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LAND HO SINCE 1992 DETAIL FROM "SHIPBREAKING, MOUNT RAINIER" BY MARY IVERSON • ON VIEW AT 516 ARTS VOLUME 24 | ISSUE 37 | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 | FREE [2] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [3] alibi VOLUME 24 | ISSUE 37 | SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 EDITORIAL FILM EDITOR: Devin D. O’Leary (ext. 230) [email protected] MUSIC EDITOR: August March (ext. 245) FOOD EDITOR/MANAGING EDITOR: Ty Bannerman (ext. 260) [email protected] CALENDARS EDITOR/COPY EDITOR: Renee Chavez (ext. 255) [email protected] CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Cecil Adams, Sam Adams, Steven Robert Allen, Gustavo Arellano, Rob Brezsny, Shawna Brown, Suzanne Buck, Eric Castillo, David Correia, Mark Fischer, Ari LeVaux, Mark Lopez, August March, Genevieve Mueller, Geoffrey Plant, Benjamin Radford, Jeremy Shattuck, Holly von Winckel PRODUCTION ART DIRECTOR: Jesse Schulz (ext. 229) [email protected] PRODUCTION MANAGER: Archie Archuleta (ext. 240) [email protected] EDITORIAL DESIGNER/ GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Tasha Lujan (ext. 254) [email protected] ILLUSTRATOR/GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Robert Maestas (ext.256) [email protected] STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER: Eric Williams [email protected] CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS: Ben Adams, Eva Avenue, Cutty Bage, Max Cannon, Michael Ellis, Adam Hansen, Jodie Herrera, KAZ, Jack Larson, Tom Nayder, Ryan North SALES SALES DIRECTOR: Sarah Bonneau (ext. 235) [email protected] SENIOR DISPLAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE: John Hankinson (ext. 265) [email protected] ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES: Rudy Carrillo (ext. 245) [email protected] Valerie Hollingsworth (ext. 263) [email protected] Dawn Lytle (ext. 258) [email protected] Tierna Unruh-Enos (ext. 248) [email protected] ADMINISTRATION CONTROLLER: Constance Moss (ext. 257) [email protected] ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE : Courtney Foster (ext. 233) [email protected] FRONT DESK: Desiree Garcia (ext. 221) [email protected] Taylor Grabowsky (ext. 221) [email protected] EDITOR AND PUBLISHER: Carl Petersen (ext. 228) [email protected] SYSTEMS MANAGER: Kyle Silfer (ext. 242) [email protected] WEB MONKEY: John Millington (ext. 238) [email protected] OWNERS, PUBLISHERS EMERITI: Christopher Johnson and Daniel Scott CIRCULATION CIRCULATION MANAGER: Geoffrey Plant (ext. 252) [email protected] INFORMATION PRINTER: The Santa Fe New Mexican IN LOVING MEMORY: Doug Albin, Martin Candelaria, Michael Henningsen, Eric Johnson, Greg Medara, Mina Yamashita INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDER: Southwest Cyberport (232-7992) [email protected] NATIONAL ADVERTISING: VMG Advertising (888) 278-9866 www.vmgadvertising.com NUCITY PUBLICATIONS, INC. 413 Central NW, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102 BUSINESS HOURS: 10AM–5PM MON–FRI PHONE: (505) 346-0660 FAX: (505) 256-9651 Alibi (ISSN 1088-0496) is published weekly 52 times per year. 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Association of Alternative Newsmedia [4] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 CRIB NOTES BY AUGUST MARCH Crib Notes: Sept. 10, 2015 1 Two city councilors plan to introduce legislation aimed at reducing penalties for the possession of _____________________. a) kittehs b) Amanita Muscaria c) marijuana d) time travel devices 2 According to published reports, 35.5% of Albuquerque residents have little or nothing to do with ______________________. a) banks b) jumping spiders c) chrome wheel rims d) green chile 3 The University of New Mexico football team began their season last weekend, beating the _________________________ 66-0. a) Alabama Crimson Tide b) Auburn Tigers c) New Mexico State Aggies d) Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils 4 The one-time site of Eclipse Aviation is now slated to be a plant that manufactures ___________________. a) tortillas b) replicants c) Soylent Green d) flying saucers 5 Our state legislators are currently gearing up to _______________________. a) order lunch from The Bull Ring. b) face off with the governor over concerns about public education c) dance merrily about the Roundhouse d) impeach Secretary of State Dianna Duran Answers: 1) C. Councilors Isaac Benton and Rey Garduño are convinced that Albuquerque’s citizens have spoken clearly about reducing penalties for possession of marijuana and are pursuing the matter. 2) A. There are more than 120,000 unbanked and underbanked households in the metropolitan area, according to a newly released FDIC survey. 3) D. The Lobos brutalized the Delta Devils, giving up only 74 yards and causing three turnovers and nine punts as they rolled over the hapless team from Mississippi. 4) A. The former aircraft hanger has been purchased by New Mexico Foods LLC. It’ll make a great tortilla plant. 5) D. A legislative committee will meet next week to consider impeachment proceedings for the beleaguered secretary of state, who is accused of gambling away campaign donations at area casinos. a AND ODDS ENDS WEIRD NEWS Dateline: China In order to keep a military parade commemorating the end of World War II bird-free, Chinese leaders have turned to some unusual exterminators—a gang of monkeys. The trained macaques are being used to drive birds away from designated areas in Beijing. The worry is that common city birds like pigeons could strike airplane engines during the many flyovers scheduled to take place during the parade. “We bought two monkeys in April last year from Henan Province. After one month’s training, the macaques mastered the skill of taking apart birds’ nests,” air force official Wang Mingzhi was quoted as saying by China News Service. Three more monkeys have been added to the team since then. Wang estimated the monkeys, who work for treats, can dismantle up to 60 nests per day. Other measures designed to keep the skies free include a ban on kites, balloons and “sport pigeons.” Local airports will also be shut down during the festivities. This September marks the 70th anniversary of Japan’s official surrender during World War II. No word on how Beijing will now get rid of its monkeys. Dateline: Illinois According to the Chicago Tribune, a 23-yearold Aurora man sent naked selfies of himself to the human resources manager of a St. Charles company where he had been offered a job early last month. The HR manager contacted police on Aug. 14 to report that the man had sent her two nude photographs of himself via text. “There was a conditional offer of employment made to this particular applicant,” Elmhurst Police Chief Michael Ruth told the Tribune. “My understanding is they’ve rescinded the offer of employment.” The victim received the texts while at home in suburban Elmhurst. The texter told police the nude selfies were all a mistake. According to the police report, the offender was contacted and “admitted to sending the photographs, explaining they were actually meant for another individual and were sent to the victim in error.” Police advised the job seeker to “cease any contact with the victim.” Although the victim did not pursue charges, the unnamed company has decided not to hire the sexting jobseeker. Dateline: Texas In other selfie-related mishap news, a 19- year-old Houston man accidentally killed himself while posing for a selfie with a gun. KPRC News-2 is reporting Deleon Alonso Smith, a father of two, was struck in the throat with a bullet as he took a picture with his cell phone in one hand while holding a gun in the other. According to relatives Smith was one day away from starting community college. Investigators told KPRC that Smith’s cousin was in another room at the time the gun went off. The cousin told police they found the gun earlier in the day. No charges have been filed, but Houston Police are attempting to determine the origin of the gun. Dateline: Texas A Texas State University co-ed has become famous (well, internet famous) after she took to driving a tiny, pink Barbie Jeep around campus. Tara Monroe, 20, says her license was suspended and her father took her car away after she refused a Breathalyzer test during a DWI stop following a Waka Flocka Flame concert. “Riding a bike around campus sucks,” Monroe told the San Antonio Express-News. And in case readers didn’t understand, she added, “Like, really sucks.” So instead of riding a sucky bike around TSU campus, Monroe opted for a batterypowered Barbie Jeep she bought for $60 off Craigslist. Pictures and videos of Monroe driving around San Antonio in the child- sized Jeep have gone viral on social media. “This is the best way I could have gotten my 15 minutes of fame,” Monroe said. “Basically, it was the best decision I’ve made in college, yet.” Dateline: Maine A little thing like a police chase and a car crash didn’t stop a suspect from getting his high on. Topsham Police Sgt. Robert Ramsay told the Portland Press Herald an officer saw 44-year-old John Yates pull his SUV into a breakdown lane on Interstate 295. The officer got out of his cruiser, but before he could could speak to the motorist, Yates pulled suddenly back into traffic, nearly hitting a semi tractor-trailer. Ramsay said a slow-speed pursuit ensued, ending when Yates hit a guardrail and crashed into a ditch. According to the police report, Officer Randy Cook approached Yates’ vehicle and witnessed him pull a can of Dust-Off keyboard cleaner from under his seat and begin huffing it. At that point Cook removed the keys from the ignition and arrested Yates. He was charged with operating under the influence of drugs, driving to endanger, failure to stop for a police officer and civil possession of inhalants. a Compiled by Devin D. O’Leary. Email your weird news to [email protected]. SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [5] [6] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 BUGS! | THE BUGMAN Potential Hazards of Pesticides UC Davis study may link poison to autism BY RICHARD “BUGMAN” FAGERLUND believe it is time that we get a handle on how we use pesticides in public areas. Right now, any pest control company can use any registered pesticide in public buildings and on public property. Because of the potential hazards of the pesticides, we need to control this. There are several issues that are very important. First, just because a pest control person is licensed by the State of New Mexico does not mean he/she is competent. There are a number of different pesticide categories, including structural pest control, vertebrate pest control, fumigation, wood destroying organism control, lawn and ornamental pest control, weed control and vector control. These are only a fraction of the categories. The state requires the pesticide applicator to get four Continuing Education Units (CEUs) every year. They can get four CEUs in any category (except wood destroying organism control) and be recertified in all of the categories. This is ridiculous. Everyone should be required to get CEUs in every category on their license. So just because your exterminator has a license in a category, I doesn’t mean he has taken any CEU classes to update his knowledge in that category. Secondly, and this is very important, research published recently in Environmental Health Perspectives supports the theory that children whose mothers are exposed to some pesticides during pregnancy may be at increased risk for autism spectrum disorders. Researchers at the University of California, Davis, looked at the medical records of 970 participants. They found pregnant women who lived within a mile of an area treated with three different types of pesticides were at a two-thirds higher risk of having a child with ASD or developmental delays. These types of pesticides include synthetic pyrethroids, organophosphates and carbamates. These pesticide-treated areas included parks, golf courses, pastures and roadsides. This would include spraying for mosquitoes. The study discovered that women exposed to pesticides during their second or third trimesters were even more likely to have a child born with developmental delays or autism. The findings add to the mounting evidence linking autism and developmental delay to pesticide exposure during pregnancy. Third, herbicides that contain glyphosates are frequently sprayed on public areas, in parks, along roadways and other areas where people can unknowingly become exposed to them. There is a study published in Entropy, a peer-reviewed journal that exposes the health hazards of glyphosates. The conclusion below says it all: Given the known toxic effects of glyphosate reviewed here and the plausibility that they are negatively impacting health worldwide, it is imperative for more independent research to take place to validate the ideas presented here, and to take immediate action, if they are verified, to drastically curtail the useof glyphosate in agriculture. Glyphosate is likely to be pervasive in our food supply, and, contrary to being essentially nontoxic, it may in fact be the most biologically disruptive chemical in our environment. I believe that the studies definitely show that synthetic pyrethroids, organophosphates, carbamates and glyphosates should not be used in public areas without the knowledge of the public. They should definitely never be used in schools, day care centers, medical facilities and similar places. I would urge the state government to pass legislation that prohibits the use of these pesticides in public areas. If people want to use these toxic chemicals in and around their homes, that is fine, but nobody should be unknowingly exposed to them. If the legislators do not want to prohibit the use of these chemicals in public areas, then they should absolutely require pesticide notification so the public is aware of the pesticides before they enter a building or public area. The notification should include the name of the pesticide, the pests being treated for, the name, address and phone number of the company applying the pesticides and where people can get copies of the pesticide label and Material Safety Data Sheet. I also recommend that Albuquerque and Bernalillo County require the same regulations as mentioned, either totally eliminating the pesticides mentioned from use in public buildings and on public property, or require pesticide notification. I ask that legislators make pesticide applicators get yearly training in all the categories on their license. To get training in one category and re-certified in many categories is patently ridiculous. a If you have any pest questions, you can contact The Bugman at [email protected] or call him at (505) 385-2820. You can also go to his webpage at www.bugmansbugclub.com and join the Bug Club. You will get a lot of information on ants and all other household pests. SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [7] [8] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 OPINION | ¡ASK A MEXICAN! BY GUSTAVO ARELLANO D ear Mexican: Why is it that Mexican immigrants like my parents, who have done well enough in this country to provide a home (a house, paid off in 10 years, in white Orange County}, an education, food, clothes and toys for their children (namely, myself and my brother), can complain about El Hombre Gringo and his stupid immigration laws, but when they go down to Tijuana, or to visit family in La Barca and Zacatecas, they complain about the prices of things: the blankets, the jewelry, the food; about how it’s “tan caro”? Call me a commie, but goddamn, these people are making shit profit on their wares. Shouldn’t more affluent people such as my parents be happy to spread their money around and help out their fellow country men and women? Why do my parent’s complain about how El Hombre Gringo treats us like shit even though we work hard at the jobs even they wouldn’t do, but when they see one of “our people” selling roses on the freeway off-ramps, they ignore him/her, and never even think about buying one? At least they’re not just standing there with a cardboard sign that says “Will wurk fur food,” so why make a big stink when I want a damn blanket at the border crossing (one of those fabulous, warm, fuzzy ones, you know) that costs $32 there, and would most certainly cost me more than twice that even in Westminster? ¿Qué mendiga mierda es eso? I don’t exactly consider myself Mexican; call me a traitor if you will, but since I was born in the US, raised around nothing but whites and went to school with a majority of whites, I don’t identify with the Chicano culture. But I see what people like my parents do, people who were born in Mexico and know what it’s like to live in poverty, and I wonder what mierda their brains are made of that they wouldn’t try to help out with something so piddly as buying the stupid chicletes that the children at the border sell. Sure, you can’t buy from all of them, but why refuse to let me buy the blanket, saying, “Oh, he’ll come back and lower his price.” Well, he didn’t come back, and I never got my blanket. And he never got the $32 I was more than willing to fork over; I was actually, going to give him $40 (but don’t tell my dad that, he’d mess his pants) because, who cares? —Too Many More Issues to Mention Dear Pocho: Loco, you’re nothing but a Chicano. Chicanos are the only people on Earth who care about poor Mexicans. Mexicans in Mexico don’t give a shit; Mexican immigrants in the United States not brainwashed by progressive do-gooders (SARCASM ALERT to said progressive dogooders, who only laugh at jokes that involve Republicans getting ISIS-ed) talk nothing but shit about the paisas and nacos and chúntaros in their neighborhoods. So God bless you for caring about poor Mexicans and word to the wise: Stop being a Linus. The Paramount Swap Meet sells blankets for cheaper than $32. D ear Mexican: Does Mexico have a problem with illegal immigrants coming into their country for free healthcare and welfare? —San Miguel de Allende Asshole Dear Gabacho: No, because we’re smarter than that—and look at how great our immigration policy has worked for us! a Ask the Mexican at [email protected]. Be his fan on Facebook. Follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano or follow him on Instagram @gustavo_arellano! SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [9] Community Calendar THURSDAY SEP 10 ALIGN UP’S CORE BREATHING-SPINE RESTORATION CLASS Class merges gentle, helpful and hands-on work to soothe and progress your body with guidance on how to do breath-work. Orange Yoga (7528 Fourth Street NW). $10-$15 sliding scale. 