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Archives for November 2013

An International Celebration of Christmas – Open House

November 29, 2013 By Megan Cooper Leave a Comment

Is it a crèche or a nativity set? Whatever you call it, you’ve not seen them like this before!

The origin story of the Christmas display many of us have beneath our tree or on the mantle dates back to 1223 when St. Francis of Assisi (then a deacon) visited the small town of Grecio and had no room to preach in the small church. He brought the community to the hillside and created a live nativity with a baby, hay in a manger, animals and more to share the story of the first Christmas. Since then, Christians around the globe commemorate the birth of Christ with these displays with their own artistic flair.

crecheUD’s Marian Library has one of the largest collections of international Nativities in the United States. Each year new sets are designed and presented in multiple exhibits within UD’s Roesch Library. This year, you can see the collection during a special Thanksgiving Open House celebration (and on display through January 26).

To Attend the Open House:
Saturday, November 30 from 1-5 pm. The afternoon will include four exhibits, creative children’s activities, refreshments, live entertainment, The Stable Store, and a place to catch the football games and scores. It is free and open to all.

The collection will be on display continuing through Saturday, Nov. 30, 2013 – Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014creche1

The collections of the University of Dayton’s Marian Library/International Marian Research Institute include thousands of nativities from around the world that reflect a variety of customs and traditions. Depicting the story of Christ’s birth and presence, these crèches are expressions of how Christianity has shaped the culture and faith of people all over the world.

During each Christmas season, they select a new group of sets from of the large and diverse crèche collection and explore new themes shown in exhibits on campus and throughout the community. The featured exhibits, shown on three floors of UD’s Roesch library building, have become an anticipated annual event – changing every year. Exhibits are unveiled and activities begin the Saturday after Thanksgiving during our popular open house event. Designed for all ages and featuring many activities for children, this day has become a Thanksgiving tradition for families. After the turkey has been eaten and the Friday shopping has been completed, this event is a perfect ending to Thanksgiving and beginning of the Christmas season.

For complete information:
www.udayton.edu/libraries/manger
Curious how different countries display the Nativity? Click here for some of the international creches in the UD collection and notice how each country makes it their own – like the kangaroo in the Australian set or the rooster in sets from Latin America.

Also available: The Digital Archive of the Creches.

 

Filed Under: Community

Feast for the Community

November 28, 2013 By Megan Cooper Leave a Comment

feastThere’s a bit of a storied history of the event that has come to be known as the Feast of Giving. Previously sponsored by a corporate foundation, in 2008 they decided to give it up as a major event, but Dayton wasn’t ready to let it go quietly. In fact, there was quite an uproar. Now, a true community effort – with the combined support of  Dermatologists of Southwest Ohio, Stratacache, Lastar, RTA, ABC22/FOX45 and hundreds of partners and volunteers – this is the fifth year that it has been the Feast of Giving.

I had heard about this free Thanksgiving meal, but never really understood what it was. Without taking the time to learn about it, I assumed it was a large-scale soup kitchen set-up. Just like I wouldn’t take advantage of the generosity of a service organization feeding the homeless on any other day, I sure wasn’t going to go in for a meal on Thanksgiving.

I sure was wrong.

The Feast of Giving, Thanksgiving in Dayton is an event that reaches out to bring the entire community together. It is a dinner, a feast2celebration, a community event based on the following principles:
To provide a dinner for anyone that might be spending the holiday alone.
To provide a dinner for those that are homeless or less fortunate.
To provide a dinner for anyone who wants to attend.

I talked to a couple people who work behind the scenes to make the event happen. Leslie Barrow, from the Dayton Convention Center – the host of the annual event – shared that over the last five years it really has become a huge community event. Complete with live music by the Chris Bowman Band, guests eat, drink, dance and celebrate the day. Kids have their own room with special kid-themed arts, crafts, tattoos, music and more. Plus, Ident-A-Kid will be there providing their services.

Continuing the family theme, for those who need – gloves, hats and coats are available to keep kids and adults warm as winter blows into Dayton.

Although there are many services for those who may need extra support, this is a community party for every. Barrow shared that in the past, she’s visited a friend from church each Thanksgiving. When Barrow asked about this year, her friend said, “I’m not cooking this year – I’m coming (to the Feast of Giving) with you. I’m 65; I want to volunteer and enjoy the meal and the day.” The fact that it’s a party for the whole community is reflected in the numbers – the number of guests coming through the lines has doubled in the last 5 years. Barrow says, “it’s a wonderful melting pot of people – a true reflection of this country and our community.”

Last year, they broke a record with over 8,500 attendees and they’re prepared for all that and more. The volunteer slots are all taken – but you can still enjoy the meal and the day. There’s room at the table (and on the dance floor and in the crafts room and at the karaoke stage) for you and your family. Join in the community celebration. With the party happening from 11AM – 2PM, you can enjoy lunch with your neighbors in the region and dinner with your family.

feast1Kathy Shearer from Ovations Food Service (the catering company that handles all the food preparation) shared that the Feast is a “true community event.”  Shearer has noticed many changes since the event has become the “Feast of Giving.” She lists so many reason why there’s a great positive feeling from everyone – no ticket is required, it’s all-you-can-eat, there are plenty of events and everyone has a great time. Is it a family event? Shearer shared the story of a multi-generational family of 28 people who came to the Feast because there wasn’t room in anyone’s home to get that many people around a table. There’s plenty of room at the Feast!

RTA buses are free from anywhere to downtown until 4PM, and guests who drive can park in the Transportation Center Garage for free.

Over 500 volunteers come together to make the event a reality. But don’t plan on deciding to help out at the last minute – all the volunteer slots have been filled since late September by families, church groups, organizations, individuals and friends. People are still calling, and the team has to turn away volunteers every year. (If you really want to get in on the action of serving, House of Bread and many other great service organizations accept volunteers 365 days/year.)  Donations to this great event are accepted through a fund at The Dayton Foundation.

Starting at 2AM, the Ovations staff will be there to start the cooking in preparation for an 11AM doors open. What will they be cooking? Here’s the feast by the numbers:

  • 8,500 served in 2012 – and room for more in 2013
  • 2,617 lbs turkey (that’s a ton + a quarter!) donated by Cooper Farms
  • 800 lbs cole slaw
  • 2,000 lbs green beans
  • 2,000 lbs cranberry sauce
  • 2,000 lbs mashed pot
  • 2,000 lbs stuffing
  • 100 gallons gravy
  • 10,000 dinner rolls
  • 10,000 ice cream cups
  • 1,300 pies (fruit, sweet potato, pumpkin and chocolate cream)

Mike-Sells, Wallingford, Produce One, Victory Grocers, I Supply, and Ovations all donated food to make the event happen. Leftovers will go to House of Bread and St. Vincent de Paul to continue the spirit of giving.

Shearer shared that the Feast of Giving is an event that everyone should experience. “When you leave at the end of the day, it’s very humbling – it’s awesome. You don’t even care that you worked Thanksgiving. People are having a blast.”  Join the party between 11AM-2PM on Thanksgiving.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Feast of Giving

What a Gas! AMBUCS Chili Cookoff Winners Announced

November 27, 2013 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

Jimmie's Ladder 11 Chili was the Peoples Choice for # 1 (served with a jalapeno corn muffin)

Ladder 11 was the People’s Choice Winner (served with a jalapeno muffin) Click to Enlarge

The people have spoken at the 27th Annual Charity Chili cookoff and Casino Night for AMBUCS.  And they were tooting more than their horns the next day!

For the 2nd year in a row, JIMMIES LADDER 11 was the people’s choice for best chili.   BUT NOT SO FAST MY FRIENDS ….. THE FOOD ADVENTURES CREW with THE BIG RAGU have their takes on the chili contest and it may surprise you.

Your humble Food Adventurers were asked to be special celebrity guest judges and we ate every station, every bowl and left no pot unturned.  We also had hot dogs, coney dogs, wine, beer and soft drinks.  The frigid evening was PERFECT for chili tasting.

There was spicy chili, mild chili, chicken chili, no bean chili, .. there was even a gumbo !   Topping options were cheese, onions, hot sauce some had sour cream ! …  So Poopsie, how do you like your chili ?

 

THE BIG RAGU’S WINNER: Tie between THE BRUNCH CLUB and THE TROPICS

The Brunch Club had an amazingly sweet chili that was delicious.  The Tropics entry was just as addicting.  It was a  with a hearty, traditional chili with great flavors.

