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Archives for May 2018

McCoy on Movies: SOLO

May 24, 2018 By Tabari McCoy

The galaxy’s most famous scoundrel finds himself often upstaged in latest Star Wars stand alone

“You know, once you see my face … You’ll know I’m not Harrison Ford!” Alden Ehrenreich prepares to make his presence known in a scene from SOLO: A STAR WARS STORY. Credit: Jonathan Olley © & ™ Lucasfilm, Inc. All rights reserved.
 

WATCH THE TRAILER(S) HERE: 

 




KEY CAST MEMBERS: Alden Ehrenreich, Donald Glover, Emilia Clarke, Paul Bettany, Joonas Suotamo, Woody Harrelson, Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Thandie Newton

WRITER(S): Jonathan and Lawrence Kasdan (screenplay); George Lucas (based on characters created by)

DIRECTOR(S): Ron Howard

WEB SITE: https://www.starwars.com/films/soloHERE’S THE STORY: The second installment in the Star Wars “here’s the story behind this character/moment in the main films,” Solo focuses on the most famous scoundrel in a galaxy far, far away: Han Solo, now portrayed as his younger self by Alden Ehrenreich (Hail, Caesar!, Rules Don’t Apply). And this is a much different solo than fans are used to, for the young solo is a man with a dream: To escape his current life on the planet of Corellia where he is living under the rule of Lady Proxima (voiced by Linda Hunt), become a pilot in the Empire fleet (!) and possibly marry his lady love, Qi’Ra (Emilia Clarke). 


But once he and Qi’Ra run afoul of Lady Proxima, Solo finds himself eventually in a whole lot of trouble – which is why once he escapes from prison via a very hairy newfound friend (Joonas Suotamo), he is quick to take on a risky job with Tobias Beckett (Woody Harrelson). Of course, that job has much more to it than he originally suspects, which sets in motion a trail of events that make being in debt to Crimson Dawn leader Dryden Vos (Paul Bettany) a very, very bad thing. Throw in a contentious relationship with the most notorious and charismatic smuggler in the galaxy (Donald Glover) and you have an epic tale in the making.


Or at least that’s what everyone behind the world’s most popular sci-fi fantasy franchise hopes, anyway …

WHO WILL LIKE THIS FILM THE MOST? Donald Glover fans; Star Wars diehards; Chewbacca fans

WHO WON’T (OR SHOULDN’T) LIKE THIS MOVIE? People who hate anything outside of the “original” Star Wars films (now known as episodes four, five and six, respectively); adults that are not already Star Wars fans; those who will

SO IS IT GOOD, BAD OR JUST AWFUL? Far less hard-hitting (both in terms of storytelling, character development and action), Solo is in fact a Star Wars story … It’s just not the best Wars story despite having it focused on what many consider to be the best character in its galaxy.


Accompanied by a friend at the screening I went to, I was asked for my opinion of the film, which took me a second to formulate. And then it came to me: Watching Solo is like watching your team’s franchise quarterback that often underperforms lead to victory as he passes for 400 yards and 4 touchdowns … Only to remember that what was supposed to be said team’s championship season is instead going to end up 8-8 and missing the playoffs. 


Don’t get me wrong – it’s not that’s there’s necessarily anything wrong with Solo. Ehrenreich proves himself capable of hitting all the beats as younger version of one (if not the) most famous of Harrison Ford’s roles. He conveys the expected mix of ambition, recklessness and confidence one might expect while mixing in a nice bit of sensitivity that will set up for why he becomes cold as ice later in his life. Likewise, the rest of the cast turns in commendable performances, Glover in particular in continuing his hot streak by making his turns as Lando Calrissian count for all they’re worth. Harrelson does exactly what he needs to do to make his character’s arc work from start to finish and Chewbacca is Chewbacca – “lol” intended.


However, Solo doesn’t feel like the epic its intended to be for a very simple reason: It doesn’t feel special in any way. It just feels like a standard action film set within the Star Wars universe.


The first hour of the film feels like conveniently placed together events made to fit the existing character fans know INSTEAD of bringing about any real revelations other than how he got his name. To put it another way, the backstory isn’t so much of a coming of age tale where we see how Solo evolves from a boy to a man or any major change in his life that feels organic or revelatory. Instead, it’s a standard action story that doesn’t make Solo feel so much special as just a capable hero. There’s not gritty, soul searching moment, there’s no epic, battle sequence – the most intense sequence in the film is arguably more of a ship battle where several people play a critical part in the outcome – and the most interesting character is barely given a name and has a more interesting backstory than Solo’s in his own movie. In fact, for a man named “Solo” it’s only at his best, it seems, when he has a bunch of people – or Wookies or droids – helping his cause. (Seriously, you see the movie and tell me who was more interesting head-to-head: Solo or Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s L3-37?)


It would just help Solo‘s cause a lot more if he was always the main attraction in his own movie.

