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A SHAPE IN THE SHADOWS SINCE 1992 COVER PHOTO BY PAT BERRETT VOLUME 25 | ISSUE 15 | APRIL 14-20, 2016 | FREE [2] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [3] alibi VOLUME 25 | ISSUE 15 | APRIL 14-20, 2016 NOW W OPEN! EDITORIAL MANAGING EDITOR/COPY EDITOR: Renee Chavez (ext. 255) [email protected] FILM EDITOR: Devin D. O’Leary (ext. 230) [email protected] MUSIC EDITOR: August March (ext. 245) [email protected] ARTS/LIT EDITOR: Maggie Grimason (ext. 239) [email protected] STAFF WRITER: Joshua Lee (ext. 243) [email protected] EDITORIAL INTERNS: Megan Reneau [email protected] Taylor Grabowsky (ext. 221) [email protected] Monica Schmitt [email protected] CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Cecil Adams, Gustavo Arellano, Robin Babb, Rob Brezsny, Carolyn Carlson, August March, Geoffrey Plant PRODUCTION ART DIRECTOR/PRODUCTION MANAGER: Archie Archuleta (ext. 240) [email protected] EDITORIAL DESIGNER Robert Maestas (ext.256) [email protected] ILLUSTRATOR/GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Tamara Sutton (ext.256) [email protected] PRODUCTION INTERN: Brie MacQuarrie [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] ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES: Kittie Blackwell (ext. 224) [email protected] Valerie Hollingsworth (ext. 263) [email protected] Sally Jackson (ext. 264) [email protected] Tierna Unruh-Enos (ext. 248) [email protected] Samuel Kerwin (ext. 265) [email protected] ADMINISTRATION CONTROLLER: Blythe Crawford (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 INTERIM PUBLISHER: Jesse Schulz (ext. 229) [email protected] SYSTEMS MANAGER: Kyle Silfer (ext. 242) [email protected] WEB MONKEY: John Millington (ext. 238) [email protected] OWNERS, PUBLISHERS EMERITI: Christopher Johnson, Daniel Scott and Carl Petersen CIRCULATION CIRCULATION MANAGER: Geoffrey Plant (ext. 252) [email protected] T hurs. 4/14 C alle 66 (Salsa) (Salsa) Thurs. Calle F ri. 4/15 Chr is Dracup Dracup & FFunk unk of the W est Fri. Chris West (Blues) unk/Classic R ock) Sat. 4/16 DCN Project Project (R&B/F Sat. (R&B/Funk/Classic Rock) Plena (Salsa/Latin (Salsa/Latin Jazz) Thurs. 4/21 Tera TTer era Plena Thurs. Fri. 4/22 Stratus Stratus Phear Phear (Classic (Classic R ock) Fri. Rock) Sat. 4/23 Raven Raven & the Sweet Sweet Potato Potato Pie Pie Band Sat. (Blues) ocha (S alsa) T hurs. 4/28 C afé éM Thurs. Café Mocha (Salsa) Fri. 4/29 Soul Soul Kitchen Kitchen (Soul/Blues) (Soul/Blues) Fri. Sat. 4/30 En tourage Jazz ((Jazz) Jazz) Sat. Entourage INFORMATION PRINTER: The Santa Fe New Mexican IN LOVING MEMORY: Doug Albin, Martin Candelaria, Michael Henningsen, Gretchen Hudson, 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. The content of this issue is Copyright © 2016 by NuCity Publications, Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without written consent of the publisher. All rights are reserved. One copy of each edition of Alibi is available free to county residents and visitors each week. Anyone caught removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Yearly subscription $100, back issues are $3, Best of Burque is $5. Queries and manuscripts should include a self-addressed stamped envelope; Alibi assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. Association of Alternative Newsmedia [4] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Letters should be sent with the writer’s name, address and daytime phone number via email to [email protected]. They can also be faxed to (505) 256-9651. Letters may be edited for length and clarity, and may be published in any medium; we regret that owing to the volume of correspondence we cannot reply to every letter. Word count limit for letters is 300 words. Donald Trump Way Worse Than Dubya Dear Alibi, Donald Trump’s campaign is getting more and more crazy, just like his followers. In the beginning, I must confess, I found the notion of Trump’s candidacy refreshing. Don’t get me wrong, I was never a fan of the man, per se, but initially I was in love with how he was making both members on the established Left and Right feel anxious. “The Donald” was, in the beginning to me, a great comeuppance to the establishment, a big middle-finger to both powers that be. I felt that voting for Trump would have been a great political statement to all the heavies in charge—a big screw-you. I did not necessarily like the man, nor did I honestly take seriously any of the things he was saying, but in a strange way, I felt he was giving voices to the voiceless, simply by defying the powers that be: the bought and paid for politicians. The Hillary Clintons out there, who are in bed with Wall Street. And the John Kasichs and the Ted Cruzs and the Marco Rubios, who are both so owned by the brothers Koch, they might as well have “Property of Koch Industries” stamped on their buttcheeks before they go out and graze with the rest of the truffle pigs. At least Trump doesn’t want to raise the Social Security retirement age. At least he’s not a puppet, like all those aforementioned yahoos, and he’s disrupting the Republican party, I thought at the time. Little did I know, in the beginning, that Trump would end up being a gazillion times worse than the establishment politicians he was speaking out against. Yep—Trump is already worse than any other president we have ever had. Even George W. Bush. Now don’t misunderstand me here: I disliked Bush with a passion. I thought his war in Iraq was unconstitutional, even criminal (and I still do). However, at this stage of the game, I believe I abhor “The Donald” even more. Bush used to always love to say, “I’m a uniter, not a divider.” That was such a crock of bullshit! Yet, compared to Trump, I’m ashamed to say, Bush really was a uniter. Of course, I might sound like I’m off my rocker, and like I’ve been eating a few too many edibles from the local dispensary, but it’s true. For example, how many times did Bush subtly try to incite riots and violence at his rallies? How many times did he stigmatize all Muslims? Did George W. Bush ever once promote riots at the Republican National Convention if he were to lose the nomination? How about lawsuits? Did George W. Bush ever promise a full-fledged assault on our beloved 1st Amendment, by threatening to sue all the newspapers across the country that printed negative op-eds about him? Donald Trump is considerably worse than George W. Bush ever was. He is a much greater threat to the Constitution, and to our democratic rights as American citizens. To some people, the man is a god and a breath of fresh air. To me, Donald Trump is anti-American—a monster who promotes hatred, sexism and racism and has no qualms about destroying our civil liberties as Americans. -Jack Bristow a LETTER FROM THE EDITOR OOPS! Dear Readers, We are terribly sorry to inform you that there was a mistake in this year’s Best of Burque tallies. Craft Hair Studio was the real winner of Best Hair Salon, and Canine Country Club and Feline Inn was the real winner for Best Place to Board Your Pet. Further apologies go to CNM Cosmetology School and Corrales Kennels for the disappointment. Alas, though we do our very best to make BOB the best reader survey in Burque, we are only human-robot report-o-trons that occasionally have glitches. A better way to search for New Mexico Homes Sincerest apologies, Alibi PS Further adding to our humiliation, we got the name of a business wrong in Best Category We Forgot. It’s The Vanity Wax, not Vanity Salon. We deeply regret being such massive nincompoops. a GRANDE GRA RANDE E OPEN N HOUSE WEEKEND APRiL A PRiLL 16 & 17 APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [5] AND ODDS ENDS WEIRD NEWS Book by Peter DePietro; Lyrics by Tom Chiodo; Music by Galen Blum, Wayne Barker, and Vinnie Martucci Directed by Robb A. Sisneros April 8 - May 1 The internationally popular Parker Brothers’ Board Game is now a fun-filled musical. Audience members choose the potential murderers, weapons and p otential m urderers, w eapons a nd rrooms: ooms: are possible tthere here a re 2216 16 p ossible ssolutions! olutions! Tickets: com www.musicaltheatresw.com www.musicaltheatresw. MTS Box Office 505-265-9119 Performances are at the Performances MTS Center for Theatre 6320-B Domingo NE MUSICAL THE ATRE THEATRE SOUTHWE ST SOUTHWEST Dateline: New Zealand A student production of the musical Sweeney Todd got a little too real when two teenagers had their throats accidentally slashed by a prop. The boys, both aged 16, were treated at Auckland City Hospital after the opening night incident at St. Kentigern College. One was treated for serious injuries, the other for moderate injuries. Both were later released. The well-known musical tells the story of a demented Victorian barber who kills his customers by slashing their throats with a razor. Stephen Cole, the head of the private college, told TVNZ that it was an “unfortunate and isolated” incident. Cole described the prop straight razor as being “covered in all sorts of duct tape, foam and silver paper.” The same prop had allegedly been used in rehearsals without incident. Asked by a reporter whether a plastic prop blade should have been used instead, Cole replied, “In hindsight that may be a reasonable point.” Police and health-and-safety officials are investigating. Dateline: Australia AMPLIFY YOUR LIFE www.ampconcerts.org Tickets: Hold My Ticket (112 2nd St SW) 505.886.1251 and ampconcerts.org A motorist has been charged with several offenses after police in West Australia say he used a seatbelt to secure two cases of beer while leaving his children unrestrained. Kimberley District Police posted a photo on their Facebook page showing two 30-packs of beer (Emu Export and Victoria Bitter, to be precise) buckled into the passenger seat of the man’s car. The photo was captioned, “Priorities?” According to the police department “a suspended driver had children laying on adult’s laps and seated in foot wells, while cartons of beer were seat-belted into position.” One of the children was less than a year old. The driver was given two liquor offenses, two summons for misuse of Drugs Act offenses, five summons for no authority to drive, three summons for no seatbelts, seven speeding offenses and four “other cautions.” Kimberley District Superintendent Allan Adam told ABC News Australia that the incident was symptomatic of a larger problem. “It shows some of the attitudes of some of our road users,” the superintendent was quoted as saying. “We are doing our best to stamp it out through enforcement, but we are also about to embark on public education, which is obviously needed in remote communities.” Dateline: Texas A United Airlines flight attendant evidently had enough of her job, deploying a plane’s emergency slide and bailing out on a flight packed with passengers at the Bush [6] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Intercontinental Airport in Houston. Security footage obtained by NBC affiliate KPRC shows the flight attendant tossing a bag down the slide, then riding it expertly to the bottom. She then reclaims her luggage and calmly walks into the airport. United spokesperson Charlie Hobart said officials are still investigating why the unnamed flight attendant inflated the slide from the side of the plane following the early morning flight from Sacramento, Calif. The flight attendant has been removed from her flying duties while airline officials investigate the incident. “We hold our employees to the highest standards,” the airline said in a statement. “This unsafe behavior is unacceptable and does not represent the more than 20,000 flight attendants who ensure the safety of our customers.” The plane was put back into service after a new emergency slide was installed and the aircraft was inspected. Dateline: Florida Good news, Floridians: It’s now legal for you to live with one another in sin. On Wednesday, April 6, Governor Rick Scott signed a bill to repeal the state’s generally unenforced prohibition against cohabitation. The law has apparently been on the books since 1868 and prevents a man and woman from living together without being married. Until now unhitched couples could have been fined $500 and locked up in jail for 60 days. The new law repeals the long-standing stature covering unmarried (or married, for that matter) men and women “engaging in open behavior that is gross, lewd or lascivious.” Now you can be gross all you want, Florida. Dateline: California A man who wanted to propose to his girlfriend in the worst way did just that. Michael Banks, 27, had to be rescued by the California Highway Patrol and ended up being arrested on multiple charges after he scaled the southern face of the 591-foot high Morro Rock off California’s Central Coast. According to the San Luis Obispo Tribune, Banks used the towering backdrop to propose to the love of his life via iPhone’s FaceTime app. Fortunately, she said yes. Unfortunately, Banks got trapped on the rock’s sheer face. A witness heard him yelling for help around 8:30am on the morning of Thursday, April 7, and called 911. A CHP helicopter was eventually dispatched to winch the man off the face of Morro Rock. To make matters worse, Banks was cited for trespassing, since climbing Morro Rock is prohibited. The romantic rock climber was also arrested on suspicion of being under the influence and in possession of methamphetamine. Banks was being held at the San Luis Obispo County Jail in lieu of posting $10,000 bond. The City of Morro Bay later released a statement saying that Banks, “will be billed for the chopper ride and other related costs.” a Compiled by Devin D. O’Leary. Email your weird news to [email protected]. APR 14 ARLEN ASHER-PATTI LITTLEFIELD QUINTET Two NM Jazz luminaries 7:30PM A Members Only Event, become a member today! THUR ASPADA 21 With George Brooks, V. Selvaganesh, Osam Ezzeldin & Kai Eckhardt Indian jazz fusion APR 7:30PM FRI APR 22 7:30PM ROUST THE HOUSE TEEN PERFORMANCE NIGHT 210 Yale SE | 505.268.0044 | Student discounts and Rush tickets available! | TICKETS AVAILABLE ONLINE: OUTPOSTSPACE.ORG THUR REGISTER NOW! MAY 1, 2016 1MILE FUN RUN/WALK • 5K FITNESS RUN/WALK • TIMED 10K, 5K RUNS & HALF MARATHON APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [7] NEWS | OPINION NEWS CITY BY TAYLOR GRABOWSKY Why, That’s Outrageous! NM Poverty Center Confronts HSD The New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty recently filed a motion concerning the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD). The Center on Law and Poverty wants an independent monitor brought in to bring the HSD in to full compliance with a 1990 consent decree. The decree was created as a result of a class action lawsuit against the HSD which accused the department of not providing adequate services to its constituents. Officials at the Center on Law and Poverty say the HSD is still not in full compliance. Initial legal action against HSD in this matter was filed in 2013. That’s when HSD went digital, and as a result, 10,000 to 30,000 applicants were automatically denied Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. Allegedly, these unprocessed cases were not studied to determine who was at fault in the denial of benefits. Ultimately a violation of federal statutes was discovered; this was the reason for the initial court case filed against HSD by the Center on Law and Poverty. As a result of this motion, the Center was allowed to perform random checks on cases and found a backlog of thousands of SNAP and Medicaid cases that had not been serviced properly. In the past three years, the HSD had five motions filed against them claiming they hadn’t complied with the original 1990 consent decree. This situation led the Center on Law and Poverty to ask for a courtappointed monitor to go through and make sure things are not slipping through the cracks. In their defense, the HSD has called the motion an “extraordinary remedy,” claiming that the Center has not worked with them cooperatively. HSD also says that they are working closely with their IT companies in order to program the necessary changes. Discrimination Results in Travel Ban Santa Fe Mayor Javier Gonzales has banned any non-essential official city travel to North Carolina and Mississippi. Gonzales, Santa Fe’s first openly gay mayor cites the recent anti-LGBT laws as the reasons why he enacted the ban. Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant recently signed a law that protects businesses who refuse services to samesex couples due to their religious beliefs. North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory infamously signed into law legislation that states people must use public restrooms according to the gender listed on their birth certificate. According to Mayor Gonzales, “Santa Fe will continue the policy of banning all non-essential travel to states that pass hateful legislation that promote discrimination.” The mayor was recently selected among a few mayors to travel to Qatar to discuss economic and infrastructure development. However, as the Santa Fe New Mexican reported, Qatar is a country that has passed laws that discriminate against LGBT people. On Saturday, April 9, Matt Ross, a city spokesman, said that the mayor was reconsidering this trip. Gonzales is aware of Qatar’s stance, and is hoping to be able to bring up these issues if he goes on this trip, according to Matt Ross. Mayor Gonzales may still make the trip because the government of Qatar is funding the expedition. Santa Fe city officials indicate that the point of the ban on travel to such states as North Carolina and Mississippi was to prevent N.M. taxpayer money benefitting states with discriminatory laws. a [8] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Petulance and outrage are never enchanting BY AUGUST MARCH ccording to the latest trends in cultural identification (and literally thousands of license plates affixed to a myriad of automobiles in this place), New Mexico is the land of enchantment. Enchantment’s an odd thing. The word conjures a sense of magic. To be enchanted is to be under the influence of a greater power than generally available through human agency. So here, the stars drift by magically at night. The wind through the cottonwoods is majestic, though sometimes troublesome, and the air is scented with the aroma of fresh tortillas and roasting green chile. Based on such descriptions, it’s easy to see why enchantment is generally a positive force amongst Nuevo Mexicanos and Burqueños. But apparently, even magic has its limits. A growing sense of dissatisfaction—with the normative, with the results of more than 70 years of postmodern civilization under our collective belts—has resulted in situations where humans are angry and disconsolate about the world flowing around and through them. The culture of outrage has come to New Mexico. Influenced by commenter culture on the interwebz, social networking sites that are just one step removed from real human interaction, and a political system that is at turns disappointing and perplexing, a palpable sense of anger has manifested itself in the midst of public discourse on a variety of subjects. Given the troubled circumstances of our current age—from a disappearing middle class to the wide-ranging evolution to social mores—its seems that some of the resulting anger is righteous, is a necessary step in defining and solving the problems we