Spruce or Douglas Fir? Cocktails Gain the Taste of Trees

(Image: broVo)

In  Atlantic Magazine‘s “Sprucing Up Your Cocktail,” Wayne Curtis writes in  about the trick to getting your drink to taste like a Northern Maine spruce tree. It involves letting spruce resin simmer overnight in pots you never want to clean again. But the reward, he says, is a primeval awakening as you are transported to the loamy forest floor.

Spruce was a familiar flavoring in the 18th and 19th centuries, especially if you lived up north. It was found in tea, in beer, and perhaps most commonly in chewing gum—spruce gum was produced commercially all the way until the 1970s.

(Here we pause for a flashback to Pinot Grand Fenwick chewing gum.)

Curtis approvingly cites a spruced-up Manhattan, mentions Oregon’s Rogue Spruce Gin, and notes that spruce is showing up in beer, too, but it doesn’t seem that he has heard of newcomer broVo‘s Douglas Fir Liqueur. [UPDATE: I, in turn, hadn’t heard of Oregon’s Clear Creek distillery’s Douglas Fir Eau de Vie. Thanks to @WN1188 for the tip.]

We had the chance to sample a few of broVo’s wares over the summer (broVo’s Mhairi Voelsgen and Erin Brophy head out to the Washington State forests in summer, when they say the fir’s new growth’s notes of “citrus and earth notes are strongest”). It’s true: If you smell a tree in your drink, it wakes you right up.

If you’re making a face at the prospect of a sappy drink, know that the effect is largely thanks to your nose, rather than your tastebuds. Besides the Douglas Fir, broVo offers rose geranium, lemon balm, ginger, and lavender liqueurs, and all provide light, unusual overtones that prompt you to ask, “What’s in this?”

Brophy and Voelsgen (their last names, mashed up, provide the company with its name) are staking out drinks on the far side of the spectrum from, say, a heftily peaty scotch. Their liqueurs stay on the tip of your tongue, dancing away from any flooding of flavor. You can try out the lavender in a Saint Blanc at Oddfellows Café & Bar, the Douglas Fir in RN74‘s Emerald & Lime. A wide variety of local bars have put new broVo spins on familiar drinks. See what you think.

Natural Disaster Tips That Renters Need to Know

With a 7.7 earthquake to the north at Haida Gwaii and Hurricane Sandy working over the East Coast, it feels like a good time to have Arne (@nwquakes) talk with emergency management expert Carol Dunn (@caroldn) about a higher-risk group: renters.

What are some things renters can do to help protect themselves?

The impact from disasters can be reduced when communities work together in advance to identify and reduce risks, to gather supplies, and to train to work as a team to respond to disasters–but this can be harder to achieve in areas with a high number of people who are renting. In King County, there are a number of cities where more than half the people rent and not own. Because renting can lead to more frequent moves within the community, individuals may not feel vested in the neighborhood or community. And, local preparedness training efforts can be hampered by residential turnaround.

But as a renter, you can provide guidance to other residents—help teach them how to safely conduct light search and rescue/first aid, and do welfare checks after a disaster. Work with your management company or property owner to see if they will be willing to provide emergency information to new tenants: perhaps a simple handout with contacts listed, info on tools and other equipment stored inside the building and how to access them, emergency exits, nearby emergency shelters and medical aid, etc.

Reach out and talk to your neighbors. Share your telephone numbers, and a number of a contact who lives out of the area. If you are away from your home and a disaster strikes, you will be relieved that you have someone you can talk to who might be able to tell you the status of your location. This is particularly true if you are the caregiver for someone (person or animal) who can’t communicate on their own. Out-of-area contacts are useful after disasters if no one can return to their original location, and in the period immediately after a disaster, when local phone lines are more likely to be jammed than long distance lines.

Rental insurance is really important. The owner of the property will have insurance that covers their building, but not the things you have inside the building. Also, a lot of people don’t realize that property owners aren’t required to rehouse and repair units damaged by a natural disaster. I’ve seen situations where property owners simply declare the buildings too damaged to be used, so, since disasters are considered Acts of God, the residents are not allowed back, and not given any assistance by the property managers to find new housing.

Mind you, this can also be an advantage in a post-disaster period: if your unit becomes inhabitable your lease is no longer valid, providing flexibility that allows you to relocate to an area that isn’t damaged. This can make recovery faster and easier. But, studies have shown that being forced to relocate with no advance warning is emotionally hard no matter what the circumstances, so be sure to take advantage of opportunities to talk with counselors who have specific experience working with people who have undergone disaster related trauma.