OVERALL RATING (OUT OF FOUR POSSIBLE BUCKETS OF POPCORN):

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Han Solo, Solo, Star Wars

Dave’s Juke Joint – It’s Happening Again!

May 24, 2018 By Lisa Grigsby

In 2016 Dave Chappelle hosted an amazing event in a barn, on a farm in Yellow Springs.  Inspired by music born in the juke joints of Americas Deep South, Chappelle’s modern day Juke Joint takes you on a trip thru his personal playlist which includes tunes ranging from Coltrane to Nirvana. This real music revival was part concert, part comedy, and all-out unpredictable.  In 2015 Chappelle hosted his Juke Joint in London, in 2016 besides the Yellow Springs event, there was also one in Minneapolis . In 2017 Dave’s Juke Joint popped up in New Orleans during NBA All Star weekend.

photo from DJ DNice’s instagram.

And now it’s happening again this Sunday and Monday in Yellow Springs.   Chappelle doesn’t exactly promote the Juke Joint, but rather seems to leave it to his Band with No Name leader, Frederic Yonnet, who, with other band members, post about the event on Instagram. Tickets will be  sold online only, and attendees have to agree to  relinquish their cell phones before entering the event.  According to the Instagram announcements,  tickets will go on sale tonight at 6pm at his website.

In 2016 the  all-star guest list included  Q-Tip, Jarobi White, Bradley Cooper, David Blaine, John Legend, Donnel Rawlings, Cipha Sounds.  Tickets that year were $75 each day for general admission, VIP was $100. There was a $10 parking fee.

Filed Under: Community, Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: dave chappelle, Juke Joint, Y, Yellow Springs

Golden Lamb Begins Historic Renovation

May 24, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Golden Lamb announced it is beginning major renovations on one of its four first floor dining rooms and kitchen as part of a master plan to reinvest in and refresh Ohio’s longest continually operating business.

 

In addition to this project, the Golden Lamb is proud of its recent and ongoing reinvestment into its historic property, including the General Grant Suite, a new hotel suite named in honor of the late Union General and 18th President, Ulysses S. Grant.  The General Grant Suite boasts rich mahogany furnishings, a luxurious private bathroom with marble floor and shower, as well as authentic artwork from the Civil War era. Updates also have been made to:

  • The Henry Clay private dining room, which hosts wedding receptions, private dinners and parties.
  • Refurbishment to the third and fourth floor hotel corridors, including new art that portrays the Golden Lamb’s colorful history and Shaker heritage led by the team at Caza Sikes.  Additionally, the Golden Lamb commissioned two signature pieces from Cincinnati artists Ursula Roma and Suzanne Fisher, now on display.

 

Renovations for the Charles Dickens dining room are now underway and will be completed by early July. The space will feature reclaimed Ohio hardwood floors, a new lighting package and dramatic wall coverings styled with a nod to Charles Dickens and the Victorian era. A warm library setting featuring keenly appointed furniture, antique lithographs and cherry dining tables from the Workshops of David T. Smith will bring the room together to ensure the feeling of the historic property is kept throughout.

 

Plans Integrate Heritage with New Ideas

“For our business to survive and thrive for 214 years, we’ve continuously evolved,” said Golden Lamb General Manager Bill Kilimnik. “This renovation will reinforce our heritage while writing the next chapter in our long history of being the place where friends, family and the community gathers.”

 

Kilimnik and the Golden Lamb ownership group worked hand-in-hand with an expert team to continue to evolve the vision of casual sophistication for the property in harmony with the heritage of the Golden Lamb.  The team includes Tim Herberth and Herberth Construction, a proven historical contractor, which is leading the project. Jenna Prenger of Reztark is the project designer, accompanied by Greg Snyder of the RDA Group on the architectural work.

Dickens dining room renovation rendering

 

Additional Plans in the Works

Over the next few years, Golden Lamb anticipates additional, significant renovations to the property, including its two other public dining rooms and its popular pub, the Black Horse Tavern.  Plans also are underway to establish Golden Lamb’s own farm to provide fresh, homegrown produce and meats to the Golden Lamb’s kitchen.

“We’re as focused on our guests’ dining experience as we are on the unique ambiance of our property,” Kilimnik said. “With these changes coming to life, we’re as excited about sharing our future as we are proud of our past.”

Fo more informations visit the www.goldenlamb.com or call (513) 932-5065. The Golden Lamb is located at 27 S. Broadway in Lebanon, Ohio.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Golden Lamb, Lebanon

‘Beautiful’ Review – Victoria Theatre Association – A Tapestry of Melody and Heartbreak

May 23, 2018 By Russell Florence, Jr.

A striking lesson in perseverance, survival and self-esteem concerning one of pop music’s legendary singer-songwriters, Beautiful – The Carole King Musical warmly and nostalgically satisfies with entertaining, crowd-pleasing familiarity.