5:30-6:30pm. 933-5211. alibi.com/e/158717. ALIGN UP’S STRESS BUSTERS DEEP FASCIA RELEASE CLASS A super-relaxation circuit training helpful for recovery from long-term stress, PTSD and chronic pain. Orange Yoga (7528 Fourth Street NW). $10-$15 sliding scale. 6:45-8:30pm. (917) 535-9530. alibi.com/e/158895. BENTLEY ZUMBA Whether you’re a newcomer or seasoned [10] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 dancer, front row or back, everyone has a great time. Form Studio (3001 Monte Vista NE). $5. 5:45-6:45pm. 489-9168. alibi.com/e/162717. HERBALISM SERIES 2 Learn how to use herbs for a variety of conditions including stress, chronic pain, insomnia, mood imbalances, immune issues and more. The Source (1111 Carlisle SE). $160. 6-8pm. 265-5900. alibi.com/e/139088. INTRODUCTION TO CONTEMPLATIVE PSYCHOLOGY Karuna Training is an extended training program in Contemplative Psychology that teaches how to heal oneself and work skillfully with others through the innate potency of the heart. Albuquerque Shambhala Meditation Center (1102 Mountain NW). $65. 7-9pm. 717-2486. alibi.com/e/161390. JOIN ALBUQUERQUE ROLLER DERBY Join the best way to get in shape: roller derby! Loaner gear and skate lessons are provided for newbies. Wells Park (Sixth Street & Mountain). 6:30-8:30pm. 688-2426. alibi.com/e/158563. TOUCHPOOL VOLUNTEER TRAINING Offer Aquarium visitors a hands-on learning experience. If you are interested in becoming a BioPark Volunteer, complete an online application (adults and teens). ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden (2601 Central NW). 9:30am-3:30pm. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/149344. VIPASSANA MEDITATION AND DHARMA TALK 40-minute meditation followed by a Dharma talk. Albuquerque Vipassana Center (200 Rosemont NE). Donations accepted. 6:30-8pm. alibi.com/e/128742. URBAN SHAMAN: LEARNING LODGE A class for spiritual explorers who are looking to meet each other and grow. All backgrounds welcome. The Kiva (3096 Rosendo Garcia SW). $5-$25. 7-9pm. 382-5275. alibi.com/e/108566. SATURDAY SEP 12 FRIDAY SEP 11 GENTLE WALKS Explore easy trails of less than two miles and under 300 feet elevational change, meandering from one item of interest to another. Pajarito Environmental Education Center (2600 Canyon, Los Alamos). 8:30am. 662-0460. alibi.com/e/161570. ROCOCO SPORT HORSES Visit Corrales, home to Romance Arabians and now, Rococo Sport Horses—a lighter, livelier version of the Baroque—truly the best of both worlds. Palo Duro Senior Center (5221 Palo Duro NE). $2.50. 9am-3pm. 888-8102. alibi.com/e/161909. SHAMANIC DRUM CIRCLE: JOURNEY THROUGH TRANCE A light ceremony followed by trance drumming, with Shamanic techniques and teachings offered. World Studio (6300 Magpie NE, Rio Rancho). $5. 10:30am-12:30pm. 382-5275. alibi.com/e/145028. 6TH ANNUAL GALA FUNDRAISER The largest fundraiser of the year for non-profit Indian Pueblo Cultural Center whose mission is to preserve and perpetuate Pueblo culture. Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (2401 12th Street NW). $150-$1200. 6pm. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/161924. AFRODANSASANA Be prepared for a colorful fusion of dance/movement inspired by cultures of the African diaspora and centered in the eastern practice of mindfulness. Studio Sway (1100 San Mateo NE). $10. Noon-1pm. 710-5096. alibi.com/e/162600. ALBUQUERQUE WEST FAMILY HISTORY CONFERENCE This is a great opportunity to get started with genealogy research if you are a beginner or expand your skills if you are a more advanced researcher. Seven Bar Stake Center (4500 Seven Bar Loop NW). 8:30am-4pm. 898-7583. alibi.com/e/162189. BEASTLY BASH: GROWN UP GAMES AND GRUB Party like an adult and play like a kid. Run through an obstacle course, ride a mechanical bull, fly down a zip line, play giant beer pong, sample tequila and more. ABQ BioPark Zoo (903 10th Street SW). $30-$35. 6:30-10pm. 764-6280. alibi.com/e/162468. THE BOSQUE BUZZ: POLLINATORS AND PLANTS Take a close look at the flowers of the Rio Grande Bosque and their insect pollinators. Bachechi Open Space (9521 Rio Grande NW). FREE with registration. 10-11:30am. alibi.com/e/162894. BOSQUE RESTORATION DAY Give back to the Bosque in support of native plants. Habitat restoration will focus on removal of invasive Ravenna Grass in prepartation for the Yerba Mansa replanting. Tingley Beach (1800 Tingley SW). 10am-1pm. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/160317. DUKE CITY ROLLER DERBY DOUBLE HEADER: ABQ VS. DENVER Munecas Muertas vs Contenders and Juggernaughties vs Project Mayhem. Heights Community Center (823 Buena Vista SE). $5 suggested donation. 2:30-7pm. alibi.com/e/163209. GARAGE SALE AND DE-CLUTTER FOR A CAUSE All proceeds benefit El Ranchito de Los Ninos and Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central New Mexico. Donate gently used items. Los Lunas Middle School (423 Main SE, Los Lunas). 7am-1pm. 565-4470. alibi.com/e/162832. GRASS CLASS Retired professor of Biology, park herbarium curator and volunteer Pete Peterson leads a workshop on native grasses flourishing in the park. Cerrillos Hills State Park (Santa Fe County Road 59, Cerrillos). $5 per vehicle. 10am-noon. 474-0196. alibi.com/e/158441. HABITAT FOR HUMANITY NEEDS VOLUNTEERS Volunteers needed to assist with set-up and take-down, passing out fliers, etc. for Upcycle Fair/TedxABQ. University of New Mexico (Cornell Mall outside Popejoy Hall). 8am-4:30pm. 265-0057. alibi.com/e/162427. JOIN ALBUQUERQUE ROLLER DERBY 7-9pm. See 9/10 listing. LAVENDER: A TO Z Learn the basics of growing lavender. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). $0-$30. 1-2:30pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/162343. MARAVILLA “LAST CALL” AFTER PARTY The event will showcase poetry, live art and music. Performers include Flo Fader, Keith Sanchez, BuddhaFunk, The 2Bers, Mondo Vibrations and more. National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street SW). $50. 8:30pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/163145. ON YOUR MARK TEDxABQ 2015 highlights 16-20 remarkable homegrown ideas from New Mexico’s most passionate innovators, thinkers and doers. Popejoy Hall (203 Cornell NE). $50-$94. 10am-4pm. 925-5858. alibi.com/e/149076. OUT OF THE DARKNESS WALK Walk with the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention to raise money for vital research and education programs to prevent suicide and save lives. Hoffmantown Church (8888 Harper NE). 10am-1pm. 263-2085. alibi.com/e/145389. PATRIOT TRIATHLON This race is staged in honor of fire, military, police and EMS personnel who on a daily basis make our lives safer and better. A 400 yard swim, 15.4 mile bike and 5k run. Rio Rancho Aquatic Center (745 Loma Colorado, Rio Rancho). $15-$220. 8am. 891-5230. alibi.com/e/149077. PEOPLE CREATE CITIES: THE IRISH COMMUNITY As part of the Library’s speaker series, Ellen Dowling tells the story of Albuquerque’s Irish settlers Special Collections Library (423 Central NE). 10:30am-noon. 848-1376. alibi.com/e/162890. XERISCAPE SEMINAR Join Claude Ceniceros, Xeriscape Incentive Inspector, to learn more about xeriscape principles, plant selection, design strategies, drip irrigation and how to get an ABCWUA rebate. Cherry Hills Library (6901 Barstow NE). 10am-noon. 857-8321. alibi.com/e/162888. SUNDAY SEP 13 12TH ANNUAL NM CHIPS AND SALSA HALF MARATHON 10K run, 5K run, 5K race walk and kids K run located in the heart of the North Valley. Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute (9169 Coors NW). $15-$70. 6am. 586-7474. alibi.com/e/149078. 3RD ANNUAL 5K REMEMBRANCE RUN A 5K run/walk/stroll. All of the fundraising done in the Albuquerque chapter of Blue Star Mothers supports local military and veterans. Balloon Fiesta Park (5500 Balloon Fiesta Parkway). $15-$40. 8:30am. alibi.com/e/149121. CONTEMPORARY ISSUES SERIES David Green discusses the principles for creating spaces that encourage innovation and reviews his plan for Albuquerque’s Innovation district. Albuquerque Museum of Art and History (2000 Mountain NW). Included with regular admission. 1-2pm. 243-7255. alibi.com/e/161471. DRUM JOURNEY: URBAN SHAMAN Experience a powerful journey through sound and tap into your own personal abilities for healing and growth. The Source (1111 Carlisle SE). $10. 4:30-6pm. 382-5275. alibi.com/e/108614. HANOI: POISED BETWEEN IDEOLOGY & REALITY A lecture by Dr. Monika Ghattas, retired professor of history at CNM, about Hanoi. Albuquerque Museum of Art and History (2000 Mountain NW). $0-$20. 3-5pm. 856-7277. alibi.com/e/163163. MEDITATION FOR KIDS In this lighthearted and fun class, children learn how to build a space of inner strength and confidence by developing their good qualities. Kadampa Meditation Center (8701 Comanche NE). $3 per child suggested donation, parents free. 10-11:30am. 292-5293. alibi.com/e/161688. MEXICAN EXTRAVAGANZA A Mexican rodeo. Tingley Coliseum (300 San Pedro NE). $15-$30. 4pm. alibi.com/e/161931. NATIVITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY PARISH FIESTA Celebrate the community feast day with food booths, live music, games, arts and crafts, a silent auction and a raffle. Nativity Church Classroom (9502 Fourth Street NW). 10am-6pm. 898-5253. alibi.com/e/163153. PRAYERS FOR WORLD PEACE Bring meaning to your Sunday morning by learning how to practically bring more peace and happiness into the world. Kadampa Meditation Center (8701 Comanche NE). $10 suggested donation. 10-11:30am. 292-5293. alibi.com/e/161684. PUBLIC MEDITATION SITTING Join in for a public sitting. Meditation instruction is available upon request. Albuquerque Shambhala Meditation Center (1102 Mountain NW). 10am-noon. 717-2486. alibi.com/e/132014. MONDAY SEP 14 2015 LINK CONFERENCE This year’s Link conference features national and local speakers including Lt. Andrea Taylor and Misha Goodman to highlight what other jurisdictions are doing with demonstrated success. National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street SW). 8am-5pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/162897. See preview box. FAVORITE XERIC PLANTS FOR AUTUMN The Xeric Garden Club of Albuquerque gives a guided tour of its certified Wildlife Habitat Garden with an emphasis on favorite plants for fall. Albuquerque Garden Center (10120 Lomas NE). 10-11am. 296-6020. alibi.com/e/160967. HEART OF RECOVERY MEDITATION GROUP A 20-minute sitting meditation, a reading and group discussion, followed by announcements and a brief closing meditation. Albuquerque Shambhala Meditation Center (1102 Mountain NW). $5. 6-7:30pm. 717-2486. alibi.com/e/141117. TODDLER TIME A chance for toddlers four and under to explore early-childhood exhibit areas, enjoy stories and join in a music jam. Explora! (1701 Mountain NW). Included with admission. 9am. 224-8300. alibi.com/e/129398. TRIBAL STYLE BELLY DANCE Students learn the core language of tribal-style belly dance, including footwork, conditioning, layering techniques and finger cymbals. Maple Street Dance Studio (Alley Entrance) (3215 Central). $15. 5:30pm. alibi.com/e/140390. TUESDAY SEP 15 ABC SEED LIBRARY BOOK CLUB MEETING Join in every month to discuss seed/gardening/farming/food-related books. This month’s book is Gary Paul Nabhan’s Desert Terroir. Holiday Park Community Center (11710 Comanche NE). 6-7:30pm. alibi.com/e/162899. EVENT | PREVIEW AMELIA OLSON ZENTANGLE FOR ADULTS Do you Zentangle? Enjoy this relaxing art and practice with other folks who would love to share their projects with you. Lomas-Tramway Public Library (908 Eastridge NE). 2-3:30pm. 291-6295. alibi.com/e/162891. Loving Humans, Loving Pets, Loving Communities Pets are part of my family and like true family members my relationship with my smaller mammal loved ones can be complex. Statistics have shown that when an animal is being abused in a household, a human family member is also experiencing abuse. By acknowledging and studying the link between animal and human violence, we can create new ways of MONDAY maintaining a safe and secure household for all of our family members. This also SEPTEMBER 14 allows for multi-disciplinary public safety and public-service agencies to find National Hispanic effective ways to collaborate and cross-report abuse in order to reduce Cultural Center community violence. The National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street 1701 Fourth Street SW SW) hosts and the Bernalillo County Sherriff’s Office and the Animal Care alibi.com/e/162897 Services Department will head the 2015 Link Conference, an event highlighting 8am to 5pm what other jurisdictions are doing to improve community relationships with demonstrated success. Anyone from social workers and law enforcement officers to domestic violence workers and attorneys will be attending this crucial event. All others are welcome to attend this conference happening on Monday, Sept. 14, from 8am to 5pm. Registration is $80. For more information visit nationalhispaniccenter.org. (Amelia Olson) a ANGRY BIRDS IN THE LIBRARY Decorate boxes, work in groups to stack them in different designs and then try to knock them down using balls in a life-size Angry Birds game. Main Library (501 Copper NW). 3:30-4:30pm. 768-5131. alibi.com/e/162898. CONTENTMENT IN EVERYDAY LIFE Acharya Rosenthal discusses how, with meditation and contemplation practice, we can relax with ourselves as we are and appreciate simple human experience. Albuquerque Shambhala Center (1102 Mountain NW). $100-$120. 7-9pm. 717-2486. alibi.com/e/161381. FINANCIAL FRAUD SCHEMES How to avoid identity theft, lottery and sweepstake scams, telemarketing fraud, credit card fraud, advance fee schemes, mail theft and pyramid schemes. Barelas Senior Center (714 Seventh Street SW). FREE with registration. 10-11am. alibi.com/e/152796. GLOW AND GROW American Business Women’s Association’s networking and social event business meeting including dinner followed by a presentation by Janice Moranz MD. MCM Elegante Hotel (2020 Menaul NE). $17. 5:30-7:30pm. 681-0235. alibi.com/e/162858. JOIN ALBUQUERQUE ROLLER DERBY 6:30-8:30pm. See 9/10 listing. MASTERING THE BJ: INTERACTIVE SKILLS Bulk up your blowjob résumé with this hands-on (a dildo) workshop taught by Self Serve Manager Hunter Riley. Self Serve (3904 Central SE). $15-$20. 7:30pm. 265-5815. alibi.com/e/161358. NM MEDICAL CANNABIS PATIENTS ALLIANCE Bringing awareness and education about utilizing medical cannabis as a medicine and guiding you through the New Mexico Medical Cannabis Program. North Domingo Baca Multigenerational Center (7521 Carmel NE). 6:30-8:30pm. 291-9332. alibi.com/e/162371. POSTPARTUM GROUP A gathering for new parents and their babies; older children are welcome too. Inspired Birth and Families (6855 Fourth Street NW). 10am-noon. 232-2772. alibi.com/e/141956. PRCA RODEO Cheer on your favorite cowboy, cowgirl, bull or bronco. Tingley Coliseum (300 San Pedro NE). Included with regular admission. 6:45pm. alibi.com/e/161941. TUESDAY NIGHT SWING DANCE All-ages swing dance with beginner, intermediate and advanced lessons. Heights Community Center (823 Buena Vista SE). $4. 7-10:30pm. 710-3840. alibi.com/e/137569. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [11] [12] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 ARTS | FeATuRe “Cruel-Apparition” by Ryan Pierce, Knew Normal “Lemmings” by Cedra Wood, Knew Normal ”exhibition 2” by Gala Bent, Knew Normal The Art of Saving a Planet A season for change BY RENEE CHAVEZ ow is it that preserving the only known planet that can sustain human life is still considered “controversial”? Whether you’ve seen the tragically low water levels at Elephant Butte or follow National Geographic on Instagram and see the images of polar bears dying as a result of melting sea ice, you can’t deny that climate change is real. If you persist in thinking it’s all a hoax(or even if you don’t,) well, perhaps you should turn off Fox News and get out into your community for HABITAT: Exploring Climate Change Through the Arts. The season long public arts collaboration is seeking to create a dialogue about climate change, whether through film, photographs, music or poems. The following are just a few of the stellar events in the HABITAT lineup. H The Potential Project Thursday, Sept. 10, at 5:30pm UNM Keller Hall Center for the Arts Free for all ages If international activism is your cup of tea, show up for keynote presentation “The Potential Project” with special guest artist Mel Chin. He discusses his vision for an independent future for the nomadic people of Western Sahara—a future where they have designed their own currency and built an economy on their greatest (and perhaps only) resource: solar power. According to Chin, “This project focuses on economic and technological innovation as ways to bring about a new form of independence—for all.” Whether you think this sounds like a great idea for that dystopian sci-fi novel you’re writing or like the solution to real problems across the world, you’re bound to learn something new at this event. groove on to the sound of change with reggae, Latin, world and rock tuneage produced by DJ Gabriel Jaureguiberry, Racine Kreyole and Jade Masque. The physical festivities extend down Central from Fifth Street to Sixth Street but the ideas have the potential to spread across the world. Knew Normal/Off the Charts Downtown Block Party Saturday, Sept. 12, from 4-8pm Central between Fifth and Sixth Street Free for all ages Aug. 29 through Oct. 31, Nov. 21 through Jan. 9, 2016 516 Arts (516 Central SW) Free for all ages What better way to get people involved than to throw a party? The Downtown Block Party is an artsy education celebration that will include interactive art projects, performances, demos, live music, food and edifying fun for todo la familia. Exhibitions will address subjects such as alternative energy, land and water use, food issues and local environment monitoring with a focus on positive solutions and opening the dialogue for the climate change conversation. Make sure to check out feature projects like “GhostFood” (which will let visitors smell food that is not available due to loss of biodiversity), “Little Sun Pop-Up Shop” (a social business and global project addressing the need for light in a sustainable way that benefits communities) and “Energy Illuminations” (a collection of lamps made with bioluminescent materials that are activated when energy-related keywords appear on Twitter and Google.) Also get your Gaia As the saying goes, “A picture is worth a thousand words” so what better way to join in the dialogue than to hop over to 516 Arts (516 Central SW) to view gallery exhibits that are tackling environmental controversy head-on. “Knew Normal” is a collection from multiple artists that explores the way climate change affects both our exterior surroundings and interior environments—our bodies and psyches. Also showing is “Off the Charts,” a local, national and international collection that examines the visual language artists use to portray our evolving world. Both shows end on Oct. 31 to make way for “Bewilderness” and “Rise.” The former explores the extremes of pristine wilderness and human control/exploitation while the latter looks back at navigational profiling for answers on how we will navigate the changes occurring in our world on a physical level. Open your eyes and your mind to get a glimpse of what the future might hold. For the full schedule of HABITAT events which continue into January 2016, go to http://issuu.com/516artsabq/docs/habitat_guide. Chasing Ice Friday, Sept. 18, at 8pm Harry E. Kinney Civic Plaza in Downtown ABQ Free for all ages Trying to plan a romantic date night? What could be sexier than caring about the Earth? Grab bae (and Fido too) for a large, free, outdoor screening of Jeff Orlowski’s awardwinning Chasing Ice (2012) at Civic Plaza. The film centers on environmental photographer James Balog who heads to the Arctic on assignment for National Geographic to get undeniable evidence of climate change. Using “revolutionary time-lapse cameras … [he] capture[s] a multi-year record of the world’s changing glaciers.” Balog artfully captures the frighteningly quick melting of entire icy landscapes that have withstood the test of time until now. Bring the whole family for something that will nourish the brain more than the latest superhero action flick. In the words of our President, “We are the first generation to feel the impact of climate change and the last to be able to do anything about it,” so get on out there and let your voice be part of the conversation that will shape the future of humankind. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [13] Arts & Lit Calendar THURSDAY SEP 10 WORDS EL CHANTE: CASA DE CULTURA Voices of the Barrio. Open mic poetry and music at El Chante. All are welcome. Let your voice be heard. 7-9pm. 322-1337. UNM ZIMMERMAN LIBRARY Secreto a voces: Excess, Vocality and Joteria in the Performance of Juan Gabriel. Join the UNM College of Fine Arts and the UNM Latin American & Iberian Institute for a special presentation with noted ethnomusicologist Dr. Alejandro Madrid. 2-3pm. alibi.com/e/161908. STAGE STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Stand-up Comedy Thursdays. Dan Ellison “The Educated Redneck,” Danny Serrano and Mary Byrd perform. $10. 7:30pm. 771-5680. alibi.com/e/161209. LEARN ART SANCTUARY, Santa Fe Paint Moment: Santa Fe Art Classes. A two-hour, step-by-step, guided painting class to inspire your inner artist. $45. 6-8pm. (575) 404-1801. alibi.com/e/133357. FOUR SEASONS, Santa Fe Weaving Legend, Legacy and Landscape Through Filmmaking. Gala celebrating filmmaker Jill Scott Momaday includes a cocktail reception, performances, highlights from the film Return to Rainy Mountain, plus wine and a gourmet dinner created by the award-winning chef at the Four Seasons. $125. 6-9:30pm. alibi.com/e/163244. GEORGE PEARL HALL Unleashing Innovation. Marshall Monroe gives insight from his past as a Visioning Advisor, Communicator, Executive Producer and serial Innovator with the Walt Disney Company. 6:30-8pm. 277-0018. alibi.com/e/162835. FILM KIMO THEATRE The Incredible Hulk (2008). Dr. Bruce Banner seeks to cure his unique condition which causes him to turn into a giant, green monster under emotional stress. Part of the Marvel Comic Heroes Series. $6-$8. 7-8:45pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/161703. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Hospitalité. The everyday tension in Japanese life between a culture of hospitality and a fear of intruders forms a central theme in Koji Fukada’s bizarre black comedy. 7pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/163143. FRIDAY SEP 11 ART INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER Mural Discovery Tour. Reflect on nine of the IPCC’s murals and uncover new and unexpected layers of meaning in each. $3-$6. 1-2pm. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/144086. JOE WADE FINE ART, Santa Fe Passage of Time. alibi.com/e/163520. Also, Passage of Time Opening Reception. New works by Santa Fe artist Roger Williams. 5-7pm. 988-2727. alibi.com/e/161070. SANTA FE CLAY, Santa Fe Brett Freund, Kari Smith & Holly Walker Opening Reception. New works by the artists. 5-7pm. (505) 984-1122. alibi.com/e/163242. TAMARIND GALLERY Mementos. Exhibit showcases memorabilia from the past 55 years. The Tamarind Gallery becomes the “Smithsonian of lithography,” with amusing, educational and interactive displays. 5-7pm. 277-3901. alibi.com/e/161915. STAGE ALBUQUERQUE CENTER FOR SPIRITUAL LIVING And Then There Were None. Agatha Christie’s classic whodunit where 11 strangers are brought to a mysterious island home and murdered, one by one. $15. 8pm. 298-3682. alibi.com/e/161095. ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE Arsenic & Old Lace. A comedy that revolves around the Brewster family, descended from the Mayflower, but now composed of insane, homicidal maniacs. $12-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. 242-4750. alibi.com/e/158707. BOX PERFORMANCE SPACE AND IMPROV THEATRE The Show. Using audience suggestions and any absurd ideas that cross their minds, improvisers create scenarios and songs that are hilarious and preposterous. $8-$10. 8-10pm. 804-5685. alibi.com/e/163218. Also, Comedy? Albuquerque’s DIY comedy troupe provides improv, sketch and music. $8. 9:30pm. 404-1578. alibi.com/e/135352. JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA, Santa Fe Joel Ward: Comedy and Magic. Ward’s high energy, original magic ranges from comical audience participation to interactive close-up magic and flashy Las Vegas-style illusions. $15-$200. [14] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 7pm. 466-5528. alibi.com/e/162191. THE VORTEX THEATRE Sex with Strangers. A grown-up romance that taps into the world of internet literature as a 21st century alternative to traditional publishing. $12-$22. 7:30pm. 247-8600. alibi.com/e/161111. FILM NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Earth. Dovzhenko’s Earth is universally considered one of the most important films of the Soviet era. The soundtrack was created by DakhaBrakha to accompany the new restoration. $22. 7:30pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/163144. WITCH’S BREW Dark Matters Film Festival Launch Party. Music by The Horned God and a photography exhibit by Guerrilla Photo Group, plus prizes and giveaways. 8pm. 835-5072. alibi.com/e/160569. SATURDAY SEP 12 WORDS BOOFY’S BEST FOR PETS Ol’ Jimmy Dollar. A book signing by Slim Randles, an award-winning author and syndicated columnist from Albuquerque. Cowboys and cowgirls will love this simple, cute children’s tale. Noon-2pm. 890-0757. alibi.com/e/163141. JAMES A. LITTLE THEATRE, Santa Fe PRO: Reclaiming Abortion Rights. A lecture and book signing by Katha Pollitt. $15. 7-9:30pm. (505) 471-1799. alibi.com/e/163241. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Color de Sandia Writing Series. Two writing workshops featuring Manuel Gonzalez and Jasmine Sena y Cuffee. 1pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/162887. NEW LIFE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH One Day Memoir Conference: Tell Your Story as Only You Can. For anyone who wants to bring their memories to life for generations to come. Speakers include professional authors, agents and editors. $50-$169. 9am-5pm. 918-0240. alibi.com/e/161925. OPEN SPACE VISITOR CENTER Apricots and Tortillas. A book signing and reading by seven local authors as they launch their collection of short stories about growing up in Albuquerque during the postwar years. 2-3pm. 897-8831. alibi.com/e/163095. PAGE ONE BOOKSTORE Cowboy Romances. Melissa Cutler and Katie Lane read and sign their latest releases, Colton’s Cowboy Code and Deep in the Heart of Texas, respectively. 3:30pm. 294-2026. alibi.com/e/161501. ART 516 ARTS Downtown Block Party. A free, outdoor event featuring interactive art projects, performances, demos and education opportunities that examine issues of climate change. 4-8pm. 242-1445. alibi.com/e/161921. ALBUQUERQUE MUSEUM OF ART AND HISTORY Making it Modern Opening Reception. The folk art collection of Elie and Viola Nadelman with a talk by curator Margi Hoffer from the New York Historical Society. Included with regular admission. 1-4pm. 243-7255. alibi.com/e/161469. ART.I.FACT, Santa Fe #SimplySantaFe. A juried exhibition featuring the very best Instagram images of Santa Fe. 4-7pm. 982-5000. alibi.com/e/161810. LAS PUERTAS Prints Charming Ball, 55th Anniversary & Retirement Party. Tamarind Institute celebrates its 55th anniversary, and the retirements of three ‘litho legends’: Marjorie Devon, Bill Lagattuta, Rodney Hamon. $15. 8pm-midnight. alibi.com/e/161928. RICHARD LEVY GALLERY Tamarind Institute Win/Win Art Lottery. Ticketholders will choose a work in the order of a random number received upon entry. The 100 lots are online to browse in advance. $300. 4-6pm. 766-9888. alibi.com/e/161927. SANDIA HEIGHTS ART Sandia Heights Art Annual Studio Tour. The artists represent at least 13 different mediums, including watercolor and acrylic, handcrafted books, sterling silver and beaded jewelry, wood turning and more. 10am-5pm. alibi.com/e/159087. STAGE AFRICAN AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, Expo NM 2nd Annual Comedy All-Stars of the Southwest. Get a sneak peek of future comedy stars before they hit the big time. $10. 7:30pm. 426-5384. alibi.com/e/162527. ALBUQUERQUE CENTER FOR SPIRITUAL LIVING And Then There Were None. $15. 8pm. See 9/11 listing. ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE Arsenic & Old Lace. $12-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. See 9/11 listing. BOX PERFORMANCE SPACE AND IMPROV THEATRE The Show. $8-$10. 8-10pm. See 9/11 listing. Also, Comedy? Comedy? has made their mark on Albuquerque’s comedy scene with their unique stylings, bizzare exploration of every day life and angelic singing voices. $8. 9:30-10:30pm. 404-1578. alibi.com/e/162783. EFFEX Pornotopia Fundraiser & Sexy Variety Show. A fabulous night in support of The 2015 Pornotopia Erotic Film Festival. $10. 6pm. 265-5815. alibi.com/e/151623. FOUL PLAY CAFE, Sheraton Uptown Elaine Whales and the Mummy of King Khufu. American reporter Elaine Whales is covering the unveiling of the newly-discovered mummy of King Knum-Khufu. She finds herself with the story of a lifetime. $58. 7-10pm. 377-9593. alibi.com/e/161645. JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA, Santa Fe Joel Ward: Comedy and Magic. $15-$200. 2pm, 8:30pm. See 9/11 listing. THE VORTEX THEATRE Sex with Strangers. $12-$22. 7:30pm. See 9/11 listing. SONG & DANCE FELLOWSHIP CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH A Season of Song, Concert I. Tenor Derek Chester joins the Albuquerque Baroque Players in a concert of music by Rameau, Philidor and Jacquet de la Guerre. $7-$18. 7:30-9pm. alibi.com/e/162885. INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER Traditional Native American Dance. Since time immemorial, Pueblo communities have celebrated seasonal cycles through prayer, song and dance. A showcase of dance groups from 19 Pueblos. $4-$6. 11am-2pm. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/159041. OLD SAN YSIDRO CHURCH, Corrales Tali Roth. The extraordinary, internationally renowned classical guitarist Tali Roth performs a captivating mix of classical, Spanish and Latin American selections. $22-$25. 7:30pm. alibi.com/e/162886. FILM CHERRY HILLS LIBRARY “The Hobbit” Movie Marathon. Join in for an adventure into Middle Earth, complete with Orcs, Wizards, Goblins, a hero’s quest, epic battles and a firebreathing dragon. 10am-6pm. 857-8321. alibi.com/e/162889. THE FARMERS MARKET PAVILION IN SANTA FE, Santa Fe Wild & Scenic Film Festival. Experience stellar filmmaking, beautiful cinematography and first-rate storytelling to inform, inspire and ignite. $12-$25. 6-8:30pm. 989-9022. alibi.com/e/158861. MAIN LIBRARY The Decline of Western Civilization. The classic documentary that explored the Los Angeles punk scene in 1979-1980. 2-3:30pm. 768-5131. alibi.com/e/162893. Included with regular admission. 11am. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/161940. STAGE JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA, Santa Fe Burlesque is Coming: A Tribute to the Works of George R. R. Martin. The only burlesque tribute personally approved by “Game of Thrones” author George R. R. Martin. “For the night is dark and full of rhinestones.” $15-$18. 7pm, 9:30pm. 505.466.5528 Jean Cocteau. alibi.com/e/162192. See preview box. TUESDAY SEP 15 WORDS NEW LIFE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Learn to Write to Your Strengths. Kate Braverman discusses her experiences as a writer who has won awards in four genres. You must find out what you can do naturally and avoid what you can’t do. 7-9pm. 918-0240. alibi.com/e/161942. STAGE JEAN COCTEAU CINEMA, Santa Fe Burlesque is Coming: A Tribute to the Works of George R. R. Martin. $15-$18. 8:30pm. See 9/14 listing. SONG & DANCE NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Cuban-Style Salsa/Casino Classes. Dance classes taught by Sarita Streng, Nick Babic, Adam “El Caballo” Metcalf, Larry Heard and Rueda 505 Friends. $5-$10 Pay what you can. 6-8pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/163147. FILM FANS OF FILM CINEMA CAFE & ROASTER Fret for your Latte. YouTube Documentary Hour. Come learn to swim! 1-3pm. 934-7592. alibi.com/e/158825. WEDNESDAY SEP 16 STAGE SUNDAY SEP 13 ART AMAPOLA GALLERY Amapola Gallery 35th Anniversay. A ribbon-cutting, cake and work by featured artists Becky Oleson, Art Rosenberg, Joyce Scott and Diana Swanson. 10-5pm. 242-4311. alibi.com/e/162521. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Quinceañera: Our Story, Our Future. The exhibition presents the breadth of the museum’s art collection and reflects the diversity of Hispanic/Chicano/Latino art and culture. Noon-4pm. alibi.com/e/163627. Also, Quinceañera: Our Story, Our Future Opening Reception. Noon-4pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/163146. ROBINSON PARK 13th Annual Folk Art Festival. Be in a Giant Puppet Parade, make art, buy hand-made creations, see five musical acts, magic, fortune telling, caricature drawing, tribal belly dancing and Aztec dancers. 10am-4pm. 247-1172. alibi.com/e/161639. SANDIA HEIGHTS ART Sandia Heights Art Annual Studio Tour. 10am-5pm. See 9/12 listing. TAMARIND GALLERY Apex of an Era: Breakfast of Champions. Enjoy a light continental breakfast and historical musing with Tamarind’s first technical director, Garo Antreasian. 11am-12:30pm. 277-3901. alibi.com/e/161932. MAX’S MAGIC THEATRE The Comedy, Magic & Mentalism of Max Krause. Max’s show consists of original effects and routines to create a family-friendly experience you won’t soon forget. $15-$20. 7-8:15pm. 255-2303. alibi.com/e/162465. LEARN SOUTH BROADWAY CULTURAL CENTER Mask Making Workshop. A two day artist workshop that teaches students how to make a mask. The first day is mask construction and the second (9/17) is decorating. 6:30pm. 848-1320. alibi.com/e/162461. FILM KIMO THEATRE Indie Q. A quarterly series that celebrates Albuquerque’s vibrant independent film scene. 7-9pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/162464. a EVENT | PREVIEW STAGE ALBUQUERQUE CENTER FOR SPIRITUAL LIVING And Then There Were None. $15. 2pm. See 9/11 listing. ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE Arsenic & Old Lace. $12-$22. 2-4pm. See 9/11 listing. THE VORTEX THEATRE Sex with Strangers. $12-$22. 2pm. See 9/11 listing. SONG & DANCE FELLOWSHIP CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH A Season of Song, Concert I. $7-$18. 7:30-9pm. See 9/12 listing. INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER Traditional Native American Dance. $4-$6. 11am-2pm. See 9/12 listing. THE KOSMOS Chatter Sunday: Serenata of Santa Fe. Works from Osvaldo Golijov. John Amen, poet. $5-$15. 10:30am. 307-9647. alibi.com/e/162684. LENSIC PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, Santa Fe Doug Montgomery. The world-class piano entertainer plays with the Santa Fe Symphony Joplin Ensemble. $10-$50. 7:30pm. (505) 988-1234. alibi.com/e/163243. FILM KIMO THEATRE White Hunter. Black Heart (1990). A famous movie director becomes obsessed with hunting a particular elephant in Africa. Part of the Make My Day Series. $6-$8. 