Make More Art in a DOGE Eat DOGE World

Oh, history, that compulsive rerun machine, seems intent on dredging up its greatest hits—only this time, the sequelitis that’s plagued Hollywood has spread to Washington. But here’s the thing: When reality teeters on parody, art sharpens its blade.

Periods of upheaval have always been a crucible for creativity, pushing artists to confront the world’s contradictions and distill them into something resonant. When the center cannot hold, art steps in—not just as commentary, but as a means of cultural survival.

As history repeats, so does its creative backlash. We’ve crossed from “stranger than fiction” into full-on Mad Magazine territory. And for those with an anarchic streak and an artistic bent, this clusterf— is a gift.

Would punk rock or Basquiat have thrived stateside without the conservative cultural vacuum Reagan created? When Bush the First arrived, grunge bubbled up from the underground. When W metastasized into The White House, hipsters got vinyl back in circulation, and coffee and cocktails became art forms. Although comedians say they suffered under Trump because it’s impossible to satirize such a self-caricature, I urge them to “try harder.”

This is how art serves us in moments like these: It gives us the cultural vocabulary to understand our times. (If you can name it, you can blame it—and maybe even fix it.) Art is a flashpoint that clarifies where everyone stands, and inevitably, it becomes a timestamp by which we gauge how far we’ve come… or fallen.

More chaos births more creativity. Artists, this is your cue. Transform the wicked and banal with inspired urgency. Create fiercely, without restraint. Let the absurdity of our era be the unwelcome muse that sparks the masterpiece we never saw coming.

There’s no time for a manifesto, just a mandate: Make more art. Create to destroy. Burn it all down, rebuild it in your image, and, for the love of all things sacred and profane, Make Art Great Again.

Daedalus Howell is the editor of this paper and writes the Press Pass newsletter for creatives at dhowell.substack.com.

Pizza Week Delivers as Tri-County Event Begins

Welcome to the ultimate weeklong pizza party. Starting Jan. 8, select pizzerias across Napa, Sonoma and Marin will participate in the culinary collaboration known as North Bay Pizza Week

After pizza was more or less invented in Naples as a sauced-up flatbread, it took the globe by storm when American GIs returned from World War II, bringing a fondness for pizza that led to a Cambrian explosion of different forms we know now—from traditional Neapolitan styles to thin crust in New York, Detroit squares, sheet pans and deep dish variants in Chicago, to name a few. 

Then there’s California-style pizza, which features a thin, chewy crust and unconventional toppings that embrace the concept of fresh, local ingredients in a creative twist on pizza that’s unique to the state. Which brings us back to the topic at hand: North Bay Pizza Week.

I decided to get a headstart on the tri-county pizza party by visiting San Anselmo’s Creekside Pizza & Taproom a week early to get the inside, um, slice.

Pat Townley, the owner of Creekside Pizza & Taproom, was kind enough to give me a tour of his establishment ahead of Pizza Week. However, I imagine that for him, every week is pizza week. During my behind-the-scenes peek at Creekside, I learned that there is much more to the establishment’s success than the obvious outstanding pizza, beer and ambiance.

My behind-the-scenes peek at Creekside demonstrated how even the most perfect pizza is simply a catalyst, an artistic centerpiece for something much bigger than the pie itself. 

Pizza, I realized, is the vessel that serves as a reason to gather together. Pizzerias are an integral, irreplaceable neighborhood fixture, a central hub where locals gather and commune over a shared pie. At the risk of sounding cheesy (or maybe saucy), pizza is community. That’s what North Bay Pizza Week celebrates. Of course, it helps that it tastes amazing, too.

Pie Chart

Visit NorthBayPizzaWeek.com and @restoweeks on Instagram for specials, updates and additions.