Sarah Bockel (Carole King) in Beautiful. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

The finale of the Victoria Theatre Association’s 2017-2018 Premier Health Broadway Series continuing through Sunday, May 27 at the Schuster Center, Beautiful, sleekly directed by Marc Bruni with crisp period choreography by Josh Prince, showcases King from her early songwriting days in 1959 to her career breakthrough writing 1971’s best-selling album Tapestry, which received four Grammys including Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Song of the Year. Librettist Douglas McGrath smoothly juggles King’s pioneer composing against the backdrop of her rocky marriage to Gerry Goffin, her equally talented collaborator who battled mental illness and had difficulty being grounded in marriage life. King’s ability to ultimately use the pain of her relationship as fodder for her incredibly relatable Tapestry tunes is a testament to her artistic genius, which was also greatly admired by her close friends and fellow songwriters Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann.

Sarah Bockel marvelously inhabits King’s down-to-earth charm and distinct vocal phrasing, especially her interpretations of classics such as So Far Away, Will You Love Me Tomorrow, It’s Too Late, You’ve Got a Friend, (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman, and the bouncy, inspirational, gospel-tinged title tune. McGrath wholesomely fashions King without imperfection, a considerable flaw, but it’s easy to see why she was so loved and respected by her peers nonetheless thanks to Bockel’s endearing magnetism. The handsomely brooding Andrew Brewer lends great support as the conflicted Goffin, constantly craving more as musical trends change throughout the 1960s. The sardonic Sarah Goeke and comical Jacob Heimer are wonderfully paired as Weil and Mann. James Clow (producer Don Kirshner), Suzanne Grodner (Genie Klein), McKynleih Alden Abraham (Janelle Woods), and Nathan Scherich (Nick) are very effective and purposeful in smaller roles. Many ensemble members shine as well when the focus turns to specific acts such as the Drifters, the Shirelles and the Righteous Brothers whose careers were bolstered by King, Goffin, Weil, and Mann, specifically John Michael Dias and the aforementioned Scherich’s fantastic rendition of You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling.

(l to r) James Clow (Don Kirshner), Jacob Heimer (Barry Mann), Sarah Bockel (Carole King) and Sarah Goeke (Cynthia Weil) perform “You’ve Got a Friend” in Beautiful. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

Without a doubt, King’s empowerment to believe in her potential paved the way for Carly Simon, Joni Mitchell, Janis Ian, Tracy Chapman, Sheryl Crow, Lauryn Hill, Alanis Morissette, Norah Jones, India Arie, Duffy, Adele, Sara Bareilles, and many more. Beautiful certainly resonates as a meaningful tribute to her influential legacy.

Beautiful continues Wednesday-Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m., and Sunday at 2 and 7:30 p.m. at the Schuster Center, Second and Main Streets, Dayton. Act One: 70 minutes; Act Two: 55 minutes. Tickets are $26-$119. For tickets or more information, call Ticket Center Stage at (937) 228-3630 or visit www.ticketcenterstage.com.

 

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, On Stage Dayton Reviews, The Featured Articles Tagged With: beautiful, Beautiful – The Carole King Musical, Schuster Center

Free Admission to 2000 Museums for Miltary Families This Summer

May 23, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

This summer in is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) in collaboration with Blue Star Families, the Department of Defense, and more than 2,000 museums nationwide to offer free admission to the nation’s active duty military personnel and their families from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day.

The free admission program is available for those currently serving in the United States Military—Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard as well as Active Duty and Reservists, National Guardsman (regardless of status), U.S. Public Health Commissioned Corps, NOAA Commissioned Corps, and up to five family members.  Qualified members must show a Geneva Convention common access card, DD Form 1173 ID card (dependent ID), or a DD Form 1173-1 ID card for entrance into a participating Blue Star Museum.

In Ohio that means 51 museums in Ohio will open their doors to military and their families as part of the ninth annual Blue Star Museums program, including:

  • Aullwood Audubon Center and Farm
  • The Dayton Art Institute
  • The Springfield Museum of Art
  • Brukner Nature Center

“Ohio’s museums have once again embraced the NEA’s Blue Star Museums initiative. Each year, more and more museums are participating and sharing in the appreciation we have for military members and their families who sacrifice so much for all of us. It makes me ‘Ohio proud’ to see so many museums saying ‘thank you’ to our military members and their families,” says Ohio Arts Council Executive Director Donna S. Collins.

 

A full list of participating museums nationwide is available at arts.gov/bluestarmuseums.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Blue Star Museums, Free Admission

Food Adventure Crew Adds “Healthy” Influence

May 23, 2018 By Dayton937 1 Comment

You may know the weekly Food Adventure blog here at Dayton Most Metro.  We visit the local mom and pop restaurants from greasy spoons, to fine dining and everything in between.  We give some of the most in-depth restaurant reviews because, unlike other sites, they visit the eatery multiple times.  No plate is unturned.  You may have attended one of our Food Adventure events over the past 10 years.