 

Honorable Mention to the other great chili’s: Longhorn Steakhouses’ Brisket chili, and of course the chili from Jimmie’s Ladder 11.  The Spiciest chili was Harrigan’s chili.  Other great, hearty traditional chili’s included Elsa’s Restaurant and Slyder’s Tavern.   Buckin Donkey Grille’s traditional chili was great, and they even served chicken sausage gumbo that was to die for.  Even amateur entries like Chef Daddy’s Firehouse won hearts with their chicken chili.

 

The real winner here was the AMBUCS charity who raises money to help disabled children and adults in the Miami Valley.  It is a local chapter and the funds stay local to help those in need in the Dayton area.  If you have never attended this event, it is a complete blast.  There was chili, beer, hot dogs, wine and pop (all you can eat).   There were casino games like blackjack, showdown, dice games and spin the wheel games.  The upstairs area even had a Bingo area !

 

Chef Daddy’s Firehouse White Chicken Chili (click to enlarge)

It was a true Food Adventure and Gamblers paradise!   You have 12 month to get your gastro-intestinal tract in shape for this one.  Don’t miss this event next year, it truly was a gas !

Want more photos and tongue in cheek fun from the one and only FOOD ADVENTURES CREW?  Then  “like” us on FACEBOOK by clicking HERE.  

We are not food critics, we are two “foodies in our forties” who love to eat !    This is not our job, this is our hobby, so we don’t have an agenda !  That’s why our stuff is original!  Often imitated, but never duplicated you can find us every week right here on Dayton Most Metro !

As always, check out our gallery photos below for some amazing food shots !

[flagallery gid=68]

Filed Under: Food Adventures Tagged With: #daytonfood, #daytonfoodies, AMBUCS, atrium grilol, beans, Beer, Big Ragu, bob medlin, Brandell, brisket, brunch club, Buckin Donkey, casino, charity, cheese, chef daddy's, chief, Chili, cook, cook off, cookoff, Dayton, DaytonDining, Elsa's, firehouse chili, gambling, Gary Leitzell, gumbo, hot, hot dogs, jankovich, Jimmes, judges, jumbalaya, Ladder 11, longhorn, longhorn steak, maggie, off, onions, quinn, sean mckown, Slyder's, spicy, steakhouse, sugar valley golf club, Taste, tavern, The Big Ragu, tropics

‘The Gifts of the Magi’ Review – Dayton Theatre Guild – A Heartwarming Delight

November 27, 2013 By Russell Florence, Jr. Leave a Comment

magi

The Dayton Theatre Guild’s production of “The Gifts of the Magi” features
Back row, l to r: Kelli Locker, Jared Mola, Bobby Mitchum, Shawn Hooks
Front row, l to r: Dave Nickel, Megan Kuchan (Contributed photo)

The Dayton Theatre Guild provides an absolutely charming production of Randy Courts and Mark St. Germain’s 1984 off-Broadway musical “The Gifts of the Magi.”
Set in New York City circa 1905 and based on O. Henry’s short stories “The Gift of the Magi” and “The Cop and the Anthem,” the musical, delicately directed with precision by Kathy Mola, nicely balances two engaging, straightforward tales. The primary story chronicles the love and hardships of Jim and Della Dillingham, a sweet couple struggling to make ends meet as Christmas approaches. In order to provide each other with a present, both make a great sacrifice, which ultimately reflects the spirit of the biblical example set by the Magi. The secondary, more consistently lighthearted account involves Soapy Smith, a gallantly good-natured bum whose only desire is to be arrested in order to obtain food and shelter during the holidays. The wonderfully meaningful, life-affirming journeys of Jim, Della and Soapy, combining rewarding themes of faith, family, forgiveness, friendship and goodwill as narrated/guided by amiable newsboy Willy Porter, epitomize the true significance of the season.
In addition to grasping the harmonic challenges within the tuneful score, particularly accented with beguiling ballads, Mola’s cohesive cast offer highly enjoyable portrayals. Shawn Hooks and Meagan Kuchan, making their Guild debuts, are very compatible as the Dillinghams. The mature Hooks, given a poignant moment of reflection in “How Much to Buy My Dream,” doesn’t diminish Jim’s serious frustration of being unemployed, a topical element deeply felt today as it did when the “Magi” story was first published in 1903. The gentle Kuchan delivers her most touching performance to date as the devoted, encouraging Della. Some of her best scenes stem from Della reminding Jim that money isn’t the foundation of a home and pondering life with a different hairstyle in “The Same Girl.” As Soapy, who quips at one point that he’s been “cursed with good fortune,” the delightful Dave Nickel treads carefully in terms of the music, but his humorous character choices are endearingly sound. Versatile partners Jared Mola (in his local musical theater debut) and Kelli Locker terrifically embody different personalities and disguises as The City: Him and The City: Her. As Willy, Bobby Mitchum is so effortlessly excellent in his Guild debut I’m tempted to brand this production as simply “Bobby Mitchum: Live at the Guild.” Willy isn’t a flashy or grueling role, but surely requires a considerably strong tenor with a thoroughly appealing ability to connect with the audience. The magnetic Mitchum, blessed with a voice that soars while containing enormous warmth, unquestionably fits the bill right at the outset leading a gorgeous rendition of the alluring title song, one of many numbers propelled with beautiful flourishes courtesy of music director Luke Williams.

In addition, costumer Linda Sellers supplies striking period attire. Blake Senseman is responsible for an equally attractive set evoking turn of the century New York. Courtney Wheeler’s choreography is apt and colorful, specifically “Christmas is to Blame.” Nick Vanderpool’s suitable lighting design and Deirdre Bray Root’s fine properties are also noteworthy components of this utterly heartwarming treat.

“The Gifts of the Magi” continues through Dec. 8 at the Dayton Theatre Guild, 430 Wayne Ave., Dayton. Performances are Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 5 p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. Act 1: 45 minutes; Act 2: 40 minutes. Tickets are $18 for adults, $16 for seniors and $11 for students. For tickets or more information, call (937) 278-5993 or visit online at www.daytontheatreguild.org.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Reviews, The Featured Articles Tagged With: dayton theatre guild, The Gifts of the Magi

A Primer To Help You Shop Local

November 27, 2013 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

images-6This weekend, ditch the Black Friday crowds and go local. Many independent Dayton businesses will participate in Small Business Saturday, offering shoppers a unique shopping experience away from the malls.

“Small Business Saturday is the opposite of Black Friday,” said Amelia O’Dowd, co-owner of Brim on Fifth. “No camping out, no lines. Great retail, lunch and drinks with your family and friends.”

16 businesses in the Oregon District will be participating. Each business will offer unique sales, products, and discounts for the event. The Downtown Dayton Partnership is holding a window display contest starting on Friday that will last the holiday season.

“Downtown Dayton is home to one of the largest collections of independent retailers in the region,” said O’Dowd. “In addition to great shopping, restaurants and bars will offer gift certificates… Wellness/yoga studios and salons will be offering gift certificates and merchandise.”

sewdayton_logoAt Sew Dayton, 261 Wayne Avenue, pre-purchase classes for the sewing enthusiast. If sewing isn’t your thing, premade aprons, toiletry bags, bunting and beautiful fabrics are available for purchase. Sew Dayton is offering 25% off Riley Blake fabrics, $10 Oliver & S patterns, and new Brother Sewing Machines. Artwork by Erin Pryor is available for purchase; 10% of art sales will be donated to Hannah’s Treasure Chest.

Brim on Fifth, 464 E. Fifth Street, has the largest selection of hats in Ohio.  Brim features American made Bailey’s of Hollywood, hats worn by the likes of Sinatra and most recently seen on 156530_229922907134749_268433418_nNBC’s The Voice. There is a hat for every lady and every style; try a cloche by Betmar for a classic look. Recherche NYC and Grace Tokyo have unique and edgy styles for the adventurous. The jewelry and accessories are all handmade and curated by O’Dowd and husband Brian Eastman. Jewelry by Son of Sailor and Dea Dia are beautiful options. Bow ties by Fox & Brie will add professorial flair to any man’s wardrobe.

Stop by Clash Consignment, 521 E. Fifth Street, for original apparel, including the popular Gem City hoodies and t-shirts. Fulfill your vintage fix at Feathers, 440 E. Fifth Street. The vintage lover will swoon over their selection of clothing, fixtures, lamps, toys and other oddities. Get to Feathers early to buy up their selection of bad Christmas sweaters for your next holiday party.