Frequently multi-housing units are electric only—heating, stove, refrigeration. This makes a power outage in extreme weather hit harder. Have backup heating, lighting that doesn’t require any sort of flame or burning anything (candles, camp stoves, etc.), backup food that doesn’t require heat. Fire and carbon monoxide poisonings frequently happen in the period after the cause of the disaster have passed. Multi-housing units may depend on electric pumps working for water to reach apartments—and may not have water heaters in individual units. This makes water a more serious problem.

Do you have other advice?

The very nature of multi-family units mean that you are living with others nearby, so the mistakes of others can impact your life. Be sure to have a carbon monoxide detector with a battery backup. If a nearby family uses charcoal or a generator inside, creating odorless, invisible, dangerous gas, you will be warned that the gas is in the air. Don’t assume that your smoke detectors work: Test them yourself.

Often there are rules on whether you can bolt furniture to your apartment walls. If the rules say you can’t, work with other residents to try to influence the owners of the property to change the rules. In the meantime, consider the location of furniture that might fall down in an earthquake. If you can’t brace your furniture to the wall, you should at least move it away from places where it might tip over and hit someone (i.e., near beds, chairs, and couches). And you don’t want furniture where it can fall and block doorways and hallways and any other exits.

Unrepaired masonry (Photo: Carol Dunn)

Since we live in an area with flooding, landslides and earthquakes, it is important to spend time evaluating whether the place you want to live is at risk from each of these hazards. Your ability to make it through a large disaster will largely depend on how well the building you’re in holds up to the disaster. People living in buildings that are not in flood zones have radically different experiences during a flood than people living in buildings in flood zones.

Likewise, people living in buildings that were built to handle earthquakes have radically better chances of recovering quickly from an earthquake than people living in buildings that can’t withstand shaking. Take the time to evaluate your building and its risk of being damaged in a disaster. A benefit to renting is that if you learn you’re in a risky building, it’s easier to move to a safer building pretty quickly.

Do not make the mistake of thinking that landlords can’t offer units for rent that are in bad earthquake buildings, or located in an area known to flood. Local laws state that only new buildings, or buildings that have undergone major structural renovations, need to meet current earthquake codes. We have literally hundreds, if not thousands, of rental units in the Puget Sound region (See this Capitol Hill map–ed.) that are in buildings made with materials and techniques that cannot handle earthquakes well, or are in areas that flood.

Since there is no law requiring property owners to make such buildings safe for earthquakes and flooding, it is up to us as individuals to make sure we don’t live in them. Learn how to recognize buildings that don’t handle shaking well, or are in flood zones.

LINKS:

  • How to Secure Your Building
  • Three Days, Three Ways (pdf)
  • King County Hazard Maps & Data

Does “Demon Dreams” Sound Like Family Fare?

(Photo: Larae Lobdell)

There are those who are of the mind that children’s theatre should be the best sort of theatre, the most entertaining and highest quality. The sad reality is that children’s theatre is occasionally a dumping ground for sub-par efforts.

But the Ethereal Mutt production of Demon Dreams (at West of Lenin through November 10; tickets) does not need to be sub-par children’s theatre. Despite a large amount of simplistic verse that suggests an attempt to bridge conventions of hip-hop and kabuki, Tommy Smith’s script shows promise. In the hands of the right director that promise might well be realized, but AJ Epstein is not that director at this time.

The plot of Demon Dreams consists of a showdown performance of Japanese-inspired fables between three demons and the three women who seek shelter in their hut. The threads of the fables and their frame are smartly woven, but played with the broad style of acting endemic in children’s theatre. This almost works for the demons. Matthew Aguayo, Chris MacDonald, and Carter Rodriguez are freed to play and do so with strong commitment. Epstein has hamstrung Susanna Burney, Sara Peterson, and Heather Persinger with a calm, ethereal style that does not lend itself to the precise, shape-shifting transitions required by the script nor Smith’s awkward attempts at hip-hop.

Initially the hip-hop breaks suggest the weak rap of the Witch from the Sondheim/Lapine musical Into The Woods. Repeated forays into the form do not improve the impression, and by the third iteration we’ve stopped listening to the content in favor of cowering till the ordeal has passed. This is not entirely a problem of writing. Carter Rodriguez, who directed the music and created the instruments, manages to make the language and rhythm of his number entertaining. His unexpected syncopation works against the prevailing metric structure, reminiscent of Dr. Seuss or the white politician rap of the Warren Beatty film Bulworth.

The accompaniment to the verse is all live percussion using props and the minimal set pieces. A metal belt used as a kind of chime is especially clever and key phrases break into melody. This is all reasonably effective and pleasantly homespun but needs a stronger rhythmic grounding and more confident vocal performance.