2-3:45pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/162182. MONDAY SEP 14 ART INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER An Artistic Teller of Tales. Gary Keene, a visual artist from Acoma Pueblo, blends bold geometric patterns with line drawings of Pueblo figures. Keene will discuss his art and inspirations. “BURLESQUE IS COMING” FACEBOOK PAGE Sexiness in the Seven Kingdoms What’s better than snuggling up and binging on your favorite sex, violence and dragon-filled show? Watching sexy people perform a MONDAY burlesque-styled SEPTEMBER 14 spoof on your favorite sex, violence and Jean Cocteau Cinema dragon-filled show! 418 Montezuma Virginia based troupe, alibi.com/e/162192 Blacklist Burlesque, is 7pm invading New Mexico to bring their Game of Thrones tribute performance, Burlesque is Coming, to Jean Cocteau Cinema (418 Montezuma) in Santa Fe. George R.R. Martin himself has given the show his seal of approval so your favorite dancer will probably die sometime during the performance. These hilarious and provocative exploits will take place on Monday, Sept. 14, at 7pm and 9:30pm, and also on Tuesday, Sept. 15, at 8:30pm. General admission tickets are only 18 dollars and everyone 18 years or older is welcome to attend. (Courtney Foster) a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [15] [16] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 FOOD | reSTauranT revieW Where There’s Smoke There’s Flavor PHOTOS BY ERIC WILLIAMS • ERICWPHOTO.COM The Cube BBQ Baby back ribs, corn, green beans BY TY BANNERMAN he first thing you notice about The Cube is the smoke. It’s a fragrant fugue the moment you walk in the door, a hickory cloud that envelops you in barbecue pit perfume. Oh, it can be a little much, especially when you’re ordering at the counter and can’t read the menu through your watering eyes, but fortunately there’s plenty of space in the dining room away from the wafting clouds. Some diners—by which I mean those without a lifetime of pleasant barbecue memories—might find it off-putting. To me, though, it’s a smell that indicates authenticity, and a bit of the rough-aroundthe-edges quality I crave from a BBQ joint, even if The Cube is actually very genteel otherwise. The restaurant is arrayed like a modern fusion café with a stated preference for local ingredients and handmade meals. The smoke is there to remind you that for all the external nicety, it’s getting real in the back as slabs of meat are slow roasted into carniphile fever dreams. Like most BBQ joints, you’ve got a few options when it comes to the main attraction. You can order your meat by the 1/2 pound and pound, mixing and matching brisket, pulled pork, chicken, links and ribs until you realize that at about $14 a pound, your bank account is drained and your wife and children are buried somewhere beneath a pile of animal proteins. So, unless you’re prepping an army for a land invasion of Russia, it’s far better to stick to the “meals” side of the menu. I’ve found that the 5-meat-and-twosides sampler ($17.99), with a couple of extra sides, is enough to feed my two-adult two- T Sweet potato praline pie The Cube BBQ 1520 Central SE 243-0023 thecuberestaurant.com Hours: 11am to 10pm, Tuesday to Saturday Noon to 8pm Sunday Closed Monday Booze: Beer and wine Solid? Platonic Extras: Geeks Who Drink every Thursday at 8 The Alibi recommends: Sausage, sweet potato praline pie child family. Though once the kids make it past the 10-year-old mark, we might have to throw in a second plate. The best thing about the five meat sampler is that you get pretty much all the meat, except for the ribs (which is a real shame) and you’ll have to skip one thing of your choice like the turkey leg, which is fine because who even wants to eat a giant turkey leg outside of the Ren Faire anyway? But the brisket is wonderful, with a touch of blackening on the edges and fall-apart-in-your-mouth fragility. The pulled pork and pork loin keep pace with it and the chicken isn’t bad. But the real star of this plate is the sausage. The links are hefty and red with a sweet cayenne punch that honestly makes me sometimes consider just getting a plate of them and to hell with everything else. But no, the smoky succulence of these links does best with a supportive ensemble to help it shine. Of course, an integral component of this meat-frenzy is the sauce. There are two varieties in which to drench your meat, an original and a hot. Original puts forward a noticeable molasses flavor and, of course, a tangy tomato base. The hot is, well, pretty much the same except with a dose of capsaicin to liven things up. That’s as it should be. No matter which one you choose to douse your beef, pork or chicken with, you should be happy. Somehow, in the midst of this hedonistic savaging, you may wish to take a moment to turn your attention away from the meat. Sacrilege? Yes, but those sides are just sitting there and they are actually worthy of your time. I tried the mashed sweet potatoes and the smoky baked beans and found myself shoveling it down, which never happens at most BBQ joints. If you’re lucky, The Cube might even have a bushel of locally-grown, pesticide-free sweet corn available and I can honestly say I’ve never had fresher, firmer, sweeter corn in a local restaurant. Obviously, that’s only seasonably available, but a good sign all around. Unlike many traditional BBQ joints, The Cube offers quite a few options for those who may wish to avoid the pile of multi-form meat on their plate. There are several pretty great burgers, for instance. My favorite is the Lobo, a topping-ariffic sandwich that neatly undercuts the Texas-chili vs. green chile debate by offering both on the same patty, with a slice of bacon for good measure. The effect is a spicy punch in the mouth of beans and cumin with a green chile heat and a touch of vinegar. There’s a surprisingly robust hotdog menu as well, and even some salads, meaning that it’s not a bad idea to stop in for lunch during the week even if finishing off a tabletop’s worth of BBQ doesn’t seem feasible before you have to run back to work. Happily, there’s also a great beer menu, with local favorites like Marble on tap, and a wide selection of national and international varieties. It was here, in fact, that I discovered my favorite beer ever, the Scottish-made Traquair, a barley-wine like beverage of heavy malt and subtle hops. It’s pricey, but worth it. One of The Cube’s specialties is one that your appetite might not be able to take on unless you pace yourself. That would be a shame, so consider this fair warning: Save room for dessert. The pies in particular are house-made and wonderful. We didn’t quite manage to follow our own advice about saving room, so we wound up splitting a single piece of sweet potato praline pie thinking we’d have to force it down for the good of the review. Instead, the moist, sweet filling and candied nut exterior reawakened my appetite, and despite the inevitable stretching of the waist band, I would have happily eaten the whole piece by myself. In fact, I want another one. Right now. If you prefer not to rupture your gut at the table, or if you just want to have ready access to The Cube’s desserty magnificence without leaving the house, you can always order a whole pie and take it home for later enjoyment. In fact, the BBQ oeuvre is one that has always lent itself to take-out and catering, and The Cube is ready to load you down for your next banquet or picnic. With 24 hours notice you can even ask for any variety of pie, as long as the filling is in season. The only downside to doing things that way is that you’d miss out on the beer selection. And the smoke. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [17] Food Calendar THURSDAY SEP 10 2015 GREEN CHILE CHEESEBURGER SMACKDOWN Some of New Mexico’s most notorious burgers and world class chefs compete to be the City Different’s Green Chile Cheeseburger Champ. Santa Fe Farmers’ Market Pavilon (1607 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe). $25-$35. 4pm. alibi.com/e/161699. See preview box. COOKIE FUNDRAISER Duke City Roller Derby receives 15% of all sales of Rude Boy cookies for this fundraiser. Rude Boy Cookies (115 Harvard SE, #7). 5-8pm. alibi.com/e/163210. LOS ALAMOS FARMER’S MARKET Los Alamos Mesa Public Library (2400 Central, Los Alamos). 7am-12:30pm. (575) 581-4651. alibi.com/e/161573. NOB HILL GROWERS MARKET Fresh vegetables, seasonal fruit, local butter, honey, eggs, French breads and pastries and frequent musical guests. Morningside Park (Lead and Morningside SE). 3-6:30pm. alibi.com/e/162436. SALMAN RASPBERRY RANCH The Salman Ranch has been growing raspberries since 1982, and opened their fields to the public in 1993. Buy berries at the ranch store or pick your own in the field. A bus trip for seniors. Bear Canyon Senior Center (4645 Pitt NE). $17.50. 8am-4pm. 291-6211. alibi.com/e/161905. share. Enjoy a raffle, music and great company. Please RSVP. Elena Gallegos Picnic Area (7100 Tramway NE). FREE. Noon-4pm. 289-0577. alibi.com/e/145256. CORRALES GROWERS’ MARKET Locally-grown produce, fresh bread, preserves and more. (500 Jones, Corrales). 9am-noon. alibi.com/e/162248. EL LOCO CALIENTE CHILE FEST FREE. 9am-2pm. See 9/12 listing. RAIL YARDS MARKET Food, produce, art, music and activities in the historic Blacksmith Shop building with a different theme each week. Albuquerque Rail Yards (777 First Street SW). FREE. 10am-2pm. alibi.com/e/141161. MONDAY SEP 14 EL LOCO CALIENTE CHILE FEST FREE. 9am-2pm. See 9/12 listing. TUESDAY SEP 15 ABQ UPTOWN GROWERS’ MARKETS Presbyterian Hospital (1100 Central SE). 7am-noon. See 9/12 listing. WEDNESDAY SEP 16 CORRALES GROWERS’ MARKET 3-6pm. See 9/13 listing. TASTY WEDNESDAY: HOUSEMADE RILLETTES Chefs slowcook the meat in its own fat for over five hours before seasoning and then tamp down the mixture into weck jars. We recommend serving with local sourdough toast points. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). 10am-4pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/163102. a FRIDAY SEP 11 SATURDAY SEP 12 11TH ANNUAL SALSA FIESTA Watch as contestants make their homemade salsa on site as you enjoy the rhythms of Albuquerque’s Historic Old Town. Old Town Plaza (200 Romero NW). FREE. Noon-7pm. 311. alibi.com/e/160308. ABQ UPTOWN GROWERS’ MARKETS Locally grown produce and locally made crafts. All produce is picked within 24 hours of being available. ABQ Uptown (2200 Louisiana NE). 7am-noon. alibi.com/e/162849. COOKING CLASSES Eat, play and learn at this fun and exciting hands-on cooking class. Cinnamon Sugar & Spice Cafe (5809 Juan Tabo NE). $59. 5-8pm. 492-2119. alibi.com/e/158668. DOWNTOWN GROWERS’ MARKET Featuring fresh produce, local goods, kids’ activities and live music. Robinson Park (Eighth Street & Central). FREE. 7am-noon. 252-2959. alibi.com/e/134057. EL LOCO CALIENTE CHILE FEST Green Chile is uniquely New Mexican so ready to celebrate the state’s hottest tradition with a pepper eating contest, a stew cook off and more. Idalia Road Marketplace (1320 Idalia NE, Rio Rancho). FREE. 9am-2pm. 897-6474. alibi.com/e/162862. LOS RANCHOS GROWERS’ AND ARTS/CRAFTS MARKETS Fresh fruits and veggies, arts and crafts and live music. Los Ranchos Growers’ Market (6718 Rio Grande NW). 7am-noon, 8am-noon. alibi.com/e/163245, alibi.com/e/162837. PIE TOWN DAY TRIP If you are looking for a good piece of pie, Pie Town serves the best pies on the planet. Be there for their annual Pie Town Festival. A senior bus trip. Los Volcanes Senior Center (6500 Los Volcanes NW). $17.50. 8am-4pm. 836-8745. alibi.com/e/161917. SUNDAY SEP 13 CELTIC PICNIC Celebrate your Celtic heritage. Hotdogs and hamburgers are provided. Bring a sidedish or desert to [18] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 EVENT | PREVIEW JOSHUA S. FRANCO ABQ FOOD FRIDAYS Enjoy fine food, drinks and music in a fun and unique atmosphere. Harry E. Kinney Civic Plaza (1 Civic Plaza). 4-8pm. 768-4575. alibi.com/e/144542. CHILE HARVEST FIESTA Celebrate New Mexico’s chile harvest at a roasting and recipe-sharing event. Green chile with homemade tortilla samples and lemonade will be available. North Domingo Baca Multigenerational Center (7521 Carmel NE). 9-11:30am. 291-9332. alibi.com/e/152794. FRIDAY FARM STAND Purchase fresh, local produce from an organic farmer. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). 3-6pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/161414. TRADITIONS OF NEW MEXICO: AN EXPLORATION OF DREAMS IN ART, WINE AND CHOCOLATE The preeminent surrealist artist of New Mexico, Josh Franco, inspires new desserts and wine pairings in conjunction with La Bella Vino Winery. Joliesse Chocolates (6855 Fourth Street NW). $0-$35. 6:30-9pm. 369-1561. alibi.com/e/163062. See preview box. Chocolate Dreams in Vino-color If there were a manual on how to adult, I’m sure every person who is considered one would be eternally grateful for the “do’s and don’ts” in FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 11 life. Being responsible is Joliesse Chocolates stressful and 6855 Fourth Street NW remembering how alibi.com/e/163062 to relax is often 6:30 to 9pm forgotten. You map out these weekend scenarios in your head but don’t want to keep the same routine. Dinner and a movie fit are a cliché part of the weekend extravaganza. You’ve already been there and done that every other weekend and going down to the bars isn’t that appealing for this weekend either. But wait—you’re in luck! Joliesse Chocolates (6855 Fourth Street NW) is holding a free event full of art, chocolate and wine and it is just the place for you to be if you want to change your routine. In Traditions of New Mexico: An Exploration of Dreams in Art, Wine and Chocolate New Mexico artist Josh Franco and La Bella Vino Winery pair up to unravel an exquisite collection of surreal art for your eyes as well as cocoa and vino confections for your tongue. The dream occurs Friday, Sept. 11, from 6:30-9pm, so put your pinky up with a glass of wine and enjoy yourself. (Desiree Garcia) a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [19] [20] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 FILM | reVIew REEL WORLD The Visit What’s the twist in M. Night Shyamalan’s new “old people are scary” thriller? ... That it’s a decent film. Grandma, making biscuits. Nothing creepy about that. BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY h, M. Night Shyamalan. We, the American movie-viewing audience, don’t know what to do with you. Your breakthrough film, The Sixth Sense, made you a superstar thanks to its unexpectedly twisty premise. Your next film, Unbreakable, is arguably your best work, due to its pioneering deconstruction of superhero mythology. After that, though, you became a punchline. (Literally, for viewers of “Robot Chicken.”) You insisted on shoehorning head-spinning twists and Hitchcock-esque cameos into stories that simply weren’t strong enough to hold up the weight (Signs, The Village, Lady in the Water, The Happening). Even when you approached other people’s material (The Last Airbender, After Earth), the films sank in a morass of poor casting choices and half-baked sci-fi ideas. And yet, we all knew—deep down inside—you were a skilled filmmaker. Now, after an unmitigated string of bombs, you’ve decided to get back to your roots. To reboot your career by writing, producing and directing a small-scale indie shocker. And damned if The Visit isn’t a tasty little palate cleanser on the rancid cheese Danish (but it was sour cherry Danish all along—what a twist!) that is your Hollywood career. The Visit finds Shyamalan visiting the lowbudget exploitation realm in a way he’s never really tried. Turns out the guy has a taste and talent for ’70s-style grindhouse entertainment. The gloss and polish and misplaced stardom (Mark Wahlberg?) he’s ladled onto his previous projects have only distracted from their sporadically clever ideas. Here, he wipes the canvas clean, staring with a low budget, a single location and a no-name cast. Becca (Olivia DeJonge, The Sisterhood of Night) and O The Visit Written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan Starring Olivia DeJonge, Ed Oxenbould, Deanna Dunagan Rated PG-13 Opens Friday 9/11 Tyler (Ed Oxenbould, Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day) are our main characters, a couple of tweens being brought up by single mom Kathryn Hahn (Tomorrowland, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, “Transparent”). Since getting pregnant right out of high school, Mom hasn’t had a lot of time off. So, when she gets a call from her estranged parents, wanting to connect with the grandchildren they’ve never met, Mom figures maybe this is the break she’s looking for. Without hesitation, she loads the kids on a train, sends them off to Nana and Pop Pop’s rural Pennsylvania farm and heads out on a Caribbean cruise. (OK, so it’s not the most responsible of parenting choices, but bear with us on this.) Nana (Tony Award-winning stage actress Deanna Dunagan) and Pop Pop (Peter McRobbie from “Boardwalk Empire,” “Daredevil” and Brokeback Mountain) are tickled pink to see their young grandchildren for the first time since their daughter ran off with her skeevy high school boyfriend. Becca and Tyler are mostly curious, wanting to know what drove their mother to run away in the first place. Becca, in fact, is even filming a “documentary” about it. Here, we encounter our first “uh oh” sign. The Visit is shot foundfootage-style, all of the imagery coming from Becca’s eternally handheld video camera. Shyamalan is awfully late climbing aboard the found footage train. As a genre/style it’s simply played out. But, low and behold, the concept works decently enough here. It keeps the budget lean and mean, forcing Shyamalan to concentrate on his story and his actors. And it adds an air of claustrophobic mystery to the proceedings that traditional “omniscient” filmmaking would not. You see, soon after arriving for their weeklong visit, Becca and Tyler start to realize something’s not quite right about Nana and Pop Pop. They’re ... weirder than you’d expect. Pop Pop eventually admits that Nana is suffering from some form of senility, but that’s not enough to explain all the naggingly odd things the kids are witnessing (an obsession with food, nightly freakouts and more nudity than most of us like to see from our senior citizens). Shyamalan, to his credit, doesn’t hide his source material. The Visit is obviously a winkingly funny update on the old Brothers Grimm fairy tale “Hansel and Gretel.” Just so we don’t miss it, Shyamalan even has Nana ask Becca to crawl inside the oven to “clean it.” We spend a lot of the film waiting for the other shoe to drop, to explain what nastiness the grandparents have in store for these kids. And the