberyardbrewingcompany.com Happy Hour Monday - Friday 2pm - 6pm $3 Pints $2.50 Well Drinks $1 OFF Glass of Wine $4 OFF Bottle of Wine $1 OFF 1/2 Liter Sangria $2 OFF Liter of Sangria DRINK SPECIALS START AT 9PM ! S D N E K E E W Y R T N U CO $5.95 32OZ YARD JARS FRIDAY: - 9PM S N O S S E L E C N A D FREE SATURDAY: PINT NIGHT! M P 10 T A S N E P O R O O DANCE FL ISSION- 21 AND OVER PINTS OF DOUBLE WELL DRINKS AND LUMBERYARD BREWS FREE ADM SHOTS OF MOONSHINE $2.99 Mother Tree main stage digital rendering by Owen William Fritts. 1 2 3 1. Metaphysically Speaking by Zach Jackson. 2. Zaca by Lofti. 3. Apex by Zach Jazkson. 4. Creating the Matrix by Zach Johnson. 5. Ouroboros by Chancellor Roberts. 6. 9204F by Lofti. 7. Drama by Vajra. 8. Order Among the Abyss of Chaos by Zach Johnson. 9. Spectral Flower by Chancellor Roberts. 10. Ross “Rossome” Steeves of the Jive Joint. Courtesy photo. 11. Paul “Super Tall Paul” Newman of the Jive Joint. Courtesy photo 12. Former Flagstaff resident and artist Matthew “Lofti” Koscica returns to Firefly this year. 13. Fluid Dreams by Zach Jackson. 14. The Mother Tree main stage under construction leading up to the festival. Photo by Brian Bradley 15. Bogotá, Columbia performing arts troupe Nemcatacoa Teatro will perform at Firefly for the second time after coming in 2013. Courtesy photo 14 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 4 The Giving Tree 5 FLAGSTAFF’S FIREFLY GATHERING CONTINUES TO SPROUT CREATIVITY By Elizabeth Hellstern 7 Imagine this scene: 6 8 9 You are listening to reggae legend Pato Banton. He’s playing on a stage that rises 30 feet behind him and is shaped like the Mother Tree of all mother trees, with a brightly colored canopy above you sprouting 50 feet forward. You’ve just finished a tasty hemp burger by Morning Glory Café over at Eat Street. You look behind you and see more than 30 artists creating live art, a gallery tent, stilt-walkers and comedy shows, all framed by the San Francisco Peaks. A train rolls by in the distance. Can you get any more quintessentially Flagstaff than that? H ead out to the Firefly Gathering at Soggy Bottom Ranch this Friday through Sunday and this is what you’ll experience. In its sixth year, the Firefly Gathering has grown into a festival that is nationally-known as a family-friendly event, with top-notch international and electronic dance music, yoga and movement workshops, healing experiences, an art gallery, art installations and all the live performance art you can take in. Firefly’s founder Laura Day Rivero writes on her blog that the festival was created to express “value for artistic expression, shared ceremonial experiences and celebrations, healthy eating habits, tight families and supportive tribal members, sacred spaces, and expression through movement.” She aims “to touch the attendee’s soul.” This year’s festival theme, “Emergence,” attests to the growth of the gathering, from a birthday party in the woods with 30 guests, to a high-class event with an estimated 2,500 attendees in 2015. The invited artists have all incorporated “emergence” into their artwork, and plan on guiding festival-goers through a transformative event. June11–17, 11–17,2015 2015 || flaglive.com flaglive.com June 15 15 11 10 12 Interacting with the artful mind and body Close to 20 installation artists from around the nation will place their multi-media pieces at Soggy Bottom Ranch. Installations include digital production zen gardens, live sculpture and totem creation, a black-lit body painting area and a tea house. Some will be interactive, visual or musical. Others will be meditative spaces with visuals to aid in finding silence. “Installation art really resonates with people because of its interactive nature and its ability to evoke an emotion within the place that you’re at, at that time,” says installation coordinator Danielle Difilippantonio. “Art allows people to step outside their comfort zone and explore different ideas that artists and other community members are experimenting with.” Christopher Dastan from Phoenix will be doing an interactive sound and video installation. “The Feels” combines projection mapping and kinesthetic touch with light and music. Dastan studied for a degree in Arts, Media and Engineering at Arizona State University and uses his skills to setup a playground environment. “I love to create fully immersive sensory experiences and am inspired by watching people play,” Dastan says. This will be Dastan’s second time at Firefly, but first time as an artist. “The unique 16 flaglive.com 16 flaglive.com || June June 11–17, 11–17, 2015 2015 community at Firefly feels like a family,” he says. Crystal Pirritano and Trina Taylor from Albuquerque, N.M., will be debuting their first collaborative art piece, Meta Reclamation, a butterfly sculpture made from reclaimed materials to represent the Firefly Gathering theme “emergence.” They also hope to bring awareness to the plight of butterflies and other pollinators, and will pass out butterfly attracting wildflower seeds for attendees to scatter. The artists utilize copper tubing, X-rays and used CDs in their creation. In the future, they hope to get more women involved in the collaborative process. “Emergence to us is the time when we come out of the messy process of metamorphosis; better than who we were before, stronger, more solid and ready to contribute to our communities,” Taylor says on behalf of the team. “Additionally, we’d like to throw in the importance of being gentle and forgiving of those of us, including ourselves, who may be in our caterpillar stage in certain or most areas of our life.” Fireflies will get to dance in front of another huge installation this year. The Mother Tree main stage, created by designer/sculptor/builder Owen William Fritts of Flagstaff, is made from recycled materials, using naturally fallen trees from the ponderosa pine forests surrounding town. The result is an epic art installation, 30 feet tall by 45 feet wide. The roots of the tree hug around a stage that is 32 feet wide by 16 feet deep. “The original Firefly Gathering was on National Forest land,” Fritts says. “They had a heart-centered tree that they would go to and place their written intentions. I took that as an inspiration for the main stage.” A 50-foot shade structure flies over the tree, looking like a massive foliage canopy. Installed by Global Village Productions out of Santa Cruz, Calif., the “leaves” will provide shelter from the elements for the musiclovers below. The all-seeing eye Around 35 artists will be doing live-painting during the festival, providing spectators a chance to witness the creative process in action. Of those, 16 artists will also have more than 30 paintings, photographs and sculptures featured in the Emergence Gallery. Four local poets have written ekphrastic poetry for the gallery, responding to the art with their own piece of art. The gallery also provides an opportunity for festival-goers to paint their own thoughts on “emergence” on a canvas outside of the tent. One of the artists that will be coming back to Firefly for the third time is Vajra, a self-taught painter from Southern California. He considers himself a “visionary artist,” which he defines as “art that comes from those that look within.” Vajra is influenced by diverse sources such as artists Luke Brown and Alex Gray, physicist Nassim Haramein and ancient historian Graham Hancock. His pieces incorporate the ancient origins of civilization, space-time geometry and free energy and feature images that come from Vajra’s imagination. Viewers will appreciate the alternative worlds that he finely communicates through color and geometry. Vajra tries to balance his works with elements of positive and negative aspects, but always points toward the light. For example, he will be painting the The Wish is Granted at Firefly this year. It’s a positive piece with a fierce dragon, synthesizing and bringing to union the polarities between light and dark. “Creating art from a space of love and positive intention, and with a focus on pure beauty really opened the door to the true potential of my art to change the world,” he says. “Those that wish to embody emergence should live from the heart.” Another artist featured is Chancellor Roberts from San Marcos, Texas. Roberts just graduated with a degree in art from Texas State University and has been actively involved with the live-painting circuit since late 2011. He attributes a lot of his art to things he’s learned from other artists on the road. “I’ve come to visionary and psychedelic art through a series of self-explorations, consciousness expansions, and really confusing weird human times,” Roberts says. “I like to use archetypes to reference different things that people have explored in the past, ways of thought and lessons learned, and attempt to translate them into images that might be relatable to the people that I know and love, and maybe help them in some small way in this vast, confusing world.” Art lovers will get to see Robert’s orangehued painting Ouroboros, at the Emergence Gallery. The canvas print was painted