have all inherited from previous generations of humans. But the tone of such expression is self-limiting, leaving participants mired in accusation, condescending language, petulance and a lack of civility that doesn’t work to illuminate or find a solution to an issue, but rather damages the links we all seek to bind together human enterprise and action. Two local examples of the continuous and seemingly implacable outrage that has infiltrated our enchanting state come to mind. In the exploration of this aggressive sea A ILLO B Y RROB M change, it’s important for this writer to note that more could be accomplished with less. Plainly spoken, one can always catch more flies with sugar than with salt. The recent public debates over the implementation of the Albuquerque Rapid Transit plan were fraught with a type of incivility that bordered on a wanton disregard for the social contract. Video taken of a public meeting on the subject included footage of one of ART’s naysayers constantly interrupting a city councilman who was making a presentation about the proposed bus system. The interaction quickly devolved despite the official’s stern attempt to keep things formal; the angry protester’s demands became threatening when he repeatedly asked the councilor to “step outside” before he stormed out of the meeting and presumably caught fire. Ultimately such representations must have had a deleterious effect on antiART efforts. No one from the coalition of individuals and business entities associated with that faction came forward to denounce or distance themselves from such unwarranted actions, as if each one involved was an island of righteous indignation, free from the scrutiny of others similarly involved yet tasked by that same group with disrupting and derailing a discourse aimed at improving conditions within this city. Similarly, a recent meeting of the Albuquerque Public School Board, ostensibly to discuss the implementation of policies created to ensure equal protection under the law for transgender students, instead became a heated discussion of toilet etiquette. The session also provided an opportunity for one board member to freely expound on her personal values while denigrating transgendered humans through the use of a questionable narrative based on stereotypes. The local daily reports that while 30 individuals spoke in favor of the measure, 10 spoke against. Those who were against the policy mostly spoke about “bathroom policy.” Board member Peggy Muller-Aragon recounted, in an outraged, affected tone, how she was effectively held hostage by a transgender human while using a public restroom, telling the gathered audience that “I went into a restroom and there was a transgender person that was in there. I was in there alone, and they didn’t let me come out.” It’s been reported that several present at the meeting scoffed at Muller-Aragon’s account, but that she said nothing further to detail or give credibility to her story. It’s well understood that humans want a comfortable place to carry out waste elimination functions, that we all have bodies which require some exposure in that process. Playing on people’s deep fears and using outrage to drive a discussion about civil rights does little to advance any agenda that supposedly is grounded in providing for the public education of its citizens. Interestingly, as our city and state move on toward even more complex societal issues, it seems counter-intuitive to believe we can solve our problems with civility and kindness, especially when a mean word or phrase is just a click away. But there’s the rub; in a world that has lifted human discourse past conversation and into a realm of emoticons, textual pronouncements and anonymity of avatars, it should be our duty to rehumanize our interactions. That would be productive, progressive and enchanting. a OPINION | ¡ASK A MEXICAN! BY GUSTAVO ARELLANO ear Mexican: Why do white guys still think it’s cute to call a Latina “spicy”? D —Serene Serena Dear Pocha: The term hasn’t just applied to mexicanas; I’ve found newspaper clippings from 1866 hailing the virtues of a “spicy woman.” But referring to the better sex by her hotness nowadays is almost universally applied to Mexican mujeres. The answer is obvious: It’s been ingrained in the American consciousness ever since gabachos discovered our women and chile and decided they wanted chiles in their mouths and our women on their puny chiles. In that light, it’s easy to understand why gaba men still use such antiquated, sexist, racist language: They’re gabachos. It’s like asking why a dog eats its own caca. And now, a quick etymological lesson: The earliest mention I could find of referring to a woman as a “hot tamale” is in a 1909 Philadelphia Star article; the earliest example of the old saw “spicy señorita” happened in a 1919 advertisement in The Seattle Star for a vaudeville show called The Spanish Vamp that promised “A Spicy Dish of Senoritas,” and the earliest use of “spicy señorita” is in a 1940 St. Louis Post-Dispatch ad for Down Argentine Way, a Betty Grable/Don Ameche/Carmen Miranda musical that offered “Spicy Senoritas ... Sultry Songs ... in the South American Way!” And, sí: in the latter two shows, there is no tilde over “senorita” because tildes weren’t invented for the English language until 1978. Dear Mexican: I’ve always wondered during my travels in Mexico why they paint the bark of their trees white. I’ve heard that it helps with controlling pests, or that it helps with protecting young trees from sunburn. Can you please tell me the correct reason why this practice is followed? Trees are much more attractive when you leave them in their natural state and natural color. —Go Green Dear Gabacha: What you heard is right. Also? Trees are much more attractive when they’re alive instead of dead. Dear Mexican: Why are all Mexicans so hardheaded? I was working a promotion last fall at Reliant Stadium for the Fiestas Patrias and in the process of the event, I came to realize that Mexican people just won’t understand the meaning of “I can’t” or “No.” These people wouldn’t understand I couldn’t give them a shirt of the Mexican soccer team, that it was only for people who would activate a phone. They also kept begging to give them backpacks after we had run out of them. I would tell them “Wey, ya no tenemos, en serio,” and that Mexican would repeat “Sí, wey, sí tienes. Ándale, dame una para mi hijo. Tu puedes.” At that point, I came to realize what the fuck is wrong with us? Why cant we understand? Dear Mexican: explain to me why! —I’ve Done Half the Fifth Ward Dear Pocho: And you know the dad wanted the backpack for himself, amiright? Mexicans are stubborn because that’s the only way to cope with life when you have little else. But I’m also noticing another Mexi-tendency here: our knowledge that everyone’s always on the take, that all you need to know to get what you want are the right palabras or have the right amount of cash, and you can get most anything. And we learned that from the best source imaginable: American electoral politics, which makes Mexico’s PRI oligarchy look like Jimmy Stewart’s character in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. a Ask the Mexican at [email protected]. Be his fan on Facebook. Follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano or follow him on Instagram @gustavo_arellano! APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [9] EVENT | PREVIEWS FRIDAY APRIL 15 SUNDAY APRIL 17 Science Fixation St. Andrew Presbyterian Church 5301 Ponderosa NE alibi.com/e/179110 7:30 to 10pm Let your inner dweeb out in a safe space courtesy of the the Albuquerque Science Fiction Society and Alibi’s own film connoisseur Devin O’Leary, who will be telling us all about upcoming genre films and showing some clips from this year’s hottest flicks as part of “SF Trailer Park Theater 4.” Hopefully he’ll also explain his success in straddling the razor wire between nerdy and sophisticated. Doors open precisely at 7:15pm (no early birds, please), and newcomers are welcome with a $1 contribution. Outside food will be met with disapproval and immediate ejection (of the food, not the person). (Joshua Lee) a SATURDAY APRIL 16 Me-ow! ABQ BioPark Zoo 903 10th Street SW alibi.com/e/184038 6 to 8pm I don’t know about you, but I swear to God, every single time I go to the zoo I’m greeted by an unusual noise. After a brief investigation, I find it’s the tortoises doin’ it. This causes me to seriously wonder about how often and why tortoises reproduce. Are they worried about their population? Do they want to make a lil’ tortoise so when their significant other dies they’ll have another creature to look at and be reminded of them? Are they bored? If you ever find yourself wondering about things like this then pull out your agendas, because you’re going to be busy learning about how animals are getting busy on Saturday evening. At this adult event (21 and over, folks) at ABQ BioPark Zoo, while you learn about animal sex you can eat some delicious food at different stations all around the zoo. Some of the items on the menu will be chicken tagine with almonds and apricots, harvest blend greens with cucumber, and street tacos with slow cooked carnitas and more. That’s right, more. At $50 per ticket, all this food and acquired knowledge are honestly priceless. (Megan Reneau) a JEMEZ BUFFALO DANCERS VIA PINTREST Jemez in the Heart Congregation Albert 3800 Louisiana NE alibi.com/e/182924 10am to 4pm The Congregation Albert Brotherhood and Sisterhood, an organization dedicated to providing cultural outreach and recognition among Albuquerque’s Jewish community by sponsoring local political debates and helping fund entities as diverse as the Roadrunner Food Bank and the Albuquerque Holocaust Museum, Water Shoes Not Required Bachechi Open Space ¡Ay, caramba! 9521 Rio Grande NW alibi.com/e/185245 Historic Old Town 5:30 to 7pm 303 Romero NW alibi.com/e/184035 Noon to 5pm Excuse me readers, I’m on the phone for a minute ... “Hey, happy birthday Alburquerque! I know you don’t go by that anymore, but it is your birth name. Okay, okay, we’ll just keep calling you Albuquerque. What’s that? You want me to ask the populace to help you celebrate your 310th birthday? By the way, you look great. Huh uh. Okay. Got it! Byeeeeeeee.” Sorry about that, readers, so rude, I know. But guess what! You’re invited to celebrate Albuquerque’s birthday in Old Town on Saturday afternoon! There will be performances all day by groups like the Sun and Fire Dance Group, Kontratiempo, Casa Flamenca and many more. So boogie on down to Old Town and celebrate the reason why we’re all together: Albuquerque! (Megan Reneau) a Historically, when I go down to the bosque, it is to put on my aqua socks and hazard a wade into the Rio Grande, but this weekend offers art lovers an opportunity to make their way to the river for a whole different reason. Head to the Bachechi Open Space’s Environmental Education Building for a public art dedication by contemporary artist Alan Paine Radebaugh. Radebaugh’s paintings and drawings will be on display in “Down in the Bosque.” through July, but catch him on Sunday, April 17, at 5:30pm as he expounds upon his many works on display. This event, like beers on the riverbed, is totally free and open to the public. (Maggie Grimason) a “BOSQUE III” BY ALAN PAINE RADEBAUGH [10] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 present the Jemez Pueblo Artisan Fair on Sunday, April 17, from 10am to 4pm at Congregation Albert. Dancers, artisans and craftspeople from the Pueblo of Jemez (known as Walatowa in the Towa language) will joyously present aspects of their vibrant and vital culture to fairgoers. Jeff Paul, president of Temple Albert Brotherhood, says that more than 20 vendors will be on hand and tribal dancers and musicians will provide an environment rich with activity and nuance. By creating cultural bridges through events like this artisan fair, Paul and congregants at Temple Albert hope to broaden the sense of community and cooperation already evident in the Duke City. Personally, I really, really hope they have fry bread for sale. (August March) a Community Calendar THURSDAY APRIL 14 ANNUAL THREE-DAY GERANIUM SALE All proceeds from this activity go to Operation School Bell, which aides the underserved children of Albuquerque. Assistance League of Albuquerque (5211 Lomas NE). 10am-4pm. 265-0443. alibi.com/e/185260. UNM INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL Food, crafts and information to celebrate local connections to the rest of the world. Baracutanga perform. Cornell Mall on the UNM Main Campus (East of SUB) (1 University NE). 10am-2pm. 277-4032. alibi.com/e/185483. KIDS PETER AND THE WOLF The Music Guild of New Mexico introduces the instruments of the orchestra to children using Prokofiev’s music. South Broadway Library (1025 Broadway SE). Noon-12:45pm. 768-5170. alibi.com/e/179219. LEARN ANIMAL MYTHS DISCOVERY DAY Learn the truth about common animal myths with hands-on discovery stations. ABQ BioPark Zoo (903 10th Street SW). FREE with regular admission. 10am-2pm. 764-6214. alibi.com/e/182596. NM CENTER ON LAW AND POVERTY Celebrate 20 years of advocacy for equal rights, opportunities and justice with State Senator Michael Sanchez and US Senator Jeff Bingaman. Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (2401 12th Street NW). $75. 5-7pm. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/182599. WELLNESS/FITNESS CONTEMPORARY DANCE AND CHOREOGRAPHY CLASS Work on full body awareness through stretching and strengthening exercises, as well as focusing on a combination of modern, jazz and lyrical dance styles. Maple Street Dance Studio (Alley Entrance) (3215 Central). $13. 4-5:20pm. 699-9018. alibi.com/e/178432. HEALING ANXIETY Combining meditation with practical Buddhist wisdom, experience inner stability. Kadampa Meditation Center New Mexico (142 Monroe NE). $10. 7-8:30pm. 292-5293. alibi.com/e/184173. KUNDALINI YOGA Seeking physical and mental relaxation and rejuvenation? Experience Kundalini Yoga, always at your own level. Wellspring Yoga (5500 San Mateo NE). $10-$16. 5:30-7pm. 881-2187. alibi.com/e/176322. FRIDAY APRIL 15 ANNUAL THREE-DAY GERANIUM SALE 10am-4pm. See 4/14 listing. KIDS AQUARIUM OVERNIGHT Learn about ocean animals and their nighttime behavior, visit the touchpool, play a game, make a craft and watch a marine movie in the theater. ABQ BioPark Aquarium (2601 Central NW). $30. 6:30pm-8am. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/183723. LEARN FARM TOUR Tour a working organic lavender farm and kitchen gardens and learn more about field-to-fork practices with resident farmers. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). 10-11am. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/182603. LOCAL MEDICINAL WEEDS Herb discussions include identification, wild habitat, cultivation, harvesting, preparation, dosage, herbal actions and healing uses for each plant. The Source (1111 Carlisle SE). $15. 6-7:30pm. 265-5900. alibi.com/e/175773. SPORTS/OUTDOOR 5TH ANNUAL RAIL JAM 2016 A 10-foot ramp is created with rails and boxes, and skiers and snowboarders compete for various prizes. Sun Village Apartments (801 Locust NE). 7-10pm. 842-6640. alibi.com/e/183152. TWILIGHT HIKE Experience a splash of color at sunset and welcome night rise on this guided hike. Cerrillos Hills State Park (Santa Fe County Road 59, Cerrillos). $5 per vehicle. 7-9pm. 474-0196. alibi.com/e/184602. WELLNESS/FITNESS 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/145059. BioPark Zoo (903 10th Street SW). $2-$6. 9am-4:30pm. 764-6214. alibi.com/e/177327. GREEN AND GIVE BACK DAY Recycle old electronics, shred documents, eat barbecue and get your face painted. Signature Southwest Properties (6745 Academy NE). 11am-2pm. 301-4425. alibi.com/e/182423. NEW MEXICO PHILHARMONIC GALA Fourth Annual event including cocktail hour, wine tasting, music by the Fredenburgh Jazz Duo, silent and live auctions, and dinner catered by Atrios. Las Puertas (1521 First Street NW). $150. 5:30pm. alibi.com/e/183764. TIMBERCON 2016 Harry Potter quizbowl, an anime-themed maid cafe, a steampunk goggles building workshop, vendors, costume contests and more. East Mountain High School (25 La Madera, Sandia Park). $5. 10am-4pm. 306-9086. alibi.com/e/184497. WINTER MARKET A bazaar-type marketplace filled with the vintage/antique/ethnic collectibles. El Museo Cultural de Santa Fe (555 Camino de la Familia, Santa Fe). 8am-3pm. 250-8969. alibi.com/e/176269. ZOMBEES PUB CRAWL Bee The Swarm is hosting a ZomBees Pub Crawl to promote the Kickstarter for their ZomBees game app. Nob Hill (Central Ave). 7pm. (623) 853-6805. alibi.com/e/183568. KIDS BARNYARD BASH Featuring a petting zoo, bounce house, farm-themed crafts, giveaways and educational lessons about animals and crops. Cottonwood Mall (10000 Coors Boulevard Bypass NW). Noon-3pm. 897-6571. alibi.com/e/182449. LEARN BACKYARD FARMING SERIES: LANDSCAPE FOR LIFE Covers the basics to plan and design your garden landscape focusing on sustainability, permaculture and wise use of limited natural resources. Gutierrez-Hubbell House (6029 Isleta SW). 9am-noon. 314-0398. alibi.com/e/184214. LIKE AN ANIMAL: THE GRAZING AND SEX TOUR Resident experts divulge the details of the curious romantic rituals and strategies of animals. Price includes cocktails and appetizers. ABQ BioPark Zoo (903 10th Street SW). $50. 6-8pm. 764-6214. alibi.com/e/184038. See Event Horizon. NATIONAL CITIZEN SCIENCE DAY Learn about important citizen science projects and how to contribute to important data, which results in information used by land managers and scientists. Bachechi Open Space (9521 Rio Grande NW). 2-4pm. 314-0398. alibi.com/e/184216. SPORTS/OUTDOOR BOOTCAMP ULTRATHON Activities include agility ladders, battling ropes, low-crawling, endurance events and more. Participants who complete event receive a small giveaway. Santa Fe Community College (6401 S. Richards, Santa Fe). $20-$25. 11am-1pm. 428-1751. alibi.com/e/184184. FREE DOWNTOWN WALKING TOUR Albuquerque Historical Society (2617 Decker NW). 10am-noon. 345-5300. alibi.com/e/175600. SPRING CLEANUP IN THE SANDIA FOOTHILLS Serve your community and protect the open space in the foothills by cleaning different areas. Bring work gloves, water, appropriate clothing, sun protection, a sack lunch and sturdy shoes. Piedra Lisa Open Space (East of Tramway on Candelaria Rd.). 8:30am-noon. alibi.com/e/185107. WELLNESS/FITNESS LUCKY PAWS VAN ON THE MOVE Take a yoga class with cats that are up for adoption. Dogs up for adoption are in front of the studio. All proceeds are donated to Lucky Paws. Let It Be Yoga (6200 Coors NW). $15. 10am-2pm. alibi.com/e/184041. MINDFUL PARENTING CLASS Explore what a mindful home is and set intentions to create one. Body Café (333 West Cordova Rd, Santa Fe). by donation. 10:15-11:15am. (203) 788-1993. alibi.com/e/178507. PET LOSS GROUP A group supporting those who have lost or anticipate the loss of an animal companion. Animal Humane (615 Virginia SE). $20. 10-11am. 265-3087. alibi.com/e/175345. SIX SIMPLE STEPS TO YEEHAW An empowerment workshop to promote healthy relationships, increased productivity and reduced stress at home and on the job. Inn at Loretto (211 Old Santa Fe Trail, Santa Fe). $39. 8am-noon, 1-5pm. 466-6203. alibi.com/e/183622. SWEAT LODGE Purification in a safe environment with trained professionals, like a sauna but with prayers and a drum and song ceremony. The Kiva (3096 Rosendo Garcia SW). $20. 