Amici’s East Coast Pizzeria

1242 Fourth St., San Rafael. 415.455.9777. amicis.com

Ausiello’s Homeslice

5755 Mountain Hawk Dr., Santa Rosa. 707.595.3923. ausielloshomeslice.com

The Bird

4776 Sonoma Hwy., Santa Rosa. 707.542.0861. thebirdrestaurant.com

Campanella

7365 Healdsburg Ave., Sebastopol. 707.910.3030. campanellasoco.com

Cibo Rustico Pizzeria

1305 Cleveland Ave., Santa Rosa. 707.623.9906. ciborustico.com

Creekside Pizza & Taproom

638 San Anselmo Ave. San Anselmo. 415.785-4450. creeksidesa.com

Diavola Pizzeria

21021 Geyserville Ave., Geyserville. 707.814.0111. diavolapizzeria.com

Domino’s Pizza

1561 Farmers Ln., Santa Rosa. 707.578.6161. dominos.com

Downtown Barbecue

610 3rd St., Santa Rosa. 707.843.4830. downtownbarbecue.co

Fogbelt Brewing Company Healdsburg

410 Hudson St., Healdsburg. 707.473.8532. fogbeltbrewing.com

Forge Pizza

155 Gasser Dr., Ste. B, Napa. 925.927.3394. theforgepizza.com

Fox Pizza

158 Crescent Rd., Corte Madera. 925.212.3466. foxpizzamarin.com

Gabacool Provisions

4927 Sonoma Hwy., Santa Rosa. 845.800.3552. gabacoolprovisions.com

Homerun Pizza & Sports Bar

484 Larkfield Center, Santa Rosa. 707.527.6600. homerunpizzalarkfield.com

KIN

740 McClelland Dr., Windsor. 707.837.7546. kinwindsor.com

L’Oro di Napoli

629 4th St., Santa Rosa. 707.541.6394. lorodinapolisantarosa.com

Luma Bar & Eatery

50 East Washington Street, Petaluma. 707.772.5037. lumaeatery.com

Mama J’s

10101 Main St., Penngrove. 707.664.1515. eatatmamajs.com

Mary’s Pizza Shack

101 Golf Course Dr., Rohnert Park. 707.585.3500

3084 Marlow Rd., Santa Rosa. 707.573.1100

535 Summerfield Rd., Santa Rosa. 707.538.1888

maryspizzashack.com

Palisades Eatery

1414 Lincoln Ave., Calistoga. 707.942.9300. palisadeseatery.com

PizzaLeah

9240 Old Redwood Hwy. #116, Windsor. 707.620.0551. pizzaleah.com

Psychic Pie

980 Gravenstein Hwy. S, Sebastopol. 707.827.6032. psychicpie.com

Red Boy Pizza

459 Entrada Dr., Novato. 415.382.7711. 

2042B 4th St., San Rafael. (415) 258-0420.

redboypizza.com

Rocco’s Pizza

711 E. Blithedale Ave., Mill Valley. 415.388-4444. roccospizzamillvalley.com

Salt & Stone

9900 Sonoma Hwy., Kenwood. 707.833.6326. saltstonekenwood.com

Slow Co. Pizza

8197 La Plaza, Cotati. 707.796.5124. slowcopizza.com

Sonoma Pizza Co.

6615 Front St., Forestville. 707.820.1031. sonomapizzaco.com

Stonework Pizza & Tap

615 E. Washington St., Petaluma. 707.981.7360. stoneworkpizza.com

The Red Grape

529 First St. W, Sonoma. 707.996.4103. theredgrape.com

The Village Italian Restaurant

1200 Grant Ave., Novato. 415.898.2234. thevillageitalianrestaurant.com

VJB Cellars

60 Shaw Ave., Kenwood. 707.833.2300. vjbcellars.com

Lights Up: North Bay Theater Companies Raise Curtains on 2025

Marin theater companies have their collective fingers crossed that audiences will continue to come out and support them in 2025. The New Year in theater begins with a classic comedy, a musical adaptation of a Sundance Film Festival favorite and a political drama that was banned for decades in its native England.

The Novato Theatre Company opens things up in the county with their production of Noël Coward’s Present Laughter. Written before Blithe Spirit but not produced till after Spirit’s record-breaking London run (it was interrupted by a little thing called World War II), it’s a light comedy about a harried, narcissistic actor in the throngs of a mid-life crisis trying to leave for a tour despite multiple distractions. Carl Jordan directs the show, which opens on Jan. 23. novatotheatercompany.org 

Ross Valley Players go from farce to folk and follow up December’s well-received production of Coward’s Blithe Spirit with James Valcq and Fred Alley’s The Spitfire Grill. Based on the same-titled Lee David Zlotoff film from 1996, which won the Audience Award at that year’s Sundance Film Festival, the musical adaptation premiered off-Broadway in 2001. It’s the story of a young parolee trying to restart her life by taking a job at a small-town diner. Small towns being small towns, there are secrets to be revealed.