Stop by Spice Paradise, 8 Brown Street to pick up spices, exotic ingredients and gourmet flours that your foodie friends will love. Hop next door to Hick’s Barber Shop and get your bearded friend a gift certificate for a straight razor shave.imgres-1

At the St. Clair Lofts, American Pi, 41 St. Clair Street, offers American made apparel, including denim, T-Shirts, and dresses. The soothing DayLight candles make an excellent gift for even the pickiest friend. At Green Baby, 31 St. Clair Street, pick up cloth diapers and holistic products for mom and baby. Green Baby also offers a selection of mom and baby consignment, for the budget minded parents.

imgres-2Looking for all-in-one shopping convenience? Stop by the  2nd Street Market, 600 E. Second Street. Grab bottles of maple syrup at Dohner’s Maple Camp.  Flavored olive oil and balsamic vinegars from the Olive Tree are a guaranteed hit. Spring for a leather watch by Vintageliz and art at Decoy Art Boutique. Grab a bottle of wine for your next holiday party at The Wine Gallery. Need an eco-friendly gift? Try the Dayton Urban Green shop.  Don’t forget the furry friends in your life. The Friends of the Humane society booth has treats, toys, and gifts for cats and dogs.

logo-2After a long day of shopping, relax with a cocktail at Lily’s Bistro, 329 E. Fifth Street. The Elderflower Gin & Tonic is sure to clear your mind.  Need a pick me up after all that shopping? Head to Ghostlight Coffee, 1201 Wayne Avenue.  Try a single origin pour over coffee. If you forgot someone on your list, Ghostlight also offers gift certificates, bags of coffee, gift baskets and coffee makers.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Shop Small, Small Business Saturday

To Canal Street: With Love, Dayton

November 26, 2013 By Juliet Fromholt 20 Comments

photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

On Saturday night, Shrug will take the stage at 308 East 1st Street and when they are finished, the space will no longer officially be called Canal Street Tavern as founder Mick Montgomery’s association with the venue he founded over 30 years ago will end.  Right now reports say that the space will continue to host live music under its new ownership, and both fans and musicians will keep careful watch in the months to follow to see how this new reality for the space fits into our music community.

photo courtesy of Greg Simerlink/Grog

photo courtesy of Greg Simerlink/Grog

Like so many of us, Canal Street was the cornerstone of my musical education with side lessons in friendship and community.  I learned to be a listener in that room whether I was jumping up and down screaming along to the Luxury Pushers or finding truth in Tod Weidner’s lyrics in a room paying such close attention, you could have heard a pin drop.

I’ve had the pleasure of hearing Mick tell the story of the founding of Canal Street a few times.  Once, I even got to sit on a panel with he and Jerry Gillotti about the Dayton music scene, an honor I still question whether I deserved.  Mick certainly succeed in his goal of creating a listening room, a place for music to be appreciated without pretense, but I wonder in those early days in 1981, if he knew that he was also creating a family as tight-knit and diverse and downright quirky as anything you’d see in a movie but a thousand times better.  This family would celebrate weddings on stage, send some of our best and brightest out into the world with one last show and welcome newcomers from near and far with open arms.

It’s in this spirit that I’ve invited some of my musical family, individuals who I met either directly or indirectly because of Canal Street, to share their thoughts, their memories and to say thank you to Mick for the time and energy he’s given our community.  It won’t be forgotten, and things we learned onstage and in the audience will carry on wherever we find ourselves playing or listening.

**UPDATE:  an online fund has been set up to help with bills from Mick’s Montgomery’s recent hospital stays.  More information on how to donation via the link.

 

photo by Juliet Fromholt

photo by Juliet Fromholt

Eric Cassidy

I played my first Musician’s Co-op, when I was 15 years old. Brian Wells, Thadd Brittain, and I played a bunch of Velvet Underground, Smashing Pumpkins, and Pearl Jam covers. We were probably terrible. Regardless, we were on a real stage, with real lights, PA, sound tech, listening audience…it was unbelievably cool. With King Droopy, Shrug, Human Cannonball, and solo performances, I’ve since been on that stage more times than I can count. KD did the Dayton Band Playoffs a couple of times. We got more votes than we deserved, and got to play with some great bands that blew our minds, and taught us about etiquette and connecting with audiences. When we got knocked out of the competition, we started getting show offers from the guy who counted the ballots. Enter Mick Montgomery.

If you love Canal Street Tavern, you love Mick Montgomery…the man behind the curtain. He has channeled passion, charm, elbow grease, and unrivaled stubbornness into the improbable anachronism that is CST. As a result of this work, he provided the community with an incubator for young performers, a reliable source of gigs for local bands, and intimate access to some of the best acts in the world. I’m very grateful to have been in this time and place to enjoy the spoils of Mick’s labor. I have shared that stage with incredible performers, who have often become incredible friends. I can’t express how much joy CST has brought into my life.

You want to sit 10 feet from Arlo Guthrie? Done.
You want to see Glenn Tilbrook stand on your table with no PA, singing your favorite Squeeze song? Done.
You want to hear Jay Bennett dish about Jeff Tweedy pretending to be sick in the Wilco movie (whether that’s true or not)? Done.
I could name drop all day. Just as special to me are the many weddings, birthday parties, and unforgettable events that I got to see and be a part of. The memory of hearing the words “This is for Gregg Spence” still sends waves of emotion over me.

Mick has also provided a place for like-minded and not-so-like-minded music lovers to get around the normal bar nonsense, and focus on the music. It’s such a great place to be a fan or performer; there are no TVs, blenders, games, or anything else that makes noise. If it’s a quiet performance, loud talking is not tolerated. The patrons enforce the rules as often as the staff. It’s just the right thing to do. Would you have a conversation during a movie? My CST friends replaced most of my school friends. The club is at least partly responsible for my wife and I getting together. Maybe it was the right time. It was certainly the right place. How many happy relationships can draw a path back to this room?

In return for giving us this special place, Mick has received very little.  He never made a fortune, sold out, or compromised (much) for anybody. I hope that he feels satisfaction of doing things his way, and the love of an obviously appreciative group of fans and friends. I can’t thank him enough.

 

photo courtesy of Greg Simerlink/Grog

photo courtesy of Greg Simerlink/Grog

Greg Simerlink/Grog

All Good Things…

Yeah, I know but still! I for one love change and really am not a fan of tradition, but Canal Street Tavern has been such a part of my life I have a hard time seeing it cease to exist as it has for so very long.

Among some of the most memorable moments for me:
– Playing my first show with The Oxymorons!
– Being the last place I played on stage (11/24/12)
– Having my first wedding & reception there (Mick gave away the bride!)
– Went on the first date there with my current wife
– Playing on stage to bring in the New Year
– Held several benefit shows there for my old zine Mutant Renegade
– Played my first sold out show

I’m sure I’ve played on that stage over 100 times and have seen hundreds of other bands there over the years. I’ve made countless friends with patrons, fans, employees & musicians at Canal Street. I have shared so many wonderful experiences there I cannot think anywhere else can ever replace it.

So, Mick it was great while it lasted. Thank you for doing so much for the Dayton music community. I for one really appreciated everything you did even if I didn’t always say it. Also thank you to all of the wonderful friends who have worked at Canal Street over the years.

R.I.P Canal Street Tavern…

 

Photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

Photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

Tim Pritchard

Canal Street Tavern is where I cut my teeth as a musician, bought my first (legal) drink, played my first sold out show, and basically came of age.  As a kid, it was the only place I wanted to hang out and my folks were gracious enough to make that happen once and a while.  I may have even snuck in under the radar from time to time on my own.  My teenage band landed a gig there when I was 17 and I accomplished what had perhaps been my most lofty goal to that point of my life.

I could go on and on about all the shows I’ve played and seen there since, but I’ll just mention a few of the moments that I’ll never forget.
-Playing Tod Weidner’s beat-to-hell Takamine for the first time at a Musician’s Co-Op, followed by “guess what I just got to do” type phone call to my best friend who’d moved to Nashville to go to school.  We both kind of idolized Shrug at that time.
-Flyaway Minion’s EP release in 2006 to a sold out bar sponsored by Camel (what the fuck?).  Crazy night.  Incredible.
-Seeing Chris Hillman and Herb Pederson a few years ago.  Still perhaps the best performance by a two-piece I’ve ever seen and completely enthralling as Hillman is a person hero of mine.
-Talking to Mick Montgomery for well over an hour, after closing time, about Donavan’s visit to Canal Street.