7pm. 382-5275. alibi.com/e/108597. SUNDAY APRIL 17 SATURDAY APRIL 16 ANNUAL THREE-DAY GERANIUM SALE 10am-noon. See 4/14 listing. APRIL HALF-PRICE WEEKEND Watch seal, sea lion or hippo feedings at the zoo. See divers feed animals at the aquarium. All single admission tickets will be half-off. ABQ EARTH CITIZENS FESTIVAL A 1K or 3K walk, ki gong demonstration, vendors, face painting for kids. Featuring a speaker from Sedona, Ariz. who speaks about being an Earth Citizen. Comm Cal continues on page 12 APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [11] Comm Cal continued from page 11 Bachechi Open Space (9521 Rio Grande NW). $35-$40. 10am-2pm. 262-2211. alibi.com/e/185432. KIDS HIP-HOP DANCE WORKSHOP A movement-based workshop to learn hip-hop dance. For children 6 to 10 years old. Taylor Ranch Library (5700 Bogart NW). 2pm. 768-5170. alibi.com/e/181959. MEDITATION FOR KIDS Class includes a short meditation, teaching and activities to help children increase their positive minds of patience, respect for others, giving and kindness. Kadampa Meditation Center New Mexico (142 Monroe NE). $3. 10-11:30am. 292-5293. alibi.com/e/184178. LEARN MOBILE SOCIALIZATION CLASS Visit places like a brewery, go on a hike, or do a river walk while trainers help your dog learn how to behave. Positive Paws Rescue (1616 Eubank NE). $200. 11am-noon. 814-1714. alibi.com/e/185383. POPÉ, NARANJO AND THE PUEBLO REVOLT Stefanie Beninato discusses the unexplored topic of Popé being the leader of the Pueblo Revolt and the possibility of there being other leaders. Cerrillos Hills State Park Visitor Center (37 Main, Cerrillos). Donation. 2-4pm. 474-0196. alibi.com/e/184603. long-term stress, PTSD and chronic pain. Orange Yoga (7528 Fourth Street NW). $10-$15. 6-7:45pm. (917) 535-9530. alibi.com/e/160443. SPORTS/OUTDOOR 2016 HIV WALK NEW MEXICO AND 5K FUN RUN Bring awareness to HIV in New Mexico. Receive prizes for reaching certain fundraising levels. Registration required. UNM North Golf Course (2201 Tucker NE). $25. 1pm. alibi.com/e/176195. WELLNESS/FITNESS OPEN PUBLIC MEDITATION SITTING Periods of sitting meditation are interspersed with brief periods of walking meditation. The center supplies the cushions, timekeeper and chairs. Albuquerque Shambhala Meditation Center (1102 Mountain NW). 10am-noon. 717-2486. alibi.com/e/179699. SUNDAY MORNING MEDITATION Learn how to practically bring more peace and happiness into the world by learning to cherish others, overcome anger and deal with stress. Kadampa Meditation Center New Mexico (142 Monroe NE). $10 suggested donation. 10-11:30am. 292-5293. alibi.com/e/184182. SUNDAY STRESS BUSTERS DEEP FASCIA RELEASE CLASS A super-relaxation circuit training helpful for recovery from MONDAY APRIL 18 SPORTS/OUTDOOR LEARN HOW TO PLAY ROLLER DERBY Bring your own gear or show up early to borrow some. All skill levels are welcome, people will be on hand to teach you how to skate. Heights Community Center (823 Buena Vista SE). 7-9pm. alibi.com/e/180384. WELLNESS/FITNESS METAL YOGA MONDAYS The intention of this practice is to uplift your mind and body, while having fun and listening to a metal soundtrack. The Remedy Day Spa (113 Vassar SE). $5-$12. 8-9pm. 265-9219. alibi.com/e/180438. TUESDAY APRIL 19 ABWA AMERICAN BUSINESS WOMENS ASSOCIATION The meeting is the third Tuesday of every month. Meet some women who are in business or have been in business and want to share their experience. MCM Elegante Hotel (2020 Menaul NE). $17. 5:30-7:30pm. 681-0235. alibi.com/e/178789. IMPACT AND COFFEE A space where nonprofit leaders, volunteers, board members, funders and people who want to find their place in the social impact community meet up. Epicenter (199 Central NE). 9-10am. alibi.com/e/180339. LEARN SENSUAL BONDAGE: ROPEWORK TO ENHANCE YOUR SEX LIFE Learn the skills to create beautiful rope bondage that seduces the senses, and send you and your partners on the erotic adventures of your dreams. Self Serve (3904 Central SE). $15-$20. 7:30pm. 265-5815. alibi.com/e/182381. WELLNESS/FITNESS INTRO/BEGINNING BALLET-AFRIQUE COMMUNITY FUSION DANCE CLASS Playful, supportive, community oriented beginning level dance classes, with live drumming. Maple Street Dance Space (3215 Central NE). $15-$55. 5:30-7pm. 366-4982. alibi.com/e/181779. PRENATAL YOGA Explore ways to reduce the aches and pains that accompany pregnancy while preparing for your journey in a nurturing and supportive environment. Inspired Birth and Families (6855 Fourth Street NW). $10. 6-7pm. 232-2772. alibi.com/e/179457. UNM DANCE FITNESS CLINIC Meet local professionals, exhibitors, receive complimentary fitness testing and more. Johnson Gym at UNM (1 University NE). $15-$55. 2-5pm. 277-3104. alibi.com/e/184493. WEDNESDAY APRIL 20 LEARN THE COUNTER-NARRATIVE: AN IPCC RETROSPECTIVE In honor of the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center’s 40th anniversary, revisit the IPCC’s first 20 years in this lecture. Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (2401 12th Street NW). 5:30-7pm. 843-7270. alibi.com/e/182296. STRAW BALE GARDENING Covers conditioning, planting and watering straw bales. Greater Albuquerque Habitat for Humanity ReStore (4900 Menaul NE). Noon-1pm. alibi.com/e/184059. WELLNESS/FITNESS YOGA FOR PTSD Clinically based iRest Yoga Nidra meditation for anyone suffering from PTSD. Healing Massage (2469 Corrales, Ste A2, Corrales). $12 per class. 6-7:15pm. alibi.com/e/185827. Food FRIDAY APRIL 15 ARGENTINIAN MENU Check online for a full menu. M’Tucci’s Cocina Grill (1701 Fourth Street SW). $29-$55. 5-8pm. 242-3564. alibi.com/e/183618. COCKTAILS ON THE TERRACE A new variety of special cocktails with a free-seating arrangement. RSVP highly encouraged. St. James Tearoom (320 Osuna NE). 4:30-6:30pm. 242-3752. alibi.com/e/185139. FREE COFFEE TASTING Free coffee tasting every Friday night. Try a variety of blends, single origins and even espresso. Prosum Roasters (3228 Los Arboles NE). FREE. 6:30-8pm. 379-5136. alibi.com/e/172907. GROWING THE SOUTHWEST GARDEN Local author Judith Phillips signs her newest book. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). 11am-1pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/183293. SATURDAY APRIL 16 ARGENTINIAN MENU $29-$55. 5-8pm. See 4/15 listing. TART AT HEART Take a tour of exotic and unique beers from around the world during this second annual event. Featuring 20 specialty brews. Sister (407 Central NW). $35-$45. 1pm. 242-4900. alibi.com/e/184033. SUNDAY APRIL 17 MONTICELLO BALSAMICO DINNER A four-course menu to showcase the finest traditional balsamicos in the world. Reservations required. Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). $65-$90. 5-9pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/183294. “SECRET GARDEN” AFTERNOON TEA AND IKEBANA DEMONSTRATION A demonstration of Japanese flower arranging by Mable Orndorff, certified Ikebana instructor, followed by tea and snacks. Fragrant Leaf Tea Boutique (3207 Silver SE). $35. 1-3pm. 255-0522. alibi.com/e/183801. WEDNESDAY APRIL 20 TASTY WEDNESDAYS AT THE FARM SHOP Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm (4803 Rio Grande NW). FREE. 10am-4pm. 344-9297. alibi.com/e/179096. [12] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 COUNTRY DAN’S — QUALITY, VALUE AND SERVICE SINCE 1974! WHILE THEY LAST! CLOSEOUT SPECIALS! EXCELLENCE BOX TOP/ SUPER PILLOW ORIG. $ 1199 DEVOTION PILLOW TOP ORIG. $ 899 $ 729 RAPID LE ADJUSTAB QUEEN FRAME $ ORIG. 1599 $ $ 479 CAPTAIN’S TWIN BED WITH LOTS OF STORAGE! ADD A SUPERBALANCE COOLING GEL CHARISMA MATTRESS! Two motors, wireless remote 599 349 REG. $ 499 $ ELEGANT LIVING ROOMS $ 479 BUNK BEDS WITH STUDY SPACE! $ BOTH PIECES! 649 Washington Victory Dolphin sofa and loveseat featuring classic styling $ 699 SOUTHWESTERN! Washington Padre espresso sofa and loveseat. Nailhead trim. $ 1169 DINING IN LUXURY QUEEN BED WITH MATTRESS PURCHASE* $ * CM7008 frame when you buy Eloquence or Saturn queen mattress. 499 SEATS SIX! Primo quality wood table and upholstered ladder-back chairs $ 849 STRIKING! Wood table and six fully upholstered chairs from Furniture of America. $ 699 FINANCE UP TO 5 YEARS! On approved credit. $1999 minimum purchase. Conditions and restrictions apply. Details at store. 1201 S. Renaissance NE 341-4122 Renaissance FREE LAYAWAY Montano 85 Mon - Sat 9 AM to 7 PM Sun 12-5 PM SAME DAY DELIVERY(1) All advertised financing is conditional on approval of credit. Financing plans are provided by third parties and the providers may change from time to time. The financing plan selected affects APR and APR is disclosed in the financing documents. Deferred payment offers and “same-as-cash” offers contain significant conditions which are disclosed in the financing documents. “Same-as-cash” financing accrues interest from the date of purchase. Interest will be waived if payment is made in full on or before the final date stipulated in the finance agreement. “No-interest” financing requires minimum monthly payments as stipulated in the finance agreement. Interest will be charged to your account if minimum payments are not made or if the full balance is not paid by the stipulated date. Other finance plans may be offered from time to time, with conditions and charges that are fully disclosed in the finance agreement. Customers are advised to read agreements fully before signing. All illustrations similar. "Mfg. List” is published suggested retail prices and does not necessarily reflect the selling price in the area. For comparison only. Not responsible for typographic errors. * LOW PRICE OR IT’S FREE: Item must be locally advertised in the last seven days and available in local competitor’s stock.. Must be new, undamaged merchandise, same maker, same model, same fabric/color/finish. No “as-is,” demos or closeouts. Competitor’s ad must be presented at beginning of transaction. Prior purchases excluded. (1) SAME DAY DELIVERY offered on in-stock merchandise when delivery can be completed within normal business hours. Geographic and other limitations apply. Copyright © 2016 Country Dan’s — Reproduction Prohibited APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [13] ARTS | CulTuRe ShoCk Children of No Country PHOTOS BY PAT BERRETT Yjastros develops its own language of dance BY MAGGIE GRIMASON nergy pours out of the dancers of flamenco as they pound out rhythms on their heels and, in a casual flourish of a wrist or an ankle, punctuate a longer, complex phrase. The marvelously robust art of flamenco is expressed in new choreographies presented in this weekend’s 30th season of Yjastros held at the National Hispanic Cultural Center. Yjastros is a repertory company firmly rooted in Albuquerque since its inception in 1999 by Artistic Director Joaquin Encinias who works closely with visiting flamenco artists from abroad to engineer creative new choreographies to premiere at the celebration. “Because of our partnerships [with UNM, for example], we have the opportunity to present flamenco in a very big way,” said the Founder and Director of the National Institute of Flamenco, Eva Encinias-Sandoval. “It’s even difficult in Spain at this point in time to have a big company,” she continued. “Albuquerque can make this happen because of a dynamic that has been created here that doesn’t exist elsewhere.” Flamenco has been given the space to flourish in Albuquerque, thanks in no small part to The National Institute of Flamenco, E [14] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 companies like Yjastros, and through the support of the University of New Mexico. With the space and talent to progress the dance form, Albuquerque has become “a hotbed for flamenco art,” Encinias explained, and not just for New Mexican dancers and choreographers, but for artists in Spain who find greater access to performance space and support. “We really have something unique [here] in the world of flamenco,” EnciniasSandoval said. This year, choreographers are coming to the Institute not just to collaborate with local artists, but to set the choreography that they will bring back to Europe with them, a testament to the vitality that has been created in the local flamenco scene. Albuquerque provides the space and resources for artists to develop new work, which is innovative and rare, Director of Development Marisa Magallanez added. In addition to the sheer volume of new works that will be shared over the course of the three day affair, a wide breadth of styles will be enacted. “Flamenco has never existed in a vacuum,” Encinias explained, “it’s just as much about its surroundings as what it, itself, is … With these pieces you’re going to see the gamut of flamenco and related dance forms.” The pieces include dances developed by a host of visiting artists from Spain—Gala Vivancos, Javier LaTorre, Valeriano Paños, Alfonso Losa and Olga Pericet. The content of the dances differs wildly, but several have drawn inspiration from the culture and landscapes of New Mexico, contributing to the striking and fluid continued conversation between two artistic hubs, all articulated in the language of dance. Yjastros seeks to expand the dialogue by making this performance and flamenco culture in Albuquerque more available to the broader community. “Accessibility is something we take seriously,” Encinias asserted. As such, Yjastros encourages participation through discounted tickets for students and the like, and events like a picnic held the day before the event, where dancers, choreographers and appreciators can share thoughts, knowledge and food. “[We asked ourselves] what can we do to help people experience this in a more special way?” Encinias expounded. “It’s an incredible thing—the athleticism, the artistry, the expression. We’re trying to make the experience of this more accessible and more fun.” And as the audience for Yjastros and the arts in general in our city expands, “you can change a culture through that process [because] your values change,” resulting in a broader appreciation of what exists in Albuquerque. In terms of flamenco, that’s something wholly unique and important. Encinias continued, “The idea of choreography, the idea of dancers in a space moving together, the costumes, the lighting— these are all beautiful things … [and] we are better than we’ve ever been.” Careful attention has been devoted to every element of the show, from costumes to production, contributing to a worthwhile anniversary season. Still, “it exists in that weekend and then it’s gone,” Magallanez mused. “We videotape it, we take pictures, but it only exists in that moment when we come together to celebrate the process. It’s not hanging in a museum for you to look at any time. It’s such a special thing to be there in that moment. After [this] weekend, it will move.” And change and evolve because as Encinias-Sandoval added, the next time these pieces are danced, “as an organization, as an art form, as people, we’ll be in a different place. So, it should look different.” The title, Yjastros, is a derivation of the Spanish word hijastros, meaning stepchildren. “It’s about us not being a child of Spain, but not being a child of America either,” Encinias explained. Instead, Yjastros is something all its own, and it’s evolving the foot pounding classic dance of flamenco beyond watchable routines into true, choreographic works of art. a APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [15] Arts & Lit Calendar 4TH ANNUAL ALBUQUERQUE RENAISSANCE FAIRE Saturday, Sa turday y, April 30 10 a.m. – 6 p p.m. .m. • Balloon Museum THURSDAY APRIL 14 SONG & DANCE LOMAS-TRAMWAY PUBLIC LIBRARY Lara Ruggles. Singersongwriter’s piano and guitar-driven melodies invite the listener on a journey. Noon-12:45pm. 291-6295. alibi.com/e/183674. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Yjastros, 30th Season. Features accomplished flamenco artists Marisol and Joaquin Encinias, singer Vicente Griego, guitarist Calvin Hazen and more. $15-$45. 7pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/185424. See “Culture Shock.” FILM NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Loreak (Flowers). The lives of three women are altered by the gift of flowers, sent anonymously to each in memory of a loved one. 7pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/185427. FRIDAY APRIL 15 SONG & DANCE ALBUQUERQUE MUSEUM OF ART AND HISTORY Art in the Afternoon: Last Call. Live jazz performed. Enjoy great music, food and free admission to the museum. 2-5pm. 243-7255. alibi.com/e/183297. HISTORIC OLD TOWN Fiestas de Albuquerque. Enjoy the history and traditions of Albuquerque with live entertainment, artists, food, shopping and free children’s activities. Noon-5pm. alibi.com/e/184035. See Event Horizon. KELLER HALL, UNM Ekachai Jerakul. Classical guitarist performs. $15-$20. 7:30pm. 277-2131. alibi.com/e/182837. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Yjastros, 30th Season. $15-$45. 8pm. See 4/14 listing. SOUTH BROADWAY CULTURAL CENTER Rock ’n’ Rhythm Youth Orchestra Spring Concert 2016. The Orchestra and Le Chat Lunatique perform. $5. 7-9pm. 848-1320. alibi.com/e/182696. LEARN SOUTH BROADWAY CULTURAL CENTER Ballet Folklorico Adult Workshop. Learn several dances and about the culture and history behind popular Mexican folkloric dances. $10. 10am-noon. 848-1320. alibi.com/e/184909. SUNDAY APRIL 17 ART ART CENTRAL FEATURES CONTEMPORARY ART Gallery Reception. Two exhibitions open: Jami Porter Lara’s Unhyphenated and J. Matthew Thomas’s Geometries. 6-8pm. 252-9983. alibi.com/e/185304. STAGE 3r 3rd dT Thursday! hursday! I ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE The Diary of Anne Frank. Based on the true story of a young Jewish girl who kept a diary of her time hiding from the Nazis in the attic of her father’s office. $12-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. 242-4750. alibi.com/e/181156. AUX DOG THEATRE The Pericles Project. An adaptation of Shakespeare’s Pericles, Prince of Tyre, performed by a group of actors as if they are rehearsing the play. $10-$15. 6-8pm. 254-7716. alibi.com/e/184612. MUSICAL THEATRE SOUTHWEST Clue the Musical. Comic antics, witty lyrics and a beguiling score carry the investigation from room to room. Even after the culprit confesses, a surprise twist delights the audience. $20-$22. 7:30pm. 265-9119. alibi.com/e/184440. RODEY THEATRE, Popejoy Hall Chatterbox. The relationship between Valentina, a spirited kindergarten teacher, and Marco, an uptight literary scholar and expert on the work of one reclusive Chicano writer. $10-$15. 7:30-9:30pm. 277-4332. alibi.com/e/183563. UNM’S EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE, Center for the Arts Angels All Die. Frank Abbott lucks into the opportunity to work in the hair and makeup department of the hottest soap opera on television and falls in love with one of the stars. $10-$15. 7:30-9:35pm. 277-4332. alibi.com/e/183747. VORTEX THEATRE Terra Nova. An extraordinary play by the screenwriter of The Silence of the Lambs depicting Robert Falcon Scott’s race to the South Pole in 1912. $12-$22. 7:30-10pm. 247-8600. alibi.com/e/183587. WAREHOUSE 21, Santa Fe All Too Human. Frederick Nietzsche and his best friend Paul Rée vie for the attention of an adventurous young woman. $16-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. 303-0181. alibi.com/e/180058. SONG & DANCE NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Yjastros, 30th Season. $15-$45. 