live in Austin, Texas and at this year’s Gem & Jam Festival in Tucson. It features an ancient symbol depicting a serpent eating its own tail, symbolizing self-reflexivity or cyclicality, especially in the sense of something or someone constantly recreating itself. Another artist to check out is abstract painter Zach Jackson from Southern California, who paints in an intuitive free-form based method. The self-taught artist sees visionary art as a perfect representation of our modern times. Jackson attempts to “dissolve the barriers of language” and hopes that his audience will develop their own dialogue in response to his paintings, creating their own meaning and narrative. “Emergence to me, represents a pattern that has been inside of us all along, but has just now been rediscovered,” Jackson says. From big stilts to big laughs From stilt walkers to circus acts, comedy and theatre, there are plenty of ways to get your performance art fix at this year’s Firefly. Troupes and players have traveled internationally to provide great, interactive entertainment. Local performance groups include Flagstaff Aerial Arts, Troupe Shuvani and Sacred Mountain Lion Dance Team. And because of the recent moisture in Flagstaff, fire performances will be sure to happen. Nemcatacoa Teatro, a street and experimental theatre troupe from Bogotá, Columbia will be back to Firefly for a live performance. Flagstaff dancer Gina Shorten is also a member of the group. Their newest piece, “Asymmetric Bodies,” is a new multidisciplinary project from the ensemble that incudes photographic images. The group is inspired by la tradición de los zancos, the tradition of stiltwalking in Columbia. Street performers started wearing stilts so that the large crowds watching them could see the performance. Joining Firefly for the second year in a row, the Jive Joint from Los Angeles is an interactive music and comedy performance featuring actor/ comedian Ross “Rossome” Steeves and musician Paul “Super Tall Paul” Newman. Steeves and Newman have 10 years of experience working together. They are skilled at leading the three other players and the audience in what Steeves calls “a party of silliness.”Steeves excels at improvisation and looks for the impossible-toplan moments. “Those are magical,” he says. Often he will mirror the audience to establish a bond or connection and promote a sense of play and expression. “It’s a place to express emotions in a safe environment.” Newman is a jazz musician by trade who excels in musical looping, improvisational songs and providing the right beat for the other performers. “We want audiences to leave with a sense of lightness about them; relaxed, happy and silly,” Steeves says. The Jive Joint has performed at eight other festivals in 2015 and calls the Firefly Gathering one of the best because of the people and the community. Steeves says, “They are sweet, loyal, laugh a lot and get all of my jokes.” The Sixth annual Firefly Gathering starts Fri, June 12 at 8 a.m. and ends Mon, June 15 at noon at Soggy Bottom Ranch. The ranch is located just minutes off of Old Rte. 66 and exit 191on the I-40. Turn onto West Naval Observatory Road and follow the Firefly signs to the gathering spot. Full weekend passes (Fri–Sun) are $185 for adults in advance ($200 at the entrance) and $75 for ages 13–17; two-day passes (Sat–Sun) are $135 for adults; day passes are $75 for adults and $25 for ages 13–17 (good from 8 a.m. the day purchased until noon the following day); youngsters 12 and under are free. All passes include walk-in camping and can be purchased online or at the gathering. Car camping passes are available for $50 and RV camping passes are available for $60. No camp fires allowed. Kids under 18 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. For additional info, detailed directions, a site map and a full schedule of events, artists, musicians, vendors and more, visit www.fireflygathering.com. 13 14 “I want to create a visual poetry for the audience that inspires them and brings them in based on their own experience. That’s a true connection,” says artistic director Nicolas Cifuentes. “The narrative from the physical theatre creates images that connect with you that are unique.” 15 June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 17 17 music BY DOUGLAS MCDANIEL Duke true Steve Earle plus the Dukes in Flagstaff equals a chance to see a world-class combination E very artist like Steve Earle, who jumps the boundaries and eddies of Americana from album to album, offering a pretty regular year-to-year schedule of new releases and modes of advance, knows that in doing so there’s a chance a fan might be looking for one thing, and then, find another, then find themselves rooting for that main thing to come back. It occurs when Earle gets back together with his band, the Dukes. Yes, the forays into the deep country soul of Hank Williams and Townes Van Zandt make him a keeper of the faith, but when Earle rocks out with the Dukes, you enter the world-class terrain of a Neil Young and Crazy Horse or Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. One, without the other, is a quite different creature. Earle can be a band onto himself with the way he wails on his acoustic guitar, and the forcefulness of that growling country rock translates either way, but when Earle and the Dukes play Flagstaff at the Pepsi Amphitheater on Tuesday night, music fans in northern Arizona will catch the band pursuing its perfection of the hard-rocking blues, part of the follow-up to his February CD release, Terraplane. “My band right now is the best band I’ve been in,” Earle says as he tries to cut through the dirty noise of a telephone call in stormy America, from Flagstaff to New York City, while at his home in Greenwich Village. “My next record will be something with Shawn Colvin, and when we make it, it will be something different.” He kicked off the Terraplane tour at Electric Ladyland Studios in New York, where he told the crowd, “Sometimes the cure for the blues and the path to the blues is sheer audacity, which is one of my best things.” Then, after playing the heavy rocking track “King of the Blues,” the band launched into “Hey Joe,” proving the band is truly willing to rock out. The album Terraplane pursues the gritty groove of such bluesmasters as Lightning Hopkins, with the Dukes behind Earle galloping into a romp with harmonica and the lead singer on “Baby, Baby, Baby (Baby)” pursuing the sexy salvation to soaring blues leads and a deep-down growl. “You’re the Best Lover I Ever Had” has a hypnotic quality to it, as Earle keeps to just a few lines, his country blues guitar and instrumental drive reminiscent of Bob Dylan’s late records. Then comes “Tennessee Kid,” no doubt a track to get people charged up, 18 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 Steve Earle (third from left) and the Dukes with the Mastersons. Courtesy photo with Earle giving a snaky spoken word poem to a badda** blues beat, with the songwriter invoking the mythical story of blues innovator Robert Johnson’s Faustian meeting with the devil. In that tune, Earle conjures the essence of the electric juke joint blues, and perhaps a doomed Johnny Cash, simply with the breathy way he sings, “Hey, hey, hey.” It is the same authoritative street preacher voice and fire and brimstone lyrical style that Earle used on “Warrior” for the Grammy Award-winning release The Revolution Starts Now (2004). Throughout it all, Earle makes the case that his blues roots are authentic with a collection of tracks that are an homage to what he calls “the commonest of human experience, perhaps the only thing we truly share.” “The first band I ever had was a blues band,” Earle says. “Doing this [album] was something we always talked about. I thought how I knew Lightning Hopkins and Stevie Ray Vaughan, so I thought I should be doing it.” The Dukes (and Duchesses) include Kelly Looney, Will Rigby, Chris Masterson and Eleanor Whitmore, the latter two in recent years forming as the Mastersons. It is Masterson’s searing guitar that packs most of the wallop on Terraplane, and the perfectly Route 66 template of the recording living up to what Robert Johnson described as “Terraplane (a good, rough car of the ’30s) blues.” For the past four years Earle has been in hot pursuit of some of the historical legends of Americana, even to the point of writing a novel to correspond to his music output (usually at least an album a year, he says). The publication of I’ll Never Get Out Of This World Alive (2011) a fictional novel, was followed up with The Low Highway (2013), which found Earle returning to the heart of the country blues, though finding time with the Dukes to turn it up loud. Of his experience as a novelist, Earle says his favorite part of the experience is “I like having done it.” He says he’s more used to the immediate payoff of completing a song. He describes the book as a “Harry Potter novel for adults—magical realism, with kind of a good story involving Hank Williams.” One of the characters is more or less based on the phony Music doctor who treated