 

E. Ryan Roth

My fondest memory of Canal Street

I had been to my first show about a month earlier.  I had snuck into a Velour/Shrug show.  Shrug was just a 3 piece at the time, but I instantly was a fan. I liked the music, but the lyrics were pure poetry.  Such playful use of language used to paint Hemmngway-esque verbal pictures.  On my way out, an old hippy approached me.  I figured I was busted, but instead he asked me if I liked what I heard.  I of course said “yes”.  The man then told me if I liked that, then I should tell my parents to bring me back the next week to see a “Songwriters in the Round”.  I found a friend who was going the next weekend ( a member of Velour named Patrick Himes) who’s Dad would claim me as his own.  The next Sunday I entered the club legit for the first time in my life.  The first set of 3 songwriters wasn’t bad.  One guy wrote joke songs that were mildly funny, the other two were country guys….not my cup of tea.  At that point, I felt like the old hippy had steered me wrong.  Then set 2 happened.

photo by Sara Lynne Walsh

photo by Sara Lynne Walsh

The old hippy, now known to me as owner Mick Montgomery, introduced possibly the best set of music I have seen to date….and this includes Radiohead shows.  A possible giant named Tod Weidner was to play first.  I recognized him from the previous weekend.  A quite petite lady sat next to him.  Her name was Jayne Sachs.  Next to her was a pretty exotic looking lady named Phyllis Turner.

The sounds and words I was exposed to for the next hour rival the thrill of a skydive.  Tod played a song called “Drowsy” that instantly forced me to buy his album.  Jayne followed with a song called “Waiting”.  A beautiful melody and heartbreaking song that forced me to ask to buy her album as well.  She gave me both of her CDs for the price of 1 instead.  Phyllis lacked song titles that evening, but her voice cut through the other two like ginsu. “Disposable Soul”, “My Problem, “Special Neurotic Boy”, “On the Edge” and more followed.  I talked with Tod, possibly the most intimidating experience of my life the same night.  He and Mick told me about their musicians co-op on Tuesday nights if I liked what I heard that night.  In the years to come I would play a hundred or so times on that stage.  Some big shows, some for just a few people, some shows with bands, a ton of shows solo including a few dozen times getting to play a Songwriters in the Round, but like anything else in life, nothing burns brighter than the first time.  Thanks to Mick realizing that the 16 year old kid that just snuck into his bar was there for the love of music and not to get drunk, he made a fan for life.

Thank you sir.  The universe owes you at least three.

 

Chad Wells

photo by Ian Bonnett

photo by Ian Bonnett

You hear about those places… Magical musical venues where magical musical things happened – CBGB’s, The Fillmore, The Ritz, The Whisky A Go Go, The Troubador, First Avenue, The Bluebird Cafe, The 40 Watt Club and so many more – some still presenting music several nights a week – many fallen to history. Dayton, Ohio has Canal Street Tavern.

My first time stepping inside that building was around 1992 and I’ve played that wonderful little stage many times and whether the crowd was spilling over onto the stage and into the street or if we just played to a half dozen other singer songwriters at a Musician’s Co-Op, there has always been magic in that room. The historical location is likely beholden to some sort of energetic power spot or maybe it’s just the apparent amount of true love poured into that old wood through the years by Mick Montgomery and the myriad of musical spirits that have drifted up those steps and onto that stage.

There’s something about Canal Street that very few people understand – I had the awakening while attending a show at the Ryman in Nashville – all that old wood and organic material is, nightly, vibrated with the sounds that are pushed through the air and it retains an impression of that energy. Those old church pews and hard wood floor really are haunted by the songs that have been played there. If everything that exists is made of the same subatomic space stuff and the illusion of solidity is really just particles and waves acting and reacting at different frequencies then you have to imagine the intricate patterning inside that structure that we’ve come to know as Canal Street Tavern. Just like the graffiti and stickers that wallpapers the tiny backstage area, the sounds and spirit and love that has been shared and received at that particular longitude and latitude will be forever there. Whether the bank papers state the same name or even if that building eventually falls to the ages and some new, strange creature erupts from that corner… You will always be able to hear – or feel – the music that has been concentrated into that piece of ground. Thank you to Mick Montgomery and the countless staff members who made the room feel like home and kept the music playing.

 

photo courtesy of Shelly Huce

photo courtesy of Shelly Huce

Tod Weidner

Memories of Canal Street: Can’t choose. Won’t choose. Here are some, though. Meeting and becoming good friends with Peter Mulvey. Iodine, any time they played there. Christopher Corn’s co-op set after Tim Taylor died. The 93 and 95 Playoffs. The Monster Hops. Bill Frisell. Opening for the Aquarium Rescue Unit. Meeting Sharon A. Lane within minutes of walking in there for the first time. Opening for Richard Lloyd and listening to him reminisce about roller skating with Cheetah Chrome to a star-struck me and Jamy Holliday. Bill Kirchen. Opening for Ronnie Dawson. James McMurtry. Filling in as a janitor for a week for Will Dalgard. Going to the Century Bar and helping put in the bench seats along the walls. Hammel On Trial. Brian Cates. Settling up with Mick Montgomery and having him call me an “old rounder” (the highest compliment one can get from him). Songwriters In The Round. Gregg Spence. Hosting Co-op. Flying by the seat of my pants onstage more times than I can count. Being so pissed off at my performance one night that I punched a hole in the dressing room wall (it’s still there- I can show you). Hell, THE DRESSING ROOM WALL (and trying to remember where the perfectly-camouflaged electrical outlet is on it). Meeting girls. Meeting my wife. Weddings. Wakes. Learning how to be a musician and person over the course of 22 years and literally thousands of gigs on that stage.

 

courtesy of Shelly Hulce

photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

Gladgirl Shelly Hulce

I invented myself there, many times over. And I witnessed the same of others.

It was my life in my early 20’s, then I dropped out of the scene to do the pregnancy/parenting thing.  When I was released from “baby jail,” I started revisiting my old identity to see if it was in tact.  Not long after re-entry, a band I was in entered the band playoffs. One night after a playoff session,  Mick pulled me in the office saying, “Good to see you back, kid. You look happy.” I said “Yeah, I guess I’ve come  full circle Mick.”  Mick, as usual, put things in perspective with one sentence “ Life isn’t one big circle Shell, it’s lots and lots of circles. You have lot’s of circles ahead.”  Mick is one of a few “gurus’ in my life. He and the late Greg Savage (Dingleberries founder) have big notches on the timeline of my life.

CST is home base for me. I was there watching the birth of GBV.  I was there watching the birth of The Breeders.  Had we only known what that would mean to the rest of the world….!

That room was everyone’s living room. The transition is like having your parents move out of your childhood home.  I always went there for comfort. I always felt safe, and there was never any trouble. It was my home. Not a lot of people have that luxury in their towns, a safe place you can go and be with your “family”. A very forgiving place where, if you fail, people help you back up. When you succeed, they lift you on their shoulders. This is where we got our news, and where we “made” our news.

Canal Street is a state of mind, a culture. It’s in Dayton’s DNA. (And most of Dayton’s DNA is in there as well.)  I witnessed many couple meet there for the first time. I’ve attended weddings there, and witnessed some break-ups and the awkward re-entry after those break-ups. That goes for bands too, not just couples.

From the outside, the place might not look like much, but for those who live and breath Dayton music, it’s romantic and gritty and real. It’s to Dayton what CBGB was to New York. I have many heroes locally, and in my mind they will always be bathed in the red glow of the CST stage. Some have aged and dropped out, others moved on to international fame, some are from the more current circle. I watched my heroes grow up there too: Tod Weidner, Jesse Remnant, Eric Cassidy, Dan Stahl. We, as a family, celebrated  the birth of many new voices, and clung to one another as some of our favorites fell silent.

If you’ve ever seen CST in the day time, or with all the lights on, it’s a real shocker. It’s like seeing your favorite performers at the pool or something. It messes with my perception. I like the dreamy mind set it created for me. I got most of my hug therapy there!  For me, the most beautiful and iconic piece of Dayton art is the dressing room of CST. The saying “If these walls could talk…” is fitting to say the least.

One personal favorite memory of mine is being in the Playoffs in 2003 ( I could be wrong on the year) .The band I was in, Ruetschley, advanced a few rounds and it was fun. We decided that I would transfer over to synth, and I was scared to death, having never played keys in a band before. So I took clear tape and wrote the chord on the keys and had a cheat sheet for which patch numbers to dial in for which songs. We had in ear monitors too (looking back, that was insane for that stage). So the first night I am to play keys in this band, during Playoffs, I put the monitors in my ears and I could hear my heart racing and every breath I took. This made me even more nervous, like I was ready to walk on the moon or something. Knowing I had all these notes and keys written was my safety net and my only source of comfort…..THEN they turned the house down and the red stage lights on. I couldn’t read a damn thing. I was terrified, but I faked my way through the first song. When it hit me that all the people in front of me were on my side, I was okay.