8pm. See 4/14 listing. LEARN SITE SANTA FE, Santa Fe An Evening with Dave Hickey in Conversation with Julie Freedman. An informal, creative discussion on the impact of digital technology on culture. 6pm. (505) 989-1199. alibi.com/e/180223. ST. ANDREW PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Devin O’Leary’s Summer Film Preview. Our Film Editor discusses his predictions for this years upcoming films. $1. 7:30-10pm. 266-8905. alibi.com/e/179110. See Event Horizon. SATURDAY APRIL 16 Experience the Museum in a new way! 3 RD Performance by poet Carlos Contreras Conversation with artist Matt McGee Music by Burque Sol Art Making, Cash Barr,, Galleries open April 21, 5 – 8:30 p.m. 3rd Thursday (Free) Happy Hour specials in the Lobby Lounge and Grab and Go snack kss available from 5 – 8 p.m. from Slate at The Museum. W (in Old Town) 2000 Mountain Road NW RUŘ5HOD\10RU Cultural Cultur al Services Department, Department, City of Albuquer Albuquerque, que, Richar Richard d J. Berry, Berry, Mayor cabq.gov/museum [16] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 STAGE ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE The Diary of Anne Frank. $12-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. See 4/15 listing. AUX DOG THEATRE The Pericles Project. $10-$15. 6-8pm. See 4/15 listing. Also, Stand-Up at The Aux Dog. Local comedians Ann Gora, Mike Long, AJ Martinez, Jason Green perform and Mary Byrd hosts. $10-$12. 8:30pm. 254-7716. alibi.com/e/184564. MUSICAL THEATRE SOUTHWEST Clue the Musical. $20-$22. 7:30pm. See 4/15 listing. RODEY THEATRE, Popejoy Hall Chatterbox. $10-$15. 7:30-9:30pm. See 4/15 listing. VORTEX THEATRE Terra Nova. $12-$22. 7:30-10pm. See 4/15 listing. WAREHOUSE 21, Santa Fe All Too Human. $16-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. See 4/15 listing. BACHECHI OPEN SPACE Down in the Bosque Opening Reception and Talk. Artist Alan Paine Radebaugh discusses his work. 5:30-7pm. 314-0467. alibi.com/e/185245. See Event Horizon. CONGREGATION ALBERT Jemez Pueblo Artisan Fair. Artisans sell their art and crafts. Jemez Dancers perform. 10am-4pm. 883-1818. alibi.com/e/182924. See Event Horizon. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH Art Show Reception. The Rainbow Artist Collective displays their works. 9am. 884-1801. alibi.com/e/185240. STAGE ALBUQUERQUE LITTLE THEATRE The Diary of Anne Frank. $12-$22. 2-4pm. See 4/15 listing. AUX DOG THEATRE The Pericles Project. $10-$15. 4-6pm. See 4/15 listing. KIMO THEATRE Disney’s Alice In Wonderland Jr. Performance. $12. 2-3:15pm. See 4/16 listing. MUSICAL THEATRE SOUTHWEST Clue the Musical. $20-$22. 4pm. See 4/15 listing. RODEY THEATRE, Popejoy Hall Chatterbox. $10-$15. 2-4pm. See 4/15 listing. VORTEX THEATRE Terra Nova. $12-$22. 2-4:30pm. See 4/15 listing. WAREHOUSE 21, Santa Fe All Too Human. $16-$22. 2-4pm. See 4/15 listing. SONG & DANCE FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Santa Fe Choral Masterworks. The Santa Fe Symphony Chorus performs Duruflé’s Requiem, a plainchant-inspired 20th-century classic composed in memory of his father. 4pm. (505) 982-8544. alibi.com/e/185522. LAS PUERTAS Chatter Sunday: Debussy and More. Gabriel Landstedt performs Claude Debussy’s Images, Book 1, Frederic Rzewski’s Down by the Riverside and Sergei Rachmaninoff’s 9 Etudes-Tableaux Opus 39. Poet Billy Brown performs. $5-$15. 10:30-11:30am. alibi.com/e/183451. MONDAY APRIL 18 LEARN UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO Barbara Coleman. The awardwinning painter discusses her work and creative process. 3-4pm. 225-5866. alibi.com/e/184049. FILM KIMO THEATRE 4th Annual Albuquerque Film and Music Experience (AFME). Seven days of musical performances, unique films and opportunities for attendees to engage with filmmakers, actors and musicians. $100-$175. 265-7866. alibi.com/e/185402. TUESDAY APRIL 19 SONG & DANCE KELLER HALL, UNM Stefano Barone. Modern music for guitar via acoustic and electronic equipment. $5-$12. 8pm. 277-2131. alibi.com/e/185437. WEDNESDAY APRIL 20 SONG & DANCE O’SHAUGHNESSY PERFORMANCE SPACE, Santa Fe N.M. School for the Arts Jazz Ensemble. The 19-member ensemble perform jazz standards, Latin jazz and contemporary compositions. $5-$10. 7pm. 995-3862. alibi.com/e/183178. W E E K LY B U S I N E S S P R O F I L E • PA I D A D V E R T I S E M E N T Anatolia Turkish Mediterranean Grill Now Serving Halal Meat Type of Business Restaurant Year Established This is our 6 year anniversary! Owner Mehmet & Umut Kokangul Business Address 313 Central NW Business Phone 505-242-6718 Business Hours Monday 11am-2pm, TuesdayFriday 11am-8pm, Saturday 12pm-8pm, Sunday closed Website Anatolia Turkish Mediterranean Grill is a small, family-owned, familyoriented restaurant specializing in Turkish cuisine. We offer a wide variety of plates, including meat and vegetarian entrees, sandwiches and salads. Here at the restaurant, the customers are considered family. The owners always make time to talk to new customers, establishing friendships with them. The restaurant also offers space for special events. Apart from special events services, we also offer catering services. Give us a call or send us an email to reserve a time and date, or to place your order, and we will provide for you. The Desert Darlings Belly Dance Show every Saturday Night – FREE! $6.99 Lunch Specials posted on Facebook daily between 11am and 2pm *Weddings, Meetings, Parties, and Birthdays Available *All Meat Gluten-Free *Catering *Everything Homemade a www.anatoliaturkishgrillabq.com Now Serving Beer and Wine Spicy Hummus Eggplant Tava Adana Kebab APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [17] Chowtown FOOD | rEstaurant rEviEw a rotating guide to restaurants we like suggest a restaurant or search for more at: w alibi.com/chowtown Enter the Calzone Zone Exterior MIDTOWN J.J.’S PIZZA 4711 Menaul NE, 883-6962 • $ [Pizza] In addition to some of the best NY-style crust, sauce and toppings in town, this family-run pizza joint houses arcade classics Centipede, Gauntlet and R-Type. J.J.’s also boasts hot, New Mexico-grown green chile (as it should), jumbo cheese ravioli for about six bucks, calzones, hot subs and buffalo thighs. Forget wings. These thighs are enormous and juicy. Plus, the recipemakers have really put some love into their gluten-free crust. Pork belly Toc, Tofu Toc, Clamato & Beer Mixxed Feelings NORTHEAST HEIGHTS FRATELLI BISTRO 2740 Wyoming NE, 554-2602 • $$ [Italian] Fratelli’s reincarnation revives the menu and familiar decor from the former Lomas deli with oven-baked subs, pasta platters, pizza and their popular calzones. Add a side salad or a Fratelli antipasto to complete your meal, or sample the pastries and donuts (made fresh daily). PAISANO’S CUISINE 1935 Eubank NE, 298-7541 • $$$ [Italian] This restaurant has been around for 35 years for a darn good reason—fresh pasta made and cooked to order. Owner Rick Camuglia carries on a fine Sicilian tradition of fresh ingredients, a cozy atmosphere like grandma’s kitchen, and pizzas and calzones made with fresh dough. SOUTHEAST GIOVANNI’S PIZZERIA 921 San Pedro SE, 255-1233 • $$ [Pizza] Just thinking about the pizza here is enough to send our insulin levels into overdrive. The authentically crisp-yet-floppy New York-style thin crust is a perfect foundation for garlicky tomato sauce and a mountain of toppings. Buy it by the slice (just $2.50, plus 55 cents for additional toppings), as a pie (12, 15 or 18 inches) or Sicilian style (a rectangle with eight big slices). There are also mammoth baked calzones, rolls and stromboli. They’re all stuffed to the gills with delicious ingredients—which is exactly how you’ll leave if you eat one. UPTOWN MARIO’S PIZZERIA & RISTORANTE 2401 San Pedro NE, 883-4414 • $$ [Italian] Mario’s is on the west side of Coronado Mall and open for continual service every day of the week. It’s great in the afternoon after the lunch crowds and before dinner for any size of meal. The sandwiches, calzones and pizzas are far more substantial. You and the guys just come in from a rousing game of pass-the-pigskin? Stop by and share Mario’s mega meat pizza or the gouba nachos, or pick up a pie to go. [18] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Carne Asada Toc Baja Mexican food brings the noise BY MEGAN RENEAU ne Sunday night, I was procrastinating packing for a fast approaching move. I decided now was the best time to try out Mixx Food Bar, which just so happened to be located right below my living quarters. As soon as I walked in, it was loud. There was a DJ mixing live and people were dancing—just 3 people out of about 15. I would have thought it was cute if I could hear myself think. I approached the five-foot tall bar and tried to order. I had to repeat myself a few times for the hostess to hear me and vice versa. I eventually was able to communicate that I wanted the shrimp tacos with red sauce and a Happy Camper IPA. The hostess explained as well as she could without screaming in my ear that the sauces, rather that being chile, were Japanese mayonnaise mixed with something— the yellow was sweet, the green kinda spicy, and the red was hot. Since I always assume the hottest thing in a restaurant won’t be hot to me (and with her recommendation), I went for the red sauce. I went to a table in the corner and waited for my meal. The server danced my drink over to me. I ordered a simple IPA and received a large, ornate drink dressed in what looked like spiced fruit in the dim lighting. He left the drink on my table and salsa-ed away. The hostess quickly noticed the mistake and brought me my drink, taking the large, fancy drink to the couple who actually ordered it. Shortly after that, I received the food in a togo box. I assumed the kitchen misunderstood my order until I looked around at everyone else’s meals—they actually were serving food in to-go boxes for everyone. O Mixx Food Bar 901 Park SW, Ste. 102 505-312-7394 mixxfoodbar.com Hours: Monday-Sunday 10am-10pm Vibe: Fashionably Undone Alibi Recommends: Tofu Tocs with Yellow Sauce Normally I wouldn’t have any problem with this, but considering the atmosphere of the restaurant, I expected more. The place is modern—it has casually unfinished walls, exposed pipes, wooden tables, metal chairs and extremely soft lighting By all means, this place is fashionable but they decided it was appropriate to serve their food in to-go boxes? It was preposterous. I can’t get over it. Overwhelmed by the noise from the people yelling and the thumping music, I struggled to get a hold on my over-stuffed taco with the wrong sauce (it was the yellow sauce) to shove it in my face and hopefully make all my problems go away. I bit into the taco, and I saw the light. The corn tortilla guided the shrimp concoction straight to my foodie soul. The crunch of the tortilla followed by a small bite of shrimp took me to Surf Toc heaven. The shrimp was perfect, it was juicy and plump. My teeth cut through it, and I felt every protein fiber being severed in pleasure. The heat from the spice that coated the crustacean followed by the yellow sauce was beautifully complex. Then the taco fell apart, and I was ripped from my moment in Elysium. I continued to eat the Toc, but with much strife. I finished it as quickly as I could so I could escape this mid-’90s dance club. When I went in again with my boyfriend on a Monday afternoon, the place was empty but the music was still blasting. I ordered the Tofu Tocs and went out on the patio to wait. We received our meal quickly and dug in. I had ordered the yellow sauce this time but received an unmixed coleslaw dressing. My boyfriend ordered the Pork Belly Toc with the green sauce but he got the unmixed coleslaw dressing as well. After expressing his disappointment, he dove into it, nodded and said, “Yeah, this is really good.” After a bite of the Tofu Toc, I was sold. I would love to have that thing in my life every day but, despite the very affordable cost of $7$8 per two tacos, I can’t afford that. Especially since I would prefer to have it every meal of the day. The tofu was perfectly spiced, as was the shrimp, but the texture was (obviously) different. I’ve found in my vegetarian-ish experience that people either know how to cook tofu or they don’t. A lot of the time, tofu ends up cooked so badly that I understand why meat-eaters think it’s shit. This tofu was a wonderful example of what a good cook does. The inside remained slightly creamy but firm and the outside was exquisitely crispy. The slaw added an entire other level of intricacy. The cabbage was plentiful and juicy, the carrots added a wonderful, barely-sweet flavor, and the dressing melted into everything creating a lovely unity in the meal. Hopefully in the future the volume will be turned down so I can stand to be there for more than five minutes and enjoy one of the huge fancy drinks. For the residents of the apartments above, it’s delightfully convenient since they offer food delivery. For the rest of Albuquerque, I can say with certainty— despite the issues of noise, proper food display and utensils—it is certainly worth the trip. a PHOTO BY ERIC WILLIAMS • ERICWPHOTO.COM These listings have no connection with Alibi advertising APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [19] FILM | rEvIEw REEL WORLD BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY Booze and Bowie Distillery 365 is kicking off the summer movie season early with its first outdoor movie of the year. The classic Jim Henson/Terry Jones fantasy Labyrinth, starring David Bowie and Jennifer Connelly, will screen under the stars at the Broken Trail Distillery and Brewery (2921 Stanford NE) on Friday, April 15. Seating begins at 7pm. Movie starts at 8pm. You’re free to bring your own lawn chairs, but space is limited—so get there early. No outdoor drinks or coolers. Admission is free, but drinks are not. Reach the goooooal There will be a “local soccer and film culture” gathering on Friday, April 15. Organized by the Albuquerque Sol Football Club, this night of cinema and sports will take place at the old Lobo Theater (3013 Central NE) beginning at 7pm. The documentary Sons of Ben will be shown. The film is described as an “insightful” documentary about a small group of diehard soccer fans in Philadelphia who started a fan club for a team that did not exist. Eventually, they had 1,500 drum-banging, song-singing fanatics. Their grassroots effort led directly to the birth of an MLS franchise, the Philadelphia Union. Albuquerque Sol co-owner and president, Ron Patel, believes Albuquerque has the right atmosphere to foster a similar growth in professional soccer. Following the film screening, Sons of Ben cofounder Bryan James will join the audience for a Skype Q&A session to discuss best practices in building a true soccer culture. Tickets are $5 apiece and are available now at tickets.abqsolfc.com. Drivin’ theater Writer and New Mexico film historian Jeff Berg is inviting movie lovers to take a fun, interactive trip down Route 66. On Sunday, April 17, Berg will be at the Village of Tijeras Historic Church (4 Tijeras Ave.) for a lecture/movie clip show spotlighting more than 50 years’ worth of Hollywood films that have cruised down historic Route 66, using our desert backyard as backdrop. This 90-minute screening will include live narration, explaining the history and significance of these nostalgic American films. After the screening, Berg will sell and sign copies of his new book New Mexico Filmmaking. The event starts at 2pm. It is free and open to the public. Post time New Mexico Post Alliance is a professional association focused on educational and networking opportunities for people involved in the local film industry—particularly those who work in editing, special effects, music, sound mixing and color correction. NMPA will host another postproduction workshop on Saturday, April 16, from 1 to 3pm. Steve Milner, a postproduction professional with more than 20 years experience, will speak on the topic of “Postproduction Careers: Being on the Cutting Edge of Change.” Milner has done telecine mastering, color grading and lighting design with 3D software. In addition, he has worked closely with world renowned color correction artists at Company 3 in New York. The workshop will cover topics including growing skills on the job, advancement by changing jobs and “How to bring job opportunities to New Mexico by establishingand growing a thriving post industry.” General admission to this workshop is $30. You can get reserve your ticket now by going to eventbrite.com. For more info on this and other postproduction workshops, go to nmpost.org. a [20] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 She Sings to the Stars (Wednesday, April 20, 5:30pm KiMo) Are You Experienced? Local film premieres flavor Albuquerque Film and Music Experience BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY he Albuquerque Film and Music Experience returns to the Duke City, April 18 through 24, filling up venues from the KiMo Theatre to the Guild Cinema to the South Broadway Cultural Center. The “Experience” aims to bring together filmmakers, musicians and artists from around the world to share their stories, on-screen and off. It’s a week-long scrum of films, concerts, parties, panels, workshops and awards ceremonies. Among the special guests this year is noted jazz/R&B bassist Nathan East, who will be 2016’s AFME Music Award recipient. VP of Yamaha Entertainment Chris Gero will receive this year’s Visionary Award and will screen his new musical documentary—which is none-too-coincidentally titled Nathan East: For the Record. Screenwriter Bettina Gilois (Glory Road, McFarland USA) will be in town to host a screenwriting workshop. Actor Wes Studi and songwriter Dan Navarro will participate in intimate conversation sessions. In addition, there will be panel discussions with various industry insiders on auditioning, fundraising, distribution and “pursuing your dreams in Los Angeles.” On the music side of things, we get an after party with Jessie Martinez and Casper Leo Gomez, a karaoke night event at Gioco pizza parlor, a flamenco movie block featuring a special performance by the National Institute of Flamenco and a concert by the John Kurzweg Band. But the focus of most film festivals tends to be film, and AFME doesn’t slack off in this regard, offering attendees nearly 100 features, documentaries, shorts, music videos and animations to choose from over the course of the week. Homegrown New Mexico films are well-represented, with several local efforts receiving their local premieres at this year’s AFME. Here, then, is a quick rundown of some of the local highlights you could be catching at T The 2016 Albuquerque Film and Media Experience APRIL 18 THROUGH 24 Various venues abqfilmx.com Tickets/passes $8 to $175 the 2016 Albuquerque Film and Music Experience: The Merry Maids of Madness (TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 7PM KIMO) This feature-length comedy serves as AFME’s opening night film. Directed by Phillip Hughes and written by Jenn Daugherty, the film spotlights a number of Albuquerque theater community luminaries, including Amy Baklini, Lauren Myers, Rebekah Wiggins, Sarah Minnich, Amy Bourque, Daniel T. Cornish, Jason Witter and Lauren Poole. It relates the story of Beatrice, a modern-day bride who walks out on her wedding and ends up in the Stratford Home for Rest and Rehabilitation, a psychiatric facility