film builds some tasty tension. It’s leavened with a good dose of humor, making this, ultimately, more of a horror-comedy. But it mostly works. When the shoe finally does drop, it’s not to deliver a mind-altering “twist,” but to give us a logical and creepy payoff to all we’ve anticipated. Dunagan and McRobbie are fantastic, steering their characters though whiplash changes of temperament and appearance. DeJonge and Oxenbould are decent as well— although their characters are required to skirt some rather silly clichés. Becca is ridiculously precocious, talking about movies like a postgraduate film student and dropping phrases like “mise en scene” into ordinary conversation. Tyler is the opposite, a cartoonish, 13-year-old “playa” who raps about his preteen sexual prowess. It’s as grating as it sounds. In any other movie, these characters would be hard to swallow. But The Visit treats them as rather silly, and they fit in just fine given the “fairy tale” nature of it all. Pulling off a family friendly, PG-13 horror film is quite a feat. All too commonly, they feel watered-down. But The Visit skirts the line with finesse. In retrospect, it’s all rather tame. But in the moment, it feels extremely dark and creepy. Adults will be appropriately spooked, and kids will emerge relatively trauma-free. It’s as if Goosebumps did an adaptation of The Last House on the Left. Kid-friendly grindhouse? Whodathunk? In the end The Visit is easily Shyamalan’s best effort in a decade. Not that there was a lot of competition. But the film is proof of concept that Shyamalan actually does know how make a decent movie. ... Now maybe we can talk about that Unbreakable sequel. a BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY The Dark returns Dark Matters Film Festival—Albuquerque’s annual celebration of horror, sci-fi, dark fantasy and black comedy—returns this weekend. The event kicks off at 8pm on Friday, Sept. 11, at Witch’s Brew (1517 Girard NE) with a launch party. Celtic stoner rock band The Horned God will be performing and local art group Guerrilla Photo Group will curate a pop-up “dark” photography exhibit. The launch party is free and open to the public. The festival proper starts Saturday, Sept. 12, at 3pm at Guild Cinema (3405 Central NE) and continues through Sunday night with six features and 16 short films from around the world. Films from Argentina, France, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland and the United States cover a wide range of subjects. Highlights include Keil Troisi’s urban ghost story for the 99 percent Human Resources, the Argentinian pre-pubescent vampire flick Children of the Night and the “high school death metal band fights demons in suburban New Zealand” comedy Deathgasm. Among the short films is a brand new “Courage the Cowardly Dog” cartoon from animator/creator John Dilworth. It’s an incredible line-up, if I do say so myself—and I do, because I am the programming director who helped put it together! Individual tickets are $10 or $8 students/military. Four-film punch cards run $35 dollars, and full-festival passes are $50. For more info, including a full schedule of films, go to darkmattersfilmfest.com. Soviet cinema score Avokado Artists and the National Hispanic Cultural Center will present a special, fundraising event for ¡Globalquerque!, Albuquerque’s annual celebration of world music. This Friday, Sept. 11, at 7:30pm, DakhaBrakha, Ukraine’s musical “Ambassadors of Ethnic Chaos,” will be performing a live score to Aleksandr Dovzhenko’s restored 1930 classic Earth (Zemlya). The silent film concerns the efforts of rural Kulak farmers to resist collectivism in post-revolution Russia. The movie/concert will take place at the Albuquerque Journal Theatre (1701 Fourth Street SW). Tickets are $22 and are available in advance through vendini.com. Oh, happy Day! Cult actress and internet icon Felicia Day (star of “The Guild,” “Supernatural” and Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog) will be at the Jean Cocteau Cinema (418 Montezuma) in Santa Fe this Sunday, Sept. 13. Starting at 6pm Day will sign copies of her new memoir, You’re Never Weird on the Internet (Almost). Admission to the event is $10 or free with hardcover book purchase ($25.99). To learn more about the event, go to jeancocteau.com or feliciaday.com. Q in the Q Indie Q, the Albuquerque Film Office’s quarterly celebration of local filmmaking, returns to the KiMo Theatre (423 Central NW) on Wednesday, Sept. 16. From 7 to 9pm, the KiMo will screen a collection of New Mexicomade shorts, trailers and works-in-progress. Among this go-around’s offerings are selections from the recent 48 Hour Film Project. For more info go to indieq.ning.com. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [21] TELEVISION | IDIOT BOX Get Dazzled “Moonbeam City” on Comedy Central BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY e’re living an an adult animation renaissance. From Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim offerings to Fox’s late-night Animation Domination block, TV is loaded with mature, raunchy or just plain weird cartoons aimed at stoned and/or drunk adults. Comedy Central buys a ticket on that train with its newest offering, the comically retro cop series “Moonbeam City.” “Moonbeam City” is what you’d get if 1984-era MTV, “Jem and the Holograms” and “Miami Vice” had a freaky three-way and gave birth to a cute but rather stupid love child. The show is set in the neon-soaked Miamideco metropolis of Moonbeam City. Rob Lowe (on a comic hot streak after “Parks and Recreation”) voices our main character, police detective Dazzle Novak. Dazzle is cocky, sexcrazed and cluelessly incompetent. He comes up with catchy one-liners. (“I hope your brain is hungry. It’s having bullets for dinner.”) But he’s a terrible marksman. He’s also constantly being berated by his boss, sexy Pizzaz Miller (Elizabeth Banks). On top of that, he’s regularly humiliated by his office rival, snarky (but sexy) fellow Moonbeam City PD detective Rad Cunningham (Will Forte). At least he’s got help from his new partner, a nerdy (yet still sexy) forensic lab tech named Chrysalis Tate (Kate Mara, making this quite the impressive voice cast). The show’s angular, eye shadow-heavy art style apes that of ubiquitous ’80s artist Patrick Nagel (who did the iconic cover for Duran W THE WEEK IN SLOTH THURSDAY 10 “Longmire” (Netflix anytime) Season 4 of this shot-in-New Mexico (set-inWyoming) cop series shows up on Netflix for a change. “Football Night in America: NFL Kickoff 2015” (KOB-4 6:30pm) The season starts off with Pittsburgh Steelers at New England Patriots. “Under the Dome” (KRQE-13 9pm) After three seasons, CBS has canceled this loose Stephen King adaptation. So tonight, the dome is coming down in a hasty series finale. FRIDAY 11 “Think It Up” (KOB-4 7pm) Celebrities help spotlight stories of teachers and students working together on important educational projects. Sounds like a worthy cause. Also sounds like the kind of thing networks slap on the air the week before season premieres. SATURDAY 12 “Game Shakers” (Nickelodeon 6:30pm) Kel Mitchell (’90s star of “All That” and “Kenan & Kel”) returns to Nickelodeon for this kiddie sitcom about a couple of [22] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 Duran’s Rio). The throbbing synth soundtrack and airbrushed graphics add to the flashback feel of it all. The show’s sense of humor is both goofy and absurdist, poking fun at the genre and the era. Most of the jokes derive from our hero’s incompetent attempts to uphold the law. None of the writing (courtesy of creator Scott Gairdner, a longtime “Conan” writer) is particularly clever or pointed. But it’s good for the occasional laugh. If you’ve spent the last few years watching “Archer,” you’ve probably seen this sort of dim-bulb crime-fighter done with considerably more edge. Still, “Moonbeam City” gets points for style. It’s definitely worth a glance if you grew up watching “Liquid Television,” shopping at Chess King, listening to A Flock of Seagulls or generally digesting the pop cultural detritus of the ’80s. a “Moonbeam City” premieres Wednesday, Sept. 16, at 11:30pm on Comedy Central. schoolkids who turn a 7th-grade computer science project into a multimillion-dollar video game. Ferrell Takes the Field (HBO 8pm) Last year actor Will Ferrell went to five springtraining ballparks and played 10 different positions on 10 different major league baseball teams in a single day. This comic documentary chronicles his marathon feat. SUNDAY 13 Welcome Home (UP 5pm) A novelist (Luke Perry) with writer’s block (because all novelists have writer’s block) returns home from a vacation to find a homeless woman and her children squatting in his home. I sense a marriage and a new book by the end credits. “The 2016 Miss America Competition” (KOAT-7 8pm) I thought the one good thing Donald Trump had done for this country was kill beauty pageants once and for all. Apparently not. MONDAY 14 “#DanceBattle America” (KOAT-7 9pm) I’m not sure which I hate more: TV shows with hashtags in their titles or dance competitions. Now, thanks to ABC, I don’t have to choose. TUESDAY 15 “The Mindy Project” (Hulu anytime) You can’t keep a good TV show down these days. Not with so many streaming services desperate for content. So Mindy Kaling’s canceled sitcom ditches FOX for Hulu. “The Bastard Executioner” (FX 11pm) This bloody historical drama follows a disgraced knight in King Edward’s army who finds work as an executioner. Just don’t ask me what Ed Sheeran is doing here. “Best Time Ever With Neil Patrick Harris” (KOB-4 9pm) I appreciate Neil Patrick Harris as much as the next guy. But I’d like it better if NBC had given him an actual show instead of this random collection of musical performances, hidden camera pranks, sketches, stunts, celebrity guests and whatever else they can sweep on stage to fill the timeslot each week. This joins Ryan Seacrest’s canceled-after-two-episodes “Knock Knock Live” in TV’s new, “nonconcept” genre. “Dirty Rotten Survival” (National Geographic 8pm) Home builder Johnny Littlefield, survival expert Dave Canterbury and engineer Dick Strawbridge hope to “reinvent the American roadtrip” by taking lesstraveled roads through each state. WEDNESDAY 16 “Nintendo World Championships 2015” (Disney XD 6pm) I’m not about to suggest, as Jimmy Kimmel did, that watching people play video games is boring. Because the internet will want to kill me. But ... um, I’m gonna watch something else tonight. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [23] [24] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 FILM | CAPSULES BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY OPENING THIS WEEK 2015 Dark Matters Film Festival The Dark Matters Film Festival returns, bringing with it scary, funny, thought-provoking genre films from around the world. Horror, sci-fi, dark fantasy and black comedy selections this time around include: Children of the Night (an underage vampire flick from Argentina), Deathgasm (a splatterrific horror-comedy from New Zealand in which a high school death metal band battles the “King of All Demons”), Human Resources (an urban ghost story for the 99 percent from New York City), Bloody Knuckles (an over-the-top Canadian import in which a pornographic comic book artist, his severed hand and an S&M superhero battle the Chinese Mafia) and End of Days, Inc. (a hilarious Canadian supernatural comedy featuring a group of overworked office employees forced to help bring about the apocalypse). All in all there are six features and 16 short films to be witnessed over the twoday festival. Go to darkmattersfilmfest.com for a complete schedule. (Opens Saturday 9/12 at Guild Cinema) 90 Minutes in Heaven Hayden Christensen (Star Wars: Episode II—Attack of the Clones), Kate Bosworth (Blue Crush) and Dwight Yoakam (you know, the country singer) star in this (allegedly true) story of a Baptist minister who is pronounced dead after an auto accident, but believes he spent an hour and a half strolling around Heaven before springing back to life. Weirdly, this heavily Christian drama (aimed clearly at Heaven Is for Real audiences) is written and directed by indie oddball Michael Polish (Twin Falls Idaho, Northfork, The Astronaut Farmer). 121 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Thursday 9/10 at Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) Citizenfour A documentarian and a reporter travel to Hong Kong to meet with NSA whistleblower-on-the-run Edward Snowden. Whether you think of him as a traitor or a patriot, this even-keeled collection of up-close-andpersonal interviews (recorded over the course of eight days) will make you think twice about the former CIA analyst’s narrative concerning abuse of government power in the data age. 114 minutes. R. (Opens Thursday 9/10 at SUB Theater) local teenage community, it’s soon shut down by local church and political leaders. A decade later, at the height of the Depression, Jimmy returns to County Leitrim from the US to look after his ailing mother. Seeing his old dance hall boarded up and abandoned, he decides maybe it’s time to revisit old dreams. This low-key drama comes to us from dogged English realist Ken Loach (Kes, My Name is Joe, Sweet Sixteen, The Angel’s Share). 109 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Friday 9/11 at High Ridge) Dope The Man from U.N.C.L.E. The life of a black nerd (or “blerd,” as the kids say) in a tough LA neighborhood threatens to change when he gets mixed up with a cornrowed beauty, an underground party and $100,000 worth of stolen drugs. Rick Famuyiwa (The Wood, Brown Sugar, Our Family Wedding) writes and directs this stylish flashback comedy, which has as much in common with the films of John Hughes as it does with the hip-hop exploitation flicks of the early ’90s. 115 minutes. (Movies 8) Henry Cavill (Man of Steel) and Armie Hammer (The Lone Ranger) take over for Robert Vaughn and David McCallum in this remake of the mid-’60s spy-fi TV series. Writerdirector Guy Ritchie (Snatch, Sherlock Holmes) gives the film plenty of style and temporal flair, turning this Cold War team-up between American and Russian spies into a witty buddy cop drama. Whereas the Mission: Impossible films want you to watch them from the edge of your seat, this one wants you to sit back and absorb the midcentury cool. Reviewed in v24 i33. 116 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Last Tango in Paris Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider star in Bernardo Bertolucci’s controversial erotic tale from 1972. Brando is a middle-aged American living in Paris and haunted by his wife’s suicide. Schneider is the 20-year-old Parisian beauty he hooks up with for mindless carnal delights. 129 minutes. (Opens Monday 9/14 at Guild Cinema) The Perfect Guy A successful lobbyist (Sanaa Lathan, The Best Man) meets a charming IT expert (Michael Ealy, Think Like a Man) who appears to fit the title description. After the two jump into bed for some sexual satisfaction, however, he turns violent, jealous and vengeful. Basically, this bad romance thriller is a Lifetime network movie in the theater. 100 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Friday 9/11 at Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) The Visit Reviewed this issue. 94 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Thursday 9/10 at Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) STILL PLAYING American Ultra It’s the summer of superspies, apparently. In this action comedy we’ve got dork icon Jesse Eisenberg (Zombieland, The Social Network) as a do-nothing stoner who just happens to be a sleeper agent trained and then brainwashed by the United States government. When he’s deemed a liability and marked for extermination, his hidden skills take over, turning him into a pot-addled, super-powered killing machine. 96 minutes. R. (Century Rio) Fantastic Four After a couple of less-than-stellar outings, 20th Century Fox tries to reboot the Marvel Comics franchise with director Josh Trank (Chronicle) at the helm. Miles Teller, Kate Mara, Michael B. Jordan and Jamie Bell are our quartet of (decidedly younger) scientific explorers who teleport themselves to an alternate dimension and are imbued with a wide range of superpowers. Yes, it’s as bad as you’ve heard. It’s 80 percent boring set-up and 20 percent random bad-guy battle. A decade ago this might have scraped by. But not today. 100 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) The Mend David Gordon Green (Pineapple Express, “Eastbound & Down”) presents this acidly comic, slice-of-life indie about two NYC brothers, loose cannon Mat (Josh Lucas, Sweet Home Alabama) and put-upon Alan (Stephen Plunkett), as they stumble toward some semblance of adulthood. There’s precious little in the way of narrative, but first-time writer-director John Magary shows promise in the realm of wickedly observed, no-budget character studies. 111 minutes. Unrated. (Guild Cinema) The Gift Minions Actor Joel Edgerton (Warrior, The Great Gatsby) turns writer-director to deliver this mystery-thriller. Jason Bateman and Rebecca Hall play a married couple whose lives are “thrown into a harrowing tailspin” when an old high school acquaintance of the husband’s shows up. Edgerton takes the plum role of the unwanted house guest who starts delivering an increasingly extravagant string of housewarming gifts—all of them hinting at a nasty secret from the past. The film clearly references such late-’80s/early-’90s yuppies-in-peril films as Fatal Attraction and Single White Female, but Edgerton manages to keep things creepy and surprising throughout. 108 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) The lovable yellow sidekicks from the Despicable Me films finally get their own spin-off. History tells us that the Minions have been around since the dawn of time, looking for evildoers to whom they can pledge their slavish devotion. This hectic, anarchy-driven toon takes us to swingin’ ’60s London where a trio of semi-moronic Minions try to help the world’s first female supervillain (voiced by Sandra Bullock) steal the Crown Jewels. The plot is terribly inconsequential—but it’s hard to deny the silly fun to be had along the way. 91 minutes. PG. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Hitman: Agent 47 The 2007 action-movie adaptation of the Hitman videogame series starring Timothy Olyphant wasn’t very popular. But Hollywood’s reboot machine isn’t even slowed down by failure these days. So here’s a reboot/sequel starring Rupert Friend (who played Mr. Wickham in the 2005 film version of Pride and Prejudice) as a mysterious, gentically enineered killer. It will be less popular than the original. 97 minutes. R. (Century Rio) Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation For a series as star-packed in front of and behind the camera as these movies have been, the individual films sure are forgettable. As usual, this fifth installment features jaw-dropping stunt work ... and some kind of storyline in which IMF agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his team (Simon Pegg, Jeremy Renner, Ving Rhames) are tasked with stopping an international villain who’s framed them for something-or-other. Tom Cruise buddy Christopher McQuarrie (Valkyrie, Jack Reacher, Edge of Tomorrow) writes and directs. Reviewed in v24 i32. 131 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Century Rio) Inside Out Pixar mixes up another can’t-miss instaclassic. This stunningly original, digitally animated toon takes us inside the mind of an 11-year-old girl and introduces us to the anthropomorphized feelings at work inside her head. Chief among them is Joy (perfect Amy Poehler), who’s stuck working with a bunch of negative Nellies (Sadness, Anger, Fear and Disgust). But when Joy and Sadness get lost in the recesses of the young girl’s mind, the film warps from an inventive workplace comedy to a wildly imaginative, Willy Wonka-esque fantasy. It seems silly to say that a film about emotions is emotional, but trust me when I say this film has all the feels! Reviewed in v24 i26. 94 minutes. PG. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, UNM Midweek Movies) Jurassic World Grave of the Fireflies Grave of the Fireflies This animated historical drama from Japan’s Studio Ghibli (My Neighbor Totoro, Princess Mononoke) could be the most depressing kids’ film ever made. It’s both gorgeous and haunting to watch. The story follows two small children, left homeless and orphaned by the Allied firebombing in World War II, who struggle to survive on the streets of Kobe. One of the most profound anti-war films ever made. In Japanese with English subtitles. 91 minutes. (Opens Saturday 9/12 at Guild Cinema) Jimmy’s Hall In 1921 Jimmy Gralton (Barry Ward, The Claim) builds a dance hall on a rural crossroads in an Ireland on the brink of civil war. Despite the freedom it brings to the Ant-Man The latest Marvel Cinematic Universe offering is smaller than its fellow superhero movies in a number of ways. Paul Rudd is fine and dandy as a cat burglar recruited by an aging scientist (Michael Douglas) to don a powerful shrinking suit and fight the bad guys. The size-changing special effects are a blast, but the film is neither fish nor fowl. There’s not enough humor to make it a comedy, and too little action to compete with the big boys of summer. It’s perfectly entertaining in moments, but this one needed a lot more style and spark to avoid the “generic Marvel movie” pit it occasionally stumbles into. Reviewed in v24 i30. 117 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) I’m not upset that Hollywood has decided to make a third Jurassic Park sequel. Because, you know, money. I am, however, ticked off that the fictional executives at InGen thought they could get away with this. Did someone at the corporation send out a memo saying, “Hey, everybody. Remember that dinosaur theme park we were trying to open? You know, the one where the tourists kept getting eaten over and over and over again? Well, we’re pretty sure we’ve got all the kinks worked out. Fourth time’s the charm!” I mean, come on. ... Ah, well, at least we’ve got Chris Pratt. He’s cool. 124 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) Listen to Me Marlon Late acting icon Marlon Brando relates the story of his life and career in his own words, thanks to hundreds of audio tapes rescued from his estate. Around these insightful flashbacks, director Stevan Riley creates a beautiful, evocative, appropriately oddball portrait of the Hollywood legend. Reviewed in v24 i34. 95 minutes. Unrated. (Guild Cinema) No Escape Who’s ready for Owen Wilson, action star? The same ones who rushed to see him in 2001’s Behind Enemy Lines, I suppose. Here, the Wes Anderson fave and his wife (Lake Bell from “Children’s Hospital”) move to a new home in Southeast Asia. Unfortunately, the family gets caught up in a military coup, and is forced to race across the bulletriddled country to safety. 101 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Pixels When space aliens misinterpret video game signals from Earth as a challenge to war, a group of former arcade nerds (Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Peter Dinklage, Josh Gad) are recruited by the government to fight off the likes of Donkey Kong, Pac-Man and Space Invaders. The story (based on a short film) is loaded with nostalgic potential ... all of which is squashed by bored-to-be-here Adam Sandler and his pals. 106 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) Ricki and the Flash Jonathan Demme (Something Wild, Silence of the Lambs) directs and Diablo Cody (Juno, Young Adult) writes this excuse for mother-and-daughter duo Meryl Streep and Mamie Gummer to share the screen. Streep plays a failed musician who gives up her over-the-hill stardom-chasing to return home (to Indiana) and make things right with her dysfunctional family. Streep makes for a surprisingly good wannabe rock star, but the domestic drama is overly familiar. 101 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio) Sinister 2 Movie-loving demon with a goofy name Bughuul is back haunting another rural family in this sequel to the 2012 Film Capsules continues on page 26 SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [25] FILM | CAPSULES Film Capsules continued from page 25 FILM | TIMES wEEk oF FrI., SEPT. 11-ThUrS., SEPT. 17 CENTURY 14 DOWNTOWN 100 Central SW • 1 (800) 326-3264 ext. 943# horror hit Sinister. Ethan Hawke is out. Shannyn Sossamon (A Knight’s Tale) is in, doing parent duty. This unimaginative rehash is little more than a collection of jump-scares. 97 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Southpaw Jake Gyllenhaal and Rachel McAdams star in this gritty sports drama about a boxer trying to get his life back on track after losing his wife to a tragic accident and his daughter to child protective services. Antoine Fuqua (Training Day, Shooter, The Equalizer) directs. Gyllenhaal gives it his all, but his greatest opponent is sports movie cliché. 123 minutes. R. (Century Rio) Straight Outta Compton F. Gary Gray (The Italian Job, The Negotiator) directs this dutiful biopic relating the origin story of controversial, groundbreaking LA rap group NWA. O’Shea Jackson Jr. is particularly convincing as the young Ice Cube—not too surprising, considering he’s Cube’s son. The film has generated some serious buzz; too bad it’s so by-the-numbers. 147 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) The Transporter Refueled After beginning life as a series of BMW commercials, Luc Besson’s Transporter raced through three action movies and a French-Canadian TV series. Now it reboots its way back to theaters with Ed Skrein (who?) replacing Jason Statham as the fast-driving, tie-wearing mercenary. This time around he’s stuck between a femme-fatale and a sinister Russian kingpin. 96 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) Un Gallo con Muchos Huevos Evidently popular in Latin America, the Mexican series “Huevo Cartoon” gets the big-screen CGI treatment. In it, a literal and figurative “chicken” (voiced by Bruno Bichir) joins forces with his farmyard friends (most of whom are eggs— presumably because they’re easier to draw) to save his home. In order to accomplish that, our timid hero must transform himself into a scrappy rooster. ... Yeah, this appears to be a kids’ cartoon about cockfighting. The title means “The Rooster with Many Eggs” or, colloquially speaking, “The Cock with Big Testicles.” In Spanish with English subtitles. 98 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque) A Walk in the Woods Robert Redford and Nick Nolte star in this innocuous adaptation of Bill Bryson’s equally innocuous nonfiction book. Redford is the conservative, stay-athome type of guy. Nolte is the troubled ne’er-do-well. Together these two mismatched old pals reunite and vow to hike the entire Appalachian Trail. 104 minutes. R. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) War Room From the writer-director of such Christian films as Facing the Giants, Fireproof and Courageous comes this drama about a “seemingly perfect” AfricanAmerican family who try to fix their problems (hubby grapples with “temptation”—maybe from Ashley Madison?) with the help of an older, wiser, Bibleendorsing woman. Spoiler alert: All they need is prayer. 120 minutes. PG. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) The Wolfpack This weirdly ethnographic documentary unearths a perfect subject: the Angulo brothers, six artistic outsiders who spent 17 years locked away from society in an apartment on the Lower East Side of Manhattan learning about the world exclusively through the movies they enthusiastically devoured on a daily basis. Their childhood was spent reenacting their favorite films using homemade props and costumes. Now, aged 16 to 23, these oddly sheltered, paradoxically pop-culture literate kids are the subject of their own fascinating/disturbing film. 89 minutes. R. (Guild Cinema) a [26] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. CENTURY RIO I-25 & Jefferson • 1 (800) 326-3264 The Visit Fri-Sat 11:30am, 12:50, 2:15, 3:35, 5:00, 6:20, 7:45, 9:05, 10:30,11:50; Sun-Thu 11:30am, 12:50, 2:15, 3:35, 5:00, 6:20, 7:45, 9:05, 10:30 The Perfect Guy Fri-Sat 11:00am, 12:25, 1:50, 3:15, 4:40, 6:05, 7:30, 8:55, 10:20, 11:45; Sun-Thu 11:00am, 12:25, 1:50, 3:15, 4:40, 6:05, 7:30, 8:55, 10:20 90 Minutes in Heaven Fri-Thu 12:45, 3:55, 7:05, 10:15 Un Gallo con Muchos Huevos Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 A Walk in the Woods Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:55, 4:50, 7:45, 10:40 The Transporter Refueled Fri-Sat 11:45am, 1:05, 2:30, 3:50, 5:15, 6:35, 8:00, 9:20, 10:45, 12:01; Sun-Thu 11:45am, 1:05, 2:30, 3:50, 5:15, 6:35, 8:00, 9:20, 10:45 War Room Fri-Thu 12:35, 3:45, 7:00, 10:10 No Escape Fri-Thu 11:15am, 2:05, 4:55, 7:40, 10:35 American Ultra Fri-Thu 7:25, 10:05 Hitman: Agent 47 Fri-Thu 11:15am, 2:00, 4:45, 7:30, 10:15 Sinister 2 Fri-Thu 11:35am, 2:20, 5:05, 7:50, 10:35 Straight Outta Compton Fri-Sun 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 8:05, 9:50, 11:40; Mon-Thu 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 8:05, 9:50 The Man From U.N.C.L.E. Fri-Thu 1:15, 4:20, 7:35, 10:40 Fantastic Four Fri-Thu 11:10am, 4:50, 10:10 Ricki and the Flash Fri-Thu 1:55, 7:25 The Gift Fri-Thu 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:50, 7:10, 10:30 Southpaw Fri-Thu 12:40, 4:05, 7:15, 10:25 Pixels Fri-Thu 1:05, 4:00, 6:55, 9:50 Ant-Man Fri-Thu 1:10, 4:15, 7:20, 10:25 Minions Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:40, 4:15, 6:50, 9:30 Inside Out Fri-Thu 1:30, 4:25 Jurassic World Fri-Thu 11:10am, 6:30 COTTONWOOD STADIUM 16 Cottonwood Mall • 897-6858 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. GUILD CINEMA 3405 Central NE • 255-1848 The Wolfpack Fri 4:00, 8:15 The Mend Fri 6pm Grave of the Fireflies Sat-Sun 1:00 2015 Dark Matters Film Festival Sat-Sun Check website or call for films and times Listen to Me Marlon Mon-Fri 3:30, 8:30 Last Tango in Paris Mon-Fri 5:45 9:00, 9:30, 10:15; Inside Out Fri-Thu 12:10, 1:00, 2:20, 3:10, 4:30, 5:15, 7:20 Jurassic World Fri-Thu 11:20am, 2:05, 4:50, 7:35, 10:15 Un Gallo con Muchos Huevos Fri-Thu 12:35, 3:35, 6:30, 9:25 The Transporter Refueled Fri-Thu 11:30am, 1:40, 3:50, 6:00, 8:05, 10:10 Straight Outta Compton Fri-Thu 1:05. 4:10, 7:10, 10:15 Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 MOVIES 8 4591 San Mateo NE • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1194 Dope Fri-Thu 2:50, 9:10 Avengers: Age of Ultron 3D Fri-Thu 1:20, 4:50, 8:20 Avengers: Age of Ultron Fri-Thu 11:30am, 3:00, 6:30, 10:00 Terminator Genisys Fri-Thu 12:20, 7:20 Terminator Genisys 3D Fri-Thu 3:30, 10:20 Paper Towns Fri-Thu 12:00, 6:20 Max Fri-Thu 11:50am, 3:20, 7:00, 9:50 San Andreas Fri-Thu 1:00, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 San Andreas 3D Fri-Thu 11:40am, 2:40, 5:40, 8:40 Mad Max: Fury Road Fri-Thu 12:10, 3:10, 6:40, 9:40 MOVIES WEST 9201 Coors NW • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1247 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. RIO RANCHO PREMIERE CINEMA 1000 Premiere Parkway • 994-3300 90 Minutes in Heaven Fri-Thu 11:40am, 2:45, 5:50, 8:55 The Visit Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:15, 5:00, 7:45, 10:30 A Walk in the Woods Fri-Thu 11:10am, 1:55, 4:40, 7:25, 10:10 The Transporter Refueled Fri-Thu 1:05, 3:50, 6:35, 9:20 Inside Out Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:10, 4:50 War Room Fri-Thu 1:10, 4:05, 7:00, 9:55 Jurassic World Fri-Thu 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:35 No Escape Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:50, 4:35, 7:20, 10:05 Sinister 2 Fri-Thu 12:20, 2:50, 5:20, 7:50, 10:20 Straight Outta Compton Fri-Thu 12:25, 3:50, 7:15, 10:40 The Man From U.N.C.L.E. Fri-Thu 12:25, 6:05 Fantastic Four Fri-Thu 6:30, 9:05 The Gift Fri-Thu 7:30, 10:15 Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation Fri-Thu 11:20am, 2:35, 5:50, 9:05 Pixels Fri-Thu 3:20, 9:00 Ant-Man Fri-Thu 11:05am, 2:00, 4:55, 7:50, 10:45 Minions Fri-Thu 11:15am, 1:40, 4:05 SUB THEATER UNM (Student Union Building Room 1003) • 277-5608 Citizenfour Fri 6:00, 8:30; Sat 6:00, 8:30; Sun 1:00, 3:30 Evangelion: 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone Thu 7:00 HIGH RIDGE 12910 Indian School NE • 275-0038 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. UNM MIDWEEK MOVIES UNM (Student Union Building Room 1003) • 277-4706 Inside Out Tue 8:00; Wed 4:00, 7:00; Thu 3:30 ICON CINEMAS ALBUQUERQUE 13120-A Central Ave. SE • 814-7469 The Perfect Guy Fri-Thu 12:00, 12:35, 2:25, 3:05, 4:50, 5:20, 7:10, 7:40, 9:30, 10:00 The Visit Fri-Thu 11:15am, 1:20, 3:30, 5:45, 6:45, 8:00, WINROCK STADIUM 16 IMAX & RPX 2100 Louisiana Blvd. NE • 881-2220 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [27] ! $%&$#'($)*+&%&,!"#$$!"#$!%&#'()*% "# ./-!$0) 1234-5*6 ,-.$#*$/-. [28] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 MUSIC | Show Up ROCK READS BY AUGUST MARCH PHOTO BY: JAY BLAKESBERG Dancing Toward Deliverance Four oceanic outings BY AUGUST MARCH he is benediction/ She is addicted to thee/ She is the root connection/ She is connecting with he/ Here I go and I don’t know why/ I flow so ceaselessly/ Could it be he’s taking over me?/ I’m dancing barefoot/ Headin’ for a spin/ Some strange music draws me in/ Makes me come on like some heroine … She is re-creation/ She intoxicated by thee/ She has the slow sensation that/ He is levitating with she/ Here I go when I don’t know why/ I spin so ceaselessly/ ‘Til I lose my sense of gravity/ I’m dancing barefoot/ In midair I spin/ Some strange music draws me in/ Makes me come on like some heroine.”— “Dancing Barefoot” by Patti Smith and Ivan Kral, from the album Wave by the Patti Smith Group. If I was writing concert previews for the mainstream press, I’d start out with this: Summer’s almost over; you ought to think about getting those boots out and ready for the winter—you wouldn’t want to go barefoot in the kind of weather that’s coming. Thankfully, I’m not writing for the dailies; I’m writing for their alternative. So I begin my weekly tirade thus: Dude have you listened to Wave!? It’s, like, one of the most totally rocking records ever. The pop luster of Todd Rundgren’s production layered sublimely over the poetically punk vocalizations of Patti Smith make for a hell of an album. Don’t even get me started on Ivan Kral’s snaky guitar. Afterwards, I’d find a clever way to transition into the previews like this: some strange music keeps drawing me into another week of amazing Albuquerque concerts. Here I go again. S Thursday If you’re still craving an endless summer—the point’s not moot here with daytime temperatures still hovering in the eighties— then you should check out the Surf Lords. The band washes ashore at Marble Brewery (111 Marble NW) on Thursday, Sept. 10, after vigorously paddling out to some of the biggest breaks available on the Rio Grande. I’m just kidding about that last part, but it’s true that this band roars like the ocean, making the French saying “Sous les pavés, la plage” take on spectacular meaning when invoked at musical venues in and around the Duke City. Featuring the tidal visions of guitarist/vocalist Tom Chism, the swelling double drum-kits of D.K. Warner and Polo Garcia as well as the oceanspray sonics of bassist Tracey Lipka, the Surf Lords bring a eternal sense of the stormy sea— complete with beach parties and primal palapas—to their gigs. Their Thursday night show is free to those at least 21 years of age. The water’s just fine and the surf’s in at 7pm. Friday In case that last paragraph got your Francophile tendencies to rise to the surface, follow up on Friday, Sept. 11, with a visit to the Historic El Rey Theater (622 Central SW) for Madeon. He subscribes to a type of EDM called French House that has been widely influential on the other side of the pond and is now finding a place in the hearts and minds of young Americans all over this continent. Madeon, also known as Hugo Pierre Leclercq, brings his collection of MIDI controllers, sophisticated software and other complicated electronic equipment to our little city by the river for a rave-up of COURTESY OF THE ARTIST Gordy Andersen loves you! the most glorious kind. Of course the dude’s big news on metallic monster Tenderizor. Also on the bill: BBC Radio 1. Heck, his collaboration with SuperGiant, Black Lamb, Shoggoth, DeadMau5 first made waves on that segment Anesthesia, Econarchy, Sandia Man, of the continental airwaves back in 2011 and Marsupious and Hanta. It’s going to fucking 2012. Lately the European electro-wizard has rock. And Gordy, bless his pointed head, will concentrated on work with Lady Gaga in be there to watch. 