The biggest surprise to me when it came to playoffs was how supportive the bands were, at least the year I was in it.  When we would beat a band in a round, they would rally their fans to come support us, and we did the same when we got beat. It was then that I realized that Mick was a leader in building community.

As an events promoter, Mick taught me a lot too. I cut my teeth there by throwing shows. He knew I was there to learn. He has a lot of grace for people who care to keep learning. Must be the old school teacher in him.  I appreciated his love for antiques and whimsical things too. The styles of handwritten signs, the file they are kept in, the boards of THIS WEEK and  COMING UP that flank the stage…. I love those. Sharon’s piano, Rev. Cool’s big head, Woody Guthrie big as life, the crows nest with chairs that always ruined your pants, the creaky floor….. I love it all.  It’s home.

I love it that I could stand inches away from a guitar player and watch every pedal being used, read every note and setlist they had on the floor and feel the breeze come out of their amps. It’s magic and church and love and sex one song at a time.  I can truly say I have had a religious experience there many times over, especially with the Buffalo Killers. Those shows were every bit as Pentecostal as any alter call I experienced as a child raised in the church. The stained glass windows were no accident if you ask me!

 

photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

photo courtesy of Shelly Hulce

Steven Gullett

November 30th is the last show at Canal Street Tavern. I worked there for 10 years and played onstage in 7 different bands, I grew up in that bar. It will always be a major part of who I am as a person musically and otherwise. I hope it gets a great sendoff. Thanks for everything Mick.

 

Angelle Haney Gullett

I knew about Canal Street as soon as I was old enough to read. The weekly ad in the newspaper seemed like a window into a rarefied and exotic world where people made lives around the most important thing in the world – music. I used to clip those ads, even though I didn’t know any of the bands, and paste them into a scrap book. It was the world I desperately wanted to be a part of.

When I was in grade school, my friend’s mom was a jazz and blues artist. I thought Sharon Lane was just about the most glamorous, amazing woman I had ever seen, and she worked at Canal Street Tavern.

When I finally got my job at Canal Street, I was neither glamorous nor amazing. I was 19, an unemployed high school drop out, and scared beyond belief because I had no idea what I was going to do with my life.

Canal Street Tavern had all my answers, even if I didn’t know it.

I watched my friends enter, lose, and eventually win the Dayton Band Playoffs. I got my high heels stuck in those hundred-year-old floorboards. I learned how to say no. I learned how to say yes. I met the man who would become my husband and the people who are my lifelong friends. I made the decision to get my GED. I started college. I waited tables, worked the day bar, remembered people by the drinks they ordered and saw hands-down the greatest live music of my entire life, night after night.

And I mean, I saw everything. Because Mick booked live, original music six nights a week, I found myself listening to everything from folk to alt-country to zydeco to Hawiaan slack-key guitar, all against the never-ending thrum of local punk, metal, and rock n’ roll. I only worked there for three years, but I kept coming back to see music, several nights a week, until I finally moved away. When I wanted to make my first movie, of course it was about Canal Street’s Musician’s Co-Op and how special it was.

Today, I live, work and see music in Los Angeles. I would like to say that I didn’t know how special Canal Street, and by extension the Dayton music scene was until I got away, but that would be a lie.

It was obvious to me that I was part of something very special the first time I stepped through those doors. I knew that bands like Iodine and Braniac and Shrug and Real Lulu and The Mystery Addicts were giving me the best nights of my life, even as it was happening.

And I owe that to Mick Montgomery, who always allowed 18 year olds in, because that’s the age when music matters to you so much you can’t survive without it. Who never let a blender, a pool table or a television screen through the door. Who always cared about the music first, the bar second, and the business third. Who made it very clear that, even though I was a cocktail waitress, I did not have to take a drunk’s disrespect, and neither did the people on stage.

Mick’s children are all grown now, and like them, I grew up in Canal Street Tavern. It made me who I am. It showed me what was possible, if people cared enough to make it happen. Whatever happens to the building and the bar, that’s a legacy that will grow and live on.

That’s Mick’s gift to all of us. And I will be forever in his debt.

Angelle Haney Gullett
Canal Street Tavern, Class of ‘94

This is for Mick, Sharon, Steven, Jamy, Amy, Heather, Rob, Cates, Stacy, Melissa, Elizabeth, Katy, Liz, Sandra, Doug, and Kimberly.

[yframe url=’http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGkN2pjKGWw’]

Filed Under: Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Canal Street Tavern, Dayton Music

The Show Must Go On- The Rubi Girls- One Night Only!

November 26, 2013 By Lisa Grigsby 2 Comments

11204_812160505476522_680203231_nThanksgiving- the kind of holiday where you slave in the kitchen, spend time with the family, eat turkey for dinner, express thanks for the great people in your life, eat turkey sandwiches, shop, eat more turkey,  watch football and start to really wonder how you are related to those people!

So lets face it, by Saturday night you’re going to need to get out! May we suggest you make plans to head downtown and catch The Rubi Girls as they make their traditional Thanksgiving appearance with The Show Must Go On.   For those of you who haven’t seen one of their shows (gasp)  we should warn you- they are a little risque (and sometimes as the night goes on they can get just downright nasty (but in a good way)!

Grown men dressed as women, dancing, singing and performing in a way that will have you laughing and screaming!  Together over 25 years The Rubi Girls perform only to raise funds for AIDS related causes.  Having to helped raised over $1,000,000  with their shows and calendars, The Rubi Girls have a cult following in Ohio.

Rumor has it that this may be the largest cast for a Rubi Girl Show ever!  With over 14 Rubi Girls, who range from their 20’s to their 50’s,  the “ladies” will  perform to holiday classics as well as some of the latest pop hits.  The costumes alone are works of art. and you always have to wonder what the newest version of The Rubi Dance will be…

VIP seating, which is the front 5 rows is already sold out, but you can reserve your general admission tickets online for just $10, they’ll be $15 at the door- if still available.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

UE-CWA Union Hall- doors open at 7pm, show begins at 8pm
313 S. Jefferson St., Dayton, OHBenefitting AIDS Resource Center Ohio
 

Filed Under: Charity Events, Getting Involved, The Featured Articles Tagged With: ARC Ohio, Show Must Go On, The Rubi Girls

Restaurants Add Holiday Hours and Opportunities To Dine With Santa

November 25, 2013 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

A few of our local restaurants have added additional hours of service or special holiday events.  When planning any large outings, we highly suggest you call the restaurant to check availability and make reservations.   Enjoy:

 

Carvers Steaks & Chopscarverslogo

535 Miamisburg Centerville Rd, Dayton, OH 45459

adds lunch Monday – Friday from 11:30am -2pm  Dec. 2 -20

Reservations suggested 937-433-7099, private room available

 

Hawthorn Grill –  will open Mondays in December from 5-9pm, reservations encouraged (937) 298-2222
1222 E Stroop Rd, Dayton, OH 454291005941_633429216685168_679072608_n

Dinner with Santa on Mon, Dec 2nd – Drop in and take a cozy seat by the fire for a great meal before you tuck everyone in for a ‘long winter’s nap’! RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED starting the day after Thanksgiving

Christmas Eve Dinner Service – Drop in and take a cozy seat by the fire for a great meal before you tuck everyone in for a ‘long winter’s nap’! RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED starting the day after Thanksgiving! Christmas Day – CLOSED to celebrate with our family and friends. New Year’s Eve 4-course Dining Extravaganza! – Join us to ring in another new year! We’ll again serve our delicious 4-course seasonal menu at 5:00 and 8:30 seatings by reservation only. They’ll start taking reservations after Thanksgiving.

Jay ‘s Seafoodjay's

225 E 6th Street, Dayton, OH 45402|
add lunch Monday – Friday from 11:30am-2pm from Dec. 2 – 23
Reservations suggested  937-222-2892, private room available

 

Rue Dumaine   (937) 610-1061
1061 Miamisburg Centerville Road, Dayton, OH 45459ruedumainelogo

A note from Chef Anne Kearney:  “While we are fully committed with private events at Rue Dumaine for this years’ holiday season it is never too late to find a evening to gather with friends or co-workers to break bread. While the RUE is normally closed on Sundays and Mondays we change it up every year during the last half of December opening for 4 additional shifts to be of service to you and your holiday celebrations. During each shift we are able to accommodate 2 parties with up to12 guests (select times). There is additional availability for smaller gatherings throughout each shift. If your company is dark on Sundays join us. Gather up a group of girlfriends for a Monday evening supper. Consider giving us a call to see what we can do to suit your needs. ”

 

2013 Holiday Schedule is as follows:

Open for dinner service.