Jessie Whitesell – the Newest Food Adventurer

Today, we proudly announce the addition of a Paleo and Whole 30 guru who will bring a fresh breath of healthy eating into the mix.  Meet the latest crew member, Jessie Whitesell.  A Mom whose busy lifestyle and own health concerns, turned her on to the power of fresh, natural foods.  Using gluten free foods, and a paleo style diet, she has conquered her own health concerns from allergies to inflammation.  Jessie will bring fun videos, cooking tips, and much more to Food Adventures.   She will help you and your family who may be looking to promote a healthier lifestyle.

Food Adventures has not changed, we will still bring you the best of local food places.  We have just added a new dimension to the mix.  Jessie is a lifelong Dayton resident with a passion for healthy, nutritious, fresh local foods.  Here is her bio:

MEET JESSIE:

Yep, she is one of us !

Jessie Whitesell of Jessie Whitesell Health + Wellness is our team’s Wellness Consultant . She brings a piece to Food Adventures that focuses on holistic health and healing through whole, natural foods. Jessie is a certified health coach, autoimmune paleo coach, fitness nutritionist, behavioral coach, and personal trainer. She holds an BA in Education and a M. Ed. in Counseling Psychology.

She and her high school sweetheart are raising three incredibly active and hungry kids. Self taught in the kitchen, she has learned how to simplify feeding a busy active family a mostly paleo nutritional plan through mindful planning, meal prep, and single ingredient foods. Jessie likes to cook with in season produce and support local farmers when possible. You can often find her at the ball fields either coaching or cheering on her kids with a cooler packed to the brim of healthy, whole foods.
The Food Adventures Crew is super excited to add Jessie to the blog.  We look forward to her articles, recipes, videos and takes on local foods.  You will see her at many of our events, and we can’t wait to learn more about wholesome foods for a healthy lifestyle, and even food tips for treating specific ailments.  Stay tuned and keep following us right here, weekly on DaytonMostMetro.com!

Jessie and her family

Jessie with her husband.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, Food Adventures, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Food Adventures, Gluten Free, Jessie Whitesell, Paleo

Singer-Songwriter Series

May 23, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Join us every Sunday on our Acoustic Patio, May 20th – September 10th from 5:00 – 8:00 pm for the Singer Songwriter Series. We will have 2 – 3 Singer-Songwriters each week.

Filed Under: Dayton Music

Sideshow 13 – An Artistic Extravaganza

May 23, 2018 By LIbby Ballengee

The annual music and art extravaganza Sideshow is being held again at Yellow Cab Tavern  (700 E 4th St, Dayton Ohio) this weekend on May 25th from 5pm‐1am and May 26th from 3pm‐1am. Admission is free! All ages are welcome too.

Sideshow is celebrating its 13th anniversary of creating a free show of Art and Music that all ages can enjoy. Sideshow is run entirely by volunteers and uses fundraisers and donations to offset the cost of hosting a show featuring more than 100 local artists and musicians.

This event will be the biggest Sideshow yet with sculpture, painting, music, performers, wrestling, dancers, comedy, food trucks, local brews, photography and much more. It will also feature a special Kid’s Sideshow portion. Over the years this has become an event that draws creators from all backgrounds, all levels of skill and all media. Fostering an open creative environment that will grow talent of all kinds has been the organizer’s goal from the start.

Yellow Cab Tavern is a community art space and music venue in Dayton, Ohio in the Motor Car District near the Oregon District. Formerly, home to a taxi business for more than 40 years, they now host a variety of events – art shows, live music, food truck rallies and much more.

Music Schedule:

Friday Main Stage
7:00pm-7:40pm John Dubuc and the Guilty Pleasures
7:40pm-8:20pm NOVAGOLD
8:20pm-9:00pm The Repeating Arms
9:00pm-9:40pm The Zygotes
9:40pm-10:20pm Nasty Bingo
10:20pm-11:00pm The New Old Fashioned
11:00pm-11:40pm Bribing Senators
11:40pm-12:20am Todd the Fox
12:20am-1:00am Dip Spit vs. Duderus

Friday Acoustic Stage
7:00pm-7:40pm Max B Greene
7:40pm-8:20pm Mandy Jewell
8:20pm-9:00pm Doug Nichols
9:00pm-9:40pm Steve Makofka
9:40pm-10:20pm Sam Stone
10:20pm-11:00pm Rich Reuter
11:00pm-11:40pm McGuff and the Dumpster Fires
11:40pm-12:20am Ryan Jones
12:20am-1:00am The Typical Johnsons

Saturday Main Stage
5:00pm-5:40pm Evil Eye Gypsy
5:40pm-6:20pm The Vibe
6:20pm-7:00pm Lord Kimbo/Flam Feeva
7:00pm-7:40pm Enzo
7:40pm-8:20pm Thank The Maker
8:20pm-9:00pm Neo American Pioneers
9:00pm-9:40pm The 1984 Draft
9:40pm-10:00pm Scarecrow Sideshow
10:20pm-11:00pm Stella’s Demise
11:00pm-11:40pm Dark Backward
11:40pm-12:20am Burn the Dead
12:20am-1:00am Far From Eden