Besides the addition of music, there are some significant changes to the film’s story, and the show apparently underwent another round of revisions last year. So even if you’ve seen it before, maybe you haven’t seen it before. The show opens at the Barn in the Marin Art and Garden Center on Jan. 24. rossvalleyplayers.com

Marin Theatre brings perhaps the area’s most interesting production to their stage in early February with their presentation of Harley Granville-Barker’s Waste, a show written in 1906 that had a troubled production history.

Granville-Barker’s play about sex, religion and politics was refused a license to be performed in Great Britain in 1907, and a revised version didn’t get a fully staged, public production in England until 1936. Possible reasons for the ban vary from the unacceptability of addressing the issue of abortion on stage to the outrageousness of portraying British political leaders in a less-than-flattering light.   

A.C.T. artistic director emerita Carey Perloff makes her Marin Theatre debut with Marin Theatre’s artistic director Lance Gardner taking on the lead role of a British politician mired in scandal. The show begins previews in Mill Valley on Feb. 6. marintheatre.org

Marin audiences have three very distinctive productions from which to choose to satiate their live theater appetites. Be a glutton, and check out all three.

Your Letters, 1/8

Punchline or Prejudice?

Harry Duke’s Dec. 25 “2024’s Top Torn Tix, SoCo’s best/interesting theater of the year” included POTUS, etc. “Or Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying To Keep Him Alive,” a “feminist farce” (which he referred to as “pretty darn funny”) that undisguisedly discriminates against men as all cast members are female as are both the playwright and director.

This misandrist and blatantly sexist play promotes anger and resentment toward men. Would you endorse a theater production entitled “VPOTUS, etc. Or Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Men Trying To Keep Her Alive,” that portrayed a female VPOTUS as a buffoon and only employed male actors, writers and directors?

And the script is not kind to women either. Laura Foti Cohen of The Larchmont Buzz wrote, “POTUS is a brutal reminder that even women can make women look bad…Despite being in positions of power, the women are simpering and foolish, morally bereft and addled, immature and flailing. They are quick to anger and violence. Their first reaction to trouble is to cover their own butts. 

“They don’t know enough to check for a pulse to see if someone is alive. One is encouraged—and eagerly agrees—to perform oral sex to solve problems…virtually every character is herself a dumbass, or a milquetoast, a deceived sad sack, or an amoral creep. Rather than trying to keep their leader alive, none seem sorry at the idea of his potential death at their hands,” Foti Cohen continued.

Oh, and I see that you employ the director of the play at the Pacific Sun as a freelancer.

Talk about “group think.”

Joe Manthey

Petaluma

We appreciate your letters to the editor—send them to le*****@******an.com and le*****@********un.com . Letters may be edited for clarity and space.

Elise McRoberts, “The Hashinista” and Fire Dancer

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I first heard about Elise McRoberts, aka “The Hashinista,” when I was working on a few projects in the cannabis industry some years ago. (She may not have realized it, but I had been to one of her very successful events, appropriately called High Society.) 

Then, having seen her fire dance at a party in Sausalito just a few months ago, I had to get in touch.

What do you do? It’s always super hard for me to answer this question because I do so many different things. I suppose, professionally speaking, I am an entrepreneur, the creator and founder of Hashinista, a cannabis and wellness lifestyle brand. But I am equally passionate about being a hula hoop and fire dancer, performing monthly in Mill Valley’s own Boomerang Cabaret (@boomerangcabaret) and at other events around the Bay Area.

Where do you live? Mill Valley.

How long have you lived in Marin? Seven years.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work? Road biking, dancing, or, ideally, sailing.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them? On a cruise from Sausalito through Mill Valley to Stinson Beach, so they’d see the charm of the small town(s) and experience the grandness of the redwoods and the epic coast, all in one day.

What’s one thing Marin is missing?

Cannabis dispensaries and lounges, of course. But generally, nightlife and options for dining, drinking and socializing after 10pm. 