20 clams grants one access addition to designing a web app that allows to this 21+ rock spectacle for the ages. listeners to infiltrate and remix his recordings Launchpad opens at 5 pm that night; the to their liking. $20 gets one in to this 18+ thunder commences at 5:30 pm, continuing flowing summation of post-postmodernism. It into the wee hours of the next morning. all goes down at 8:30 pm. Saturday Sunday French Disco is cool alright (check out Stereolab’s Emperor Tomato Ketchup for details on that conclusion) but back here in America we’ve got the coolest of them all. Let me tell you a little bit more about Gordy Andersen. He was about three years ahead of me in high school. Back then his veritable creation of the punk scene in this town with Jerry’s Kidz cohort Kevin Cruikshank led an entire generation of Burque rock-heads to a deep blue baptism with heavy water. Responsible for bringing just about every skating so-and-so to the temple of what rock music would become in this town, Andersen went on to play in seminal outfits like Cracks in the Sidewalk and Black Maria. Now, much later, hilt deep into the twenty-first century, it turns out the dude’s cancer—originally fought over and vanquished in the aughts—has returned. So the local scene is throwing a festival in his honor. Gordyfest happens at Launchpad (618 Central SW) on Saturday, Sept. 12. Proceeds from this rocked out super-fiesta will help Gordy finance his continued medical needs, making his second slaughter of the big C an attainable thing. Some of the city’s best, brightest and burnt rock musicians will be on hand to bring this vision into fruition. Sets include performances by doom rockers Sleep— featuring heavyweight champion of sick sound Al Cisneros—and Raven Chacon’s modernist If you were concerned that the band names Jerry’s Kidz and Black Maria verged on the darkly irreverent, then what about the Cloacas? Besides being an orifice peculiar to non-mammalian animals, the pluralized name is also employed by an avant-garde folk orchestra from Santa Fe. They’ll be in recital as part of the Roost Creative Music Series— which somehow seems fitting—at the Tricklock Performance Laboratory (110 Gold SW) on Sunday, Sept. 13. Joined by a Mark Weaver (he’s the creator and life-giver of said series) trio known as The Mighty Bull Durhams, these two ensembles weave a complex collection of sounds, rhythms and ghostly musical reminiscences into a format that is as formidable as it is fantastic. Weaver contributes musically on the tuba and the didgeridoo for this concert and the work of the Cloacas has been described as “the imagined folk music of a fictional country.” This all-ages concert costs $7 and begins at $7:30 in the evening. I can’t say enough about the album Wave by the Patti Smith Group. In fact I’m not going to say anything more because I don’t want you to get distracted from the mission. But when you do get back from concert-land, have a listen. The title track at the end will surely take you out to sea. a Hippie Chicks! Sugar Magnolia in the modern age Rocanrol culture is rife with celebratory rites. This is especially true in it’s most lively manifestation, the rock concert—a timeless expression of joy that is sometimes laced with a certain longing for freedom that is a hallmark of the American experience. No group of people has been more successful in realizing that profound joie de vivre than the hippies. Photographer Jay Blakesberg captures the quintessence of all that in his new, vibrantly realized book of photographs from the scene, Hippie Chick: A Tale of Love, Devotion & Surrender, to be released on Oct. 1, 2015 by Rock Out Books. The collection of photographs and accompanying essays by Grace Slick, Edith Johnson and Grace Potter focuses on the poignant power of feminine influence upon a genre traditionally defined and glorified by patriarchy. But as the images and text clearly note, women in audiences across the our nation are definitive arbiters of the joyous spirit contained within and without the genre. Blakesberg’s viewpoint is primarily anthropological, but his documentation is far from sterile. His record of women as the center of rock’s vitality is deeply human, sometimes provocative and beautifully realized. In conjunction with the book’s upcoming release, Blakesberg commented, “These women have blazed a powerful trail, from the early 1960s through today, and have forever changed the face of women in pop culture. I hope these photos and words illustrate the positive vibes that this scene continues to generate.” Blakesberg’s vision eschews typical popular culture depictions of women, presenting images that, while sensual, are unencumbered by what we’ve come to expect in the mostly-male directed mass media. There are no garishly thin, overtly sexualized images in this book. Instead the photographer’s subjects are deeply human, alive with nuance, natural beauty and a sense of intense individuality that make them interesting and honest representatives of human culture in general and the rock and roll subculture in particular. There’s something intimate yet universal about the images captured by Blakesberg. The writing that goes along with this supersaturated look at a culture on the verge of freedom from the norm maintains a healthy connection to the past while embracing the future. A colorful aplomb elucidates the hippie aesthetic as a living component of American thought, especially in Potter’s lucid contribution—that the values contained therein (and extending past any sense of gender) are still a moveable feast. They become clear when Potter explains her connection to the spirit explored lovingly in Blakesberg’s photos, “We are the living, breathing manifestation of every path they blazed, every war they protested, every song they loved…” Much more than a picture book of happy hippies, Hippie Chick: A Tale of Love, Devotion & Surrender, is an unbound look at a part of American culture typically dismissed by a society overly concerned with a false sense of youth and beauty. It provides an earthy and earnest contrast to the plastic age and should be required reading for anyone with a rock and roll heart. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [29] Wednesday SEPT 9 7:00pm Doors NICKI BLUHM AND THE GRAMBLERS DAVID BERKELEY Thursday SEPT 10 8:00pm Doors BANDIT LORDZ + KRON JEREMY + EPIC + RENO JOE BZ + WOLFGANG PACO + G-L.I.F.E + SYG RECORDZ KID FLOW + AUX + CRYOGENIK + NICKY T + JOE GONZ INVINCIBLE + KING XERXES + BISHOP UNDURDOG Friday SEPT 11 8:00pm Doors SUBROSA BLACK MARIA + THE DITCH AND THE DELTA + CHICHARRA Saturday SEPT 12 5:00pm Doors GORDYFEST!! A BENEFIT FOR GORDY ANDERSEN!!! SLEEP TENDERIZOR + SUPERGIANT + BLACK LAMB (CO) SHOGGOTH + ANESTHESIA + ECONARCHY SANDIA MAN + MARSUPIOUS + HANTA Sunday SEPT 13 8:00pm Doors MOON HONEY + MEGAFAUNA TRAIN CONDUCTOR + SUN DOG Tuesday SEPT 15 8:00pm Doors TURQUOISE JEEP KRON JEREMY + DJ WAE FONKEY Wednesday SEPT 16 7:00pm Doors REVOCATION CANNABIS CORPSE + ARCHSPIRE + BLACK FAST Thursday SEPT 17 7:00pm Doors HIPPIE SABOTAGE USELESS G + ONDER + GALAXY Saturday SEPT 19 2:00pm Doors FOUR YEAR STRONG DEFEATER + EXPIRE + MY IRON LUNG Saturday SEPT 19 8:00pm Doors METALACHI Wednesday SEPT 9 8:00pm Doors HOPELESS JACK COWBOYS AND INDIAN Friday SEPT 11 8:00pm Doors REVEREND PEYTON’S BIG DAMN BAND THE IMPERIAL ROOSTER THE WHISKEY PRIEST Saturday SEPT 12 8:00pm Doors DOUBLE PLOW THE SHACKS + THE TALKING HOURS Sunday SEPT 13 7:00pm Doors AN EVENING WITH THE BLACK LILLIES Tuesday SEPT 15 8:00pm Doors BEARD + SNAILMATE ADRIAN AND THE SICKNESS + THE VELVET O Thursday SEPT 17 8:00pm Doors DIRTY BROWN JUG BAND NO DRY COUNTY + THE PORTER DRAW Wednesday SEPT 23 8:00pm Doors BEN MILLER BAND [30] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 Music Calendar THURSDAY SEP 10 BEN MICHAEL’S Gerald Lujan Latin Jam Session • 7pm • FREE DIRTY BOURBON Zach Coffey • country • 9pm • $5 HOTEL ANDALUZ Jesus Bas y MÁS • 7pm • ALL-AGES! IMBIBE Throwback with DJ Flo Fader • 9pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD F*ck the Swine Hip-Hop Showcase • Bandit Lordz • Kron Jeremy • Epic • Reno • Joe BZ • 9pm • $10 LIZARD TAIL BREWING Kamikaze Karaoke • 7:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! MARBLE BREWERY The Surf Lords • beach rock • 7pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Jimmy Jones • 6pm • FREE PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Chava • R&B • Paid My Dues • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! Q BAR Latin Gold Thursday with DJ Aztech Sol • 8pm • FREE RANCHERS CLUB Lindy Gold • piano • 6:30pm • FREE SAVOY WINE BAR & GRILL Memphis P. Tails • blues • 6pm SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Chris Dracup • acoustic blues • 8:30pm SISTER Lil Debbie • hip-hop, rap • The Krown • Jungle Ghetty • DJ Clout • 9pm • $10 SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Lulz Comedy • Ben Kronberg and Friends • 8pm • $10 • VDJ Dany • Latin • 10pm TINGLEY COLISEUM NEEDTOBREATHE • christian rock, alternative rock • Poema • 7pm • $15-$30 • ALL-AGES! TRIPLE SEVENS, Isleta Casino Karaoke • 9:30pm • FREE WINNING COFFEE CO. Above-Average Open Mic • 6pm FRIDAY SEP 11 BIEN SHUR Kari Simmons Group • R&B, funk, soul • 9pm-1am CASA ESENCIA Dj Sez • Josh Burg • 9pm • $10-$20 DIRTY BOURBON Zach Coffey • country • 9pm • $5 HISTORIC EL REY THEATER Madeon • EDM, french, funky house • 8:30pm • $20 IMBIBE DJ Rotation • 9pm • FREE INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER Nosotros • salsa • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! THE JAM SPOT Burn Halo • alternative rock • Heartist • Courage, My Love • Run 2 Cover • 7pm • $12 • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD SubRosa • Black Maria • The Ditch And The Delta • Chicharra • 9pm • $8 • See preview box. LOUNGE 54 @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Carl Silva • rock, pop, R&B • 9pm • FREE LOW SPIRITS The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band • The Imperial Rooster • The Whiskey Priest • 9pm • $10 MARBLE BREWERY Pawnshop Poster Boys • reggae, ska • 8pm • FREE MARBLE BREWERY WESTSIDE TAP ROOM Matt Jones • folk, acoustic • 6pm • FREE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Adam Wayne • Americana, country • Bus Driver Tour • folk, country, rock • 5pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras John Wells • 1:30pm • Memphis P. Tails • blues • 6pm • FREE NED’S BAR & GRILL Split Decision • classic rock • 9pm OLD TOWN PLAZA Jody Vanesky & Groove Time • blues, swing, jump • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! Q BAR DJ Tommy Gallagher • 9pm • FREE THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo The Gregg Daigle Band • Americana, roots • 7:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Rodney Bowe’s Sweet Life w/Sina Soul • soul, R&B • 8:30pm SISTER TNR Anniversary • Aceyalone • Asphate • Working Class • Sol & Dirty Spoonz • DJ Wae Funky • 8pm • $10 SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe EmiArte Flamenco • baile, cante, guitarra • $13-$20 • ALL-AGES! • Kris Shaw • comedy • 8pm • $10 • The Alchemy Party • DJs Dynamite Sol & Poetics • 9pm • $7 STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo DJ Devin • house, dance • Chris de Jesus • 9pm • $0-$10 TINGLEY COLISEUM Doug Stone • country, folk • 7pm • $15-$30 • ALL-AGES! TLUR PA LOUNGE, Sandia Resort and Casino JDS • 9pm-1am VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Calvin Appleberry • solo piano • 7pm • FREE SATURDAY SEP 12 ALBUQUERQUE MUSEUM OF ART AND HISTORY Jose Salazar • guitar, composer • 2-5pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! BIEN SHUR Kari Simmons Group • R&B, funk, soul • 9pm-1am THE COOPERAGE Nosotros • salsa • 9:30pm • $7 DIRTY BOURBON Zach Coffey • country • 9pm • $5 DUKE CITY SOUND STAGE Shatterproof (CO) • On Your Doorstep • Right On Kid • 7pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! IMBIBE Ryan Shea • 10pm • FREE INDIAN PUEBLO CULTURAL CENTER Stratus Phear • classic rock, variety • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! ISLETA RESORT & CASINO: THE SHOWROOM American English • Beatles tribute • 8pm • $10-$20 LAUNCHPAD GordyFest • Sleep • Tenderizor • Supergiant • Black Lamb (CO) • Shoggoth • Anesthesia • Econarchy • 5:30pm • $20 LAZY LIZARD GRILL, Cedar Crest Scotty and the Atomics • rock, reggae, funk • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! LEGENDS THEATER @ ROUTE 66 CASINO Sparx • Latin • Antonio Lorenzo • 8pm • $45-$65 • ALL-AGES! LOUNGE 54 @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Carl Silva • rock, pop, R&B • 9pm • FREE MARBLE BREWERY Dorian Vibe • jam rock, dance • 8pm • FREE MARBLE BREWERY WESTSIDE TAP ROOM Last Call • punk rock • 6pm • FREE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Joe West • psychedelic country • Hogan & Moss • folk • 3pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Rock Bottom • 1:30pm • Group Therapy • blues, rock • 6pm • FREE RANCHERS CLUB Lindy Gold • piano • 7pm • FREE THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo Junior Brown • country • 7:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SAVOY WINE BAR & GRILL Todd Tijerina Band • 6pm SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Charlie Christian Project • jazz • Michael Anthony • Bobby Shew • 8:30pm SISTER Baracutanga • Latin, folk fusion • Son Como Son • DJ Justin Credible • 9pm • $10 SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe We <3 Tech • Andrew Bowen • B2B Mayrant • Justin George • 9pm STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo DJ Finesse • hip-hop, R&B • 9pm • $5-$10 TINGLEY COLISEUM Los Lonely Boys • blues, rock • 7pm • $15-$35 • ALL-AGES! TLUR PA LOUNGE, Sandia Resort and Casino JDS • 9pm-1am TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK DJ Halcyon • 9pm • FREE VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Lori Michaels • jazz piano, vocals • 7pm • FREE VERNON’S OPEN DOOR Mary Mayhem • modern, classic, pop rock • 6:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SUNDAY SEP 13 THE BLUE GRASSHOPPER BREW PUB, Rio Rancho Tom Dhanens • 5pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! HYATT REGENCY TAMAYA RESORT, Santa Ana Pueblo Wayne Wesley Johnson • solo guitarist • 5:30pm • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD Moon Honey • rock, pop • Megafauna • Train Conductor • Sun Dog • 9:30pm LOW SPIRITS The Black Lillies • bluegrass, Americana • 8pm • $8 MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Junior Brown • country • 3pm • $0-$25 • ALL-AGES! O’NIELL’S PUB, Northeast Heights Los Radiators • folk, blues • 4pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe DakhaBrakha • folk, Ukrainian, ethnochaos • 7:30pm • $18 ST. JOHN’S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Jim Cullum Jazz Band • classic jazz • 2pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! ST. PIUS X HIGH SCHOOL Nuovi Venti Wind Ensemble • big band, contemporary • 2pm • FREE, donations accepted • ALL-AGES! TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK I’ll Drink To That • variety show • 4pm • FREE TRICKLOCK PERFORMANCE LABORATORY Mighty Bull Durhams • improv music • Cloacas • avant-folk orchestra • 7:30pm • $7 • ALL-AGES! VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE WITCH’S BREW Be Be La La • 7pm • FREE MONDAY SEP 14 LIZARD TAIL BREWING Open Mic Jam Night • 7pm SUNSHINE THEATER The Neighbourhood • rock, alternative • Bad Suns • Hunny • 7pm • $30 TRACTOR BREWING TAPROOM Virginia Creepers • jam • 7:30pm • FREE TUESDAY SEP 15 BEN MICHAEL’S Joe Daddy Blues Jam Session • 7pm • FREE FAT SQUIRREL PUB & GRILLE, Rio Rancho Geeks Who Drink • 6:30pm • FREE IMBIBE College Night with DJ Automatic & Drummer Camilo Quinones • 9:30pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD Turquoise Jeep • hip-hop, electronic • Kron Jeremy • DJ Wae Fonkey • 9:30pm • $13 LOW SPIRITS Beard • rock • Snailmate • Adrian And The Sickness • The Velvet O • 9pm • $5 Music Calendar continues on page 32 SONIC REDUCER BY GEOFFREY PLANT Miley Cyrus Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz (Self-Released) While sounding a bit half baked (pun intended), this collaboration with Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips is the most interesting thing Miley Cyrus has done, musically or otherwise. Recorded on the cheap and self-released, Dead Petz is refreshingly real-sounding, somewhat off-thethe-cuff and weird in a relaxing way. The work is inspired by a series of pet deaths—the ghost of Floyd, Cyrus’ dog, apparently inhabits Wayne Coyne now—and her close relationship with the haunted Flaming Lips frontman. This album consists mostly of electronic music in the vein of Gorillaz’ Plastic Beach and a lyrical focus on sex and relationships. And weed. And pills. Listeners will find themselves looking forward to each successive song, wondering what’s going to spill out of Cyrus’ head next. Worth a listen for anyone remotely interested in the phenomenon of American culture, Dead Petz will either please Lips fans or simply mentioning it will make them groan. Big Swing Theory Big Swing Theory (Self-released) Led by outstanding guitarist Jackson Price and upright bass player Conrad Cooper, this Taosbased four piece manages a big sound with only a few instruments. Price and Cooper got together in 2009 and later added Jeremy Jones on Sax and Max Moulton on drums. Big Swing Theory performs driving swing music in the style of Louis Prima, jump music complete with irreverent and hilarious lyrics. For inspiration their sound owes a debt to the electric blues music of Elmore James and Lightnin’ Hopkins . Cruising through all these related styles with mucho panache and without sounding like a parody, Big Swing Theory boasts a track list of all original compositions—no small achievement—with the exception of “I Wan’na Be Like You.” A great debut from four guys who not only have major chops but know how to wear suits every day like it ain’t no thing. Impressive. Herbcraft Wot Oz (Woodsist) Not wanting to let another week go by without reviewing an album accompanied by a press release with the phrase “will appeal to fans of classic Krautrock”, I present you with Herbcraft’s fourth release, Wot Oz. The trio do indeed lay out the repetitive bass and drums of Can and the abrupt noises of Faust, but there is something distinctly American about Herbcraft’s psychedelia, the genre to which Wot Oz indisputably belongs. This is heavy duty, distorted wah-wah guitar interspersed with Grateful Dead noodling and USA-sized amounts of looped excess surrounding every note. The mono recording consists of some informal jams recorded on two track and is as good or better than previous Herbcraft releases—it’s also testimony to the trio’s talent for the soothingly weird. There are long noise breaks on this album that are more enjoyable than other band’s entire albums. Definitely “drug music”. a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [31] EVENT | PREVIEW STEFAN RADUTA A Rose in the Garden of Doom Though the landscape has FRIDAY changed in recent years and SEPTEMBER 11 metal is no longer a boy’s club, the scene still isn’t Launchpad populated by all that many 618 Central SW female musicians. So creep alibi.com/e/161778 on down to Launchpad 9pm (618 Central SW) this Friday, Sept. 11, for what is going to be a female-heavy night of the region’s best stoner rock, doom metal and sludge. SubRosa, arguably the kings of the Salt Lake City metal scene and fronted by a trio of women who share vocal duties—none of whom play the typically female role of bass player—have a uniquely beautiful and baroque doom sound, augmented by electric violinists Sarah Pendleton and Kim Pack, that is not to be missed. SubRosa brings their friends from Mormon country, The Ditch and The Delta, who sound like Neurosis meets old school Melvins and who released their first EP earlier in the year. Though you already have plans to hit Gordy Fest on Saturday, Friday’s show gives you another opportunity to show your love and support for local musician Gordy Anderson by coming out to see his band Black Maria, Albuquerque’s supra-puro stoner rock group. Chicharra, the “best triple bass band ever,” fronted by three ultra-talented badass chicks on bass and vocals, opens at 8pm. Eight bucks buys you entrance into this 21+ night of low-end sludge. (Geoffrey Plant) a Music Calendar continued from page 31 MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Cactus Slim & The GoatHeads • blues jam • 7pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Merican Slang • funk • 6pm • FREE Q BAR Piano Bar with John Cousins • 5pm SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe The Bright Light Social Hour • indie rock • 7:30pm • $12 • ALL-AGES! WEDNESDAY SEP 16 THE BARLEY ROOM Karaoke with DJ Scarlett Diva • 9pm • FREE BEN MICHAEL’S Asher Barreras Jazz Jam Session • 7pm • FREE BEST WESTERN RIO GRANDE INN Weekly Wednesdays Dancing with Caleb Crump • 7-10pm • $10 [32] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 DIRTY BOURBON Live Band Karaoke • 6pm • FREE IBIZA AT HOTEL ANDALUZ Alex Maryol • blues, rock • 6pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD Revocation • death metal • Cannabis Corpse • Archspire • Black Fast • 8pm • $12 MARBLE BREWERY Tiffany Christopher • rock, pop, blues • 5pm • FREE MARBLE BREWERY WESTSIDE TAP ROOM Tres Pendejos • acoustic, reggae • 6pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Falcon Eddie • 6pm • FREE Q BAR Piano Bar with John Cousins • 5pm RAILYARD PLAZA, Santa Fe Zella Day • indie, pop, folk • 7pm RANCHERS CLUB Lindy Gold • piano • 6:30pm • FREE TRACTOR BREWING TAPROOM Garry Blackchild • 8:30pm • FREE UNM KELLER HALL Edison Quintana & Fred Sturm • piano • 7:30pm • $5-$12 • ALL-AGES! a SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [33] [34] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 Free Will Astrology | Horoscopes by LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): As I hike up San Pedro Ridge, I’m mystified by the madrone trees. The leaves on the short, thin saplings are as big and bold as the leaves on the older, thicker, taller trees. I see this curiosity as an apt metaphor for your current situation, Leo. In one sense, you are in the early stages of a new cycle of growth. In another sense, you are strong and ripe and full-fledged. For you, this is a winning combination: a robust balance of innocence and wisdom, of fresh aspiration and seasoned readiness. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I hope it’s not too late or too early to give you a slew of birthday presents. You deserve to be inundated with treats, dispensations and appreciations. Here’s your first perk: You are hereby granted a license to break a taboo that is no longer useful or necessary. Second blessing: You are authorized to instigate a wildly constructive departure from tradition. Third boost: I predict that in the next six weeks, you will simultaneously claim new freedom and summon more discipline. Fourth delight: During the next three months, you will discover and uncork a new thrill. Fifth goody: Between now and your birthday in 2016, you will develop a more relaxed relationship with perfectionism. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): A “wheady mile” is an obsolete English term I want to revive for use in this horoscope. It refers to what may happen at the end of a long journey, when that last stretch you’ve got to traverse seems to take forever. You’re so close to home; you’re imagining the comfort and rest that will soon be yours. But as you cross the “wheady mile,” you must navigate your way through one further plot twist or two. There’s a delay or complication that demands more effort just when you want to be finished with the story. Be strong, Libra. Keep the faith. The wheady mile will not, in CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In this horoscope, we will use the Socratic method to stimulate your excitement about projects that fate will favor in the next nine months. Here’s how it works: I ask the questions and you brainstorm the answers. 1) Is there any part of your life where you are an amateur but would like to be a professional? 2) Are you hesitant to leave a comfort zone even though remaining there tends to inhibit your imagination? 3) Is your ability to fulfill your ambitions limited by any lack of training or deficiency in your education? 4) Is there any way that you are holding on to blissful ignorance at the expense of future possibilities? 5) What new license, credential, diploma or certification would be most useful to you? AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The story of my life features more than a few fiascos. For example, I got fired from my first job after two days. One of my girlfriends dumped me without any explanation and never spoke to me again. My record label fired me and my band after we made just one album. Years later, these indignities still carry a sting. But I confess that I am also grateful for them. They keep me humble. They serve as antidotes if I’m ever tempted to deride other people for their failures. They have helped me develop an abundance of compassion. I mention this personal tale in the hope that you, too, might find redemption and healing in your own memories of frustration. The time is right to capitalize on old losses. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): It’s never fun to be in a sticky predicament that seems to have no smart resolution. But the coming days could turn out to be an unexpectedly good time to be in such a predicament. Why? Because I expect that your exasperation will precipitate an emotional cleansing, releasing ingenious intuitions that had been buried under repressed anger and sadness. You may then find a key that enables you to reclaim at least some of your lost power. The predicament that once felt sour and intractable will mutate, providing you with an opportunity to deepen your connection with a valuable resource. HOMEWORK: WHAT ARE FIVE CONDITIONS YOU’D NEED IN YOUR WORLD IN ORDER TO FEEL YOU WERE LIVING IN UTOPIA? TESTIFY AT FREEWILLASTROLOGY.COM Go to realastrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s expanded weekly audio horoscopes and daily text message horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at (877) 873-4888 or (900) 950-7700. Dating Easy made www.MegaMates.com CANCER (June 21-July 22): Why grab the brainscrambling moonshine when you may eventually be offered a heart-galvanizing tonic? Why gorge on hors d’oeuvres when a four-course feast will be available sooner than you imagine? According to my analysis of the astrological omens, my fellow Crab, the future will bring unexpected opportunities that are better and brighter than the current choices. This is one of those rare times when procrastination may be in your interest. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Is feeling good really as fun as everyone seems to think? Is it really so wonderful to be in a groove, in love with life and in touch with your deeper self? No! Definitely not! And I suspect that as you enter more fully into these altered states, your life will provide evidence of the inconveniences they bring. For example, some people might nag you for extra attention and others may be jealous of your success. You could be pressured to take on more responsibilities. And you may be haunted by the worry that sooner or later, this grace period will pass. I’M JUST KIDDING, SAGITTARIUS! In truth, the minor problems precipitated by your blessings won’t cause any more anguish than a mosquito biting your butt while you’re in the throes of ecstatic love-making. ©2013 PC LLC GEMINI (May 21-June 20): There have been times in the past when your potential helpers disappeared just when you wanted more help than usual. In the coming weeks, I believe you will get redress for those sad interludes of yesteryear. A wealth of assistance and guidance will be available. Even people who have previously been less than reliable may offer a tweak or intervention that gives you a boost. Here’s a tip for how to ensure that you take full advantage of the possibilities: Ask clearly and gracefully for exactly what you need. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Trying improbable and unprecedented combinations is your specialty right now. You’re willing and able to gamble with blends and juxtapositions that no one else would think of, let alone propose. Bonus: Extra courage is available for you to call on as you proceed. In light of this gift, I suggest you brainstorm about all the unifications that might be possible for you to pull off. What conflicts would you love to defuse? What inequality or lopsidedness do you want to fix? Is there a misunderstanding you can heal or a disjunction you can harmonize? 18+ TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “The fragrance from your mango groves makes me wild with joy.” That’s one of the lyrics in the national anthem of Bangladesh. Here’s another: “Forever your skies ... set my heart in tune as if it were a flute.” Elsewhere, addressing Bangladesh as if it were a goddess, the song proclaims, “Words from your lips are like nectar to my ears.” I suspect you may be awash with comparable feelings in the coming weeks, Taurus—not toward your country, but rather for the creatures and experiences that rouse your delight and exultation. They are likely to provide even more of the sweet mojo than they usually do. It will be an excellent time to improvise your own hymns of praise. fact, take forever. (Thanks to Mark Forsyth and his book The Horologicon: A Day’s Jaunt Through the Lost Worlds of the English Language) Albuquerque 505.268.6666 FREE CODE 3079 For other local numbers call 1-888MegaMatesTM 24/7 Friendly Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 ARIES (March 21-April 19): “More and more I have come to admire resilience,” writes Jane Hirshfield in her poem “Optimism.” “Not the simple resistance of a pillow,” she adds, “whose foam returns over and over to the same shape, but the sinuous tenacity of a tree: finding the light newly blocked on one side, it turns in another.” You have not often had great access to this capacity in the past, Aries. Your specialty has been the fast and fiery style of adjustment. But for the foreseeable future, I’m betting you will be able to summon a supple staying power—a dogged, determined, incremental kind of resilience. rob brezsny WARNING HOT GUYS! Albuquerque 505.268.1111 FREE TO LISTEN & REPLY TO ADS! FREE CODE: Weekly Alibi For other local numbers call 1-888-MegaMates TM 24/7 Friendly Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2013 PC LLC www.MegaMatesMen.com 2508 SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 WEEKLY ALIBI [35] [36] WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2015 straight dope | advice froM the abyss by ceciL adaMs Will Lockheed Martin produce fusion power in a decade? Lockheed Martin's claim of fusion power "in a decade" has my Spideysense tingling. Is there any merit to their claim? It seems like fusion power is always just a decade away—is there reason to hope anyone is going to create workable fusion power in our lifetimes? —Kevin Miller Depends on how long you plan on living. At the rate things were going, the timeline for commercial fusion power was up there with the half-life of radium. Sure, Lockheed Martin’s bid could crash and burn, but current efforts don’t seem noticeably more promising and it’s not my money. So why not? Lockheed engineers raised eyebrows worldwide when they announced last October that they were pursuing a new type of compact fusion reactor. They planned on testing their design in a year, they said, with a working prototype in five years. The skepticism stemmed from the lack of technical detail provided and the feeling we’d heard this before. However, enthusiasm in some quarters was also high—the reactor is being developed by Lockheed’s Skunk Works research and development team, responsible for among other things the SR-71 Blackbird (the fastest non-rocket plane ever built), the F-117 stealth bomber and the F-22 that replaced it. Lockheed Martin is a public company with an image and stock price to protect and you’d think they wouldn’t be foolhardy enough to promise a breakthrough without something to back it up. Then again, Microsoft seemed pretty confident about Windows 8. The details released by Lockheed are sketchy, but apparently the company has decided to go with a smaller-is-better approach to containment design. In a hot-fusion reactor a mixture of deuterium and tritium, two heavy forms of hydrogen, are injected into an evacuated chamber and heated to millions of degrees to form a plasma in which atoms fuse together, releasing energy. This insanely hot plasma must be contained in a small space not only to keep the reaction going but also to allow safe extraction of the heat needed for power production. To date most fusion reactor designs have been of a type called a tokamak (a Russian coinage), which suspends the plasma in a superconducting magnetic field shaped like a giant donut. The drawback of a tokamak is that it’s huge and complicated but can contain only a small amount of plasma. The Lockheed people claim that by shrinking the reactor they can hold more plasma relative to the energy required to maintain the magnetic field, resulting in ten times the power production. Furthermore, they say their system is safer and more stable than a tokamak—as the plasma pressure increases, so does the strength of the field, containing the plasma even more securely. Beyond these efficiency advantages, there’s obvious benefit to having something powerful enough to run 100,000 homes but small enough to fit in a semitrailer. On paper at least, the compact and safe design could make it suitable for powering ships, airplanes and even spacecraft. Lockheed isn’t alone in breaking away from the tokamak herd. General Fusion, for example, uses a sphere filled with liquid lead and lithium to contain the fusion reaction. Others have redesigned the tokamak to look more like a cored apple than a donut. It’s hoped that, within a decade (a familiarsounding timeframe, admittedly), these so-called spherical tokamaks will achieve the critical “net power production” point—that is, where they’re producing more power than they consume. We’re not there yet. In 1997 the Joint European Torus set a record for producing 16 megawatts of power for a few seconds—an impressive number, but only 65 percent of the power that went into running it. In 2014 a laser fusion experiment at the Lawrence Livermore National Ignition Facility managed to generate “fuel gain greater than unity.” Is that good? Absolutely. Does it mean we’ve crossed the net power production threshold? Alas, no. Still, it’s more progress than some fusion efforts have made. The current leader in money spent vs. watts produced—and that’s not a title you want to hold—is the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, or ITER. A monster of a project at ten stories tall and costing more than $18 billion, ITER utilizes a traditional tokamak design and hopes to produce fusion energy sometime after 2027—which is, I note, more than a decade away. By reaching its goal of 500 megawatts of power from 50 megawatts of input energy, ITER would set the stage for the next phase, called DEMO, projected to start construction in 2024 and possibly finish by 2033. DEMO wouldn’t be one plant but rather a sort of joint venture in which multiple parallel efforts would somehow produce a single reactor to serve as the prototype for multiple commercial-grade utility reactors, which would in turn begin construction after 2050. Right after that, Jesus comes back. The one fusion reactor of demonstrated practicality is the sun, one of your more plus-size phenomena, suggesting Lockheed’s small-isbeautiful approach is no sure route to success. On the other hand, you have to like the idea of a test design in a year. 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