Saturday Acoustic Stage
5:00pm-5:40pm Achilles Tenderloin
5:40pm-6:20pm Debbie DeCasio
6:20pm-7:00pm Moringa Moon
7:00pm-7:40pm Chris Ball
7:40pm-8:20pm Boo Lee Crosser
8:20pm-9:00pm Vincent Holiday
9:00pm-9:40pm Dan Sebree
9:40pm-10:00pm XL247
10:20pm-11:00pm Sharon Lane
11:00pm-11:40pm Dayton Poetry Slam
11:40pm-12:20am Dayton Poetry Slam
12:20am-1:00am Kevin Milner

Visual Artists Featured:
Bradley the Dark
Cherry Fullam
Chris Corn
Christina Lewis
Christine Gaffney
Coco Birdi
David Kenworthy
Elysia Pritchett
Gary Mitchell
Grant Nikanowicz
Hannah Jones
Heather Lea Reid
Jackie Wagner
Jen Dyke
Jenny J. Ink
Jess Fecke
Jess Gilbert
Joe Augustin
Josh Arnold
Kara McCray
Lauren Wantz
Mal Thokey
Marishah Paddock
Matthew Reynolds
Megan Fiely
Melanie Dufresne
Michelle Carr
Mikee Huber
Nashonba Hostina
Phil Preston
Reilly Stasienko
Ron Rollins
Samantha Farkas
Sarah Mackenzie
Seth Ratliff
Summer Rose Fig
Tara Moore
Tiffany Hunter
Tom Gilliam
Travis Waller
Wendy Wagener-Harris
Whitney Marie

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Comedy, Dayton Music, Downtown Dayton, Street-Level Art, Urban Living, Visual Arts Tagged With: Sideshow, Yellow Cab

Spirit of America in a Bottle with Indian Creek Distillery

May 22, 2018 By Lisa Grigsby

Joe and Missy Duer

It’s not easy putting history in a bottle, but Joe and Missy Duer have resumed a very old family tradition that allows them to do just that with their Artisan Farm Distillery~ Indian Creek Distillery, located in southern Miami County.

“Making whiskey the old fashioned way, not the industrialized way, is an art and flows out of passion and intuition which makes for a very artistic process,” Missy said.

Missy Duer comes from a long line of millwrights and distillers by trade. Her forefathers moved from Pennsylvania and settled in Ohio before it was recognized as a state. Missy’s great great great grandfather Elias and his two brothers built a grist mill along Indian Creek which was completed in 1818. Elias purchased the farm in 1820 and built a brick distillery to utilize the excess grain from the large grist mill. The demand for whiskey was great- a bonus for the ambitious Staley family.  Staley Rye Whiskey became known for its quality and customers traveled for miles to have their jugs filled. The business flourished for 100 years involving 3 generations of Staleys until Prohibition put a halt on whiskey production in 1920.

“From 1933 until about 15 years ago, you could not build a distillery in the state of Ohio, but recent law changes have allowed my husband Joe and I to bring my family’s distilling legacy back to life,” Missy said. “Most importantly was that my great-grandfather, George Washington Staley, saved the stills, mash tubs, fermenters and assorted distilling equipment from the revenuers during Prohibition. We also have the original Rye Whiskey recipe!”

The Duers have a modernized facility on their beautifully preserved family farm where the distilling takes place, but they operate with an “old school, old rules” mentality crafting whiskey like the Staley forefathers, including use of the original  copper potstills.  The stills are the oldest working stills in America today.  They follow an old, open-top mashing and fermentation process where the weather plays an important role in the process.

“There are limitations with open-top fermentation and mashing. You run into weather considerations because changes in the weather give you different yields. The reason being, mashing — which is the conversion of starch to sugar with the mixture of grain and hot water that takes three or four hours — if there is a drop in the barometric pressure, the yield of sugar is reduced,” Joe said. “In fermentation, which is the conversion of sugar to alcohol, there can be situations where there is electricity in the air from thunderstorms that will stop the action of the yeast being used. Once the storm is passed, the yeast can be reactivated but that can delay fermentation and the production of alcohol. All of these limitations and problems could be solved by not doing the open-top fermentation but that’s not the way the old boys did it, so we aren’t doing it that way either.”

There were numerous challenges in figuring out how to make Pre-Prohibition whiskey; Joe did most of the distilling when they first re-opened in 2012 and he had a tremendous challenge learning what the Staleys used to know.

“It was a steep learning curve because we were recreating history, and all the old timers are gone who I could ask,” Joe said. “We had to interpret old letters and recipes where the initial guidelines were to ‘heat your water and cool your water.’ That’s very interesting to me because I didn’t know what that meant until I found that heating the water consisted of being able to hold your hand in the water for one minute and cooling the water meant bringing it down to the temperature of fresh milk from a cow, which proposed an issue, because I didn’t have a cow.”