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites? It’s OK to share this beautiful land and county with more people. 

If you could ask anyone to join you at dinner, whom would you invite? Super tough call between Jerry Garcia and Rihanna.

What’s some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago? Be your most authentic, wild and free self. Trust your intuition, follow your heart and passion, not some idea of what (you think) society wants you to be. 

What’s something that 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy? Hopefully, the way this society worships wealth and celebrity culture.

Big question. What’s one thing you’d do to change the world? 

Dismantle the patriarchy. Can I say that? If not, then for sure: Legalize cannabis, psychedelics and all plant medicine.

Keep up with McRoberts at both @elisemcroberts and @thehashinista on Instagram.

Nish Nadaraja was on the founding team at Yelp and posts random stuff at @IveGotNissues. He’s also a dad to a cool teen and a little baby girl.

‘Winter Wonderettes’ in San Rafael

No matter how you look at it, opening a Christmas show four days before Christmas is odd.

While I am writing this on Christmas Eve, you are most probably reading it after the wrapping paper has been discarded and the tree needles have begun to drop. But then again, everything about the script for Winter Wonderettes, Roger Bean’s holiday-themed follow-up to his Marvelous Wonderettes, is a little bit like holiday lights on Boxing Day. Sure, they’re still pretty, but the magic has been stripped away.

That isn’t to say that Bay Area Music Theatre’s show (at the new Marin Shakespeare downtown space through Jan. 5) isn’t a good production. Director Robert Currier has done an admirable job of casting. The ensemble is tight, and all four actors have a stage presence that is only surpassed by their voices. Costumes by Ashley Garlick are – please excuse the pun – pitch-perfect, and the set by Jackson Currier makes excellent use of the space. It is a technicolor explosion of Christmas that feels as dated as the songs being sung, though it is only a little under 25 years old.

Set at the 1968 Harpers Hardware Holiday Happening, all four girls from the original Springfield High Song leaders are back. Missy (Anna Vorperian) is a newlywed, Suzy (HarriettePearl Fugitt) is heavily pregnant, Betty Jean (Heather Mae Steffen) is newly dumped, and Cindy Lou (Gillian Eichenberger) is searching for purpose. Things quickly go wrong when Santa Claus can’t be found, and a big holiday surprise is not what anyone expects.

As in the original, there is audience participation that, depending on the audience, can be fun, funny, or creepy. However, the decision to let Fugitt be the one ensuring that the audience sings along is a brilliant call. Fugitt always brings something a little off-kilter to the characters she plays, which makes her characters more intriguing and/or scary in the best way possible. In fact, all four performers are both excellent actors and singers, which is rare no matter what and even rarer considering how silly this script is.

The bottom line is If you are looking for high art or thought-provoking theater, this isn’t for you. But if you’re just looking for a fluffy bit of Christmas nostalgia, this might be the glittery ticket. Of course, Christmas itself will be nostalgia by then, so bring your suspension of disbelief and leave your cynicism at the door. 

Bay Area Music Theatre presents ‘The Winter Wonderettes’ through January 5 at Marin Shakespeare Company’s Center for Performing Arts, Education, and Social Justice at 514 4th Street, San Rafael. Thurs – Sat, 7:30 pm; Sun, 1 pm. $15-$40. 415.388.5208. marinshakespeare.org 

Your Letters, 1/1

Woke Folk

Funny how “woke” became a term of derision. The folks who think that “woke” people are foolish ignore the greedy hands thrust deeper and deeper into their pockets ever since 1980. They want to go back to sleep. 

Many Americans now find it’s too much work consciously choosing to serve their own real interests. They’d rather be distracted by the billionaires who refuse to pay their fair share. The richest among us are happy to take advantage of voters who can’t seem to wake up and stay that way. 

Being “woke” is a sign of intelligence and energy and not a badge of shame. And while we’re talking about it, how does a nation that’s cloaking itself as “Christian” ignore the fundamental teachings Jesus left us? “Suffer the children” and “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” seem to have been packed away as irrelevant. 

I’m an atheist who believes fervently in the Golden Rule. It was and remains a revolutionary advance in human thinking, urging us to move on from the retaliatory spiral of “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.” Let’s treat each other better. Money changers are not the moral leaders they pretend to be.