Sunday, Dec. 22nd (5pm-9pm)

Monday, Dec. 23rd (5pm-9pm)

Sunday, Dec. 29th (5pm-9pm)

Monday, Dec. 30th (5pm-9pm)

 

There are many opportunities to have a meal with Sanat around the Miami Valley:

Bravo Cucina Italiano
Breakfast with Santa, Sat Dec 7 9am

Hilton Garden Inn 
Breakfast with Santa – Sunday, Dec. 14th 10:30am – noon url-4

Polen Farms
Breakfast with Santa  – Sun, Dec 1st 9am

Rusty Bucket by the Dayton Mall  937-436-2426
Breakfast with Santa on Saturday Dec. 7th & 14th at 9am.

Uno’s Pizza with Santa
126 N. Main St., Dayton, OH 45402
December 7, 14, 21 & 22; 11 a.m.
December 9 & 16; 6:30 p.m.
Uno Chicago Grill, 126 N. Main St.
Have a special lunch with Santa and then visit the Tike’s Shop at the Schuster Center! Reservations required. Call for cost and reservations. 910-8000.
Yankee Trace Golf Club
Santa Claus Brunch- Reservations Required   Sunday, Dec. 8th 1-a,- 2pm

Filed Under: Dayton Dining Tagged With: Breakfast with Santa, Dine with Santa

Such A Night! A Celebration of The Band’s Last Waltz to Benefit WYSO

November 25, 2013 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

o8bm3ppzje61tdstrttu43kcb4dg6qf1On November 27th, nearly thirty local musicians will gather and celebrate the music of the Band and the historic performances of The Last Waltz live on the stage of the NCR Theater at the Dayton Art Institute at 456 Belmonte Park North, Dayton Ohio.

Proceeds from Such A Night! A Celebration of The Band’s Last Waltz will benefit WYSO.

Such a Night features many of Dayton’s most talented musicians, including a 7 piece horn section. The original film The Last Waltz featured performances by Dr. John, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Neil Diamond, Van Morrison, Emmylou Harris, Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield, Eric Clapton, and Bob Dylan and documented The Band’s final concert on November 25th, 1976.

Event details:
Such A Night! A Celebration of The Band’s Last Waltz
Wednesday, November 27th at 7pm
NCR Theater at the Dayton Art Institute
456 Belmonte Park North, Dayton
$15 in advance/$20 at the door
For tickets, call the Dayton Art Institute at 937.223.5277
or buy them online athttp://www.daytonartinstitute.org/shop/eventexhibition-tickets/such-night-last-waltz-liv

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: The Last Waltz, WYSO

Local Entrepreneur Celebrates 2nd Anniversary In A Fair Trade City

November 25, 2013 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

images-4Within a two-week span this summer, Dayton became a Fair Trade City and a Fair Trade Town.

 

Many are still unaware of this, as well as what it means to individual citizens, the region, and the world. Fair trade promotes methods of commerce that eliminate slave labor and unfair working conditions to provide a fair living for the people behind the products we buy.

 

London Coe, owner of fair trade store Peace on Fifth (508 E. Fifth St., Dayton) has made this her passion.

 

“Chocolate is the easiest example to explain why fair trade exists,” she said. “There are six companies that control 56% of all the chocolate production in the world. Hershey’s is the smallest of those with 6%, Mars is the largest with 14.6%. Chocolate is actually very expensive. It’s a huge international industry, traded on floors in New York and London, and is one of the world’s most demanded commodities along with things like corn, soybeans, orange juice concentrate, and cotton.

 

“It trades for so much money, but we all want to feel we’re part of this special class of people who get to enjoy this luxury item. So the chocolate companies sell it to us – but they have to strike a balance, they need us to feel we’re getting enough of what we want, but they need to make a profit. So you end up with people like Herhsey’s, who include just enough chocolate to flavor what they’re making.”

 

This allows one pound of chocolate to make exponential amounts of candy bars that can then be sold for cheap. Even more money is saved because the chocolate is harvested using slave labor.

 

“Chocolate is harvested,” said Coe, “by children who are kidnapped as early as age seven. They have no access to school or play or safety precautions and spend all day harvesting cacao pods with machetes and being sprayed with pesticides. Remember when you were in seventh grade and your arms and legs got longer, and your hands and feet got bigger, and it made you awkward? And you ran into things and hit yourself with things? That happens to these children, except they’re holding machetes.

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“When I learned this,” she said, “I realized I was eating the result of this inhumanity. I no longer wanted my hands or my money on a company that felt this was the way to treat children. Chocolate was what led me down the path to opening a store. I have this desperate idea that says you don’t sacrifice your community for yourself; contributing to community, be it local or global, is how you pay your rent on this earth. So Peace on Fifth is my thumbs up to Dayton, to a place that supports a value system that says no matter where you come from, you can be a part of something you believe in.”

 

Peace on Fifth, which celebrates its second anniversary on November 25, sells only fair trade items, including chocolate which can be traced all the way back to the farms where the cacao originated.

 

For each dollar spent on a fair trade product, roughly 50 cents goes back to the producer (farmer, artisan, etc.). If the producer has an official fair trade label through a certification board, a percentage goes there. Money goes toward stabilizing the producer’s community, often in a third world country, and promotes education in these remote areas, which people within the communities then use to fight against human trafficking to eradicate slave labor.

 

“By supporting fair trade,” Coe said, “you’re working against slave labor. And you’re also supporting animals and the environment. If you are overharvesting animals in a space that’s too small, that’s harmful to the environment. Fair trade products that come in some way from animals are produced in ways that ensure quality treatment for the animals involved.”

 

An exemplary leader on this principle is popular ice cream maker Ben & Jerry’s, which earlier this year became the first fair trade company in the U.S., using cocoa, vanilla, sugar, coffee, and bananas (for the Chunky Monkey fans) from certified farms. The dessert purveyor even hosted a fair trade music festival in Boston this August.

 

Just a few weeks before that festival, Dayton threw its hat into the fair trade ring officially. On July 31, the City of Dayton declared itself a Fair Trade City, an informal resolution meaning the city will look closely in future purchasing decisions to ensure support for safe practices and sustainable and eco-friendly means of production.

 

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Mayor Leitzell & London Coe

On August 9, international organization Fair Trade Towns USA certified Dayton a Fair Trade Town, joining Dayton with cities across the globe that stand together to fight for a world with better work environments, better wages, and a cleaner environment.

 

 

“Mayor [Gary] Leitzell was supportive even before I started this,” she said. “He said, ‘I think you should run with this. It’s good for the city.’ The resolution I sent and the resolution that got passed were very different in that the resolution that got passed is actually much more aggressive. The city wants to be supportive of this concept.”

 

Mayor Leitzell commented, “It normally takes two to three years to get an initiative like this passed, but it happened in ten weeks. I gave London a few tips, she connected the dots and got the doors opened, and the next thing I knew, it was happening. Something like this doesn’t have to be political, it’s something that should just be. It says that we not only respect our community, but yours, wherever that happens to be, and it ties in with our whole ‘immigrant friendly’ message and being fair to all people. Hopefully Dayton will become recognized globally as a place where everyone’s got a fair shake.”

 

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Fair Trade City, Fair Trade Town, London Coe, peace on fifth

Jingle all the Way…to the Jingle Bell 5k

November 25, 2013 By Kim Estess Leave a Comment

Baby, it’s cold outside…but that doesn’t mean the 5k season has to come to an end just yet.  If you’re worried about burning off the last of the turkey and stuffing or if you’ve already indulged in a few too many holiday cookies and cocktails, the Jingle Bell Run/Walk on December 7th might be the perfect way to return your focus to healthy choices as we head into the heart of the holiday season.

SantaOn Saturday, December 7th, join me and hundreds of other crazy runners and walkers at the Dayton Mall for the annual Jingle Bell Run/Walk benefiting the Arthritis Foundation. That’s right, not only are you getting some exercise and burning some calories, but your money benefits a great cause as well. Though this will be my first year participating in the race, I’ve heard rumors that people go all out in dressing in their favorite holiday gear. Personally, I’m on the hunt for a pair of antlers that will stay on my head while I run. Stay tuned.

The run/walk kicks off at 9:00 a.m., with race day registration, packet pickup, and a wellness expo beginning before the start at 7:30 a.m. There’s also a Kids Candy Cane Fun Run that starts at 8:45. Rumor has it that Santa will even be making an appearance at the kids run!