Indian Creek Distillery’s whiskeys are available at the distillery and in over 150 state agencies in Ohio.  The Duers also offer a delicious locally sourced maple syrup (StillHouse Maple Syrup) that is aged in their used rye whiskey barrels.

“The distillery is open seven days a week and attracts three types of people: historians, whiskey lovers, and whiskey historians,” Joe said. “I have applied everything I have learned in my life to this career because being self-employed can bring surprises. We knew coming into this we needed two things to make this work. First, you need a good product, and secondly and most importantly, you need a story, and we have that here in spades.”

“Our national history is a very personal one, at least it is for me,” Missy said. “Staley Mill Farm & Indian Creek Distillery tells the story of our country and of my family, one generation at a time. This beautifully preserved pioneer complex is a remarkably intact view into a vanishing landscape. My husband Joe and I share the past, the present and the future of our true heritage, timeless history and the spirit of liberty. We are preservationists by choice, pioneers by birth, dreamers of things to come and we are proud to produce America’s spirit… a true sip of history.”

Indian Creek Distillery is open year round at 7095 Staley Rd, New Carlisle, OH 45344. Hours are: Tuesday & Wednesday 12pm – 5pm, Thursday & Friday 12pm – 7pm, Saturday 12pm – 7pm (Tours available on Saturdays only at 12, 2, 4 and 6pm). Visit staleymillfarmanddistillery.com and Indian Creek Distillery on Facebook & Instagram to learn more, including their 2018 special events featuring the Staley Grist Mill 200th Birthday Celebrations, Mash Bill Music Series, Tour de Donut, Cocktails at the Creek and more.

Filed Under: Hidden Gems, The Featured Articles

6th Annual Rocky’s Run for Freedom 5K Run/Walk

May 22, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

This race is held each year the Saturday of Memorial Day Weekend in honor of Marine Corporal Paul “Rocky” Zanowick, II who was from Miamisburg and who died while serving his country June 3rd 2011. In 2017 this race had Team Fastrax skydivers jump in the American flag to start the race. If you were there, you know it was amazing. If you weren’t there, you should come this year. You will be proud to be an American!

Filed Under: Runners

Free Kings Island Admission For Military Personnel

May 22, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Kings Island prides itself on providing world-class thrills, fun and entertainment for guests of all ages. The 364-acre amusement and water park is also proud of the brave men and women who serve in the U.S. military.

Kings Island will pay tribute to members of the military by offering free admission on military appreciation days during the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

The deal is available May 25-28.

Military who qualify for the free admission ticket include active military, retired military, National Guard, veterans with honorable or medical discharge and Reserve Officers’ Training Corps with government issued ID.

A valid military ID must be presented at Kings Island to take advantage of this offer.

Qualifying military personnel can also purchase discount tickets at a special price of $34/ticket for up to six family members at the park.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Free Military Admission, kings island

Dayton Breweries Bring Home The Awards

May 21, 2018 By Lisa Grigsby

This past weekend in Lexington, KY the finale of their Craft Beer week celebration was the Alltech Craft Brews and Food Fest. With 60 breweries pouring over 200 beers from across the US, the highlight of the festival is the Commonwealth Cup Craft Beer Competition. Beers were judged on appearance, aroma, flavor, body, color, carbonation, foam, clarity, balance, drinkability, technical quality, and overall impression.

 

The  Commonwealth Cup was awarded to the highest rated beer, which this year was awarded to Braxton Brewing Company for their Barrel Aged Dark Charge Mole Stout.

 

In addition to the Commonwealth Cup three tiers of recognition were awarded: Gold, Silver, and Bronze. A gold medal beer is an outstanding beer that displays the correct balance of taste, aroma and appearance appropriate for the style, and excellent technical merit.  Dayton breweries bringing home the Gold are:

 

Dayton Beer Company – 3 Gold Medals:
Beast of Tadmor Village, Upright Smoked Lager,
Midnight Dream

Hairless Hare – 3 Gold Medals:
Imperial CRV, Barrel Aged Barley Wine, Barrel Aged Cold War

 

A silver medal beer is an excellent product that displays the correct balance of taste, aroma and appearance appropriate for the style, and a high level of technical merit. The Miami Valley can claim seven silvers:

Crooked Handle – 2 Silver Medals:
Wee Bit O Trouble, Roadside Peanut Butter Porter
Hairless Hare – 4 Silver Medals:
Bitter Hare,  3 Quarter Porter, Kings Reserve, Kickback Kolsch
The Dayton Beer Company Lost Tunnel Deep Sea Diving
A bronze medal beer is a quality product with the correct balance of taste, aroma and appearance appropriate for the style, and the absence of major faults.  Area breweries brought in six bronze medals:
Devil Wind Brewing – 2 Bronze Medals
Heading East,  Steel Cut Stout
Lock 27 – 4 Bronze Medals
Alpheaus, Mouth Breather, Waterway, Brewing Charlosta
Crooked Handle:  Trinity Haze

 

A great showing for Dayton breweries, especially for Devil Wind to medal, as a rookie brewery.  We’re lucky to have such great local beers in the Miami Valley.  Hope you get a chance to taste all these award winners soon!