Christopher Emley

San Rafael

Broligarchy

I liked the Republicans better when I was a kid, when all the party stood for was racial hatred and exclusion, government policies that favored wealth and privilege, and rapacious behavior toward the natural environment. 

The new Christian nationalist broligarchy country club gated community, let’s all own a Tesla culture, is a little too greasy for me, thanks.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

We appreciate your letters to the editor—send them to le*****@******an.com and le*****@********un.com. Letters may be edited for clarity and space.

Culture Crush, 1/1

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Nicasio

Luxury Liner

As Gram Parsons once inquired in song, “Do you know how it feels to be lonesome?” Well, one won’t find the answer on Friday, Jan. 3, at Rancho Nicasio when Bay Area musicians perform “Luxury Liner: The Gram Parsons/ Emmylou Harris Tribute Show.” The lineup for the evening includes Jill Rogers and Myles Boisen from Crying Time, Loralee Christensen and Paul Olguin of the Loralee Combo, Candy Girard, Kevin Russell, Sean Allen, Dave Zirbel, Tim Gahagan from The Familiar Strangers and Sonoma County’s own Doug Jayne. This is an annual celebration of the iconic country rock Parsons and Harris duo.

Dinner reservations are available from 6 to 8pm, with music starting at 7:30pm. Tickets are $25 in advance at ranchonicasio.com. The venue is located at 1 Old Rancheria Rd., Nicasio.

Sonoma

Mic Man

“Garrison Keillor Tonight” is an evening of stand-up, storytelling, audience song, and poetry delivered live by the living broadcast legend himself. Keillor, known for the radio show, “A Prairie Home Companion,” has been busy in retirement, having written a memoir and a book of limericks, and is at work on a musical and a “Lake Wobegon” screenplay. Now, he’s on tour and coming to the Sebastiani Theatre in Sonoma with an act that includes sung sonnets, limericks and musical jokes, and a thread running through it on the beauty of growing old.

Doors open at 6:30pm, and the show starts at 7:30pm on Thursday, Jan. 16. Tickets are $60 in advance and $75 the day of the show. They are available at events.sebastianitheatre.com. The theater is located at 476 1st St. East, Sonoma.

Healdsburg

Doodle Dharma

One may ease into the New Year with a doodle and a deep breath. Artistic doodling—also known as “zen doodling”—is the soothing, meditative practice of creating abstract art with repetitive strokes. Think of it as stress relief disguised as scribbles, resulting in designs that are both stunning and strangely addictive to draw. Supplies are included, so all one needs to bring is their inner calm (or the promise to find it). The doodling magic begins at 4pm, Thursday, Jan. 16, at Quail & Condor, 149 Healdsburg Ave. in Healdsburg.

Tickets are $85, which covers a blank sketchbook, templates and the ticket to a more zen version of oneself. parkerhillprovisions.com/products/artistic-doodling.

Corte Madera

Romantasy Alert

As Publisher’s Weekly crows, “Romantasy readers won’t be able to turn the pages fast enough.” This is a stellar endorsement for Rachel Howzell Hall, a pioneer in the fantasy subgenre that combines romance and fantasy elements into a pithy portmanteau. The author brings her latest book, The Last One, to Corte Madera’s Book Passage next week. As the store promotes the work, “The world is dying around her. Enemies lurk in the shadows. And she can’t remember a thing about who she is…in New York Times bestselling author Rachel Howzell Hall’s gorgeous, otherworldly blend of fantasy and adventure.”

Howzell Hall will be joined in conversation by writer Samantha Downing at 6pm, Thursday, Jan. 9, at Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. The event is free.

The Second Coming

‘Darkness drops again’

By William Butler Yeats

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) was an Irish poet, dramatist and writer considered one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature.

Rebels With a Baton, Renegade Orchestra Set to Surprise

Describing themselves as an “orchestra for everyone,” the Renegade Orchestra is taking the stage on Sunday, Jan. 12. 

Doubling down on the fact they are indeed for everyone, the show will be at 2pm, which avoids a late evening on a school night. However, this show has a clever catch—the location won’t be revealed until one purchases a ticket.