Williams at the time of his death, who “wasn’t a real doctor and believed he could treat alcoholism” with a toxic mix of drugs and vitamins. “A lot of people said the doctor left him after he treated him with these things, but I don’t know ...” The character (who Earle calls Toby Marshal) started out in the book and became something completely different. “I’m working on another book now, but like they always say, it takes twice as long to write the second book.” Earle began his career in Nashville, Tenn., and after a period of trial and error, hit it big with much critical acclaim with the release of Guitar Town (1986), a pop-sensible country album that had some people wondering if the next Bruce Springsteen was at hand. But the rebellious sort that is the essence of Steve Earle the artist didn’t wait long to show his true intentions: to invigorate anyone’s idea of country rock in the 1980s, especially when playing with the Dukes. Copperhead Road (1998) was a hardrocking statement that also explored the very roots of Celtic music, connecting with the energy of the Pogues, and what a raucous Americana act could be. With the ups and downs of serving prison time for cocaine possession and the intrigues of romance, marriages, divorce and so on, Earle has consistently used music as a format to air his pain. The additional notoriety of his political views in opposing capital punishment, homelessness, the Bush administration and the war in Iraq, most apparent in “The Revolution Starts Now” (a title track that ironically found its way onto a car commercial), made Earle one of the leading artists willing to address social issues as part of the performance of being Steve Earle. Though, he admits, “the last record is the least political.” And over the heavy distortions of the phone line it was hard to get into the nuances of whether another outright act of hard-rocking protest music is in store from Earle during the 2016 presidential campaign season. But despite the crush of failed communications, he was determined to get one thing through: He was psyched about playing in Flagstaff for the “first time in a long time.” “My audience is in Tucson and Flagstaff. I play in Phoenix but not very much,” he says. “Flagstaff is where my people are. Guys with red bandanas driving motorcycles. That’s my crowd.” See Steve Earle and the Dukes perform Tue, June 16 at the Pepsi Amphitheater, Exit 337 off I-17 south of Flagstaff at Fort Tuthill County Fairgrounds. Special guests the Mastersons will open the show. Gates open at 6:30 p.m. and the show starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $22–$49. For more info or to purchase tickets, call (866) 977-6849 or visit www.pepsiamp.com. To learn more about Steve Earle, check out www.steveearle.com. June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 19 REARVIEW Northern Arizona’s Daily Event Listings VARIOUS EVENTS | THU 6.11 Beaver Street Gallery: Reincarnation. New art from old bed frames, sculpture by David B. Harton. In the Alpha space. Delta space: The Gallery Collection, featuring a selection of the gallery’s 2-D and 3-D work. Runs through June 26. Gallery hours are MonFri, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and by appt. 28 S. Beaver. 214-0408 Downtown Flagstaff: Flagstaff Eats. Walking food tours in downtown Flag. Two-and-a-half hours of walking and sampling food from seven different restaurants. Tours offered every weekend Thursday through Sunday. $40 per person. Sign up on www.flagstaffeats.com. 213-9233 Flagstaff Federated Community Church: Continuing Taoist tai chi and beginner class. Every Thursday. 5:30-7:30p.m. [email protected]. 400 W Aspen. 288-2207 Flagstaff Federated Community Church: Weekly Mindfulness Meditation every Thursday. Room 24 upstairs. 6:30 p.m. instruction, 7-8:30 p.m. sitting and walking meditation. 8:30 p.m. discussion. Come and go anytime. Free and open to all. 400 W. Aspen. 774-7383 Human Nature Dance Theatre and Studio: Individualized kung fu instruction in xingyi, bagua and taji. Every Thursday. 6-8 p.m. www. flagstaffkungfu.org. 4 W. Phoenix. 779-5858 Joe C Montoya Community and Senior Center: Hour-long small group guitar classes. Ages 16 and up. Three sessions every Thursday from 2-5 p.m. Flexible format, multiple styles. $8 per class or $30 for five classes, and $4 materials. 245 N Thorpe. (505) 614-6706 Lanning Gallery: “Russ Vogt: Animal Magnetism.” Unveiling large boldly colored mosaic-tiled animals in the outdoor courtyard. Runs through June 14. 431 State Rte. 179. Hozho. Sedona. (928) 282-6865 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Driving Miss Daisy. Featuring Angela Lansbury and James Earl Jones. On the big screen. Shot during the play’s Australian tour. 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. $15, 12.50 Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 The Museum Club: Line dance lessons. Every Tuesday and Thursday night from 6-7 p.m. $3. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 The Museum Club: Flagstaff Swing Dance Club presents dance lessons every Thursday night from 7-8 p.m. Different dance style taught each month. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 Museum of Northern Arizona: Thirsty Thursdays. New after-hours series celebrating the Museum’s recent National Medal win. Featuring music, dance, storytelling, and hands-on activities. Cash bar and food vendor onsite. 5 p.m. $5. 3101 N. Ft. Valley Road. 774-5213 Porky’s Pub: Partnered dance night. Featuring salsa, zouk, West Coast swing, East Coast swing, kizomba, bachata and more. Hosted by Flagstaff Latin Dance Collective and Grand Canyon Salsa Festival. Every Thursday. 9 p.m.-midnight. Free. 2285 E. Butler. 774-1011 Red Rock State Park: Guided nature walk at 10 a.m. Guest speaker or a ranger/naturalist gives a 45-minute talk at 2 p.m. Park is open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. $10 per vehicle. 4050 Lower Red Rock Loop. Sedona. (928) 282-6907 Simply Spiritual Healing: Thursday night meditation. Every Thursday. 6-7 p.m. $20. All are invited. 105 E. Birch. 779-6322 JUNE 11–17, 2015 Turquoise Tortoise Gallery: Turquoise Tortoise Gallery Reception. “Sharon Weiser: Desert Devotion.” Showcasing the artist’s paintings of close-up cactus compositions. Runs through June 14. 431 State Rte. 179. Sedona. (928) 282-2262 The real scandal in Denny Hastert’s life MUSIC EVENTS | THU 6.11 Cruiser’s Café: World musician Vincent Z. Noon-2:30 p.m. Every Thursday. 233 Historic Rte. 66. Williams. 635-2445 The Green Room: Rhythm Dragons. Rockabilly and swing from Arizona. Opener the Sock Puppets. 9 p.m. Free. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Heritage Square: 2015 Summer Concert Series. Featuring Trebuchet. Rock ‘n’ roll four-piece from Flag. 5-7 p.m. Free. Downtown Flagstaff on Aspen between Leroux and San Francisco. Hops on Birch: The Harmaleighs. Indie folk from Nashville, Tenn. 9 p.m. Free. 22 E. Birch. 774-4011 Old Town Center for the Arts: Live at Studio B. Featuring Wake Up (Mike McReynolds and Starr Hall). Doors open at 6:30 p.m., show starts at 7 p.m. $10 at the door. Every second and fourth Thursday with a new artist. 633 N. 5th Street. Cottonwood. (928) 634-0940 Main Stage Theater: Acoustic Happy Hour with PK Gregory. 4-7 p.m. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 Mia’s Lounge: Soul Stew. 9 p.m. Free. 26 S. San Francisco. 774-3315 Monte Vista Lounge: Karaoke with Ricky Bill. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 Shepherd of the Hills Church: Kevin Burke. Solo fiddle concert. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., show starts at 7 p.m. $20 in advance, $22 the day of the show. Children half price. Tickets available at Olives Wild. 1601 N San Francisco. 213-0752 The Spirit Room: Eryn Bent. 8 p.m. Free. 166 Main St. Jerome. (928) 634-8809 VARIOUS EVENTS | FRI 6.12 Doris Harper-White Community Playhouse: Much Ado About Nothing. Directed by Virginia Brown and Linda Sutera. Performances 7:30 p.m. Fri and Sat; 2 p.m. Sun. $13-$19. Runs through June 14. 11 W. Cherry. www.theatrikos.com. 774-1662 Episcopal Church of the Epiphany: Taoist tai chi. Every Friday. 9-10:30 a.m. flagstaff. [email protected]. 423 N. Beaver. 774-2911 Flagstaff Elk’s Lodge: Weekly all-you-can-eat Fish Fry. Fish fry begins at 6 p.m. and bingo starts at 7 p.m. $10. Must be 18 or older to participate in bingo. All proceeds benefit Elks Children Charities. Every Friday. 2101 N. San Francisco. 774-6271 Macy’s Coffee House: Baha’i Evening Program: “The Power of Spiritual Action … Help Your Friend and You Help the World.” Presentation and discussion by Bill and Nancy Barnes. 7 p.m. Free. 14 Beaver. 