Demon Dreams’ largest failure may be in its marketing. The form, content, and running time all suggest a work that invites the attention of families but it is marketed and run as typical theatrical fare with an 8:00 p.m. curtain. There are no scheduled matinees. All this would be forgivable if the production lived up to its potential as an entertainment accessible to all ages. Instead Smith, Epstein, et al., have opted to talk down to their audience, delivering children’s theatre style in an adult setting.

At Spectrum, Donald Byrd Gives “Needless Talents” Human Faces

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Cara-May Marcus and Ty Alexander Cheng in Spectrum's Theater of Needless Talents (Photo: Nate Watters)

Jade Solomon Curtis and Stacie L. Williams in Spectrum's Theater of Needless Talents (Photo: Nate Watters)

The Spectrum Dance troupe in Spectrum's Theater of Needless Talents (Photo: Nate Watters)

Alex Crozier-Jackson and Stacie L. Williams in Spectrum's Theater of Needless Talents (Photo: Nate Watters)

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More frequently in Seattle these days, you might catch yourself in an act of arts-going self-envy.

Where typically you might be reading about a blockbuster week in New York, or Edinburgh, or Avignon, and wishing yourself there, this week you could attend back-to-back performances of Kidd Pivot‘s The Tempest Replica (our review) at On the Boards and Spectrum Dance‘s Theater of Needless Talents (at the SDT Studio through October 28; tickets). These are both major works, and that’s following last weekend’s City Arts Festival, which itself set a new benchmark for arts installation and performance curation in Seattle.

This matters because however the arts move you–maybe they elevate, maybe they take you downtown–they can only move you so far, singly. But together, they can shift your center of gravity, fragment your perspective, create new harmonies. Urban density makes a city take place–arts density makes minds take place, just as if you were walking along a Jane Jacobs sidewalk, encountering artworks as you go. (She called it the “ballet of the good city sidewalk,” in fact.)

It’s an engine of serendipity, letting you tussle with Shakespeare one night, and a response to the Holocaust the next, and in so doing, witness the construction of a city of cities.

To bring this back down to earth, consider choreographer Donald Byrd’s statement that, with The Theater of Needless Talents, he wanted to get into how particular humans keep finding ways to commit atrocities against humanity. Rather than totalizing Nazi power, buying into the Reich’s myth, his work, iconoclastic as ever, breaks it into pieces: At the outset, members of the troupe recite the statistics of who killed, who was killed, where they lived–you see a spate of killings, setting off more killings. Contingency re-enters the history.

The stark set (designed and originally lit by Jack Mehler, with lighting here by Rico Chiarelli) is a bare floor, with a square box taped out, divided into tic-tac-toe format; above the dancers are blocks you surmise are inspired by the Berlin Holocaust Memorial. The plain curtain is sketched out in the style of Terezín artworks. That, in conjunction with the period-ish (for dancers’ purposes) costumes by Jessica Markiewicz is all that’s needed to create the dread and (fatalistic) joy of the era.

Byrd is fascinated in this piece, slightly revised for these performances, by what’s known as “negative capability,” defined variously, but most famously by Keats as an ability to meet manifold reality without filtering it through your identity first. For Byrd, the cabaret-style performances in the concentration camp Terezín are emblematic of this state of mind. Was it a courageous way to reclaim their humanity? A form of denial? Submission to Nazi whim? A morale boost? Was it all of these things?

In composer Erwin Schulhoff, who died in a concentration camp in Wülzburg, Bavaria, Byrd has found a fellow iconoclast and outsider, with a similar taste for experimentation in forms and genres. The work uses Schulhoff’s Duo for Violin and Cello (1925), Hot Music, 10 Studies in Syncopation; 5 Etudes in Jazz; Suites Dansant en Jazz; and the second movement from his Sonata for Cello and Piano (1914). Performers are pianist Judith Cohen, remarkably adept at bridging classical and jazz; and violinist James Garlick and cellist Rajan Krishnaswami, the last of Simple Measures, who drew bravos during their bows.

At times, Byrd has used dance to find the extremes in music; here, the music is in extremis, and his choreography, often tender. Where it startles–a dancer drops to the floor as if shot in the head, early on, though the dance continues–it is not dramatic so much as an intrusion of that reality. I think a book could be written about the difference (it is anti-dramatic to lose people randomly, when the murder is no mystery), so I have to leave it at that: the impact of subtraction.