Renegade Orchestra is led by local musician Jason Eckl, who, when he’s not touring with bands like Dirty Cello, Death and Taxes Swing Band and the San Francisco Yiddish Combo, is the leader of the rock band program at Cal State East Bay. 

If one didn’t know there was a rock band program at Cal State East Bay, they are not alone. According to Eckl, “This is a new program that seeks to prepare students to be employed as rock musicians when they graduate. It’s a pretty unique program—imagine learning the ins and outs of how to be a rock star!” 

When asked about how the idea for a rock and roll orchestra for all came about, Eckl dove in on the feeling that orchestral performances can be a bit stiff. “My wife is cellist Rebecca Roudman, who is a member of a number of Bay Area orchestras [including both the Oakland East-Bay Symphony and the Santa Rosa Symphony], and this means I’ve been to a lot of orchestra concerts,” he said.

“Often, while watching her concerts, I thought about how many barriers there are to enjoy a standard classical orchestra. These include the formality, the hard-to-enjoy modern pieces, and the unspoken rules about how and when you can applaud,” Eckl continued.

While Eckl is a trained conductor and says his main instrument is the guitar, it’s refreshing to hear a frank answer from someone intricately involved in the orchestra scene. 

“With the Renegade Orchestra, we remove all of these barriers—we want people to relax and have fun, perhaps even dance. The orchestra loves mid-song cheering. Our concerts feel like rock and roll shows, not sleepy orchestral concerts. There is improvisation, joyful playing and some surprises,” he noted.

Those who have not heard Renegade Orchestra before might be surprised. The group covers a variety of rock classics, inspiring the Mercury News to proclaim, “The Renegade Orchestra would rather tackle Hendrix than Handel.” 

Indeed, the band’s setlist often includes Hendrix’s “Purple Haze,” Iron Butterfly’s “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida” and Creedence Clearwater Revival’s classic “Proud Mary,” just to name a few. A real highlight is their rendition of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” as well as local and worldwide faves Metallica with a cool cover of “Enter Sandman.”

Since Renegade Orchestra is such a large group of working, professional musicians, how difficult is it to get everyone nailed down for rehearsals and shows? Eckl says there is not as much cat herding as one would expect. 

“Getting everyone into the same place at the same time is always an interesting task, but what makes it easier is that these are professional musicians who make a living playing music at a wide variety of events,” he said. “They are tied to their calendars and can tell you where they will be playing, often over a year in advance. The members of the Renegade Orchestra are also chosen not only for their playing ability and responsibility but also because they are nice and fun people who rock out on stage.”

In terms of what this different style of music means to Eckl and the rest of the Renegades, he said, “One of the best parts of Renegade Orchestra is the diverse and exciting musicians that make up the group.

“These are folks who have spent years and years becoming amazing musicians, and in a standard orchestra, they are often treated as interchangeable parts—dressed the same, seldom individually acknowledged and easily replaced. With the Renegade Orchestra, our players finally get the cheers and appreciation they deserve as individuals and as part of the group,” he continued.

“They all went to the top music schools, and everyone has heard them on Hollywood soundtracks, Grammy award-winning albums and in wedding string quartets, but in the Renegade Orchestra, they really get to let their hair down,” noted Eckl.

Speaking of music soundtracks, readers may have heard some of Eckl’s music in the soundtrack of Pacific Sun editor Daedalus Howell’s feature film, Werewolf Serenade. Of the experience, Eckl said, “The movie has a cellist in it, so I wrote some new music for the cello scenes. I’ve written music for a lot of independent films that never saw the light of day, so it was exciting to see Werewolf Serenade on the big screen.” (One can hear Eckl’s contributions to the soundtrack by streaming it on Amazon Prime Video.)

Curious about the secrecy in terms of the location of the Jan. 12 performance, Eckl would only say the show will be “someplace near Mill Valley.” When pressed if the secrecy was due to the size of the band, the type of music, fearfulness of the word “orchestra” or a variety of reasons, Eckl replied, “It is always a challenge to find a place that will host a rock and roll orchestra. Sometimes it is the size of the stage, but more often it is an issue that venues don’t want to book an orchestra.”