774-2243 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Madame Bovary. (4 p.m. Fri, Sat and Mon; 7 p.m. Tue and Wed.) Charlie’s Country. (7 p.m. Fri, Sun and Mon; 4 p.m. Tue and Wed.) $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Pulse continued on page 22 20 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 Wrong, sir! Wrong! W ashington‘s gossip mill is spinning furiously over the recent revelations about Dennis Hastert’s long hidden sexual molestation scandal. But what about the filthy, backroom affair he’s been openly conducting with corporate lobbyists for nearly two decades? During his tenure as Speaker of the House, Hastert turned the place into the Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory of corporate favors. In exchange for campaign cash for Republican candidates, corporate interests gained entry into Denny’s psychedelic playhouse. With Hastert himself singing “Candy Man,” the favor seekers could help themselves to the river of chocolate running through Congress’ back rooms. Remember “earmarks,” the sneaky tactic of letting congressional leaders secretly funnel appropriations to favored corporations and projects? Earmarks were the trademark of Hastert’s regime—indeed, Denny grabbed a $200 million earmark for himself, funding an Illinois highway near land he owned—land he then sold, netting millions in personal profit. When he left Congress, Hastert moved just a short limo ride away to become— what else?—a corporate lobbyist. Trading on his former title, personal ties to House By Jim Hightower members, and knowledge of how the chocolate factory runs, he has been hauling in a fortune as a high-dollar influence peddler for makers of candy-flavored cigarettes, Peabody Coal Co., and other giants. He specializes in getting “riders” attached to appropriations bills, so public money is channeled directly to his clients. Most certainly, Hastert should be held accountable for the deep personal damage and pain his alleged molestation would’ve caused for his former student. But Denny should also pay for his abominable abuse of the House Speaker’s office, his self-gratifying groping of public funds, and his repeated, stickyfingered violations of the American people’s trust. Jim Hightower is a best-selling author, radio commentator, nationally syndicated columnist and editor of The Hightower Lowdown, a populist political newsletter. He has spent the past four decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers that ought-to-be: consumers, working families, small businesses, environmentalists and just-plainfolks. For more of his work, visit www. jimhightower.com. My martial arts moves are so quick and so fierce I make Jackie Chan look like Stephen Hawking. Occasionally going too far since 1994. #SHIRTLESS ROCCO REARVIEW Bartender wisdom Speranza of the Nation D espite the rain and occasional snow, it’s summer in Flagstaff. Even if a deluge of rain for last Friday’s June ArtWalk brought out a sea of umbrellas and coats and some fast shuffling soggy shoes, folks still made their way from gallery to pub to restaurant filling their senses with the work of some of Flagstaff’s finest artists. The summer calendar of events is here in full force with a festival or parade or something interesting every weekend—and typically throughout the week as well. You’d be hard pressed to not find something to inform your mind, body, soul or all of the above during this time of year. I’m still putting lavender oil on my sunburnt arms after this weekend’s Hullabaloo at Wheeler Park. The redness is well worth it though, as we got a family photo with this year’s MC, the incomparable Andres “Dre” Adauto; danced to the tunes of one of my favorite bands, the Voluntary String Band; and my young boys were thrilled to do high fives with one of my favorite downtown beat cops (he works overtime at a lot of these events to pay for his own kids college tuition and summer school). Throughout the afternoon, By James Jay friends old and new jammed along during this wonderful annual festival. Now, I’m gearing up for the Northern Arizona Celtic Festival on July 18 and 19 at Fox Glenn Park. For years I’ve done a public lecture on Irish poetry. From Yeats to Patrick Kavanagh, Eavon Boland, Dennis Greig, we’ve looked the lives and times of poets and writers, read their work under the shade of the tents, and sitting around on folding chairs tackled ideas, enjoyed literature, and celebrated our own unique voices. I’m browsing through past year’s notes on William Butler Yeats, the quintessential Irish poet. It is said that Irish poetry begins and ends with Yeats. While somewhat hyperbolic, it is difficult to overstate the importance of Yeats’ poetry, as well as with plays, and the collecting and preserving of old Irish folks tales. His career begins in the early 1890s; his early work often times reflected his interest in Irish mythology and reflected the magical, rural landscape where he was born in Sligo. During this time, he met Oscar Wilde, the larger than life Irish intellectual and writer who helped to inspire the young Yeats and to draw him toward the events in Dublin. The 1916 Easter Uprising, World War I, the increasing English violence throughout Ireland all worked to make Yeats the poet, the national voice of the newly formed Republic of Ireland. In some ways (and not to oversimplify a person who had a long and complicated life), it would seem that the wars, the nationalism, would not have been Yeats first choice of subject matter. Given his own druthers, his regional, rural Ireland and its rich myths might have been his preferred choice. But, one can’t be neutral on a moving bus, as they say, and so the matters of the nation bled into his vision. Can it go the other way? Is it always the national drawing the local talent up and away from its roots? Speranza might be the exception. Speranza means hope in Italian and is the pseudonym to protect another national Irish poet from the mid-19th century uprisings that preceded Yeats by a generation. Speranza wasn’t the poet’s only penname; John Fanshawe was another. Thirtynine poems by either of those names were published in The Nation newspaper, including “The Die is Cast” which championed violent uprisings. This brought about Victorian style sedition trials and the English began the process of rounding up Irish men to jail or exile to Australia or killed. During the theatrics of the courtroom, Speranza stood up and confessed, shouting, insisting, “I am Speranza.” The court ignored the confession for Speranza was Jane Wilde, a woman (mother of Oscar Wilde, the man who would so inspire Yeats and many others). While British soldiers would beat, rape and kill women in the back alleys of Dublin and in the country side, they weren’t about to put an affluent one on trial and hang her on the public square. She would have been the poet of the new nation, but she was a woman in the 19th century. The British weren’t ready to fight her, so they ignored her. Speranza/Jane Wilde wrote that, “Once I had caught the national spirit the literature of Irish songs and sufferings had an enthralling interest for me. Then it was that I discovered that I could write poetry.” Jane Wilde was of Dublin, comfortable in that Anglo-Irish world. And her tone, her style, was that of a capital city. Every place is local to someone. Every place is exotic to someone as well. When I look around at the eclectic quirky characters in my own town, I know this is where vision and power rises from, enriches life and the culture of a town for both its locals and the intriguing characters traveling through looking for something new as well. And so I prep my lecture notes and my mind for another discussion in the park. I look forward to the continued conversations this summer. Slainte. For more than 20 years, James Jay has worked in the bar business from dishwasher, bouncer, bartender, bar manager to pub owner. He is the author of two critically acclaimed books of poetry and his poems have been selected for the New Poets of the American West anthology. ll a c e h t g n i r e Answ since 1994 June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 21 Pulse continued from page 20 VARIOUS EVENTS | FRI 6.12 Mother Road Brewing Co.: Mother Road Brewing Co. Presents: Roadside Circus. Featuring Circus Bacchus who will turn the entire parking lot into circus grounds. Tapping 11 kegs throughout the day. 7-9 p.m. $5 cover at the door. Ages under 21 must be a with a parent or legal guardian. 7 S. Mikes Pike. 774-9139 Orpheum Theater: Anger Management Stand Up Comedy. Two shows: 8 p.m. (all ages) and 10 p.m. (ages 18 and over). $10. Tickets available at the door. 15 W. Aspen. 556-1580 Soggy Bottom Ranch: The Sixth annual Firefly Gathering. Featuring the theme “Emergence.” Camping, music, art, healing workshops, yoga, and more. Fri, June 12 through Sun, June 14. Off Naval Observatory Road in the Coconino National Forest. For detailed ticket pricing, directions and a complete lineup of music and events, see www.fireflygathering.com. The Spirit Room: JLR Trivia. 8 p.m. Free. 166 Main St. Jerome. (928) 634-8809 MUSIC EVENTS | FRI 6.12 be one of the cool kids read live 22 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 Altitudes Bar and Grill: Prayer Dog. 5-8 p.m. Free. Flat Fives. 8-11 p.m. Free. 2 S. Beaver. 214-8218 Flagstaff Brewing Co.: Steven Dreams. 10 p.m. Free. 16 E. Rte. 66. 773-1442 The Green Room: Blacksheep Invasion. Featuring Tridon, Arvins Gardens, the Oxford Comma and Starr Off Machine. 9 p.m. $10. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Hops on Birch: The Rivals. Reggae and ska from Flag. 9 p.m. Free. 22 E. Birch. 774-4011 Main Stage Theater: Acoustic Happy Hour with Cheap Sunglasses. 4-7 p.m. Mouse Powell. 9 p.m. Free. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 Mia’s Lounge: Velovalo. Rock from Flag. 9 p.m. Free. 26 S. San Francisco. 774-3315 Monte Vista Lounge: Flight of Ryan and Something Like Seduction. Indie alt-rock from Flag. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 The Museum Club: Ty-One-On. 8 p.m. $5. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 Oak Creek Brewing Co.: decker. 8 p.m. Free. 2050 Yavapai Drive. Sedona. (928) 204-1300 Raven Café: RD Olsen Blues Band. 8 p.m. Free. 142 N. Cortez. Prescott. (928) 717-0009 VARIOUS EVENTS | SAT 6.13 Doris Harper-White Community Playhouse: Much Ado About Nothing. Directed by Virginia Brown and Linda Sutera. Performances 7:30 p.m. Fri and Sat; 2 p.m. Sun. $13-$19. Runs through June 14. 11 W. Cherry. www.theatrikos.com. 774-1662 Flagstaff Recreation Center: Zumba class. Every Saturday at 10:30 a.m. $5. 2403 N. Izabel. 779-1468 Galaxy Diner: Swing Dance Club every Saturday. Lessons from 7-10 p.m. Free. 931 E. Historic Rte. 66. 774-2466 James Cullen Park: Continuing Taoist tai chi. Every Saturday 9-10:30 a.m. [email protected]. Bonito/Hopi and Apache. 288-2207 June 11–17, 2015 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Madame Bovary. 4 p.m. Sat and Mon; 7 p.m. Tue and Wed. $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Murdoch Community Center: Zumba class. Every Saturday at 9 p.m. $5. 203 E. Brannen. 226-7566 Museum of Northern Arizona: Navajo Rug Auction. Showcasing the talents of vintage and up-and-coming Navajo master weavers from all over the Four Corners area. Also featuring live weaving and fry bread. 2-5 p.m. Free (standard admission applies to the rest of the museum). 3101 N. Ft. Valley Road. 774-5213 Pepsi Amphitheater: 23rd annual Made in the Shade Beer Tasting Festival. A benefit for Sun Sounds of Arizona. Featuring more than 80 local and national breweries and live music on two stages. 1-5 p.m. $45 general admission, $80 VIP. Tickets increase $10 at the door. Exit 337 off I-17 south of Flagstaff at Ft. Tuthill County Fairgrounds. (866) 977-6849 Red Rock State Park: Saturday and Wednesday daily bird walks. 7 a.m. Park is open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. $10 per vehicle. 4050 Lower Red Rock Loop. Sedona. (928) 282-6907 Soggy Bottom Ranch: The Sixth annual Firefly Gathering. Featuring the theme “Emergence.” Camping, music, art, healing workshops, yoga, and more. Fri, June 12 through Sun, June 14. Off Naval Observatory Road in the Coconino National Forest. For detailed ticket pricing, directions and a complete lineup of music and events, see www.fireflygathering.com. MUSIC EVENTS | SAT 6.13 Altitudes Bar and Grill: Gina Machovina. 5-8 p.m. Free. Delta Blues Band. 8-11 p.m. Free. 2 S. Beaver. 214-8218 Charly’s Pub & Grill: Payback. Monthly soul, funk and oldies dance party. Featuring DJ Emmett White with special guests DJ Smite and DJentrification. 9:30 p.m. Free if you’re snazzy, $5 if you’re lazy. 23 N. Leroux. 774-2731 Cruiser’s Café: John Carpino. Singer-songwriter from northern Arizona. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Every Saturday. 233 Historic Rte. 66. Williams. 635-2445 Flagstaff Brewing Co.: Patio Party featuring Santa Pachita. Latin fusion from Tucson. $5 at the entrance. 10 p.m. Free. 16 E. Rte. 66. 773-1442 The Green Room: Hard Daze Nite: A Tribute to the Beatles. 9 p.m. $10. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 The Hive: Moneypenny. Alternative pop rock and punk from Utah. Doors open at 7 p.m., show starts at 7:30 p.m. $5 in advance and $6 at the door. All ages. 2 S. Beaver, Ste 190. 864-8675 Hops on Birch: The Sock Puppets. Blues rock from Flag. 9 p.m. Free. 22 E. Birch. 774-4011 Main Stage Theater: Penny’s Birthday Bash and Fundraiser for Verde Valley Sanctuary. 9 p.m. $5 cover at the door. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Internationally acclaimed guitar virtuoso Anthony Mazzella. Fine art photography backdrop by photographer Ted Grussing. 7 p.m. $15. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Monte Vista Lounge: Al Foul and the Shakes. Rockabilly. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 The Museum Club: Roger Creager. Country music from Texas. Opener Ty-One-On. 8 p.m. $10. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 June 11–17, 2015 Oak Creek Brewing Co.: Kenzo. 3-6 p.m. Free. Open mic with James Turner at 8 p.m. 2050 Yavapai Drive. Sedona. (928) 204-1300 Raven Café: Muskellunge. Bluegrass from Flag. 8 p.m. Free. 142 N. Cortez. Prescott. (928) 717-0009 The Spirit Room: 11th Hour Band. 2 p.m. Free. Black Forest Society. 9 p.m. Free. 166 Main St. Jerome. (928) 634-8809 State Bar: Karl Jones. Acoustic folk. 7:30 p.m. Free. 10 E. Rte. 66. 226-1282 VARIOUS EVENTS | SUN 6.14 Canyon Dance Academy: Flag Freemotion. Ballroom dance lessons and dancing every Sunday. Learn social and ballroom dancing. 5-7 p.m. No partner needed. $8, $5 for students. 853-6284. 2812 N. Izabel. 814-0157 Doris Harper-White Community Playhouse: Much Ado About Nothing. Directed by Virginia Brown and Linda Sutera. Performances 7:30 p.m. Fri and Sat; 2 p.m. Sun. $13-$19. Runs through June 14. 11 W. Cherry. www.theatrikos.com. 774-1662 Flagstaff City Hall: Flagstaff Community Market. 8 a.m.-noon. Free. Runs through Oct. 18. www.flagstaffmarket.com. Human Nature Dance Theatre and Studio: Weekly Flagstaff Zen Sangha Meditation. 8:30 a.m. Free. Every Sunday. Sutra service, walking meditations (kinhin), and two 25 minute sitting meditations (zazen). First time come at 8 a.m. for orientation. 4 W. Phoenix. 773-0750 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Charlie’s Country. 7 p.m. Sun and Mon; 4 p.m. Tue and Wed. $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Monte Vista Lounge: Sunday Night Trivia with Lindsay and Savanna. Every Sunday. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 Shuvani Studio: Flag Freemotion. Conscious movement/freestyle dance. Moving meditation to dance-able music. No experience required. Every Sunday. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Next to Mama Burger on the corner of Fort Valley Road and Humphreys Street. 225-1845 Soggy Bottom Ranch: The Sixth annual Firefly Gathering. Featuring the theme “Emergence.” Camping, music, art, healing workshops, yoga, and more. Fri, June 12 through Sun, June 14. Off Naval Observatory Road in the Coconino National Forest. For detailed ticket pricing, directions and a complete lineup of music and events, see www.fireflygathering.com. Tranzend Studio: Flagstaff Latin Dance Collective. Lessons: beginner and all level fundamentals, technique and musicality. 7 p.m. Open dancing in main room with salsa, bachata, merengue and cha cha; side room with zouk and kizomba until 10 p.m. Every Sunday. $10 drop-in, $8 for students. 417 W. Santa Fe. 814-2650 MUSIC EVENTS | SUN 6.14 1899 Bar and Grill: Vincent Z. Acoustic world music. Every Sunday. 6:30-8:30 p.m. 307 W. Dupont. 523-1899 Altitudes Bar and Grill: Jimmy Deblois. 3-6 p.m. Free. 2 S. Beaver. 214-8218 Cruiser’s Café: John Carpino. Singer-songwriter from northern Arizona. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Every Sunday. 233 Historic Rte. 66. Williams. 635-2445 Flagstaff Brewing Co.: Heartwood. 2-5 p.m. Free. 16 E. Rte. 66. 773-1442 The Green Room: Grieves with Grayskul. Underground hip-hop from Seattle, Wash. Openers Mouse Powell and Sam Roberts. 8 p.m. $12. Ages 18 and over. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Josephine’s: Vincent Z for brunch every Sunday. Acoustic world music. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. 503 N. Humphreys. 779-3400 Oak Creek Brewing Co.: Alex Ogburn. 3-6 p.m. Free. 2050 Yavapai Drive. Sedona. (928) 204-1300 Orpheum Theater: Warren G with DJ Quik. Renowned hip-hop from Long Beach, Calif. Openers Mike Slice, Train City, Downtown 2E and Dub. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., show starts at 7:30 p.m. $30 in advance, $32 the day of the show. All ages. 15 W. Aspen. 556-1580 The Spirit Room: Black Cat Bone Skadoosh CD Release Party. 2 p.m. Free. 166 Main St. Jerome. (928) 634-8809 VARIOUS EVENTS | MON 6.15 Charly’s Pub & Grill: Game night. 5-8 p.m. Free. 23 N. Leroux. 774-2731 Episcopal Church of the Epiphany: Taoist tai chi. Every Monday. 10:30 a.m.-noon. [email protected]. 423 N Beaver. 288-2207 Flagstaff Recreation Center: Zumba class. Every Monday. 6 p.m. $5. 2403 N. Izabel. 779-1468 The Green Room: Weekly trivia night hosted by Martina. Every Monday. 6:30-8 p.m. Free. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Human Nature Dance Theatre and Studio: Tango classes. Fundamentals: 6-6:30 p.m. $5. Figures and Techniques: 6:30-7:30 p.m. $10. (Both classes for dancers having completed a beginner dance series). Practica: 7:30-9 p.m. Practica included in price of class. 4 W. Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Madame Bovary. (4 p.m. Mon; 7 p.m. Tue and Wed.) Charlie’s Country. (7 p.m. Mon; 4 p.m. Tue and Wed.) $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Sacred Mountain Fighting and Healing Arts: Self defense class. Every Monday. 6-7 p.m. $10. 202 S. San Francisco. 864-8707 MUSIC EVENTS | MON 6.15 Campus Coffee Bean: Open Mic night. Every Monday. 6-8 p.m. [email protected]. 1800 S. Milton Road. 556-0660 Cruiser’s Café: World musician Vincent Z. Noon-2:30 p.m. John Carpino. Singer-songwriter from northern Arizona. 5:30-9:30 p.m. Every Monday. 233 Historic Rte. 66. Williams. 635-2445 The Green Room: Karaoke. 8 p.m. Free. Every Monday. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 The Hive: Ramshackle Glory. Punk music from Tucson. Doors open at 7 p.m., show starts at 7:30 p.m. $5 in advance and $6 at the door. All ages. 2 S. Beaver, Ste 190. 864-8675 Hops on Birch: Special open mic night hosted by Joshua Powell and the Great Train Robbery (Americana from Indiana) who will open things up with a short set and provide backup for all performers. Every Monday. 8:30 p.m. sign-up. 9 p.m. start. 22 E. Birch. 774-4011 Pulse continued on page 24 ROGER CREAGER saturday june 13 , 8 pm • 21 + WITH TY-ONE-ON thursday, june 18 doors open at 7 pm • 21+ 3404 E Route 66 • (928) 526-9434 • themuseumclub.com Authentic Issan-style Thai Food known for its wonderful flavors 15% off Gluten Free Menu we deliv 928.774.4 er! 080 expires 6/30/15 Alcoholic beverages excluded. Mon-Fri 11am–3pm, 5pm–9pm Saturday-Sunday 12pm-9pm www.ewathai.com 110 S. San Francisco St, Flagstaff, AZ 86001 928.774.4060 June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 23 Got a Money $hot? Pulse continued from page 23 MUSIC EVENTS | MON 6.15 Main Stage Theater: Karaoke Service Industry Night. 8 p.m. Free. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 The Museum Club: Open mic night. Every Monday. 8 p.m. Free. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 Olde Sedona Bar and Grill: Jam session/open mic every Monday. 9 p.m. 1405 W. Hwy. 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-5670 VARIOUS EVENTS | TUE 6.16 Firecreek Coffee Co.: Speak Up: Bridging the gap between local people and local politics. Forum for Flag residents to connect with local politics. 5 p.m. Free. Every Tuesday. 22 E. Rte. 66. 774-2266 Hops on Birch: Trivia night with Eric Hays. Every Tuesday. 8:30 p.m. sign-up. 9 p.m. start. 22 E. Birch. 774-4011 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Charlie’s Country. (4 p.m. Tue and Wed.) Madame Bovary. (7 p.m. Tue and Wed.) $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Man and Superman. Live on the big screen from the National Theatre of London. 3 p.m. $15, 12.50 Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 The Museum Club: Line dance lessons. Every Tuesday. 6-7 p.m. $3. 3404 E. Rte. 66. 526-9434 Orpheum Theater: Film screening: Napoleon Dynamite. Two showings. 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. $3 or two for $5. Tickets available at the door. All ages. 15 W. Aspen. 556-1580 Ponderosa High School: Beginner Taoist tai chi. Every Tuesday 5:30-7 p.m. Followed by continuing Taoist tai chi. Every Tuesday. 7-8:30 p.m. [email protected]. 2384 N. Steves. 288-2207 Taala Hooghan Infoshop: Dharma Punx meditation group every Tuesday. 8:15 p.m. 1700 N. 2nd St. www.taalahooghan.org Temple of the Divine Mother: Unplug and Recharge Meditation: Come join us to unplug from stress and recharge your being by learning moving, sound, & guided meditation. Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month. Ongoing from 7-8:30 p.m. by donation. Vino Loco: Words & Wine hosted by Barley Rhymes. Spoken word and poetry night. Every third Tuesday of the month. 6 p.m. Free. 22 E. Birch. 226-1764 MUSIC EVENTS | TUE 6.16 r tagram o s n I n o E V ve.com #FL AGLI i l : g o a t fl t i @ m t b o Su emoneysh h t o t l i a em 24 flaglive.com | June 11–17, 2015 Firecreek Coffee Co.: Open mic night. Every Tuesday. Signup at 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m. show. All ages. 22 E. Rte. 66. 774-2266 The Green Room: Honky Tonk Tuesdays. Featuring DJ MJ. Every Tuesday. 8 p.m. Free. 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Main Stage Theater: Open mic with D.L. Harrison. 8-11 p.m. Free. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 Mia’s Lounge: Jazz Jam. 9 p.m. Free. 26 S. San Francisco. 774-3315 Monte Vista Lounge: Karaoke with Ricky Bill. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 June 11–17, 2015 Oak Creek Brewing Co.: Drumz and Dance Party. Free. 6:30 p.m. 2050 Yavapai Drive. Sedona. (928) 204-1300 The Patio: Blues Tuesday with Larry Z. 7-10 p.m. Free. Every Tuesday. 409 S. San Francisco. 779-7033 Pepsi Amphitheater: Steve Earle and the Dukes. Special guest the Mastersons. Gates open at 6:30 p.m., show starts at 7:30 p.m. $22-$49. All ages. Exit 337 off I-17 south of Flagstaff at Ft. Tuthill County Fairgrounds. (866) 977-6849 VARIOUS EVENTS | WED 6.17 Charly’s Pub & Grill: Team trivia. 7 p.m. 23 N. Leroux. 774-2731 Firecreek Coffee Co: Poetry slam. Every Wednesday. Signup at 7 p.m., 8 p.m. start. 22 E. Rte. 66. 774-2266 Flagstaff Recreation Center: Zumba class. Every Wednesday. 7 p.m. $5. 2403 N. Izabel. 779-1468 Heritage Square: Kids Squared. Fun and educational programs for children ranging from ages 2-12. This week: Tippy Toes. Dance class for young children. 10-11 a.m. Free. Runs through July 29. Downtown Flagstaff on Aspen between Leroux and San Francisco. Heritage Square: Dancing on the Square. Free lesson from 7-8 p.m., followed by open dancing until 10. Lessons taught by volunteers, alternating between Latin and swing each week. All ages welcome. No partner needed. 7-10 p.m. Free. Runs through Aug. 26. Downtown Flagstaff on Aspen between Leroux and San Francisco. Jim’s Total Body Fitness: Flagstaff Latin Dance Collective. Six week salsa dance fundamentals. 6-7p.m. $15 drop in, $20 for couples. Every Wednesday. www.latindancecollective.com. 2150 N. 4th St. 814-2650 Lumberyard Brewing Co.: Extreme Wednesdays. Showing extreme sports videos. Free. 10 p.m. 5 S. San Francisco. 779-2739 Main Stage Theater: In House Dart and Pool Leagues. 6 p.m. Free. 1 S. Main St. Cottonwood. (928) 202-3460 Majerle’s Sports Grill: Trivia night. Every Wednesday. 7 p.m. 102 W. Rte. 66. 774-6463 Mary D. Fisher Theatre: Film screening: Charlie’s Country. 4 p.m. Madame Bovary. 7 p.m. $12, $9 for Sedona Film Fest members. 2030 W. Hwy 89A. Sedona. (928) 282-1177 Murdoch Community Center: Zumba class. Every Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. $5. 203 E. Brannen. 226-7566 Red Rock State Park: Saturday and Wednesday daily bird walks. 7 a.m. Park is open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. $10 per vehicle. 4050 Lower Red Rock Loop. Sedona. (928) 282-6907 State Bar: Wings and Wine. Pairing Pillsbury Winery from Cottonwood with Wil’s Grill from Flag. 6 p.m. 10 E. Rte. 66. 226-1282 MUSIC EVENTS | WED 6.17 The Green Room: Soulective. DJs spinning funk, dance, hip-hop and EDM. Every Wednesday. 8 p.m. Free 15 N. Agassiz. 226-8669 Mia’s Lounge: Open mic night. 9 p.m. Free. 26 S. San Francisco. 774-3315 Monte Vista Lounge: ‘80s Flashback Party. Featuring Lounge Lizard D from Jerome. 9 p.m. Free. 100 N. San Francisco. 779-6971 To have an event included in the Pulse calendar e-mail [email protected] or mail info to Flagstaff Live, Attn: Pulse Calendar Submissions, 1751 S. Thompson St., Flagstaff, AZ 86001. The deadline is every Friday by 5 p.m. for the following week’s issue. All events are subject to change, subject to editing, and may have to be cut entirely due to limited space in Flag Live. For more info, call 779-1877. COmICS I just saw that they’re investing millions in a new Disney Frozen theme ride. I thought Frozen mania was over, but now it will live on as a theme park attraction. Craziness. Proudly presented by the staff at May sweet, sweet Carol never know that I am working on a series of adult film scripts based on Disney World Magic Kingdom rides. We have Big Thunder Mountain Railroadin’ It, Buzz Lightyear’s Intimate Love Capsule, The Seven Dwarfs Sexy Mine Train and Space Mountin’. Larry &Carol June 11–17, 2015 | flaglive.com 25 Classifieds LOST AND FOUND Lost gig drive downtown. Lost bicycle head light, brown knit mens cap, downtown/goodwill/ country club terrace neighborhood. Found set of keys on San Francisco St. lostandfound78@ yahoo.com. APPLIANCE REPAIR Appliance Repair in your home. Best in Flagstaff w/23 yrs Exp & Insured. Call Russ @928863-1416 CONCRETE Accel Construction Group offers The Best Concrete Work for the Best Price. Free Estimates. ROC# 219882. 928-527-1257 EQUIPMENT Annual Equipment Service Special Service most makes of Farm, Construction, & Lawn Equipment Pick up/Delivery Available 7741969 www.flagequip.com EXCAVATION Tractor and bobcat ready for work; any construction, masonry, paver or ? Miguel @ 928-399-9432 FIREWOOD PAINTING Heber Martinez Professional Painting Call Today for FREE est. Int/Ext, Decks, Drywall Repair Avail anytime, 12 yrs exp. Ref. avail., Heber Martinez: 928-600-5944; Not a licensed contractor “Nick the Painter”, 25 yrs exp. Top Quality, Low Prices Small Jobs OK. Ref Avail. Interior/Exterior 928-310-1862. Not a licensed contractor. ROMANO’S PAINTING Interior & Exterior, residential painting. Free over the phone estimates. 