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Commonwealth Cup, Crooked Handle, dayton beer co, Devil Wind, Hairless Hare, Lock 27

Freight to debut Album

May 21, 2018 By Guest Contributor

Have you heard of Freight? Join them and hop on the elevator with the release of their debut album Start The Night Off Easy, set to be released May 2018!

Officially formed in the summer of 2017, this Dayton band has been tirelessly writing and performing original music around town. Their already released single “12 Bar Crawl” has been well received as it talks about 12 of the local Dayton bars.

 

Fans also hold dear Freight’s released cover of “My Funny Valentine”, which puts a funky twist on the 1937 jazz standard.

Being primarily categorized as rock, Freight incorporates aspects of funk and jazz into their music and are compared to the likens of Led Zeppelin, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Cake, with hints of the Beatles, Nirvana, and Gem City. This 5-piece band is composed of Matt Huntington on keys and vocals, Tim Schroeder on guitar and vocals, Ethan Steinmetz on guitar, Adam Knox on bass, and Matthew Stevenson on drums. Their album was recorded by Adam and Matthew at 14 Chambers Studios and produced by Adam. 

Start The Night Off Easy is sure to be a hit, including favorites such as “12 Bar Crawl” and “Needle’s Eye”, as well as never before heard songs like “Waiting” and “Lies”. Fans have been tuned in to their Instagram and Facebook accounts @udfreight, eagerly awaiting news of the release.

Be sure to listen to Freight and catch their debut album on iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, Amazon Music, as well as other platforms! This is a band you don’t want to miss.

-Comet Stone

Filed Under: Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: freight

Alabama Brings THE HITS TOUR To The Rose

May 21, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Country music legends ALABAMA will bring THE HITS TOUR 2018 to Huber Heights, OH at Rose Music Center on Friday, September 14th.

Fans can expect the once in a lifetime show that continues to attract multiple generations of fans that flock to see ALABAMA, driving them to be named the ‘Greatest Country Band of All Time.’ The iconic performers will showcase the unprecedented collection of 43 No. 1 singles spanning 21 GOLD, PLATINUM, and MULTI-PLATINUM albums and a musical tradition and legacy that continues.

“This year’s tour is for the lifelong fans, and also the younger generations just now discovering the music,” Randy Owen notes.

 

Tony Conway continues, “The band is having fun, selling tickets, and sounding unbelievable vocally. This tour is about the music of the past 49 years the band’s 43 No. 1 singles. ALABAMA is still and will always be the greatest country band in American History.”

Tickets for the Huber Heights show will go on sale to the public beginning 11am on Friday, May 25th atwww.Ticketmaster.com, www.Rosemusiccenter.com and the Rose Music Center Box Office. Charge by phone at 1.800.745.3000. *Ticket prices include parking and are subject to applicable Ticketmaster fees.  Dates, times and artists subject to change without notice. All events rain or shine.

ABOUT ALABAMA

It’s been over 40 years since Randy, Jeff and Teddy, left the cotton farms of Fort Payne, Alabama, to spend the summer playing in a Myrtle Beach, South Carolina bar called The Bowery. Having grown up working in the fields, the cousins were no strangers to hard work. They didn’t flinch when it took six long years of working for tips and living hand to mouth playing in the bar.

Finally, word of mouth earned the major label deal they’d been dreaming of. In 1980 the band broke through with their first Top 20 hit “My Home’s In Alabama.”

ALABAMA is the band that changed everything. They brought country music to the mainstream and from side stage to the main stage. ALABAMA introduced rock style guitars, lights, pyrotechnics and sounds to the country audience.

ALABAMA’s reach goes far beyond their impact on other artists; their music is timeless and can be heard today as a part of every cover band’s set list in nearly every college town in America.

While their music continues to stand the test of time, their numbers and stats are beyond compare. The band has sold over 80 million albums. They have charted 43 #1 singles including 21 #1 singles in a row, a record that will likely never be surpassed in any genre. They have won over 178 CMA Awards, Grammy Awards, ACM Awards and counting. They’ve earned 21 Gold ®, Platinum ® and Multi-Platinum ® albums and were named the RIAA’s Country Group of the Century. They are members of the Country Music Hall of Fame and have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. They are also world-class philanthropists who have raised over 250 Million dollars for charity.

The band continues to perform to legions of loyal fans, selling out venues night after night. They were honored with the ACM Career Achievement Award at the Ryman Auditorium in the Fall of 2015 and were named “Album Of The Year” at the 2015 Dove Awards for ANGELS AMONG US” HYMNS & GOSPEL FAVORITES.

After 49 years ALABAMA continues to thrill fans as THE HITS TOUR 2018 rolls on through the US and Canada. ALABAMA is and always will be the greatest country band in American history.