He added a great point: “Since we aren’t the standard Marin style, Grateful Dead cover band, we had to seek out a place that wasn’t afraid of orchestral rock. The secret theater was willing, and we will be the first orchestra on their stage.”

As for the show on Jan. 12, Eckl is excited, saying a few reasons to come out include “a reasonable ticket price, easy parking and plenty of chairs.” Renegade Orchestra also promises “no sleepy pop songs, no overly-lush jazz standards, but the pure unbridled fury of what an orchestra can truly do.”

For more information about the band, including other upcoming shows throughout the Bay Area, as well as tickets for the Jan. 12 show, which are $25 at their website, see renegadeorchestra.com.

Make More Art in a DOGE Eat DOGE World

Oh, history, that compulsive rerun machine, seems intent on dredging up its greatest hits—only this time, the sequelitis that’s plagued Hollywood has spread to Washington. But here’s the thing: When reality teeters on parody, art sharpens its blade. Periods of upheaval have always been a crucible for creativity, pushing artists to confront the world’s contradictions and distill them into something...

Pizza Week Delivers as Tri-County Event Begins

Welcome to the ultimate weeklong pizza party. Starting Jan. 8, select pizzerias across Napa, Sonoma and Marin will participate in the culinary collaboration known as North Bay Pizza Week.  Click for North Bay Pizza Week Offers & Info After pizza was more or less invented in Naples as a sauced-up flatbread, it took the globe by storm when American GIs returned...

Lights Up: North Bay Theater Companies Raise Curtains on 2025

Marin theater companies have their collective fingers crossed that audiences will continue to come out and support them in 2025. The New Year in theater begins with a classic comedy, a musical adaptation of a Sundance Film Festival favorite and a political drama that was banned for decades in its native England. The Novato Theatre Company opens things up in...

Your Letters, 1/8

Punchline or Prejudice? Harry Duke’s Dec. 25 “2024’s Top Torn Tix, SoCo’s best/interesting theater of the year” included POTUS, etc. “Or Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying To Keep Him Alive,” a “feminist farce” (which he referred to as “pretty darn funny”) that undisguisedly discriminates against men as all cast members are female as are both the playwright...

Elise McRoberts, “The Hashinista” and Fire Dancer

I first heard about Elise McRoberts, aka “The Hashinista,” when I was working on a few projects in the cannabis industry some years ago. (She may not have realized it, but I had been to one of her very successful events, appropriately called High Society.)  Then, having seen her fire dance at a party in Sausalito just a few months...

‘Winter Wonderettes’ in San Rafael

No matter how you look at it, opening a Christmas show four days before Christmas is odd. While I am writing this on Christmas Eve, you are most probably reading it after the wrapping paper has been discarded and the tree needles have begun to drop. But then again, everything about the script for Winter Wonderettes, Roger Bean’s holiday-themed follow-up...

Your Letters, 1/1

Woke Folk Funny how “woke” became a term of derision. The folks who think that “woke” people are foolish ignore the greedy hands thrust deeper and deeper into their pockets ever since 1980. They want to go back to sleep.  Many Americans now find it’s too much work consciously choosing to serve their own real interests. They’d rather be distracted by...

Culture Crush, 1/1

Nicasio Luxury Liner As Gram Parsons once inquired in song, “Do you know how it feels to be lonesome?” Well, one won’t find the answer on Friday, Jan. 3, at Rancho Nicasio when Bay Area musicians perform “Luxury Liner: The Gram Parsons/ Emmylou Harris Tribute Show.” The lineup for the evening includes Jill Rogers and Myles Boisen from Crying Time, Loralee...

The Second Coming

‘Darkness drops again’ By William Butler Yeats Turning and turning in the widening gyreThe falcon cannot hear the falconer;Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhereThe ceremony of innocence is drowned;The best lack all conviction, while the worstAre full of passionate intensity. Surely some revelation is at hand;Surely the Second Coming...

Rebels With a Baton, Renegade Orchestra Set to Surprise

Describing themselves as an “orchestra for everyone,” the Renegade Orchestra is taking the stage on Sunday, Jan. 12.  Doubling down on the fact they are indeed for everyone, the show will be at 2pm, which avoids a late evening on a school night. However, this show has a clever catch—the location won’t be revealed until one purchases a ticket. Renegade Orchestra...
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