928-600-6261 Instagram: @romanopaintingaz Licensed & Bonded ROC#224346 Dave Carter Painting Res. & Comm. Int. & Ext. Painting & Staining Licensed in Flag since 1999 Call anytime 928-525-3754 ROC # 143913 Rob Decot Painting Decks and repairs. Professional painting and prep, I’ll do it right, and I’ll do it NOW! (928)600-4105 Not a licensed contractor. PERSONAL SERVICE • CANCER • Compensation www.cancerbenefits. com Or call 800-414-4328 CERTIFIED CAREGIVERS Available For In Home Care Call Us 928-225-9780 PET SITTING Sale thru June 24th. Hard Dry Aspen no bark $140/cord. Hard Dry Pinion $155. Pine $120, Cedar Available. Full Cords Delivered-Cut Split 16”. 928-587-8356 JPC HOME IMPROVEMENT SERVICES by Juvy JUNIPER, $150 cord. 928.606.6335 Aspen & Juniper Firewood For Sale. Ready to burn. Call for info: 779-0581 I OFFER HOUSE & PET SITTING Dogs, cats, birds etc. Ref. available. Michael. 928-6999321. Thank you! HANDY PERSON Navajo FlexCrete is looking to fill a Technical Support/Marketing position in the construction industry. See www.navajoflexcrete.com for additional requirements, job description, and application. PH: 928.608.4801 READY MIX DRIVERS Class B CDL Lic. Req. EOE CEMEX 5200 E. Railhead Ave. Mike 928-526-5250 NOW HIRING! FT LEASING CONSULTANT for FLAGSTAFF Flagstaff property management company looking for just the right person to join our outstanding team! Do you love talking to people? Are you enthusiastic about serving others? We have an immediate need for a FT Leasing Consultant at one of our Flagstaff apartment communities. Weekends required. Send your resume to careers@ bellainvgroup.com and tell us why you are the right person! Service Tech for Golightly Tire Starts at $12/hr + training or negotiable w/ exp. Need current Driver’s License & must have flexible hours. Apply until 6/19 at 3900 E. Huntington Drive COMFORT INN is Hiring Housekeepers. Weekends a must! Please pick up application at 2355 S. Beulah Blvd NO PHONE CALLS Employee Relations Representative I Peabody Western Coal Company has an opening for an Employee Relations Representative. The primary purpose of this position is to provide general human resources services for Kayenta Mine. Provide employee benefit administration, employee relations projects, recruiting, salary administration, employee counseling and records management. Contribute to the safe and efficient department. The successful candidate is required to have a Bachelor’s degree in Human Resources (preference), Business, Psychology or related fields; and a minimum of three (3) or more years of human resource experience. A good understanding of human resource principles is required. A good working knowledge of State, Federal, and Tribal (Navajo and Hopi) employment laws are essential. This position requires excellent communication and initiative skills. Candidate must be well organized for handling multiple projects and other responsibilities as well as possessing sound decision making abilities. The successful candidate must also be able to demonstrate a high level of drive and focus. The position requires that the person must have good comprehension skills and be able to write detailed documents and reports proficiently in English. The person must also be able to operate a personal computer, and be proficient in Microsoft office suite applications. SAP, Kronos, and Kenexa application experience is desirable. This position is based in northern Arizona and entails travel. A1 Handyman! Call Mike’s Tool Box Decks, tile, doors/windows, paint. Mike, 928-600-6254 Free Estimates Not a Licensed Contractor A&V Handyman Bobcat, Plumbing, Framing, Painting, Electric, Roofing, Tile, Concrete Driveways, Maintenance, Decks. Adrian 928607-9297 Not a licensed contractor All Home Repair & Remodeling. (928)-310-9800. Carpentry, decks, drywall, stone & tilework, painting, roofing, flooring. Not a licensed contractor. HAULING Flag Hauling, Yard Clean Up, Haul Off Misc Debris, Metal, Wood, Batteries, etc. Fast, Reliable & Reasonable Rates, Lic/Ins 928-606-9000 HOME IMPROVEMENT Huff Construction LLC All home improvement, repairs, remodeling & additions. ROC #230591 928-242-4994 HOUSE CLEANING Housecleaning, services not limited. I have tools & 25 yrs. experience. Please call 853-2874 LANDSCAPING AFFORDABLE LANDSCAPE. ALL PHASES OF LANDSCAPE, PAVERS, & MORE. OVER 25 YRS EXP. CALL 928-600-6681 or 928606-9000 Peak Prop. Maint & Landscape LLC ROC#297647 ALL-N-LANDSCAPING, Paver Patios, Walkways, Edgers, Planting, Clean-up, Irrigation Main’t Free Est. Not a licensed contractor Call Juan & Betty@ 928-526-2928. Father & Son Handyman Window Cleaning, Paint, Plumbing, Floors, Shingles & Yard Cleaning. Whatever You Want! 928-380-7021 Not a Licensed Contractor Kikos Landscaping Pine Needles, Yard Clean-up Francisco Valdez 928-221-9877 or 814-4787 message Not a licensed contractor HANDY SAL Complete Yard Clean-up, Hedges & weed wacking. 928-221-7931 Not a Licensed Contractor LAWN CARE Lawn Mowing: weekly or one time. Affordable and dependable. Steve 774-1688 20+yrs Local Lawn Care Exp. Lawn mowing, thatching, aeration, fertilizing, sprinkler start ups & repairs, cleanups, rototilling, bobcat & tractor svc, many other svc avail. Free estimates. Ask about Specials. Call Andy 928-310-8929 MOVING Professional Moving Service call Quick Move Local/long distance or labor only. 928-779-1774 PLUMBING Plumbing Needs, Repairs, Add-ons & Remodels. (928)-890-8462 Not a licensed contractor. HELP WANTED This position may require work beyond “normal office hours”. This is a staff position and a salary will be set that will commensurate with the duties and responsibilities of the position as well as the skills and experience of the successful applicant. Normal staff benefits apply, including 401(k), plus medical, dental, and vision. To apply for this challenging and rewarding position please send a completed application form or resume to the following address: Peabody Western Coal Company Attn: Job Vacancies PO BOX 650 Kayenta, AZ 86033 Or visit www. peabodyenergy.com Applications close at 3:00 pm on Friday, June 19, 2015 Equal Opportunity Employer of Minorities, Females, Protected Veterans and Individuals with Disabilities-Native American Preference Employer INSTRUCTION AND SCHOOLS Seeking Certified/ Highly Qualified Teachers Page Unified School District in Page, AZ SPED, Math, English, Elementary, CTE, Admin, and More Will work with motivated, Bachelor degree holding applicants interested in becoming certified in SPED or Math through ADE’s Alternative Pathways Certification program Apply online at www.pageusd.org MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR F/T Maint Supervisor for busy student housing complex with benefits. If interested call 928-7792985 to submit resume. MEDICAL FT Medical Assistant at Northern Arizona Orthopaedics Job Summary: Assist Physician and physician assistant in exam rooms. Provide quality patient care by interviewing patients, measuring vital signs, providing instructions from provider, ensuring all related documentation is in chart. Maintain exam rooms, logs and required checks and triage phone messages. Education: Medical assistant certification, preferred. Knowledge: Healthcare field and Orthopaedics Medical terminology Knowledge of EHRs Please submit resume to wilsonr@ northazortho.com or fax to 928-226-3080 TRANSPORTATION AND WAREHOUSE Propane Delivery Driver Wanted. Must have CDL. Inquire in person at John Graves Propane, 8901 N Hwy 89, Flagstaff. Good pay w/ benefits. Drug testing mandatory. MISC FOR SALE Used Non-Potable 275 gal liquid storage tanks. Great for Water Harvesting MSDS available Spoiled Rotten Pet Boutique 517 E RT 66 Williams AZ Pls contact Laurha 928-600-1423 2015 John Deere Riding Mowers Are Now In Stock! As Low as $1499 + tax OAC. Call for Details & Fincg. Specials Flag Equipment 928774-1969 www.flagequip.com Pool table, standard full size, with overhead light, sticks and balls, Best offer. Call 928-607-1175 ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES Antique gas pumps/oil company signs for sale. 802 N Main St. Cottonwood AZ. Fri & Sat 104pm 602-377-2287 HEAVY EQUIPMENT John Deere Compact Tractor Sale Payments as low as $229/mo Call for details, + down payment & tax, OAC Flagstaff Equip 928-7741969 www.flagequip.com PATIO LAWN & GARDEN Patio table/6 chairs. Glass top, cushions are sage & tan. Excellent condition. $650.00 (928)606-5737 GARAGE SALES EAST Flagstaff Christian Fellowship Annual Garage and Plant Sale. 1206 Harmony off Grandview. POSTPONED due to weather until Saturday June 20th. 7am. Multi-Family Yard Sale. Living/Dining room furniture, baseball/softball gear, Wii game set, clothes, household items, Jeep wheels, appliances. Too much to mention! SATURDAY 8AM-NOON 7965 Cowboy Way in Doney Park. This is the big one! Don’t miss it! Classifieds GARAGE SALES WEST PARK WIDE Garage Sale. MANY homes participating! Sat 6/13, 7am-4pm. Wildwood Hills MHP, 2401 W. Route 66. BIG Beacon Yard & Plant Sale 510 N. Leroux , 6/13, 7-11am WE HAVE IT ALL! Furniture, books, sporting goods, housewares, indoor/ outdoor plants. Cheshire, 2747 Darleen Dr. oak table and chairs, small chainsaw, kids stuff, small guitar, trumpet, much more! SAT 7am to 11am GARAGE SALES OTHER AREAS Moving Sale. Everything Must Go! 2nd home. 3220 Tranquility Ln. I40West, Left Garland Prairie Ext, 1/4mi to Tranquility Ln. Big Red Barn. 928-706-4622 Lots of accessories, boutique stuff, upscale items. 