 

 

Registration fees for the race are as follows:

Jingle Bell Run/Walk Adult Reg WITH Long Sleeve T-shirt: $30.00
Jingle Bell Run/Walk Adult Reg WITH Long Sleeve T-shirtJingle Bell Run/Walk Adult Reg WITHOUT T-shirt: $25.00
Jingle Bell Run/Walk Adult Reg WITHOUT T-shirt17 & Under Reg WITH Long Sleeve T-Shirt: $25.00
17 & Under Reg WITH Long Sleeve T-Shirt17 Under Reg WITHOUT long sleeve tshirt: $15.00
17 Under Reg WITHOUT long sleeve T-shirt
So bundle up, grab your Santa hat, sleigh-bells, antlers or ugly Christmas sweater, and join us for what promises to be a fun, family friendly morning!

 

 

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Jingle Bell Run/Walk

Dayton Visual Art Center Puts Fine Art and Fine Craft Into Context

November 24, 2013 By Dayton937 Leave a Comment

lAs a complementary exhibition to DVAC’s wildly popular SHOP LOCALSHOP ART-themed  annual ARTtoBUY: Holiday Gift Gallery, DVAC is presenting selections from the Ohio Designer Craftsmen’s “Best of 2013.”

 

While ARTtoBUY provides a showcase for the finest of our region’s contemporary craft artists, these additional works by members of the ODC provide an opportunity to extend the conversation beyond the Miami Valley. For this exhibition, DVAC chose pieces by artists who integrate traditional craft and contemporary art-making concepts; whose work commands unique and bold mastery of materials and techniques; and whose ideas are declared in artful interpretations.

 

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Cynthia Cetlin’s wool sculptures resemble deep-sea creatures. Collar, echoing the shapes found in coral reefs, is wearable.

Many of these artists fuse function with fine craft, such as in the delicate wool and silk “Collar” by Cynthia Cetlin, the dynamism of “Storm’s Eye Ring” by Sharona Muir, and the intimacy of “Relations” by Rebecca Szaparagwoski. Others inject fresh perspective into time-honored craft materials in decorative objects, such as fiber in Deborah Bewley’s “House with 37 Balls III” and ceramic in Denise Romecki’s “Super Storm.”

 

Juror of the ODC’s Best of 2013, Michael W. Monroe, a renowned expert in the field of fine art craft, and director emeritus of the Bellevue Arts Museum, (Washington) stated that the objects he selected “were those in which the artists made conscious attempts to add fresh ideas to our visual world rather than merely restating previously existing ones. I was attracted to pieces presenting original emotions and ideas—emotions and ideas that encouraged me to respond in unanticipated patterns of thinking and feeling.”

 

DVAC honor’s the spirit of Mr. Monroe’s curatorial intent, that “visitors to the ‘Best of 2013’ exhibition will find new visual expressions, both provocative and pleasurable.”

 

DVAC is pleased to partner with the Ohio Craft Museum and the Springfield Museum of Art in presenting selections from the Ohio Designer Craftsmen Best of 2013 Annual Juried Exhibition, now in its 30th year.

 

This traveling exhibition of more than 100 works by ODC members from 44 states and Canada was first shown in Columbus, Ohio from May 5 to June 23, 2013; in Portsmouth, Ohio from July 12 to September 20; and is now on view in the Springfield Museum of Art from October 8 to December 1, 2013.

 

Organized for DVAC by guest curator Lesley Neufeld

Filed Under: Visual Arts Tagged With: “Collar” by Cynthia Cetlin, Deborah Bewley, Denise Romecki, Michael W. Monroe, Ohio Designer Craftsmen’s “Best of 2013, Rebecca Szaparagwoski, Sharona Muir

Downtown Businesses to Participate in Small Business Saturday

November 24, 2013 By Dayton937 1 Comment

Brim is one of the downtown stores that will participate in Small Business Saturday.

Brim is one of the downtown stores that will participate in Small Business Saturday.

Saturday, Nov. 30, is Small Business Saturday, and 18 downtown businesses will participate. Small Business Saturday is observed the Saturday after Thanksgiving, and is designed to encourage holiday shoppers to patronize small, local brick-and-mortar businesses.

“Downtown Dayton is home to one of the largest collections of independent retailers in the region,” said Amelia O’Dowd, owner of Brim in the Oregon District, who helped organize this year’s event downtown. “In addition to great shopping, restaurants and bars will be offering gift certificates in addition to being open for lunch and dinner, and such businesses as wellness/yoga studios and salons will be offering gift certificates in addition to merchandise.”

 The Downtown Dayton Partnership’s website, www.downtowndayton.org, has a complete list of downtown businesses, as well as a list of business resources, arts and cultural amenities, a dining guide, parking map, and much more. Follow the Downtown Dayton Partnership on Facebook to keep up with downtown events and news. Smartphone users can find places, events, parking and more with Find It Downtown Mobile: mobile.downtowndayton.org.

This year’s participating businesses are:

Bonnett’s Books, 502 E. Fifth St.

BRIM, 464 E. Fifth St.

Clash Consignment Co., 521 E. Fifth St.

Derailed: A Hair Salon, 506 ½ E. Fifth St.

Feathers Vintage, 440 E. Fifth St.

Found Treasures 4 You, 502 Wayne Ave.

Gallery 510 Fine Art, 508 E. Fifth St.

Ghostlight Coffee, 1201 Wayne Ave.

Grass Roots Enrichment & Wellness Center, 400 E. Fifth St., Suite C

Green Baby, 31 S. St. Clair St.

Hicks’ Barber Shop, 11 Brown St.

Lily’s Bistro, 329 E. Fifth St.

Lucky’s Taproom, 520 E. Fifth St.

Practice Yoga, 504 E. Fifth St.

The Record Gallery, 438 E. Fifth St.

ReCreate, 438 E. Fifth St.

Sew Dayton, 261 Wayne Ave.

Spice Paradise, 8 Brown St.

Sterling Studio, 511 E. Fifth St.

 

Filed Under: Community, Downtown Dayton, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Dayton, Dayton Ohio, Downtown Dayton, Events, Shopping, Things to Do

Dayton R+R – Harvesting Historical Dayton For Reuse

November 22, 2013 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

doors

In today’s economy, where it’s often easier to buy new and throw away items that need repairs, it’s refreshing to know that places like Dayton Reclamation and Restoration (Dayton R+R) exist.  Jeff Wysong, a master carpenter who’s been working on historical restoration in the Dayton region for over 40 years,  has announced that he will again be in the retail business.  This Sat, Nov 23rd at 8:30am at 280 North Findlay Street in Dayton the architectural reclamation store will open with a stock of materials ranging from foundation stones to lumber, doors, windows, trims and vintage hardware. They will also have barn beams, siding and specialty items of interest!

With over 40 years of experience, Jeff and his team have reclaimed materials from over 300 houses,barns and schools.We have also restored and preserved many homes throughout  Dayton’s historic districts since 1986.

Dayton Reclamation and Restoration believe in preserving historic architecture. archWhen that is not possible,we believe in preserving the historic fabric and features that make those structures significant,and offering those items to you for the restoration of your home,and for your landscape and artistic needs as well! We believe in Dayton, it’s history past, present and future.

Marketing Manager Tyler Payne explains, “our approach is totally green.  We will continue to harvest treasures from old buildings and we have a passion for deconstruction in a way that allows us to reuse quality building materials.”He shared that in the future they plan to hold educational symposiums for the public.

You can visit Dayton Reclamation and Restoration on   Saturdays from 8:30am to 3:00pm, or call 937-477-4801 for more info.

 

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Dayton Reclamation and Restoration, Jeff Wysong

REVIEW: Legends Of Thrash Wreck Columbus

November 22, 2013 By Mike Ritchie Leave a Comment

Warbringer

Warbringer

On Tuesday November 5th, The Legends Of Thrash Tour presented by Columbus Events Group swept through Columbus stopping at the Alrosa Villa like a sonic whirlwind as bodies crashed and collided into each other in the pit like a human tornado of souls.

LA’s young guns Warbringer brought the early battle cry with Germany’s Euro-thrash heroes Kreator screaming in at over 30 years of devastation and New Jersey’s green lit thrash veterans Overkill, who’ve been on a screeching bat-winged blitz-krieg since 1980. Tonight was stop number seven on the twenty-four date North American Tour.

It’s a double fisted metal spiked, thrash hammer to the face and guitar shredding to the ear as Overkill continues touring in The Electric Age and Kreator brings America the Phantom Antichrist. With Warbringer unleashing their new October released Warbringer IV: Empires Collapse on the state capital, they’re promoting their new video for Black Sun, Black Moon. Filmed in the forbidding desolation of the Mojave Desert under pitch-black nightfall, Black Sun is a vintage highway throwback to Judas Priest.