Derek Crescenti acts as a mouthpiece for former camp members, and his forceful, direct delivery does not need any “for a dancer” qualifications. The remembrances of prisoners (when a guard told a child her mother was probably that smoke over there, coming out of that smokestack; when Mengele sewed the twins together; when an inmate realized he felt giddy at not having to worry about being put in a concentration camp anymore, since he was in one) set up the scenes that follow, though Byrd is very attentive to the music, so there is juxtaposition as much as dramatization.

Shadou Mintrone gets comedic dances, with Chaplinesque pratfalls, big grins, jazz hands–all tinged with the hysteria of someone driving themselves not to crack, to lift the spirits of others. Jade Solomon Curtis does crack–her index finger practices becoming a gun to her temple, again and again. Donald Jones, Jr., and Kate Monthy dance a torrid, bittersweet duet with an invisible third member, the prospect of separation. Bodies knot up, bend into impossible shapes, lock themselves to each other. Bodies shake, go limp with illness, exhaustion, and yet there’s always someone so hungry for human touch that they can’t let go, who lifts the body like luggage they’ll carry with them.

People were not always made into different or better people by circumstances: Ty Alexander Cheng is caught between two women, Mintrone and Cara-May Marcus, and if one falls, another is there to pull him in. Marcus has the expressive face of a silent movie star, and she is not always in control, but you can’t look away. Just as Schulhoff interpolated jazz, Byrd brings in popular dance, a few steps, a tango-like series. Hands slap the flat of the inner thigh like percussion, and punishment. Marcus curls into a ball in Cheng’s arms, but woman also support men, lift them up. In a short, heart-breaking sequence, Vincent Michael Lopez and Derek Crescenti portray a gay couple whose embraces are both a desperate solace and furtive.

At the close, Byrd revisits the earlier recitation of statistics, his troupe updating them into a roar of what sounds like ceaseless slaughter since World War II. In the program notes, he quotes President Obama: “Awareness without action changes nothing.”

Then consider the coincidence that, for Keats, the master of negative capability was Shakespeare, author of The Tempest. In Pite’s telling–which opens with Prospero (Eric Beauchesne) triggering Ariel (the incredible Sandra Marín Garcia) with the phrase “shipwreck,” and an astonishing cinematic spectacle of projected rain, billowing gauze curtains, and dancers rolling on a “pitching” deck–negative capability is humanity. Up until Prospero lets himself take in what is present before him, his frozen vengefulness (its origins told in an enrapturing shadow-puppet show) is in turn recapitulated in his puppetry of actual people.

Because this is an interpretation, I think there’s a case, as well, for considering the players to be wrapped in folio parchment, so that Prospero’s regained humanity emerging is doubled by Pite’s choreography emerging from the text, its story. There are other, structural reasons this is intriguing–the second half is all human blossoming, both in pain and regret and anger, and in joy and expression and freedom, in counterpoint to that shipwreck spectacle, and yes, I think it’s interesting which you prefer–but side-by-side with Needless Talents, there’s that framework again of cruelty, imprisonment, and humanity hard-pressed but unconquerable.

To see both of these works is to be impressed, literally, by them. They leave a mark, they layer maps onto you, leaving everything strange and yet more real than before. You are their conversation.

Rock and Roll Highlights from City Arts Fest 2012 (Photo Gallery)

Prism Tats.
Prism Tats.
Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound.
Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound.
Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound.
Fox and the Law.
Fox and the Law.
Fox and the Law.
Howlin' Rain.
Howlin' Rain
Howlin' Rain.
Ravenna Woods.
Ravenna Woods.
Ravenna Woods.
Ravenna Woods.

Prism Tats yowls for his supper. (photo by Tony Kay)

Prism Tats. (photo by Tony Kay)

Try saying it five times, fast: Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound. (photo by Tony Kay)

Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound. Then serve with electric Kool-Aid. (photo by Tony Kay)

Something in the Bay Area water breeds psychedelic bands like kaleidoscopic flies: Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound. (photo by Tony Kay)

Guy Keltner, frontman for Fox and the Law. (photo by Tony Kay)

Fox and the Law rock, they do. (photo by Tony Kay)

Guy Keltner of Fox and the Law. (photo by Tony Kay)

Still not sure if there's an apostrophe in there or not: Howlin' Rain at Barboza for City Arts Fest 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ethan Miller of Howlin Rain. (photo by Tony Kay)

Howlin' Rain. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ravenna Woods' Chris Cunningham. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ravenna Woods' Brantley Duke. (photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

(photo by Tony Kay)

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[See our previous entry for a more exhaustive report on City Arts Fest 2012, as well as more photos from the Fest.]