filled to the brim with some rather familiar Shakespearian women. She Sings to the Stars (WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 5:30PM KIMO) This “Best Feature” winner at the Toronto Independent Festival was shot in the Rio Puerco Valley around Cabezon. Producer Jonathan Corcoran, brother to writer-director Jennifer Corcoran, calls it “a quintessentially New Mexican film.” Despite a lingering drought, a Native American grandmother (actress Fannie Loretto of Jemez Pueblo) continues to inhabit her traditional home in the middle of the desert. One day a faded Anglo magician (Larry Cedar from “Deadwood”) finds himself lost at her doorstep. The Quest for Suki (THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 7:30PM, KIMO) This offbeat sci-fi comedy takes place 70 years after the bitter War of New Mexico almost destroyed the Southwest. A gullible sweepstakes entrant (Travis Freeman Webb) determines something is awry when his big win lands him a meeting with the mayor’s evil twin. Throw in brain-eating amoebas, “the bluest painting in the world” and a sinister plot to destroy our main character’s life (for no good reason), and you’ve got one absurdist look at our state’s (alternative) state of mind. This micro-budget feature is written and directed by Rio Rancho-based filmmaker Clint Bramlette. The Caveman of Atomic City (SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 6PM, GUILD) In 2013 directing/producing duo Paul and Petra Ratner gave us “Moses on the Mesa,” an awardwinning documentary about a German-Jewish immigrant who became governor of the Native American pueblo of Acoma. Now the couple has returned with a documentary profile of another colorful local legend. Los Alamos icon microMike is a self-proclaimed “scientist and philosopher” who gave up all his worldly possessions to live in a cave underneath the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He developed a theory of time travel, got busted for growing pot, found “the world’s most valuable rock” and helped avert a Martian invasion (maybe, who can say?). a TELEVISION | IDIOT BOX Chrono-chronic “Time Traveling Bong” on Comedy Central BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY aybe it wasn’t good enough to turn into a series. Maybe somebody didn’t have the attention span to follow through on it. For whatever reason, Comedy Central’s newest effort is a three-part sitcom “miniseries” being broadcast over three consecutive nights. Although the majority of the humor is contained within the show’s title, “Time Traveling Bong,” there are enough weed references, masturbation jokes and bleeped-out curse words to induce snickering in any number of teenage stoners. “Time Traveling Bong” is the work of creators/stars Illana Glazer and Paul W. Downs (of CC’s hit series “Broad City”). Glazer is bad-dating rental car clerk Sharee, while Downs tackles the role of her couch-surfing, porn-loving cousin Jeff. The two ambitiondeficient roomies spend most of their time slacking off and smoking weed. One fateful evening, while taking their bikes to the supermarket to get more buffalo chicken bites, they run across a pair of futuristic time travelers who pop out of nowhere and are promptly run over by an SUV. In the aftermath of this unusual accident, Sharee and Jeff locate the mysterious “time bong” which has sent these folks from the future. Throwing caution to the wind, the pair toke up and find themselves shooting back through time to stare down the business end of a T-Rex (one of the show’s few, inexpensive, but mostly serviceable special effects). M THE WEEK IN SLOTH THURSDAY 14 “American Grit” (KASA-2 8pm) Pro wrestler John Cena is joined by “an elite group of military mentors” who “command contestants to either persevere or give up while their teams are pushed to the limit.” So it’s “American Ninja Warrior” with amateurs. Or “Wipeout” without the laughs. Or “Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Challenge” with a different wrestler. Or “Strong” with a different title. I gotcha. “Orphan Black” (BBC America 8pm) The fourth season of the BBC’s sci-fi thriller kicks off, and you fans know what that means: more clones for the clone club! “The Dude Perfect Show” (CMT 10pm) Another one of those YouTube viral video-producing groups—this one a quintet of dudes who make basketball trick shot videos, mostly—gets its own TV show. Since this one is based in Texas and features football players and NASCAR drivers, it ends up on CMT. FRIDAY 15 “Kong: King of the Apes” (Netflix streaming anytime) King Kong gets his own CG-animated series in An inevitable mishap causes the time bong to break, forcing Sharee and Jeff to surf randomly through time with no control. (And a dwindling supply of marijuana.) So it’s basically “Time Tunnel” crossed with “Quantum Leap” crossed with Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure crossed with Hot Tub Time Machine crossed with a Cheech & Chong sketch you may or may not have heard your older brother play for you once on LP. On a Comedy Central budget. As they search for a way back to the 21st century, our protagonists encounter Puritans, cavemen, Civil War slaves, ancient Greeks and a young Michael Jackson. Aside from the general air of silliness and flippancy, most of the jokes are of the exact variety you would expect. (Jeff: “We need to get high.” Sharee: “Good idea. There must be something to smoke around here.” Jeff: “No we need to get higher up to look for an exit.”) There’s an extremely loose storyline that eventually takes our dopey historians to the far-flung future and the origins of the time traveling bong. But mostly the show is an excuse to have two self-proclaimed “idiots” teach citizens of the late 1700s how to say “chill” and to josh about pederasty in ancient Greece. Stoner humor is generally ineffective against non-stoners. And it’s wasted on stoners who are not stoned. So it’s no small coincidence that “Time Traveling Bong” is airing on 4/20. In other words: Toke it and like it. a FIND OUT WHERE TO GET FREE PASSES TO THE ADVANCE SCREENING OF THE HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR 7 PM, TUESDAY, APRIL 19 AT THE REGAL WINROCK! SIGN UP FOR THE ALIBI E-MAIL NEWSLETTER TO FIND OUT WHERE TO GET YOUR FREE PASSES! ALIBI.COM/NEWSLETTER MUST SIGN UP FOR THE NEWSLETTER BY THURSDAY, APRIL 14 AT NOON! TH E HUNTSMAN: WINTER’S WAR has been rated PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned - Some Material May Be Inapproriate for Children Under 13) for fantasy action violence and some sensuality. Supplies are limited. Limit one (1) pass per person. Each pass admits (2). Sponsors’ employees are ineligible to participate. Screening is overbooked to ensure capacity. Please refer to passes for any other possible restrictions. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. IN THEATERS APRIL 22 Time Traveling Bong” runs April 20, 21 and 22 at 11:30pm on Comedy Central. which he befriends kids and fights robotic dinosaurs. “Thunderbirds Are Go” (Amazon streaming anytime) Gerry Anderson’s classic marionetteanimated sci-fi series from the 1960s gets revived as a CGanimated series. Which is creepy in a different way. “Ghost Brothers” (Destination America 8pm) Do you have a crappy camera, an abandoned building and the ability to shout, “What the hell was that?” on cue? You too could be a ghost hunter on TV. SATURDAY 16 Confirmation (HBO 6pm) HBO dramatizes the 1991 Clarence Thomas Supreme Court hearings with actors Kerry Washington, Wendell Pierce, Erika Christensen, Jennifer Hudson, Greg Kinnear and Jeffrey Wright. Hear My Song (KRQE-13 7pm) A demanding choir master at an elite music academy pushes a gifted but rebellious student to fulfill his true potential. Sounds pretty generic, but the cast is impressive: Dustin Hoffman, Kathy Bates, Eddie Izzard and Debra Winger. SUNDAY 17 House of Darkness (Lifetime Movie Network 6pm) A couple moves to a farmhouse in search of the quiet life, but they begin to hear strange voices and experience violent urges. Maybe they should call the Ghost Brothers. “TV Land Icon Awards” (TV Land 7pm) John Stamos gets an award for his dedication to the art and craft of television entertainment. MONDAY 18 “William & Kate: The Journey—Part 1: The Royal Engagement” (Reelz 8pm) Are we still into this? Really? “Better Call Saul: Talking Saul” (AMC 9:05pm) Chris Hardwicke, of “Talking Dead,” spares an hour to host this after-show analyzing the first season of AMC’s Albuquerque-lensed lawyer dramedy “Better Call Saul.” TUESDAY 19 “Containment” (KWBQ-19 8pm) In The CW’s new viral-panic series, Atlanta is quarantined after a deadly outbreak of a mysterious disease—which is not, apparently, zombie-related. Oh well. The Night Manager (AMC 8pm) John le Carré’s 1993 spy thriller becomes a six-part miniseries starring America’s British boyfriend Tom Hiddleston. (Just wait until your other British boyfriend, Benedict Cumberbatch, hears about this, America.) WEDNESDAY 20 “The Yard” (National Geographic 8pm) NG launches a blue-collar docureality series about men and women who work in a shipyard. Which is evidently a thing. a APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [21] FILM | CAPSULES BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY The Jungle Book OPENING THIS WEEK The Albuquerque Film & Music Experience 2016 The annual AFME returns April 18 through 24 with a week crammed full of parties, panel discussions, workshops, concerts and nearly 100 features, documentaries, short films and music videos. For a complete list of films, events, times and locations, go to abqfilmx.com. (Opens Wednesday 4/20 at Guild Cinema) Barbershop: The Next Cut The gang (Ice Cube, Cedric the Entertainer, Anthony Anderson, Eve, Sean Patrick Thomas, Jazsmin Lewis) is all back in this fourth film in the Barbershop series (if you count 2005’s Beauty Shop). This time around the shop is co-ed, and everybody’s fighting against neighborhood violence. But it’s pretty much just people standing around a barber shop bagging on one another. 112 minutes. PG13. (Opens Thursday 4/14 at Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Born To Be Blue Ethan Hawke stars as jazz trumpet legend Chet Baker in this “re-imagining” of his musical comeback in the late 1960s. To be clear: This isn’t a standard-issue, based-onfact biopic. Instead it’s a sort of freeform rumination on several key moments in Baker’s life. It concentrates heavily on his heroin addiction, but features some wellrealized musical flashbacks as well. Hawke gives one of his best performances. 97 minutes. R. (Opens Friday 4/15 at Guild Cinema) Cents This crowd-funded, shot-in New Mexico success story tells the inspiring story of an uncommonly smart 12-year-old (Julia Flores)who uses her gift for mathematics to transform her school’s penny drive into a major moneymaking operation. Writer-director Christopher Boone will be on hand to introduce the film and participate in a post-film Q&A. 90 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Saturday 4/16 at Guild Cinema) Unlike Disney’s recent live-action Cinderella and Alice in Wonderland revamps, this family fantasy sticks pretty close to the source material. John Favreau (Elf, Iron Man) does an admirable job directing one kid and a whole bunch of CGI animals. Star Neel Sethi is a ball of energy, leaping and tumbling his way from one action sequence to the next. A string of celebrity voices (Ben Kingsley, Idris Elba, Bill Murray, Lupita Nyong’o, Scarlett Johansson, Christopher Walken) take on the familiar characters. The action is a bit intense at times for the littlest of tykes. The decision to include two of the songs from the original Disney cartoon is odd, but doesn’t upset the overall balance of the adventurous film. 105 minutes. PG. (Opens Thursday 4/14 at Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) The Danish Girl Eddie Redmayne (The Theory of Everything) and Alicia Vikander (Ex Machina) star in this “ficticious drama” loosely based on the romance between Dutch artists Gerda Wegener and Lili Elbe, an early transgender pioneer and one of the first recipients of sex reassignment surgery. 119 minutes. R. (Opens Thursday 4/14 at SUB Theater) Dazed and Confused Richard Linklater’s 1993 ensemble comedy looks back at the last day of high school in May, 1976. Jason London, Joey Lauren Adams, Milla Jovovich, Adam Goldberg and Matthew McConaughey are among the bell-bottomed cast in this stoned-out version of American Graffiti. 102 minutes. R. (Opens Sunday 4/17 at Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Fan In this Indian thriller a man (Shah Rukh Khan) develops a dangerous obsession with a movie star who looks just like him. In Hindi with English subtitles 142 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Friday 4/15 at Century 14 Downtown) [22] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Deadpool Ryan Reynolds single-handedly tries to rescue his cult superhero for the horribly botched 2009 film X-Men Origins: Wolverine. He succeeds beyond the wildest dreams of most comic book fans. In this self-mocking parody, he stars as a brain-addled mercenary who gains incredible healing powers but loses his good looks thanks to a little mad science. Boil it down and the film is your basic “get revenge on the bad guy and rescue the girlfriend” plot. But the third-wall-breaking humor, raunchy sex and over-the-top violence make this a shockingly fun “adult” action comedy. Reviewed in v25 i6. 108 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Mars Attacks! Tim Burton’s 1996 adaptation of the Topps trading card series is still infused with anarchic sci-fi silliness. Jack Nicholson, Pierce Brosnan, Sarah Jessica Parker, Danny DeVito and Michael J. Fox are among the Earthlings fighting off an invasion from ray-gun-wielding alien jerks. 106 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Friday 4/15 at Guild Cinema) Of Mind and Music A renowned neuroscientist (Joaquim De Almeida from Desperado and Fast Five) returns home to New Orleans’ French Quarter to find his mother succumbing to Alzheimer’s disease. Taking time off from his scientific work, the disillusioned doc finds solace in the music of the city and in the voice of one mesmerizing street singer (Aunjanue Ellis from “Quantico”). Realizing she is suffering from Alzheimer’s as well, he becomes determined to help her reconnect with her long-lost son. 98 minutes. (Opens Friday 4/15 at Guild Cinema) Theri Kollywood superstar Vijay appears in his 60th(!) film. He plays a cop worshipped by his young daughter. It’s the usual mixture of dancing, punching, romance, action and wacky comedy—which fans will no doubt love. In Tamil with English subtitles. 155 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Friday at Century Rio) Criminal In this preposterous ,’90s-era action movie throwback, a CIA agent (Ryan Reynolds) dies in the line of duty, leaving a dangerous computer hacker unapprehended. Naturally, the government recruits a death row murderer (Kevin Costner) and uses an experimental medical procedure to “inject” their agent’s memories directly into his brain. Of course the confused guinea pig escapes from jail and wanders around wondering if he should kill people or save the world. Stuff blows up a lot, and you can probably guess which direction our protagonist decides to go. 113 minutes. R. (Opens Thursday 4/14 at Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) brownie at a time. 99 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) STILL PLAYING 10 Cloverfield Lane This low-budget horror-mystery is a “secret” spin-off of the J.J. Abrams-produced giant monster movie Cloverfield. John Goodman plays a survivalist who rescues a young woman (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) and stashes her away in his underground bunker. But is the world really coming to an end, or is he just a crazy dude? (Given that this is a sequel to Cloverfield, the surprise ending probably isn’t much of a surprise.) 105 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio) Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Batman and Superman duke it out in a grimdark setting that involves lots of glowering, real estate-flattening explosions and concrete-colored costumes. The action is frenetic, the production design is faithful to its comic book roots and there’s plenty of fan service—but the film just doesn’t differentiate its heroes enough for the longawaited confrontation to feel particularly justified. Batman and Superman are now both dark, brooding, murderous vigilantes feared by polite society. This crowded, lengthy film wastes a lot of energy setting up future Justice League films, but doesn’t spend enough time being fun or escapist or particularly entertaining. Reviewed in v25 i12. 153 minutes. PG-13. (Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) The Boss Melissa McCarthy (“Mike & Molly,” Bridesmaids) stars as a famed business mogul/financial guru who is sent to prison after she’s caught for insider trading. When she gets out of prison, she’s forced to work off her community service by helping a Girl Scouts-esque organization with their annual baked goods-based fundraiser. Naturally, she seizes on the opportunity to rebuild her financial empire and get revenge on everyone who screwed her over—one Demolition wallflower who attends a self-help seminar and is inspired to romantically pursue her much-younger coworker (Max Greenfield from “New Girl”). Co-writer/director Michael Showalter (Wet Hot American Summer, The Baxter, “Stella”) displays a much more grown-up sense of humor here, deftly tackling the issue of ageism with the help of an enormously appealing lead actor. 95 minutes. R. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) Meet the Blacks An African-American family (named the Blacks) comes into some unexpected money and moves to Beverly Hills—at which point the film becomes a parody of The Purge films. Yup, all crime is made legal for 12 hours and the new Black home is besieged by violence-happy home invaders. Weirdest of all, this stars Mike Epps (The Honeymooners, The Hangover) and not one of the Wayans brothers. 90 minutes. R. (Century Rio) Jake Gyllenhaal stars as a numb Wall Street investment banker who gets even more numb when his young wife dies in an auto accident. He responds by demolishing things in his life like refrigerators, computers and houses. It’s meant to be a tragicomic indie film look at grief and the redemptive power of madness. But its quirkiness is to studied to qualify as particularly effective. Gyllenhaal puts a lot of effort into being sad and weird, but the film is extremely scattershot, juggling characters and moods like a boardwalk entertainer. Reviewed in v25 i14. 100 minutes. R. (Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Midnight Special The Divergent Series: Allegiant—Part 1 Miracles From Heaven The third film in the Divergent trilogy shows up, and—par for the course—it’s part one of two. Following the “Earth shattering” revelations of Insurgent (their words, not mine), pouty but special rebel girl Tris (Shailene Woodley) must lead her futuristic millenials in a rebellion against the evil totalitarian government. Fans know what they’re in for. 121 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Eye in the Sky Col. Katherine Powell (Helen Mirren), a military officer in command of an operation to capture terrorists in Kenya, sees her mission escalate when a girl enters the kill zone triggering an international dispute over the implications of modern warfare. Alan Rickman and Aaron Paul costar in this tense suspense drama about the morality of military drones. South African Gavin Hood (X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Ender’s Game) directs. 