9am to 12pm Thurs 6/1106/13, Tools Only on Sun 06/14. SMALL MACHINERY TOWNHOMES FOR SALE 4 WHEEL DRIVE COMML & INDUST PROPERTIES 2004 Ford Explorer XLT Sport Utility V6 4WD, Towing PKG, Clean Interior, ABS, AM/FM CD, very good condition, 134,745 miles. $4,549.00 Call (520) 977-7840 4bd/2.5ba/1688sq/2cg, built 2002. 1.5 mi to NAU. $275K. Call Wayne/Terri @ 928-7739300 8000 sq ft old charter school building, 2301 N. 4th St. Selling for appraisal price of $750K. 928-526-0300 LOTS FOR SALE RESIDENTIAL Lovely flat city lot, close to hospital. Mature fruit trees, quiet street. Recent survey available. Call and leave message for location and additional information: (928) 606-3252 $180,000 HOMES UNFURNISHED Fantastic Home/Horse Prop. 2.5 ac backing FS. Well treed 3br 3ba 3000sqft double garage. Additional 1500 sqft workshop/gar Horse corral/ barn/stalls. $2500/month 7105 Vista de Oro. 505-603-4262 Honda Generator Sale Save 20% off select Honda Generators in stock Flagstaff Equip 928-774-1969 www.flagequip.com 1 & 2 bdrm apt-house in Sunnyside $700-$999/ mo. Call Mary @ 928-526-7909. HOMES FOR SALE CONDO UNFURNISHED FLAGSTAFF/N. ARIZONA DISTRESSED HOMES FOR SALE. Foreclosures, Short Sales, Fixer Uppers. Receive free list w/pics of all properties. Free recorded message. 800-7913831 ID #1042 Free Home Values are Up in Flagstaff! FIND OUT WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH ONLINE FOR FREE! Visit www.Flagstaffhomevalue. net. Courtesy of Grand View North Realty NO OBLIGATION FREE 4 bdrm/2bath. 1838 sq.ft. Newer gas furnace, Wood stove, 1 Car garage, Basketball court. 4786 E Snowshoe Way Nice Family Neighborhood $249K 928-890-9010 FSBO FSBO-3Bdrm House on 1 acre bordering National Forest. Adjacent lot also available. (928) 853-3692 WALNUT RIDGE Beautiful 4 Bdrm, 2 1/2 Ba, 2 CG home. Quiet, Safe, family friendly. 2396 sq.ft. + 330 sq.ft. of workshop/playroom. Landscaped yard with pond. 429,000 928-526-7474 Best of Flagstaff 4 bdrm/3.5 ba, 3860 sq.ft., 1.5 acre lot, (largest in Amberwood); Front = mtns/ Back = forest Heated driveway! 2nd home, barely lived in. 602-620-6969 Country club 3bdr/2ba 2200 sf on 1/3 acre, backs grnblt, 2 CG w separate lg workshop, enclosed bck/yd, updated kit, open concept, az room, FSBO, 928-814-2569 or azcarstens@ msn.com 435,000. In the Pioneer Valley area of Doney Park, this charmer has it all! A nicely sized lot, fenced yard, garden plot, great covered patio, air conditioning, newer furnace, new roof and newer 75 gallon water heater are just the beginning. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths an office/nursery off the master bedroom which boasts a gas fireplace and jetted tub in the bathroom. $314,900 Coldwell Banker Dallas Real Estate 928-526-5309 Half acre lot in Kachina Village. Will build to suit your floor plan. Turn key priced. 928-606-1647 APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED Country Club Condo w/ full club mmbshp. 1100sqft 2bd 2bth, bright, open floor plan, deck, views, W/D NP, NS $1200/mo. w/ 1 year lease. $1400 w/ mo. to mo. lease. $800 dep. Available Now (928)607-7451 TOWNHOUSE RENTALS Boulder Pointe Townhome 3bd/2.5ba, garage, w/d, gas FP, end unit. Call: 928-221-7128 ROOM FOR RENT Quiet Nat’l.Forest, Room to Rent Util, Cable, Intrnt incld, N/S, N/P $350/mo.+ dep. Call 928-600-6769 STORE AND OFFICE RENTALS Various Retail Store Front Space & Office Space on 4th St & 7th Ave, some w/ utils incl. 526-0300. Old jewelry store 2300 N. 4th St., 2600 sf, $1,700/ mo., Old medical doctor’s office at 2314 N. 4th St, 1500 sf at $1100//mo. Water & garbage provided. Call 928-526-0300. IMPORT AUTOS 2011 VW Jetta TDI Sedan. $15K. Platinum gray/ Titan Blk. 41,212 mi. Orig Ownr 30/42mpg Sunroof Auto loaded, Carfax, all svc rcds. 40,000 mi service completed. Good-Exc. Cond. 928-204-0548 Sedona SUVS 07 HUMMER H3 deluxe package, very clean. 60k miles Clean title. No dealers 18,750K. 928-412-1497 2011 Volvo XC90R Like new, all options, 3rd row seating,black on black with black TSW wheels call 928-310-8138 or 928-699-4546 $23,900.00 TRUCKS 2008 Chevrolet Silverado LT 66K mi., very good cond, Dark Cherry with Rhino Liner and Tonneau cover. 4 dr, V8 5.3 liter w/ flex fuel option. Loaded! Sedona call or text 810-931-2115 1 owner 21,500 FLAGSTAFF LIVE GENERAL INFO Phone: (928) 774-4545 Fax: (928) 773-1934 | Address: 1751 S. Thompson St. , Flagstaff, AZ 86001 Hours of Business: Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. | On the Web: www.flaglive.com Distribution: Hard copies of Flagstaff Live are available free of charge every Thursday morning at more than 200 Flagstaff, Sedona and northern Arizona locations. Please take only one copy per reader. Feel free to call or e-mail us with any distribution questions or if you want to become a distribution point for Flag Live. Copyright: The contents of Flagstaff Live and its Web site are copyright ©2015 by Flagstaff Publishing Co. No portion may be reproduced in whole or in part in any form without permission. Disclaimer: Views and opinions expressed within the BOATS 23 ft Cabin Cruiser. Ciera Bayliner. 350 motor, Excellent condition! Good family boat. ALWAYS Garage Kept. $15,000. 928-853-7573 MOTORCYCLES 2007 Kawasaki Vulcan 900 Classic 150 original miles, like new, helmet incl. $4000. Call 928699-4765. 5TH WHEELS 1991 32ft Aljo 5th wheel. Ready to Move. Fully Equipped. Very Good Condition. $5000. 928527-0394 Great Floor plan. 1/2 ton towable. Air ride suspension and hitch. New flat screen tv. $15,300.00 BARGAIN CORNER Thanks a lot! I sold my sword in less than 1 week! Selling accessories for Kenmore Fridge #56669500- 4 drawers, 20 ea. 2 glass shelves, $25 ea., ice maker bin, fruit bin, $30 ea., xlt cond, pics avail. 928-527-1121 Toshiba-dvd plyr $50, Compact disc plyr $50, Yamaha stereo receiver $50, Sony HD linear converter 5disc systm $50, Magnabox video Cass/DVD plyr $100 928-526-9546 Metal bunk bed frame $50. 2-Old Toilets $50/ each. 928-774-6852 Mitsubishi 55” Projection TV. HDTV, loaded with features. Excellent Condition. Only $125. 928-637-8849 2 Coleman Perfectflow propane camping stoves, w/ propane tank $18 each; without propane tank $15each. Call 928-774-7629 ATV Tires for Sale, $20.00 each. Dunlop 25x10x12, good condition. have 2 only. Call Lee 773-0027. 22 LR Ammo Remington Golden Bullet $50/525 box (928) 814-6345 Diamondback Hybrid Bike $150. Needs a tune-up. Org. $600. African Drums $125 Hand Carved. (928) 607-7274 22R Toyota core motor, newly rebuilt , 100 mi. with extra parts, new rebuilt cylinder head, crankshaft not shimmed right, $100 obo. Call 928-600-4520. FREE Queen size mattress and frame, 48” door mirror, and Brinkman Gourmet Charcoal Smoker. Call 773-544-2314 or 773-616-3260 Gas Dryer Fisher Pykel. Maytag Centennial Washer. $150/each or Best Offer. Works Great! (952) 250-6798 Crossman Mark 1 single shot CO2 .22 cal target pellgun. Original box and documentation, $50. 928-266-0871 pages of Flagstaff Live or its Web site are not necessarily those of Flagstaff Publishing Co. Any reader feedback can be mailed or e-mailed to the editors. Freelancers: Flagstaff Live accepts freelance submissions for its pages and Web site. Any story pitches or unsolicited work can be e-mailed or mailed to the editors at the above addresses. Advertising: For the current Flag Live advertising rate card, see www.flaglive.com, or contact Kim Duncan at (928) 556-2287 or [email protected] THE GREEN ROOM-REDEFINING FLAGSTAFF NIGHT LIFE 09-10-15 ON SALE NOW 09-15-15 JUST ANNOUNCED 0 DEVON ALLMAN | $15/$18 THAT 1 GUY | $12/$15 THURSDAY FRIDAY NEXT TUESDAY FRIDAY JUNE 19 5 3 FUNDRAISERS TO DATE 3 5 SATURDAY WEEKLY EVENTS Mic SUNDAY: Open Karaoke 6-8pm 8pm-Close Night MONDAY: Trivia Karaoke 7-8:30pm 8:30pm-Close DRINKS WEDNESDAY: 50CENT Soulective EVERY DAY “Happiest Hour” 8-9pm 8pm-close Dance Party 5:30-7:00pm | $3 SUNDAY UPCOMING SHOWS FLAGSTAFF'S #1 KARAOKE Every Sun & Mon 06/18 Science On Tap 06/18 Chamomile & Whiskey 06/25 Cale Tyson 06/26 ONE.DEEPER 06/27 Dirty Bourbon River Show PRESENTS $4 90 SCHILLING EVERY DAY! 07/04 Freddy Todd/CloZee 07/18 Rowdy Shadehouse 07/22 Zach Deputy 07/23 Brothers Comatose 07/24 Andrea Gibson W/ Chris Pureka 07/31 ZEBBLER 08/01 Miss Lonely Hearts 09/15 Devon Allman 09/16 Reverend Peyton WWW/FLAGSTAFFGREENROOM/COM | 15 N/ AGASSIZ | (928) 226-8669 BEER OF THE WEEK: LOOSE LEAF SESSION ALE OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 3PM-2AM HAPPIEST HOUR 5:30-7PM | $3CALLS CONTACT US FOR YOUR FUNDRAISER OR PARTY
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