Lucid Dreaming
Making and Being
Beth E. Wilson shows why McWillie Chambers’s sketches are much more than “identity politics”.
View From the Top
Editor's NoteWe believe the revised Chronogram.com is the most comprehensive online cultural resource in the Hudson Valley, as well as an interactive forum for the Chronogram community. |
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Esteemed ReaderAs a teenager I worked at a health food store. The pay was so meager that even my employee discount didn’t count for much toward the expensive items in the store. |
Featured ContributorsJeremy Schwartz, Julia Taylor, Rebecca Wild Nelson, and Yulia Zaurubina. |
On the CoverDavid Perry, _Chronogram_’s art director, has a penchant for designing elaborate calendars. |
Chronogram SeenIn December, Chronogram sponsored the Sustainable Food Salon in conjunction with Fleisher’s Grass-Fed & Organic Meats on 12/14, as well as the inaugural Cafe Chronogram on 12/2. |
News & Politics
LiberaltariansWith the historical ties between libertarians and traditional conservatives fraying due to the GOP’s dogged pursuit of neoconservative policies, the possibility exists for liberals and libertarians to form an alliance of their own. |
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Beinhart's Body PoliticHappy New Year. It feels like a year of change and hope. Then I realize, with a sense of real astonishment, that George Bush is still president. |
This Modern WorldBiting wit and sharp observations. Funny, too. |
Community Notebook
Being Andy WarholIn the 1960s, Andy Warhol said that in the future everyone would be famous for 15 minutes, and artists have been pursuing their tick of the clock with ferocity ever since. |
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Weiner Takes AllPoughkeepsie’s Soul Dog is more than a gourmet hot-dog joint—it’s also a haven for people with food restrictions—dairy allergies, gluten intolerance, celiac disease—who still want to chow down on the quintessential American treat. |
Redemption SongKingston’s piano man, Adam Markowitz, brings some sweet relief to the Deep South. |
Whole Living
Navigating Your Way“Any activity, even everyday tasks including cancer appointments, can become a spiritual practice when done with love and awareness.” —Puja Thomson, After Shock |
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Inner Vision: Spiritually Speaking“Spiritually Speaking,” a radio show for progressives of a liberal bent, airs on Tuesday nights from 4-5pm on Vassar’s WVKR, 91.3FM. |
Weddings & Celebrations
Dream A Little ThemeThinking of giving your nuptial an offbeat twist? Shannon Gallagher is full of ideas. |
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Unconventional HoneymoonsThis unconventional honeymoon guide steers clear of Club Med, Six Flags, and the Europe of snow-globe Eiffel Towers and Mona Lisa tote bags. |
Music
Juice-Box JamboreeIn 2001, ex-Del Fuegos frontman Dan Zanes kicked off the kids’ music revival. Local acts like Dog on Fleas, Uncle Rock, and Elizabeth Mitchell are furthering the renaissance, crafting tunes even adults can love. |
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CD Review: ReadNex Poetry SquadIg’nant listeners might hear hate in some lyrics on this Middletown crew’s debut CD, but a deeper listen draws out the tough love earned by these lyrical flowsters. |
CD Review: Wet PaintAn artist’s paint waits to create, and the quintet Wet Paint has been laying down sonic strokes with wild abandon since 1995. |
CD Review: Michael MerendaQuiver is a quiet, decisively acoustic affair earthily infused with Merenda’s old-school folk lyricism and Ruth Ungar’s autumnal harmonies. |
Nightlife HighlightsHandpicked by local scenemaker DJ Wavy Davy for your listening pleasure. |
Egg CookerRobert Cray brings his band and his soulful, pleading vocals and effortless facility on the Telecaster to the Egg in Albany on January 13. |
Eaglesmith LandingFred Eaglesmith (aka the “Canadian Springsteen”) brings his Flying Squirrels to the Rosendale Cafe on February 1 to play his brand of blue-collar folk-rock. |
Vlad the PrevailerJazz pianist Vlad Girshevich will make his East Coast debut on January 13 with a solo recital at the Windham Civic and Performing Arts Center, part of the 2007 Windham Chamber Music Festival. |
John Schrader: Funny ManLocal musician and cancer survivor John Schrader contributed a track to I’m Too Young for This, a cancer benefit CD. Available exclusively to Chronogram readers. |
Arts & Culture
Will Work For Food“For the People: American Mural Drawings of the 1930s and 1940s” is an exhibition of paintings and sketches on view at the Frances Lehman Loeb Gallery. |
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Apocalypse AvertedMohonk Mountain Stage Reader’s Theater performs “Copenhagen” at Unison in New Paltz on January 26 & 27. |
Chip Off the Old BlockThe sculpture of Anthony Gennarelli is on view at Galleria Alba in Newburgh through February 28. |
Horses to WaterMark Doerrier’s documentary about the goings-on in an Orange County town, In the Land of Goshen, will screen at Yellow Bird Gallery on January 26 and Cafe Chronogram on January 6. |
Slide Show: Patrick MilbournStreamline Media’s Brian Branigan narrates on a new show by artist Patrick Milbourn. |
Film: Two Square MilesTwo Square Miles is a critically acclaimed documentary from NiiJii Films about the conflicts arising from the possible siting of a cement plant in Hudson, NY. |
PortfolioThe dead outnumber the living in Totowa, New Jersey, the birthplace of photographer Laurie Giardino. |
Film: Tempting God...Tricking the DevilKingston filmmaker Evan Leone’s “Tempting God…Tricking the Devil” is the gritty tale of a young couple’s unplanned pregancy. |
Lucid DreamingBeth E. Wilson shows why McWillie Chambers’s sketches are much more than “identity politics”. |
Food & Drink
Tippling Through Two LipsWhile recent transplants from Gotham might bemoan the perceived lack of amenities at local bars, one thing is certain: There is no shortage of places to get a drink in the Hudson Valley. |
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Books
Outsider ArtistJames Lasdun packs a prodigious literary pedigree. The London-born author has published two acclaimed novels and three collections apiece of short stories and poems. |
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Book Review: Tales from the Town of Widows & Chronicles from the Land of MenWry and episodic, Jaems Canon’s magical realist novel Tales from the Town of Widows opens in November of 1992, when Marxist guerillas come recruiting in tiny Mariquita, Colombia. |
Book Review: Maude March on the Run!In this sequel to her acclaimed The Misadventures of Maude March, part-time South Fallsburg resident Audrey Couloumbis keeps the dust churning, the bullets zipping, and the wry wit flying. |
Book Review: Ask the ParrotThe first few lines of Ask the Parrot parachute the reader into the middle of a manhunt in the backwoods of New England—and into the life of an incredibly dangerous man. |
Short TakesStart your New Year off reading with this quintet of diverse new releases by Hudson Valley authors. |
Horoscopes
Planet WavesThe beginning of the year is typically a time for divining the future, or making choices and commitments that change our destiny. |
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HoroscopesEric Francis Coppolino interprets the stars for January and takes a look at how the rest of the year will shape up astrologically as well. |
Parting Shot
WhitewashPainter Tona Wilson’s latest paintings, an homage to German Expressionism, are being shown through January 21 at Carrie Haddad Gallery in Hudson. |
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