102 minutes. R. (Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) God’s Not Dead 2 Faith-based audiences flocked to see 2014’s evil atheist college professor drama God’s Not Dead. In this spiritual (in more ways than one) sequel, a high school teacher goes to court to defend her in-class love of Jesus. (See, not all teachers are godless heathen.) Unfortunately evil atheist lawmakers are trying to stand in her way. By proving that God is dead. In court. Basically, this is Miracle on 34th Street, but with Jesus instead of Santa. Melissa Joan Hart, Jesse Metcalfe, Ray Wise, Robin Givens, Ernie Hudson and Pat Boone (!) are among the random, C-list Hollywood cast. 121 minutes. PG. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Century Rio) Hardcore Henry This gimmicky, nonstop action flick is shot entirely in firstperson (with a GoPro camera), through the eyes of the main character. Yes, it looks just like a FPS video game. Having just been resurrected from death with no memory, our hero wakes up in the unfamiliar city of Moscow where he must discover his identity and save his wife from an evil warlord with a plan to bioengineer cybernetic supersoldiers. Sharlto Copley (The A-Team) and Tim Roth (Reservoir Dogs) are the few recognizable faces among the mostly Russian cast and crew. 96 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Hello, My Name is Doris Sally Field reestablishes her bona fides with this comedy/drama/romance about a sixty-something Up-and-coming indie director Jeff Nichols (Take Shelter, Mud) reunites with actor Michael Shannon for this intriguing little exercise in mid-’80s Spielbergian wonderment. In it, a father and son go on the run from mysterious government types after dad learns that his kid possesses special powers. It’s mostly a slow, moody chase film, but the emotions hit harder that you might expect for such a modest experiment in genre filmmaking. 112 minutes. PG-13. (Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Ben Affleck’s estranged wife Jennifer Garner stars in this faith-based “true story” about a little girl with a rare digestive disorder who fell out of a tree and subsequently—according to the book her mother wrote, anyway—went to Heaven and met Jesus. Also, she was cured of her disease. If you paid to see that other “kid meets Jesus” film Heaven Is For Real, the producers of this one want your money as well. 99 minutes. PG. (Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX) My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 Having had success with 2002’s super sleeper hit My Big Fat Greek Wedding and 2003’s TV spin-off “My Big Fat Greek Life” and ... honestly, not much else, Nia Vardalos goes back to the well for some romantic comedy cash. This time around it’s her meddling parents (who, it turns out, were never properly married) getting hitched. Ethnic stereotype-based hijinks ensue. 94 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio) Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Seth Grahame-Smith’s groundbreaking (and nonetheless silly) mash-up novel finally gets the big screen treatment. Grahame-Smith’s version was nothing more than the text of Jane Austen’s original novel with the word “zombie” occasionally inserted. This at least adds some grody special effects to the romantic Victorian tale of five sisters on the hunt for suitable husbands. Lily James (“Downton Abbey”), Bella Heathcote (Dark Shadows) and Suki Waterhouse (Insurgent) are among the stars. 108 minutes. PG-13. (Movies West, Movies 8) Theory of Obscurity: A Film About the Residents This mind-bending documentary attempts to tell the story of influential, avant-garde San Francisco band The Residents. Since they’re noted as much for their anonymous (always masked) stage presence as for their artsy videos, it’s no surprise that the band members have declined to be interviewed on camera. Filmmakers, instead, rely on the group’s psychedelic audio/visual output and copious commentary from the legions of cultlike Residents fans to flesh out the who, what and why. 87 minutes. (Guild Cinema) Triple 9 A crew of corrupt Atlanta cops is blackmailed by the Russian mob into committing a virtually impossible heist. Raw Australian director John Hillcoat (The Road, The Proposition) keeps the adrenaline-fueled action flowing FILM | CAPSULES hot and heavy, but the messy script is like a 10-car pileup. Woody Harrelson, Casey Affleck, Aaron Paul, Norman Reedus, Kate Winslet, Anthony Mackie and Chiwetel Ejiofor are among the overstuffed cast. 115 minutes. R. (Movies West, Movies 8) Whiskey Tango Foxtrot A journalist, fed up with her life, runs off to war-torn Afghanistan and Pakistan to cover Operation Enduring Freedom. Tina Fey, Margot Robbie and Martin Freeman star in this seriocomic adaptation of Kim Barker’s nonfiction book The Taliban Shuffle: Strange Days in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 112 minutes. R. (Movies West, Movies 8) The Young Messiah Sean Bean stars (as a Roman named Severus) in this speculative religious drama told from the perspective of Jesus Christ, age . It’s based on the novel Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt by Anne Rice, who traded vampires for Catholicism about 10 years ago. It’s directed by IranianAmerican filmmaker Cyrus Nowrasteh (The Stoning of Soraya M.). Newcomer Adam Greaves-Neal is our prepubescent Jesus. 111 minutes. PG-13. (Movies West, Movies 8) Zootopia. Unfortunately, the place is run by predators, who relegate the barrier-busting bunny to meter maid duty. But when a series of mysterious disappearances rocks the city, she teams with a self-serving con man of a fox (Jason Bateman) to crack the case. This funny animal take on sun-dappled L.A. noir manages to tackle some hot-button issues (racism, sexism) while still being a colorful, entertaining Disney romp. Reviewed in v25 i9. 108 minutes. PG. (Grande 12 Albuquerque IMAX, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Icon Cinemas Albuquerque, Century 14 Downtown) Zootopia A plucky country rabbit (Ginnifer Goodwin) dreams of becoming a tough-as-nails cop in the teeming city of FILM | TIMES wEEk oF FrI., APrIL 15-ThUrS., APrIL 21 CENTURY 14 DOWNTOWN 100 Central SW • 1 (800) 326-3264 ext. 943# Dazed and Confused Sun 2:00; Wed 2:00, 7:00 The Jungle Book 3D Fri-Sun 1:30, 2:50, 5:45, 8:35, 10:00; Mon-Thu 1:30, 2:50, 4:20, 5:45 The Jungle Book Fri-Sun 10:50am, 12:05, 4:20, 7:10; MonThu 10:50am, 12:05, 7:10 Barbershop: The Next Cut Fri-Sun 11:05am, 1:50, 4:35, 7:20, 10:10; Mon-Thu 11:05am, 1:50, 4:35, 7:20 Criminal Fri-Sun 11:35am, 2:20, 5:05, 7:50, 10:35; MonThu 11:35am, 2:20, 5:05, 7:50 Fan Fri-Sun 12:35, 3:45, 6:55, 10:05; Mon-Thu 12:35, 3:45, 6:55 Midnight Special Fri-Sun 11:40am, 2:25, 5:10, 7:55, 10:40; Mon-Thu 11:40am, 2:25, 5:10, 7:55 Demolition Fri-Thu 11:50am Hardcore Henry Fri-Sun 2:55, 5:20, 7:45, 10:25; Mon-Tue 2:55, 5:20, 7:45; Wed-Thu 2:55 The Boss Fri-Sun 12:00, 2:35, 5:05, 7:35, 10:30; Mon-Thu 12:00, 2:35, 5:05, 7:35 Eye in the Sky Fri-Sun 11:55am, 2:30, 5:00, 7:40, 10:15; Mon-Thu 11:55am, 2:30, 5:00, 7:40 My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 Fri-Sun 11:20am, 2:10, 4:45, 7:15, 9:40; Mon-Thu 11:20am, 2:10, 4:45, 7:15 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Fri-Sun 12:10, 3:35, 7:00, 10:25; Mon-Thu 12:10, 3:35, 7:00 Miracles From Heaven Fri-Sun 10:55am, 1:45, 4:25, 7:25, 10:20; Mon-Tue 10:55am, 1:45, 4:25, 7:25; Wed 10:55am Zootopia Fri-Sun 11:10am, 1:55, 4:30, 7:05, 9:50; Mon-Thu 11:10am, 1:55, 4:30, 7:05 Deadpool Fri 11:30am, 2:15, 5:15, 8:00, 10:45; Sat 7:00, 10:45; Sun 2:15, 5:15, 8:00, 10:45; Mon-Thu 11:30am, 2:15, 5:15, 8:00 CENTURY RIO The Divergent Series: Allegiant—Part 1 Fri 12:25, 3:35, 9:55; Sat 3:35, 9:55; Sun 12:25, 3:35, 9:55; Mon-Tue 12:25, 3:35, 6:45, 9:55; Wed 9:55 Miracles From Heaven Fri-Thu 12:50, 3:50, 6:50, 9:50 10 Cloverfield Lane Fri-Sat 10:50am, 1:50, 4:45; Sun-Wed 10:50am, 1:50, 4:45, 7:40, 10:35 Zootopia Fri-Thu 11:40am, 1:10, 2:40, 4:10, 5:40, 7:10, 10:10 Deadpool Fri-Sun 4:05, 7:05, 10:05; Mon-Wed 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 10:-5 COTTONWOOD STADIUM 16 Cottonwood Mall • 897-6858 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. GRANDE 12 ALBUQUERQUE IMAX 3810 Las Estancias SW • The Jungle Book—An IMAX 3D Experience Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:30, 4:05, 6:50, 9:40 The Jungle Book 3D Fri-Thu 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 8:00 The Jungle Book Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:00, 4:30, 7:30, 10:00 Criminal Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 Barbershop: The Next Cut Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:00 The Boss Fri-Thu 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 Hardcore Henry Fri-Thu 12:10, 2:35, 5:00, 7:25, 10:00 God’s Not Dead 2 Fri-Thu 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Fri-Thu 12:30, 2:40, 4:00, 6:05, 7:25, 9:30 Miracles From Heaven Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 Zootopia Fri-Thu 11:00am, 12:00, 1:30, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 GUILD CINEMA 3405 Central NE • 255-1848 I-25 & Jefferson • 1 (800) 326-3264 Dazed and Confused Sun 2:00; Wed 2:00, 7:00 Criminal Fri-Thu 1:00, 4:05, 7:10, 10:15 The Jungle Book 3D Fri-Sat 11:00am, 11:45am, 12:50, 2:00, 2:45, 5:00, 5:45, 8:00, 8:45, 11:00, 11:45; Sun 11:00am, 11:45am, 12:50, 2:00, 2:45, 5:00, 5:45, 8:00, 8:45; Mon-Thu 11:00am, 11:45am, 2:00, 2:45, 5:00, 5:45, 8:00, 8:45 The Jungle Book Fri-Thu 10:30am, 12:30, 1:15, 3:30, 4:15, 6:30, 6:50, 7:15, 9:30, 10:15; Mon-Thu 10:30am, 12:30, 1:15, 3:30, 4:15, 6:30, 7:15, 9:30, 10:15 Barbershop: The Next Cut Fri-Sat 10:30am, 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 4:30, 6:00, 7:30, 9:00, 10:30, 12:01; Sun-Thu 10:30am, 12:00, 1:30, 3:00, 4:30, 6:00, 7:30, 9:00, 10:30 Theri Fri 9:00; Sat 6:00 The Boss Fri-Thu 11:30am, 12:50, 2:15, 3:35, 5:00, 6:20, 7:45, 9:05, 10:30, 11:50 Midnight Special Fri-Thu 1:10, 4:15, 7:20, 10:25 Demolition Fri-Thu 10:20 Hardcore Henry Fri-Thu 11:45am, 2:30, 5:15, 8:00, 10:45 God’s Not Dead 2 Fri-Sat 12:35, 3:45, 6:55; Sun 6:55; MonThu 12:35, 3:45, 6:55 Eye in the Sky Fri-Thu 10:55am, 1:45, 4:35, 7:25, 10:20 Meet the Blacks Fri-Thu 8:40 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice 3D Fri-Thu 1:30, 8:50 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Fri-Sun 11:40am, 3:20, 5:10, 7:00, 10:40, 11:35; Mon-Thu 11:40am, 3:20, 5:10, 7:00, 10:40 My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:50, 4:35, 7:20, 10:05 Hello, My Name is Doris Fri 11:35am, 2:15, 4:55, 7:35, 10:10; Sat 4:55, 7:35, 10:10; Sun-Mon 11:35am, 2:15, 4:55, 7:35, 10:10; Tue 11:35am, 2:15, 10:10; Wed 11:35am, 2:15 Born To Be Blue Fri-Tue 3:45, 8:15 Mars Attacks! Fri 10:30 Of Mind and Music Fri-Tue 6:00 Cents Sat-Sun 1:00 Theory of Obscurity: A Film About the Residents Sat 10:30 The Albuquerque Film & Music Experience 2016 Call for films and times HIGH RIDGE 12910 Indian School NE • 275-0038 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. ICON CINEMAS ALBUQUERQUE 13120-A Central Ave. SE • 814-7469 Criminal Fri-Tue 11:30am, 2:00, 3:05, 4:40, 7:15, 10:00; Wed-Thu call for film times The Jungle Book 3D Fri-Tue 12:45, 4:40, 8:50; Wed-Thu call for film times The Jungle Book Fri-Tue 11:35am, 12:00, 12:20, 1:55, 2:20, 2:45, 3:05, 4:15, 5:10, 5:25, 6:30, 7:00, 7:35, 7:45, 9:20, 10:05, 10:25; Wed-Thu call for film times Barbershop: The Next Cut Fri-Tue 12:20, 2:40, 5:15, 7:45, 10:10; Wed-Thu call for film times The Boss Fri-Tue 12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35; Wed-Thu call for film times Hardcore Henry Fri-Tue 12:50, 5:30, 7:45, 10:00; Wed-Thu call for film times Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Fri-Tue 12:40, 3:50, 7:00, 10:05; Wed-Thu call for film times Zootopia Fri-Tue 11:35am, 2:00, 4:25, 6:50, 9:20; Wed-Thu call for film times MOVIES 8 4591 San Mateo NE • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1194 The Young Messiah Fri-Thu 12:00, 3:30, 6:50, 9:50 Whiskey Tango Foxtrot Fri-Thu 12:40, 3:50, 7:10, 10:20 Triple 9 Fri-Thu 10:00 Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Fri-Thu 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:30 Gods of Egypt 3D Fri-Thu 3:40, 10:10 Gods of Egypt Fri-Thu 12:30, 7:00 The 5th Wave Fri-Thu 12:20, 3:20, 6:30 Kung Fu Panda 3 3D Fri-Thu 1:20, 4:00, 6:40, 9:20 Kung Fu Panda 3 Fri-Thu 11:50am, 2:30, 5:10, 8:00 Star Wars: The Force Awakens 3D Fri-Thu 11:30am, 9:40 Star Wars: The Force Awakens Fri-Thu 2:50, 6:10 MOVIES WEST 9201 Coors NW • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1247 Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Fri-Thu 12:10, 3:10, 6:10, 9:10 Triple 9 Fri-Thu 9:30 Whiskey Tango Foxtrot Fri-Thu 12:50, 4:00, 7:20, 10:00 The Young Messiah Fri-Thu 1:00, 3:55, 6:40, 9:40 Gods of Egypt 3D Fri-Thu 3:50, 10:05 Gods of Egypt Fri-Thu 12:40, 7:10 The 5th Wave Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 Star Wars: The Force Awakens 3D Fri-Thu 3:40, 10:10 Star Wars: The Force Awakens Fri-Thu 12:20, 7:00 Kung Fu Panda 3 3D Fri-Thu 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:15 Kung Fu Panda 3 Fri-Thu 12:00, 3:00, 6:00, 9:00 RIO RANCHO PREMIERE CINEMA 1000 Premiere Parkway • 994-3300 Criminal Fri-Thu 11:20am, 2:20, 5:20, 8:20 Barbershop: The Next Cut Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:50, 4:50, 7:50, 10:40 The Jungle Book 3D Fri-Thu 2:00, 7:20 The Jungle Book Fri-Thu 11:20am, 12:00, 2:55, 4:40, 5:50, 8:45, 10:00 The Boss Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:50, 4:40, 7:30, 10:20 Hardcore Henry Fri-Thu 4:20, 7:00, 9:40 Hello, My Name is Doris Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:40 God’s Not Dead 2 Fri-Thu 11:40am, 2:35, 5:30, 8:30 My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 7:55, 10:20 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice 3D Fri-Thu 12:45, 7:55 Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Fri-Thu 11:00am, 2:30, 4:20, 6:05, 9:35 The Divergent Series: Allegiant—Part 1 Fri-Thu 12:25, 3:20, 6:15, 9:10 Miracles From Heaven Fri-Thu 1:05, 3, 6:30, 9:20 Zootopia Fri-Thu 11:10am, 2:05, 4:50, 7:40, 10:30 Deadpool Fri-Thu 12:25, 3:05, 5:50, 8:40 SUB THEATER UNM (Student Union Building Room 1003) • 277-5608 The Danish Girl Fri-Sat 6:00, 8:30; Sun 1:00, 3:30 Pan’s Labyrinth Thu 7:00 UNM MIDWEEK MOVIES UNM (Student Union Building Room 1003) • 277-4706 Zoolander 2 Tue 8:00; Wed 4:00, 7:00; Thu 3:30 WINROCK STADIUM 16 IMAX & RPX 2100 Louisiana Blvd. NE • 881-2220 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [23] R. Greenleaf Now Open On The Westside! Look for us in the West Bluff Shopping Center just across from the Home Depot - right next to HR Block. Conviently located at Coors and I-40 — follow signs for the frontage road or Ouray Road off of I-40 For more info or directions call us at (505) 200-9060 Westside: 5201 Ouray NW Suite E (Coors and I-40) (505) 200-9060 Uptown: 2325 San Pedro NE Suite 2D (San Pedro & Cutler) (505) 200-9366 Sign up for our newsletter at rgreenleaf.com Medzen Is Now Open In Nob Hill! Look for us on the south side of Central Avenue just east of Morningside. Off-Street Parking Available!! Open Tuesday - Friday 10am -5:30pm Saturday 11 - 4pm For more info or directions call us at (505) 200-2367 Westside: 10660 Unser Blvd. NW (Unser & McMahon) Nob Hill: 4014 Central Ave. SE (Central & Morningside) For more information or to sign up for newsletter visit medzen.info [24] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 MUSIC | AURAl fIxAtIOn SONIC REDUCER BY AUGUST MARCH Black Mountain IV PHOTO BY ERIC WILLIAMS • ERICWPHOTO.COM (Jagjaguar) Mecca Records Record Store Day Comes Once A Year Now it’s here, now it’s hear BY ROBIN BAAB inyl junkies, recording enthusiasts and music lovers of all stripes rejoice: Record Store Day is upon us once more. On Saturday, April 16, the annual event will celebrate the nation’s record stores with a batch of special, limited vinyl releases of both new and old records, including J Dilla’s long lost vocal album, The Diary, and a 12” picture disc re-release of David Bowie’s 1970 album The Man Who Sold the World. You can find the complete list of special releases on the official Record Store Day website. A couple of Albuquerque record stores are participating in the event, so you can join the rush to get ahold of some of those special releases this weekend—if you get there early. In past years, lines have stretched down the block at some stores, an event more likely to occur than not in Burque because our town only has a handful of the places. All that being said, don’t have your sights too fixed on a certain release, as each individual record store can’t promise what titles it will actually receive from distributors. Stores won’t actually know what titles and how many copies they’ll have available until the delivery person arrives on Record Store Day. It’s like Christmas, but for a small, vinyl-loving subset of the population. In recent years, RSD has been critiqued (see Pitchfork’s article from last year, ‘Record Store Day and the Ambivalent Branding of Independence’) for creating more profit for large corporate record labels than for independent record stores. It’s certainly a high-stress event for most record store owners and employees, and, as record distributors are more likely to prioritize filling orders for larger stores, sometimes small indies are left with their orders unfilled and with long lines of disappointed customers on the big day. V “Honestly? It’s a pretty stressful day for us, and I’m looking forward to it being over,” says Rocky De la Vega, owner of Mecca Records on Central. He feels that the event has grown in both popularity and corporate-ness in the past few years. “It used to be a list of about 50 special releases each year, and it’s grown to something like 600 this time around. It’s less special these days.” Some record stores get more out of it, though. Chuck Roast of Vinal Edge Records (in Houston, Texas) says that, although stressful, RSD is their most profitable day of the year. There are a lot of people who come in early to the shop on RSD just to buy special release titles and flip them on Ebay—a practice that frustrates some shop owners—but Roast says that he “can’t get too upset about it. I mean, that’s what I used to do.” Although it can be profitable for savvy record store owners, participating in RSD is an investment, and one that doesn’t always pay off. If you order too many of a certain title, then those unsold copies sit on your shelves after RSD, gathering dust and getting more and more discounted each day. For small indie stores, it can be a make-or-break scenario. So, what’s a discerning music lover/record store aficionado to do? “Just come to our store more than one day a year!” says De la Vega. “Seriously, you’re more likely to find cool titles on any other day of the year, when we’re not swarmed.” You can try your luck for a special Record Store Day title at either Mecca Records or Charley’s 33’s & CD’s on Saturday, April 16. Nob Hill Music, one of Burque’s other local music outlets will be open, but is not officially