The war begins as they open fire with the razor-sharp riffs and cutting edge technology via science of the hunter-killer, the Living Weapon. The pit opens immediately as we wake into the nightmare of Severed Reality staring into the black murky void before us. John Kevill hand chops the crowd samurai style summoning their energy ready for a throat-slicing good time. The Turning of the Gears is what we hear tonight but for them it’s day after day, year after year. When it’s over John Kevill’s yell, John Laux and Jeff Potts’ guitars will still be stuck in our ears. They tear across the dusk lit illusive highway under the mystic fading blaze and rising glow of the Black Sun, Black Moon. Scars Remain from the pit of inner pain, as you’re Living in a Whirlwind of addiction and mother nature’s metal fury. They break out classic Exodus, Sepultura inspired Combat Shock. As Laux and Potts throttle blasted their guitars, Kevill called for one more pit before the show ended. Want musical pestilence, famine and conquest, Warbringer cometh.

Kreator

Kreator

Kreator bathed in a feast of strobes, coming forth as Mars Mantra played, opening with the obliterating Phantom Antichrist and conjuring up a pit at will. “Destroy this f*@&er!” Mille Petrozza yelled, starting From Flood Into Fire and harnessing the energy from all sides. Columbus, The Kreator has returned! They bring out the madness of the Reich on Warcurse, splitting the crowd in two, preparing the biggest pit of the night. Counting to four in German he wanted to see what a floor wide Ohio Coma of Souls circle pit looked like, in return they gave us Endless Pain. Are you ready to kill? Are you ready to kill, each other… Pleasure to Kill. It’s everyone against everyone in the Hordes of Chaos, a Necrologue for gladiators and ‘pit’ fighters alike.

Petrozza shreds, reveling in the roaring feedback before calling for a dance floor thrash pummeling Riot of Violence. Purity and innocence are killed by the Enemy of God. A paranoid Phobia forms, is someone following you? The Patriarch roars over its metal family warning of Violent Revolution. Sami Yli Sirnio plays the acoustic into United in Hate. Let there be darkness tonight with the Civilization Collapse.

Petrozza brings the flag of Kreation on stage, waving its emblem high and proud. They tease Billie Jean’s bass intro and drums on Painkiller before finishing with Flag of Hate and unleashing the Tormentor. The Kreator will return!

Overkill

Overkill

The legendary East Coast wrecking crew, Overkill, opened old school with Deny the Cross. We get modern-day Ironbound with Bring Me the Night. Blitz asks for/demands crowd noise, he’s got “f*@&in’ high standards, you better f*@&in’ remember that sh!t.” We watched them shake and bake with the Electric Rattlesnake and got knocked on our ass like a Hammerhead via 1985. Blitz grins announcing “it’s an old school f*@&ing show tonight. You motherf*@&ers get uglier every year” because Columbus is Rotten to the Core! From the back alleys and street sludge of Franklin County, welcome to the mother f*@&in’ gutter! Ohio’s one hell of a metal state and together we’re strong, together we’re Ironbound!

Wrecking necks for over 30 years with 16 records, 2 live albums, 2 DVD’s and a video-documentary; you know they’re doing fine, basking in the light of the Necroshine. The days Horrorscope said, Thanx for Nothin’ so take a trip with the pale rider at midnight to Overkill and seal your fate. Time to quit fuckin’ around and pay attention, long ago and far away like a runaway train the record was called The Years of Decay. Time for some E-limination!

Encoring with Horrorscope, Skullkrushers worldwide know when you go see the ‘kill and it’s time for the last song, you don’t wanna sound like a pussy. Columbus, we don’t care what you say, F*@& YOU!

Photography by Samantha Stewart.

Filed Under: Dayton Music

‘The Wild Party’ Review – Wright State University – Love and War

November 22, 2013 By Russell Florence, Jr. Leave a Comment

WILD PARTY

(l to r) Law Dunford, Paige Dobkins, Kelsey Pohl and Mark Beyer in Wright State University’s production of “The Wild Party” (Contributed photo)

The excellent local premiere of Andrew Lippa’s 2000 off-Broadway musical “The Wild Party,” adapted from Joseph Moncure March’s 1928 narrative poem of the same name, intimately electrifies at Wright State University.
Presented inside the black box Herbst Theatre, “Wild Party” focuses on the destructive, unstable relationship between vaudeville performers Queenie and Burrs. In an attempt to escape the monotony of their damaged existence, they decide to host a party in their Manhattan apartment. A colorful array of eccentric characters immerse themselves in drugs, booze and sex, including Queenie’s narcissistic best friend Kate, but everyone is thrown for a loop when the sophisticated Mr. Black, Kate’s mysterious date, becomes smitten with Queenie. What was intended to be a frivolous evening of decadence evolves into a dangerously heated game of survival as deep-seated jealousy and smoldering romance collide with tragic results.

 
In order to ground the show in period and tone, Lippa freely incorporates lines from March’s evocative poem, a conceptual element evident in Michael John LaChuisa’s musically challenging but masterful Tony-nominated version of “Wild Party,” which also opened in 2000. However, it’s difficult to find three-dimensional characters here aside from the four principals. There are many engaging contributors to the revelry at hand, but not enough backstory to propel them beyond the surface.

 

Nevertheless, Lippa’s catchy score, paying homage to the Jazz Age while embracing the contemporary, is the main attraction, particularly the salsa-tinged “Raise the Roof” and the gospel-flavored “Wild, Wild Party,” choreographed with crisp exuberance by Dionysia Williams. At the same rate, his introspective ballads are equally strong, especially the haunting, soulful quartet “Poor Child.” On the whole, the music is vibrantly performed by conductor Ian Benjamin’s five-piece band and well taught by musical director Sherri Sutter.

 
Director Jamie Cordes, whose first-rate artistic team includes set designer Ryan Sess, lighting designer Kody Lupori and movement coach Marya Spring Cordes (who directed WSU’s outstanding “Grand Hotel” last season), offers his most striking staging to date. Effectively capturing a few scenes in shadow for moody allure, he keeps the action fluid and gripping with a pinch of suspense as testy situations swell throughout the evening. He also ensures the compelling characterizations of the four leads, generating major sparks whenever the action focuses on them, are balanced by the sharply comedic turns of the terrific supporting and ensemble players.

 
The beguiling, effervescent and heartbreaking Paige Dobkins truly shines as the emotionally conflicted Queenie, especially as Mr. Black’s sincere advances cause her to question the life she has made with Burrs. Dobkins’ lovely rendition of “Maybe I Like It This Way” particularly resonates late in Act 1. Fine tenor Mark Beyer, who impressively understudied the role of the Baron in “Grand Hotel,” wonderfully inhabits the cruel, moody Burrs without going over the top or seeming false. It’s easy to label Burrs as a maniacal bully, but Beyer digs deep to reveal a more complex image of a man struggling with serious emotional and psychological wounds. As the calm, cool Mr. Black, Law Dunford possesses an intoxicating chemistry with Dobkins while exemplifying how to be suave without appearing slick. The marvelous Kelsey Pohl, remarkably making her presence known with the aptly titled “Look at Me Now,” lights up the stage as Kate, who pines for Burrs. Accented by a showstopping rendition of “The Life of the Party,” Pohl’s breakthrough performance, full of attack and uninhibited glee, paints an exceptionally vivid portrait of a desperate woman recklessly pursuing a love she can never obtain.

 
Elsewhere, Mathys Herbert and Kevin Ferguson (two additional highlights of “Grand Hotel”) hilariously intertwine as the flamboyantly fierce D’Armano duo. The tough, no-nonsense Tommy DiMassimo and the endearing Emsie Hapner are winningly paired as boxer Eddie and his dim-witted sweetheart Mae. Emma Jordan commands attention as lesbian Madelaine True, humorously desiring “An Old-Fashioned Love Story.” Brandon Ramos (Sam Himmelsteen), Tyler Simms (Max), Alyson Snyder (Dolores), Liz Romey (Nadine), Victoria Gilman (Jackie) as well as ensemble members Lauren Schorr, Bradley Farmer and Abby Murray Vachon add spice and personality to this captivating experience.

 

“The Wild Party” continues through Nov. 24 in the Herbst Theatre of the Creative Arts Center at Wright State University, 3640 Col Glenn Hwy., Fairborn. Performances are Nov. 22 and 23 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 23 and 24 at 2 p.m. The production runs 2 hours and 23 minutes including one 15-minute intermission. Tickets are $12 for adults, $10 for seniors and $5 for students. For tickets or more information, call (937) 775-2500. Patrons are advised the musical contains adult language and themes.

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: On Stage Dayton Reviews Tagged With: Herbst Theatre, Herbst Theatre of the Creative Arts Center, The Wild Party

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