Filed Under: Dayton Music, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Alabama, The Rose

The Canal House Eatery Now Open in Miamisburg

May 20, 2018 By Lisa Grigsby

Miamisburg has another dining option! The The Canal House Eatery opened their doors at 103 S. Second Street, in the spot that formerly housed Palmitas Taco Shop. It’s a quaint little eatery with seating in 2 small dining rooms and aa few patio tables outside.

You may have known Tanya Straight when she was running The Red Wagon Cafe Food Truck for the past six years.  The truck has been sold and they opened the restaurant on May 11th and will be serving up a menu of soups, salads, sandwiches, and fresh bakery items.  They’ll be open six days a week, Tuesday through Saturday 11am – 7pm and Sunday for brunch.

They’ll serve Sunday Brunch from 10am -2pm today and here’s what on the brunch menu:

House made:
Biscuits and Gravy
Cinnamon Rolls
Blueberry muffins
Fruit and yogirt parfait
Build your own omlett with home fries and toast
Bacon or sausage egg and cheese
Blt, or a double if you’re feeling frisky…
House chicken salad on pita bread
Southwest chicken wrap
House biscuit with housemade jam

Here’s a peak at their menu:

 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Canal House Eatery, Red Wagon Cafe, Tanya Straight

Luminaries of Dayton: Lorenzo Lorraine Langstroth

May 20, 2018 By Angie Hoschouer

Lorenzo L. Langstroth (1810 – 1895)
Father of American Beekeeping

Lorenzo Lorraine Langstroth was born December 25, 1810, in Philadelphia. He became pastor of the South Congregational Church in Andover, Massachusetts in May of 1836 and was a teacher at Yale University. In 1852, he moved to Oxford, Ohio and took up the work of bee keeping for which he is best known. The world of insects held a fascination for Lorenzo from a very early age but the one that turned out to be his life-long ambition was the bee. It was while visiting the home of one of his church members, who was a keeper of bees, that his interest in bee keeping was once again revived. Mr. Langstroth tried his hand at beekeeping and quickly became dissatisfied with the primitive methods of harvesting the honey. He read the latest books of his time, but their methods were crude, resulting in the death of a large amount of the bee population, so in order to attain the honey he constructed a beehive which contained a baseboard where the bees entered. What was the main difference between his beehive and the rest?

Patent No. 9,300 Bee Hive L. L. Langstroth 1852

Before Mr. Lanstroth’s invention, the bees attached their combs to the walls of the hive and the only way to get the comb out was to cut them out, which spoiled the comb and wasted much honey.

Mr. Langstroth’s hive housed a removable frame, a place to store the excess honey and a roof. He left a 3/8″ space between the hive wall and the frames in which the combs were built. The bees did not build across the space, leaving the comb frames free to be easily removed by the bee keeper.

His book, “Langstroth on the Hive and the Honey-Bee” written in 1853, was reprinted, revised and translated into various languages before and after his death. Though his invention was used throughout the world, he made little money because of infringements of his copyright, Patent No. 9300. He did not have the financial resources for attorney fees, court costs, etc. Mr. Langstroth lived in the East End of Dayton in 1894 with his daughter, Anna L. Cowan. Lorenzo Langstroth passed away at the podium while addressing the Wayne Avenue Presbyterian Church on October 6, 1895 at the age of 84. Mr. Langstroth is located in Section 103 lot 2634 at Woodland Cemetery. Cemetery records reflect the name on the file card was Longstroth but someone had later hand written the name Langstroth and added “Bee Man”.

Lorenzo L. Langstroth Monument at Woodland Cemetery

The following is the inscription on the front of Mr. Langstroth’s monument:

Inscribed to the memory of Rev. L.L Langstroth, “Father of American beekeeping,” by his affectionate beneficiaries who, in the remembrance of the service rendered by his persistent and painstaking observations and experiments with the honey bee, his improvements in the hive, and the literary ability shown in the first scientific and popular book on the subject of beekeeping in the United States, gratefully erect this monument.

The back of his monument reads:
“Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord,
that they may rest from their labors, and their
work do follow them.”

Woodland Cemetery, founded in 1841, is one of the nation’s five oldest rural garden cemeteries and a unique cultural, botanical and educational resource in the heart of Dayton, Ohio as you will see as you read through this new MostMetro.com series. Visit the cemetery and arboretum and take one of the many tours Woodland offers free of charge. Most of Dayton’s aviation heroes, inventors and business barons are buried at Woodland.

Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum is located at 118 Woodland Avenue off of Brown Street near the UD Campus. The Woodland Office is open Monday through Friday 8 am to 5 pm and Saturday 8 am to 12 pm. The Cemetery and Arboretum are open daily from 8 am to 6 pm. The Mausoleum is open daily from 9 am to 5 pm. For more information, call 937-228-3221 or visit the Woodland website.

 

Filed Under: Active Living, Community, Dayton History, Downtown Dayton, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Dayton Ohio, Downtown Dayton, Things to do in Dayton, Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum

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