participating in the festivities. Mecca Records 1404 Central SW, Albuquerque, N.M., 87104 505-243-5041 one. Mecca is one of the first places I ever went to upon visiting our lovely city for the first time, and it remains one of my favorite spots. Never mind the fact that they’re sometimes not open during their posted hours—that’s just part of the record store experience, you know? Mecca is a great place for crate-diggers and folks hunting for something interesting, rather than something mainstream. In addition to vinyl, they stock CDs and plenty of used books. Charley’s 33’s & CD’s 7602 Menaul NE, Albuquerque, N.M., 87110 505-296-3685 The biggest independent record store in New Mexico. Charley’s has been around since 1988 and has had the same owner for the past 10 years. While they sell (and buy and trade!) mostly vinyl, they have a wide selection of CDs and cassettes too, with plenty of band T-shirts and other musical paraphernalia as well. The owner of Charley’s, Colleen Corrie, is frequently around and ready to share her extensive musical knowledge. Charley’s 33’s and CD’s won this year’s Best of Burque readers’ poll for best local record store. Nob Hill Music 3419 Central NE, Albuquerque, N.M., 87108 505-266-4200 Steve Schroeder’s shop in the middle of Nob Hill features a curated selection of many types of music in a multitude of formats, but is particularly strong on the jazz and rock fronts. The owner’s passion for music started off as a collecting hobby and has grown into one of the more interesting music shops in the local area. Besides recorded music, the store also features high-quality, used stereo equipment for sale as well as being a place fellow collectors can buy, sell and talk records. a After spending the first part of the weekend wondering whether rocanrol was dead, and getting the feeling that it might be while listening to a variety of new and awesome hip-hop records, I let go of my negative approach to the genre and listened to the new Black Mountain record. Certainly using Roman numerals to designate a title and direction forward whilst looking back has extra-magical qualities; hell the strategy worked wonders for Led Zeppelin. Why shouldn’t it work for a quintet of Vancouverites hellbent on securing rock’s Golden Fleece as they trip languidly through psychedelic influences, synthetic syncretism and cannabis-induced dreams? It does, but IV ends up existing in a rarefied musical universe where disco never developed and rap was just a fever dream. Still tracks like opener “Mothers of the Sun” move past simple derivation and to a place where epic, instrumentally complex West-Coast tuneage with searching vocals still reigns supreme. Weezer Weezer (The White Album) (Atlantic) Rivers Cuomo reminds me of Brian Wilson, not so much in form as in execution. I have visions of the former fretting over the majesty of Rubber Soul, working feverishly to understand and overcome its understated, folky elegance, then languishing as each subsequent release by the Fab Four sent Wilson reeling with the mindcrippling realization that he just couldn’t keep up with Lennon and McCartney. Cuomo’s had 20 years of other rockers’ releases (past the coming and going of a fine first record and its strangely alluring follow up, Pinkerton) to come up to speed. Instead he’s chosen to continually digress, wandering from rocanrol flower to rocanrol flower without ever continuously demonstrating his own mastery. It’s fitting that Weezer’s latest eponymous album is buried in the same surf and sand that damn near suffocated Wilson. Although some reviewers see this latest attempt at catching up to be heroic parody, it sounds like Cuomo is content to sound like other bands because he still hasn’t figured out who he really is. Cheap Trick Bang, Zoom, Crazy ... Hello (Big Machine Records) What would a weekend filled with ponderings over the efficacy and sustainability of decent rocanrol music be without a review of the latest album by Cheap Trick? They were notable in the ‘70s for brandishing radio-friendly, hook-laden pop gems while also languishing laboriously in a mediocrity normally reserved for jokers like KISS. Cheap Trick, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year, have been through the ringer living up to their great moments while trying to establish an identity that has been elusive, given the poptastic nature and adolescent ambience of their work. On Bang, Zoom, Crazy...Hello, the band soldiers on without the jocular chops of drummer Bun E. Carlos, who has been replaced by guitarist Rick Nielson’s son, Daxx. The result is formidable but alien to practically anything that has to do with music today. Tracks such as “Roll Me” find the band in fine form, battling bravely even as their peers and fans surrender to things like age, hip-hop music and Black Mountain. a An Albuquerque institution if there ever was APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [25] Wednesday APRIL 13 8:00pm Doors NM CHILD ABUSE PREVENTION PARTNERSHIP BENEFIT SUBLMNL RNSONS + LILMIC + SELF MADE 1 WAY ENT. + G5 FLY ENT. + ROCKY RHODES ONE(CA) + SYG RECORDS + YUNG TAT GRIP ALOT RECORDS + MIC FEEDER ENT. G-L.I.F.E. + MC-X + DERANGED & KRYPTO + DEF-I VNM & MAFFIETTE 206 + LADY B + DON P SMALL SITY RECORDS + JJ BEATTRIX + SAC ONE + SUMMON K.BENALLY & LETSJUSB + & SUNNIIIBLACK TURNTABLES : DJ ADRENALINE TRUTH + DJ EXOTIC Friday APRIL 15 8:00pm Doors COBRA VS MONGOOSE + MF RUKUS WULFF + FIRE TO THE RESCUE Saturday APRIL 16 8:00pm Doors JAMES CAMPBELL'S BIRTHDAY SHOW SAVAGE WIZDOM + I'M BROKEN SHIT HAPPENS INC. SONS OF ICARUS Monday APRIL 18 8:00pm Doors HIGHLY SUSPECT AUDIODAMN! Wednesday APRIL 20 8:00pm Doors 420 DOOMED 2 GRIND FEST LAUGHING DOG + STORMBRINGER OL DAGGER + TORN BETWEEN WORLDS CAMBODIAN DEATH SQUAD JAGGED MOUTH + MORE TBA DJ BREATHALIZER SPINNING BETWEEN SETS Thursday APRIL 21 8:00pm Doors MIC CLUB 37 INVINCIBLE + COURTNEY HAMPTON HOSTED BY JOE BZ WITH DJ SHATTER + NSPIRE + CRYOGENIX THE ODDITIES + DOMINATE + SUPERIOR + FANTUM E$ BFNE + WOLFGANG PACO + BIG STOUT + XXII LETTER BIG TALK ENT. + JACKIE BROWN + JP MIDAS BDUB + SILVERBACK + KID VERSE + RICO FERRI Monday APRIL 18 8:00pm Doors AFME FOUNDATION PRESENTS: THE NOMS + GREAT STATES Wednesday APRIL 13 8:00pm Doors DRESSY BESSY +STRANGE MAGIC Friday APRIL 15 8:00pm Doors THRUART BENEFIT SHOW: REVIVA +REBECCA ARSCOTT DJ BUDDHAFUNK Saturday APRIL 16 8:00pm Doors LONN CALANCA BAND +MERICAN SLANG Sunday APRIL 17 2:00pm Doors MAKE-A-PAINTING PARTY Monday APRIL 18 8:00pm Doors SORRY GUERO BURIED FOR A DAY (AZ) + PAIN IDLE Tuesday APRIL 19 8:00pm Doors SUGARMOTOR + SNAILMATE GHETTO BLAST + SHOULDER VOICES Wednesday APRIL 20 8:00pm Doors LAURA STEVENSON CRYING + CHRIS FARREN Thursday APRIL 21 8:00pm Doors UNM HONKEY TONK ENSEMBLE W/KYLE MARTIN Friday APRIL 22 8:00pm Doors YOUNGSVILLE + THE DIRTY SHADES ROGER! + THE HOWLIN' WOLVES [26] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Music Calendar THURSDAY APRIL 14 THE BLUE GRASSHOPPER BREW PUB, Rio Rancho Chris Ravin Showcase • rock ’n’ roll, R&B • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! DIRTY BOURBON Redneck • country • 9pm LAUNCHPAD Intervals • metal • Plini • Angel Vivaldi • Save Us from the Archon • 8pm LEO’S NIGHTCLUB Amanda Perez • pop, soul, hip-hop • 9:30pm • $20 MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Cowboy Scott & Company • Jam Night • variety • 6pm • FREE OUTPOST PERFORMANCE SPACE Arlen Asher • Patti Littlefield Quintet • 7:30pm • $25 • ALL-AGES! PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party in the Fireroom • Calle 66 • salsa • all-you-can-eat-pizza • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! RIO BRAVO BREWING COMPANY Eryn Bent • indie, folk • 4pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SAVOY WINE BAR & GRILL Swag • jazz, blues, Motown • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SISTER April LowLife! • 9pm • FREE SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Latin Night with VDJ Dany • 9pm • Lilly Pad Lounge • Rebel Frog • 10pm VERNON’S SPEAKEASY Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO Island of Black and White • rock, reggae, blues • 9pm FRIDAY APRIL 15 CARAVAN EAST Point Blank • country • 4:05pm • $5 CROWNE PLAZA ALBUQUERQUE Cantina and Ranchers • Ambrose Rivera • jazz guitar • 5:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! DIRTY BOURBON Redneck • country • 9pm DRAGON HORN TAVERN Odd Dog • classic rock • 8:30pm • FREE EL CAMPANARIO DE SANTA FE, Santa Fe Amanda Perez • pop, soul, hip-hop • 7pm • $20 • ALL-AGES! HISTORIC EL REY THEATER Hieroglyphics • Binary Star • hiphop, rap • Keith Murray • Chino XL • Scarub • 5:30pm • $35 LAUNCHPAD Cobra vs Mongoose • punk • MF Rukus • Marte Wulff • 9pm • $5 THE LOFT Pistol P • Felo • Dj Big Red • 8pm • $5-$20 LOUNGE 54 @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo The Bus Tapes • funk, rock, folk • 9pm • FREE LOW SPIRITS Reviva • reggae, rock • Rebecca Arscott • reggae, calypso • DJ Buddhafunk • 9pm • $5 MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid The Wall Chargers • space Western • 7pm MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Skip Batchelor • acoustic solo • 1:30pm • Group Therapy • blues, rock • 6pm • FREE NED’S BAR & GRILL Kombat Kitty • rock • 9pm PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party in the Fireroom • Chris Dracup & Funk of the West • blues • all-you-can-eat-pizza • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo Kyle Martin • country • 7pm RIO BRAVO BREWING COMPANY The Blunns • acoustic jazz, rock • 4:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Swag • jazz, blues, Motown • 9pm • FREE SISTER Ghetto Gospel • Takah • 9pm • $3 SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Amanda Perez • pop, soul, hip-hop • 8pm • $20 • ALL-AGES! • DJ Dany • Latin • The Alchemy Party • variety • 9pm THE STANDARD DINER Last Call • jazz, blues • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! TIWA RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Blu Sol • dance, variety • 10pm VERNON’S OPEN DOOR DJ T-Bone • electronic, variety • 6:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! VERNON’S SPEAKEASY Alice Huang • variety piano • 7pm • FREE SATURDAY APRIL 16 THE BARLEY ROOM Flashback • variety • 8:30pm • FREE THE BLUE GRASSHOPPER BREW PUB, Rio Rancho Spotted Doggs • rock, blues • 8pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! CARAVAN EAST Point Blank • country • Al Hurricane & Al Jr. • Spanish, Latin • 5pm • $10 THE CO-OP Ness Lee • Avenu • Jonny Storm • Troy Brown • Chef Trez • Tru Tones • electronic • 8pm • $9 • ALL-AGES! THE COOPERAGE Terra Plena • Latin jazz, salsa • 9:30pm • $7 DIRTY BOURBON Redneck • country • 9pm GH STAGES Project Mayhem • punk rock • 8pm • $10-$15 THE JAM SPOT Battle Of The Bands 2 • 7pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD I’m Broken • rock • Shit Happens Inc. • 9pm • $5 LEO’S NIGHTCLUB Suspect Muzic • Forever Loyal • Aktive • Silverback • punk • AR • SLB • ska, reggae • 9:15pm • $10 LOW SPIRITS The Lonn Calanca Band • contemporary jam • Merican Slang • funk • 9pm • $5 MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid The Saturday Gians • rock • 7pm MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Falcon Eddie • rock, variety • 1:30pm • Iron Chiwawa • rock, variety • 6pm • FREE MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION The Rudy Boy Experiment • rock, blues • 9pm • FREE PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party in the Fireroom • DCN • funk, classic rock • all-you-can-eat-pizza • 6pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo Last Call • jazz • 7pm SAVOY WINE BAR & GRILL Ace Revel • soul, indie • 6pm • FREE SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe DJ 12 Tribe • hip-hop, reggae, house • Meow Wolf’s Lab Party • 9pm TIWA RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Blu Sol • dance, variety • 10pm TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK Homegirls Records • vinyl • 8pm • FREE UNM JOHNSON FIELD UNM Fiestas • Empra • rock • 1pm VERNON’S OPEN DOOR Mary Mayhem • modern, classic, pop rock • 6:30pm • FREE VERNON’S SPEAKEASY Larry Freedman • solo piano • 7pm • FREE ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO Keith Sanchez & The Moon Thieves • alternative, Americana • 9:20pm • FREE Greenview Specializing in Medical Cannabis Evaluations 505-990-3978 Affordable and Veteran Friendly, Discreet and Confidential Service, Conveniently located in NW ABQ. You may qualify for a medical marijuana card under New Mexico’s 21 qualifying medical conditons. Call us to see if you qualify. Like us on Facebook. Follow us on Instagram www.greenviewnm.org 3801 Atrisco Dr. NW, Abq, NM 87120 PTSD EVALUATIONS for Medical Cannabis Cards Are you suffering from symptoms of a traumatic experience? You may be suffering from PTSD. Albuquerque-Area Psychologists On Duty Zia Health & Wellness Medical Cannabis Program 5401 Lomas Blvd NE, Ste. C | Albuquerque 87110 (505) 299-7873 www.PTSDpsychiatrist.com SUNDAY APRIL 17 THE BLUE GRASSHOPPER BREW PUB, Rio Rancho Friends Forever • blues, rock • 3:30pm • ALL-AGES! • Way Go Lily • bluegrass • 6:30pm • FREE THE DECK AT THE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid The Urban Pioneers • Western swing, rockabilly • 4pm O’NEILL’S HEIGHTS Los Radiators • acoustic folk rock • 4pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SISTER BlackBook’n and BoomBox’n Art Show • DJ Switch • Mike Giant • Path • Pisto • 5pm SUNSHINE THEATER Pop Evil • Smashing Satellites • Falling Through April • Blinddryve • 7:30pm • $17 TIWA RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Los Amigos • Latin, jazz • 10am TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK I’ll Drink To That: 4 Year Anniversary • Cloudface • instrumental hip-hop • Skelly • Carlos The Tall • pop, country • 4pm • FREE VERNON’S SPEAKEASY Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE MONDAY APRIL 18 THE DECK AT THE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Way Go Lily • bluegrass • 5pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD Highly Suspect • alternative rock, blues • AudioDamn! • 9:30pm • $10 LIZARD TAIL BREWING Dave and Friends • open mic • 7pm LOW SPIRITS Sorry Guero! • Buried For A Day • rock, electronic • Pain Idle • 9pm • $5 TRACTOR BREWING COMPANY Tractor Tune Up • Virginia Creepers • 7:30pm • FREE www.MedicalCannabisProgram.com Zia Health & Wellness | 5401 Lomas Blvd. NE, Ste. C | Abq., NM 87110 Veteran/Military & Senior Discounts | www.facebook.com/ZiaMMJ TUESDAY APRIL 19 THE BLUE GRASSHOPPER BREW PUB, Rio Rancho Open Mic • variety • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! LOW SPIRITS Sugarmotor • rock • Snailmate • Ghetto Blast • rap, hip-hop • Shoulder Voices • death pop • 8pm • $5 MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Steve Kinabrew • acoustic solo • 6pm N’AWLINS MARDI GRAS CAFE Todd Tijerina • acoustic blues, folk rock • 5pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! NED’S BAR & GRILL Freddie Chavez • variety • 6pm • FREE THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo Ivan Rane • guitar • 6pm ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO Robyn Cage • singer-songwriter • 8pm WEDNESDAY APRIL 20 BLU PHOENIX VENUE The Devils of Loudin • death metal • Immortal Prophecy • progessive deathcore • Lithopaedion • Carrion Kind • 7pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! THE CO-OP Jamalski • Boomroots Collective • reggae, hip-hop • Dremon • Dre Z • Brotherhood Sound System • roots, dancehall reggae • 7:30pm • $20 LAUNCHPAD Laughing Dog • metal • Stormbringer • heavy metal • Ol Dagger • Torn Between Worlds • Cambodian Death Squad • Jagged Mouth • 8pm • $5 LIZARD TAIL BREWING ABQ Jazz Trio Open Jam • 7pm LOW SPIRITS Laura Stevenson • folk, indie • Crying • punk rock • Chris Farren • 8:30pm • $10 MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Marilyn & the Secret 7 • acoustic blues, rock • 6pm • FREE RED DOOR BREWING CO. Todd Tijerina • blues, acoustic • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! SISTER The Imperial Rooster • country • Gunsafe • alternative country • Roñoso • sludge, grind • Low Life MC • 8pm SUNSHINE THEATER Andy Mineo • hip-hop, Christian • 7:30pm TRACTOR BREWING COMPANY Solos on the Hill: Russell James Pyle • 8:30pm • FREE TRIPLE SEVENS, Isleta Casino Whiskey & Women • folk, cajun • 9:30pm APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [27] WEAK SOUND! AUDIO EXPRESS! 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INSTALLED PRIC $ SAVE For 2-DIN Dash! Choose the AM/FM/CD receiver with features you want. Same price: $ 150 SAVE 200 99 199 Android Auto, 7” Image $119999 * $ 99 749 One LCD remote, one four-button [28] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Lomas Northwest 9231 Coors NW 899-3584 Co or s San Mateo 99 499 Pa se od el No rte HOURS Mon. - Sat. 9 AM - 7 PM Sunday Noon - 5 PM FREE LAYAWAY Se habla Espanol! 24999 $ Alarm With Remote Start! $ 99 Starter kill & shock 199 Two-Way Alarm & Remote Start! Includes upgrade $ 99 two-way control Some vehicles require specific interface modules at added cost. GET YOUR DREAM SYSTEM TODAY! PPP Means 50% Off Installation! Mid-Town 1105 San Mateo NE 265-8133 139 Ready For SmartStart! $ Total package with 6.2” image! Alarm With Starter Kill! $ 99 2-Way Alarm! BUILT IN UP TO $ BUILT IN E! INSTALLED PRIC $ HD Radio brings you more stations. Control USB hubs and Flash Drives. $ SAVE 100 229 Hear More Radio! BUILT IN 469 Big 7” fold-out display plus 1-cable connection for AppRadio One! Which One’s Right For You? Choose a 6.2” 2-DIN or 7” fold-out 1-DIN, same low price. 99 449 * Proof of qualifying employment and local banking history required. Transaction amount limited. Other conditions and restrictions apply. Details at store. Unless otherwise limited, prices are good through Tuesday following publication date. Installed price offers are for product purchased from Audio Express installed in factory-ready locations. Custom work at added cost. Kits, antennas and cables additional. Added charges for shop supplies and environmental disposal where mandated. Illustrations similar. Video pictures may be simulated. Not responsible for typographic errors. Savings off MSRP or our original sales price, may include install savings. Intermediate markdowns may have been taken. Details, conditions and restrictions of manufacturer promotional offers at respective websites. Price match applies to new, non-promotional items from authorized sellers; excludes “shopping cart” or other hidden specials. © 2016, Audio Express. ARIES (March 21-April 19): “When I discover who I am, I’ll be free,” said novelist Ralph Ellison. Would you consider making that a paramount theme in the coming weeks? Will you keep it in the forefront of your mind, and be vigilant for juicy clues that might show up in the experiences headed your way? In suggesting that you do, I’m not guaranteeing that you will gather numerous extravagant insights about your true identity and thereby achieve a blissful eruption of total liberation. But I suspect that at the very least you will understand previously hidden mysteries about your primal nature. And as they come into focus, you will indeed be led in the direction of cathartic emancipation. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “We never know the wine we are becoming while we are being crushed like grapes,” said author Henri Nouwen. I don’t think that’s true in your case, Taurus. Any minute now, you could get a clear intuition about what wine you will ultimately turn into once the grape-crushing stage ends. So my advice is to expect that clear intuition. Once you’re in possession of it, I bet the crushing will begin to feel more like a massage— maybe even a series of strong but tender caresses. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your sustaining mantra for the coming weeks comes from Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer: “I am not empty; I am open.” Say that aloud whenever you’re inclined to feel lonely or lost. “I am not empty; I am open.” Whisper it to yourself as you wonder about the things that used to be important but no longer are. “I am not empty; I am open.” Allow it to loop through your imagination like a catchy song lyric whenever you’re tempted to feel melancholy about vanished certainties or unavailable stabilizers or missing fillers. “I am not empty; I am open.” CANCER (June 21-July 22): According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you are close to tapping into hidden powers, dormant talents and future knowledge. Truths that have been off-limits are on the verge of catching your attention and revealing themselves. Secrets you have been concealing from yourself are ready to be plucked and transformed. And now I will tell you a trick you can use that will enable you to fully cash in on these pregnant possibilities: Don’t adopt a passive waitand-see attitude. Don’t expect everything to happen on its own. Instead, be a willful magician who aggressively collects and activates the potential gifts. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): This would be a perfect moment to give yourself a new nickname like “Sugar Pepper” or “Honey Chili” or “Itchy Sweet.” It’s also a favorable time to explore the joys of running in slow motion or getting a tattoo of a fierce howling bunny or having gentle sex standing up. This phase of your cycle is most likely to unfold with maximum effectiveness if you play along with its complicated, sometimes paradoxical twists and turns. The more willing you are to celebrate life’s riddles as blessings in disguise, the more likely you’ll be to use the riddles to your advantage. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Right about now you might be feeling a bit extreme, maybe even zealous or melodramatic. I wouldn’t be surprised if you were tempted to make outlandish expostulations similar to those that the poet Arthur Rimbaud articulated in one of his histrionic poems: “What beast must I worship? What sacred images should I destroy? What hearts shall I break? What lies am I supposed to believe?” I encourage you to articulate salty sentiments like these in the coming days—with the understanding that by venting your intensity you won’t need to actually act it all out in real life. In other words, allow your fantasy life and creative artistry to be boisterous outlets for emotions that shouldn’t necessarily get translated into literal behavior. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Adyashanti is my favorite mind-scrambling philosopher. One of his doses of crazy wisdom is just what you need to hear right now. “Whatever you resist you become,” he says. “If you resist anger, you are always angry. If you resist sadness, you are always sad. If you resist rob brezsny suffering, you are always suffering. If you resist confusion, you are always confused. We think that we resist certain states because they are there, but actually they are there because we resist them.” Can you wrap your imagination around Adyashanti’s counsel, Libra? I hope so, because the key to dissipating at least some of the dicey stuff that has been tweaking you lately is to stop resisting it! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): During every election season, media pundits exult in criticizing candidates who have altered their opinions about important issues. This puzzles me. In my understanding, an intelligent human is always learning new information about how the world works, and is therefore constantly evolving his or her beliefs and ideas. I don’t trust people who stubbornly cling to all of their musty dogmas. I bring this to your attention, Scorpio, because the coming weeks will be an especially ripe time for you to change your mind about a few things, some of them rather important. Be alert for the cues and clues that will activate dormant aspects of your wisdom. Be eager to see further and deeper. alibi Free Will Astrology | Horoscopes by BILLBOARD TO PLACE YOUR AD CALL (505) 346-0660 OR VISIT ALIBI.COM LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF NM Annual Convention, April 16 UNM Law School, Room 2406 1117 Stanford NE, Albuquerque Starting 10:00am â BE THERE! BUY DIABETIC TEST STRIPS Cash-Highest $$$$$$ In NM-(505) 203-6806 ABQPCTUNEUP.COM Computer repair, virus removal & more! 505-629-4037 CASH FOR YOUR CAR OR MOTORCYCLE! Needing repairs, No Problem! Call Kenny, 362-2112. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Friedrich Nietzsche published his first book, The Birth of Tragedy, in 1872, when he was 28 years old. In 1886, he put out a revised edition that included a preface entitled “An Attempt at Self-Criticism.” In this unprecedented essay, he said that he now found his text “clumsy and embarrassing, its images frenzied and confused, sentimental, uneven in pace, so sure of its convictions that it is above any need for proof.” And yet he also glorified The Birth of Tragedy, praising it for its powerful impact on the world, for its “strange knack of seeking out its fellow-revelers and enticing them on to new secret paths and dancing-places.” In accordance with the astrological omens, Sagittarius, I invite you to engage in an equally brave and celebratory reevaluation of some of your earlier life and work. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Go back to where you started and learn to love it more.” So advised Thaddeus Golas in his book The Lazy Man’s Guide to Enlightenment. I think that’s exactly what you should do right now, Capricorn. To undertake such a quest would reap long-lasting benefits. Here’s what I propose: First, identify three dreams that are important for your future. Next, brainstorm about how you could return to the roots of your relationships with them. Finally, reinvigorate your love for those dreams. Supercharge your excitement about them. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “What am I doing here in mid-air?” asks Ted Hughes in his poem “Wodwo.” Right about now you might have an urge to wonder that yourself. The challenging part of your situation is that you’re unanchored, unable to find a firm footing. The fun part is that you have an unusual amount of leeway to improvise and experiment. Here’s a suggestion: Why not focus on the fun part for now? You just may find that doing so will minimize the unsettled feelings. I suspect that as a result you will also be able to accomplish some interesting and unexpected work. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): How many fireflies would you have to gather together in order to create a light as bright as the sun? Entomologist Cole Gilbert estimates the number to be 14,286,000,000. That’s probably beyond your ability to accomplish, Pisces, so I don’t recommend you attempt it. But I bet you could pull off a more modest feat with a similar theme: accumulating a lot of small influences that add up to a big effect. Now is an excellent time to capitalize on the power of gradual, incremental progress. HOMEWORK: LET’S MEET IN DREAMS SOMETIME SOON. DESCRIBE TO ME THE ADVENTURES YOU’D LIKE US TO HAVE TOGETHER. FREEWILLASTROLOGY.COM a 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. FREE TO LISTEN AND REPLY TO ADS Free Code: Weekly Alibi FIND REAL GAY MEN NEAR YOU Albuquerque: (505) 268-1111 www.megamates.com 18+ APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [29] Classified Financial Services FREE ONLINE WEBINAR http://web.gpsaffiliates.com Legal Services BANKRUPTCY CHAPTER 7 $200 Payment Plans w Upon Request. Stop Garnishments In As Little As 24 Hours. Uncontested Divorce From $199.00 505-688-0070 Handyman Services 7 STAR - SERVICE CO. 7 Star Electric, Plumb, Heating & Cooling - Get Cool or Hot with our Specials - All types Elect. , Plumbing - HVAC Mike Bell/Owner www.AlbuquerqueElectricians.n et HOMEOWNERS HANDYMAN SERVICES Carpentry,tile,decks,doors, landscaping.Free estimates.Call 313-1929 w Buy/Sell/Trade BUYING DIABETIC TEST w STRIPS FOR $CASH$ & FREE PICK-UP! Highest CASH Prices Paid In NM For Your Diabetic Test Strips And FREE Pick-UP! Help Others(Those Without Insurance) & Make Money Too! Call: 505-203-6806 ESTATE SALE HUGE Estate Sale - Furniture, Collectibles, Household, WomensPlus Clothing. Single owner. Lifetime collector. Department 56 Snow Villages. Dolls: Madame Alexander, Ginny, Barbie. Hundreds of figurines. Security will be on-site. Cash or Credit Cards only. April 15th 8 -4 & April 16th 8- 2. no Early Birds! 7834 Tennyson NE, Abq, NM 87122. Church of the Good Shepherd Arts & Crafts CRAFT SHOW Saturday, April 30th, 9:00am 4:00pm Christ Lutheran School 7701 Candelaria NE Booths still available contact Theresa at [email protected] w Computer COMPUTER HELP AVAILABLE! Need help with your computer? Hans 505-3857010 or http://mcf.hanslinux.net Seminars/Workshops CNVC PRESENTS 2016 Life Enriching Education Lab Albuquerque, NM July 24-29, 2016 www.cnvc.org/iit/lifeenriching-education-lab Place your ad: alibi.com [email protected] (505) 346-0660 ext 258 Events FREE DOCUMENTARY SHOWING POLYFACES:A WORLD OF MANY CHOICES Free showing of an uplifting documentary about inspirational farming with âAmericaâs Most Famous Farmerâ, Joel Salatin of Polyface Farms. This is agriculture at its finest â” healing the land, producing healthy food and cultivating community. Come discover how YOU can be a part of a stronger local food movement!Refreshments will be served.Thursday, April 28, 2016 at 6:00, Simms Center for the Performing Arts at The Albuquerque Academy. Registration is free but required. Watch a preview and register at www.holisticmanagement.org/ poly. Announcements TRUE HOPE IS HERE!!! Hope changes everything Focusing on helping people build lasting relationship with our Lord Jesus Christ through God’s unchangeable word. Come join us Sunday’s at 10:45 for a positive life changing message or Wednesday at 5:30 PM for Bible study. At True Hope you’ lol learn to truly love God, others and live a ChristCentered Purpose Driven Life. True Hope Community Fellowship Church 8011 Central Ave. NE., Albuquerque, NM 87102 WE HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!! Studies HEALTHY CURRENT SMOKERS The UNM College of Pharmacy is recruiting healthy current smokers, 19-50 years old, for a study on a new risk factor for heart disease. Two visits (30 min & 2 hrs) are needed. You will be compensated for your time. Call Dr. Joe Anderson, 505-272-3664. HRRC #15033 MRI STUDY 25-50 y.o. M/F for brain study. $20 per hour. 505-948-3230 (HRRC # 13-637). RESEARCH STUDY seeking males/females who are on Probation/Parole. Earn $300.00 at $20/hr for 15 hrs of your time. Free taxi rides to and from apts. Create an account online:http://goo.gl/yaQ4Xm or call 505-398-3639. HRRC10-315 MRI STUDY 18-50 y.o. M/F with history of mental illness for brain study. $20 per hour. 948-3230 (HRRC # 13-637). w w w Real Estate Real Estate General Real Estate GREAT DOWNTOWN LIVING!! Get in on the newly RENOVATED apartments at 1221 Silver SW! Downtown living starting at $575 per month, plus move-in incentives! Call Deacon Property Services to schedule another showing at 505-8780100, and see photos at www.deaconpropertyservices.c om Houses for Rent Artist Space/Studios BRUNI/KARR AGENCY Many fine homes available. All areas, all price ranges. Call for faxed lists. www.brunikarr.com. No Fees. 296-0726. w RENT Large Artist Body & Soul Wellness Licensed Massage UNM DENTAL CLEANINGS Have you ever been told you need more than a regular cleaning? Has it been a long time since you have had your teeth cleaned? Most insurances and medicaid are accepted. $10 discounts on cleanings for seniors, military, CNM and UNM students. Email or call for more information or to set up a screening. #720-840-6175 / [email protected] EXTRAORDINARY PAIN RELIEF Experience pain relief, deep relaxation, and a profound sense of well-being. 20 years experience; lots of satisfied clients. $60 Katrina LMT#6855 innovative.massagetherapy.co m. (505) 506-4016 TENSE? UPTIGHT? STRESSED OUT? Want to truly relax? Massage by Carol is the answer. 250-1198. LMT w CREATIVE STUDIOS FOR Workspace available for rent. Call 259-6320 Paula Metaphysical 596.$60/hr. Mon-Sat, 8am8pm. Shower facilities available. BEAUTIFUL MASSAGE 8210 La Mirada NE Ste. 400. Call 505-332-3339 LMT Lic. #5694. ALBUQUERQUE’S FINEST ASIAN MASSAGE, LI’S! Downtown/University/Sunport 123 Yale SE (corner of Gold/Yale) Hours 10:00am 10:00pm, Full Body $50/hr. 505-200-2949 LMT #7362 ASTROLOGICAL READINGS Know yourself, make most of your talents, improve your relationships, and finances. Affordable prices. Call now (925)3377078 to schedule an appointment in person or Skype. INTUITIVE READER & HEALER Loving,Local,Accurate & Affordable! Intuitive Reader/Energy Healer~ Mary Bernadette 505-501-0699 www.clearvisionintuition.com We require a High school diploma (or equivalent), at least 12 months experience in healthcare, the ability to pass criminal history check, a valid driver’s license, vehicle insurance, vehicle registration, and to have access to your own vehicle. You must be at least 20 years old and authorized to work in the USA. Please visit www.micasahomehealth.com for more information and to apply. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT WANTED I am looking for a responsible Administrative Assistant. Position is flexible, so students and others can apply. Computer literacy is a plus. Send resume to [email protected]. ABLE TO START IMMEDIATELY Expanding Distribution Center has several openings. High energy, hard working & dependable ppl. You can do our work easily. No experience necessary.$2000 mo Call Today 505-831-5021 w w Employment Employment CANDELARIA/RIO GRANDE You in white car, me walking my dog, both heading east on Candelaria at RG Blvd. Waiting for the light to change, I looked into your car, and I saw you in a white t-shirt and what looked like white panties, but maybe short shorts. I walked away before the light changed and glanced back at you, and you were looking at me with a smile on your face. I returned a sly smile. Maybe you’d like to meet up? No presumptions, just for fun. WALKING THE MONSTER You: captivating blonde (with frosted bits) in a black sweater and floral skirt over black leggings, walking your monster of a dog downtown Saturday evening (4/8) near Seventh and Central. [30] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016 Me: goofy liquor store clerk milling around on the sidewalk, dressed all in black. I was instantly smitten by your smile, but make it a point to not accost strangers on the street (at least beyond the usual friendly hello) but I couldn’t resist posting this ad. Would you like to get a drink sometime? DREAM GIRL!! Tall redhead in white flirty skirt, legs for days in beige high heels, just breathtaking. I saw you walking into the Walmart on Coors and Rio Bravo. You were accompanied by a man in yellow dress shirt, looked old enough to be your dad. I would like to meet and get to know you. Hope this ad reaches you. I feel we’d be good together. CAREGIVERS WANTED $300 sign on bonus at 90 days, FT positions, $10/hr., Must have NMDL, reliable vehicle, current ins., GED/HS Diploma, & must be 21 or over. Apply in person Tues. thru Fri. 9a-5p at Providence, 2225 4th ST. NW, ABQ, NM 87102,(505)8989435 NORC-PHONE INTERVIEWER NORC, an independent research organization at the University of Chicago, is hiring phone interviewers at our Albuquerque research center. Flexible part-time: Work evenings and weekends. Meaningful work: Conduct social science research in the public interest. Paid orientation and training. Compensation: Premium starting wage for Spanish/English bilinguals. For more information and to apply go to tssojobs.norc.org EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR SEEKING SKILLED FULL-TIME Executive Director for Well Established Community Arts Project. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: April 15, 2016. Submit resumes electronically. For details: http://offcenterarts.org/execu tive-director-job-posting/ CAREGIVERS WANTED!! Mi Casa Home Healthcare is looking for dedicated caregivers in the Albuquerque and Santa Fe Areas. We offer flexible schedules, hands-on training, and competitive pay ($10.00/hr and up in ABQ, and $11.00/hr and up in SF). Opportunities ONLY 13 WEEKS!!!!!!!!! Join the American Institute of Dental Assisting and change your life in 13 weeks! Gain your certificate with hands on experience with LIVE patients! Call 505-395-6295 or visit www.my13weeksnm.com for more information! NRG SERVICES, INC. HIRING Stagehands, Loaders & Riggers For Isleta Amphitheater Concerts Please Call 505-888-4036 w BY RYAN NORTH “Game On”—get that money ready. by Matt Jones Across 1 Dizzy Gillespie’s genre 6 Many August babies, astrologically 10 At a great distance 14 “Captain Blood” star Flynn 15 Prefix for pus 16 Solitary 17 1912 Nobel Peace Prize winner Root 18 What the three circled areas represent 20 ___ Aviv, Israel 21 Submits, as a sweepstakes entry 23 Illuminated 24 Auto mechanic’s service 26 “___ Wiedersehen!” 28 Tiny drink [Miss class] 30 “A Boy Named ___” [Confident] 34 Taverns [Loses one’s lunch] 38 Spigot [Links hazard] 39 Slip-___ [Burden] 40 Baseball card info [Set in motion] 41 Hosp. workers [Howard and Jeremy, for two] 42 History [“Blue Ribbon” name] 44 Deep-___ [Slugfest] 45 “Yes ___!” [Andes native] 47 Casserole bit [“Guilty,” e.g.] 48 Riddle-me-___ [Belgian painter Magritte] 49 Brazilian soccer legend [Key’s comedy partner] 50 Blasting stuff [Campsite shelter] 51 Curvy letter [PC bailout keys] 52 “Mustache Hat” artist Jean 54 Lend a larcenous hand 56 Go back, like the tide 59 Bill killers 63 “As I suspected!” 66 Person who’s ready when an insertion is made 68 Blend completely 70 Not contaminated 71 “CHiPs” star Estrada 72 Hip-hop artist Jermaine 73 Transmitted 74 Bumps on the back, maybe 75 Short-lived Ford Down 1 Salad bar veggie 2 Detective novelist ___ Stanley Gardner 3 Vividness 4 Outburst with a wince 5 Eve of “The Brady Bunch” 6 Centers of focus 7 “Green” sci. 8 Soul singer Redding 9 Braga of “Kiss of the Spider Woman” 10 Every bit 11 Ignoramus 12 “Freeze” tag? 13 Time off 19 Cold-shoulders 22 “The Fox and the Crow” author 25 Swedish home of Scandinavia’s oldest university 27 Label for the diet-conscious 28 Remove, as paint 29 31 Ill-suited 32 33 Dusseldorf neighbor 35 Philatelists’ prized possessions, perhaps 36 37 Eye afflictions 43 Mongolian invader 46 Derring-do 53 Actress Rosie 55 Flip of a hit single 56 Mike of “Fifty Shades of Black” 57 In a glum mood 58 Hoedown site 60 “To Venus and Back” singer Amos 61 “I’m ___, boss!” 62 Alarmed squeals 64 Put on the payroll 65 Angle of a branch 67 As of now 69 Water + dirt ©2016 Jonesin’ Crosswords ANSWERS TO THIS WEEK’S PUZZLE ARE AVAILABLE ONLINE AT ALIBI.COM APRIL 14-20, 2016 WEEKLY ALIBI [31] [32] WEEKLY ALIBI APRIL 14-20, 2016