This year, City Arts Fest also utilized Neumo’s basement cousin Barboza, which meant that wristband holders could see two different sets (and a slew of bands) with a simple jog up and down a flight of stairs. I took advantage of the very convenient logistics to augment the hip hop action with a dose of rock.

Barboza’s Friday night line-up included ex Koko and the Sweetmeats guitarist and singer g. vandercrimp’s one-man new wave band Prism Tats (hyper, minimalist, yelpy, and really damned fun), San Francisco psychedelic rock collective Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound (think the Brian Jonestown Massacre, Cream, and Crazy Horse sharing tabs of acid and really raging on guitar), and Seattle monster-rockers Fox and the Law (a terrific heavy-rock band whose lead singer/guitarist Guy Keltner was a show all by himself). Friday Barboza headliners Howlin’ Rain (another SF outfit) balanced their stoner tendencies with a dose of Queen-style bombast and ambition.

Last but sure as hell not least, I forced myself to exit Neumo’s before Fresh Espresso’s reportedly-great set (sorry, guys) to catch Ravenna Woods pack the house at the Crocodile. There’s a reason the Woods have earned hosannahs from nearly every music journalist in the region: On a good night, they’re the best live band in Seattle, and last Friday was a very good night, indeed.

Keyboardist Sam Miller fleshed out the sound with some apt sonic cushioning, but for the lion’s share of the set it was just the band’s core. Fount-of-ingenuity Brantley Duke capably hopscotched between guitar, keyboards, and percussion, and Matt Badger’s brilliantly outside-the-box drumming propelled the music with haunting relentlessness. At front and center, Chris Cunningham remained a  guitarist of staggering skill and a frontman of evangelical energy. Oh, and they showcased some great new material from their forthcoming 2013, too. The band plays live around town with a fair amount of frequency around town, but based on their showing at City Arts Fest, it’s a fool’s game to take them for granted.

Checking Out the Homeless at Seattle’s Downtown Library

The photogenic Central Library (Photo: MvB)

“As a resident writer, I’d been given a special code to unlock the door to the Writers’ Room,” writes Robert Andrew Powell in the November issue of Harper’s Magazine. “About twenty people had access, but not many other writers made use of it.” He discovers that one reason, despite the free WiFi in the Seattle Public Library aerie, is that it’s fairly noisy there.

You may not think you’d need extra soundproofing in a library, but you wouldn’t be taking into consideration the “tour guides on the Observation Deck,” or “fistfights echoing from somewhere down on the fifth floor.” A central portion of Powell’s article, in fact, has to do with the daily use of the public library by homeless and mentally ill people, despite the many protestations by Deborah Jacobs, the library chief who led the campaign to build the Koolhaas-designed library, that it was not, repeat not, going to become a de facto homeless shelter.

Writes Powell:

Excessive grooming is prohibited in the library’s rules of conduct, but every day I saw teeth brushing, clothes washing, hair washing, and even hair cutting. In a seventh-floor sink one Saturday I found a nest of curly black pubic hair.

In the elevators, he jostles for space with people carrying their worldly possessions in rolling luggage; at closing time, he watches as an elderly man secures a warm bed by faking a medical emergency that draws EMTs; when he asks a librarian how it’s going, she bursts into tears (she’d just been notified she’d be part-time). He notices that the $165-million library has dirty windows, and the staff is furloughed. (A levy passed this summer should help stem the bleeding.)

Despite the title “In the Writers’ Room,” Powell concludes that ” there’s not really any place in the library where a person can work undisturbed.” (I tend to agree.)

Summarizing his article so briefly risks giving the impression that Powell was in tweeds and clutching his teacup as he wrote, but he’s just back from Ciudad Juárez, where “ten people are murdered every day,” working on his book This Love Is Not For Cowards. At the library, security guards kept checking to make sure he wasn’t homeless himself. His chronicling of the ways in which the downtown public library is unsuited for its use as a refuge for those who need more help than is found in books is clear-eyed and non-judgmental.

This raises the question of what the City of Seattle has done lately to offer the homeless a semblance of home, or in the case of the mentally ill or addicted, a home and treatment. A downtown hygiene center was remodeled a few years ago and quickly reached capacity. You may recall that in the spring of 2011, the City Council put the brakes on Mayor McGinn’s rush to find someplace for tent-city occupants to live that didn’t require them to move every other month. In October last year, the City Council found their answer: letting churches host tent cities for longer.

Some on the Council do feel a sense of urgency; Nick Licata has said that the Council wants to have no family unsheltered by the end of 2012. That goal may require a real Christmas miracle.