Arts & Events

Blake Pouliot Solos In Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Monday July 22, 2019 - 01:14:00 PM

Twenty-four year-old Canadian violinist Blake Pouliot made a splashy debut with San Francisco Symphony on Thursday, July 18, at Davies Hall. I don’t know, however, which was more splashy, his skill as a violinist or his fashion statement. Blake Pouliot walked on stage wearing tight-fitting, shiny, silver pants, a three-quarter sleeve-length black T-shirt, and a black sash wound around his neck and hanging down over his left shoulder to his waist. He looked for all the world like a rock star; and his pants, in either satin or lamé, were reminiscent of pants Elvis Presley wore. -more-


Merola Opera: The Future Is Now, Yet Again

Reviewed by James Roy MacBean
Friday July 19, 2019 - 11:16:00 AM

At Merola Opera’s Schwabacher Concert on Thursday evening, July 11, at San Francisco Conservatory of Music, I was reminded of the slogan Merola Opera has used over previous years — “The Future Is Now.” Well, that formulation is surely appropriate for this year’s bumper crop of Merola’s young singers. At this Schwabacher Concert the level of vocal artistry demonstrated by the Merolini was consistently at a very high level. For listeners, it’s quite exciting to hear young singers at or near the beginning of their careers, who go on stage with a full orchestra and limited but effective costuming and staging, and sing their hearts out in stirringly beautiful vocal display. -more-


Summer History and Architecture Walks in Berkeley This Month

Steven Finacom
Friday July 19, 2019 - 10:56:00 AM

The Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association (BAHA) has started a series of Summer guided walking tours. The first tour was this past Sunday, but three more are scheduled over the next three weeks.
As of this writing space is available on all three walks. The guided walks all cost $15 each and all take place on Sundays from 1 to 3 PM.
On Sunday, July 21, UC Berkeley librarian and mystery fiction expert Randal Brandt will lead a walk in south central Berkeley focusing on sites associated with important literary figures. Homes of notable authors and editors will be visited (seen from the street), along with sites that figure in local fiction. The notables discussed include famed science fiction and mystery editor and writer Anthony Boucher and pioneering fantasy and science fiction writer Marion Zimmer Bradley.
On Sunday, July 28, two current UC students who have studied campus architecture and history will lead a walk through the UC campus visiting and describing an eclectic array of buildings and how they came about, and discussing their designers.
Finally, on Sunday, August 11, I'll co-lead a walk with "Quirky Berkeley" author Tom Dalzell entitled "Around People's Park". We'll not only discuss the history and future of the Park--which turned 50 this year--but the unprecedented array of landmark and architecturally distinctive buildings that surround the Park on adjoining blocks.
You can sign up for the walks at Eventbrite. Go here.
The walk descriptions are provided. Click on the green "Tickets" icon to purchase. There's also a phone number to call if you have questions or problems making a reservation.
(Disclosure: the author is president of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association).
-more-


The Berkeley Activist's Calendar, July 21-28

Kelly Hammargren, Sustainable Berkeley Coalition
Saturday July 20, 2019 - 10:39:00 AM

Worth Noting and Showing Up:

Monday the Mayor’s State of the City Address is sold out. It will be live on his Facebook page,

Tuesday is the last City Council meeting until September 10. The Agenda appears unbearably long. While most of it is on consent, the action items include RV permitting - Item 38. Is a one-time annual permit for a 2week RV parking permit and 39. is for a 3-month RV parking permit and temporary safe parking site. Item 40. the Update on Policing Stop Data states policing stops have declined but contains no actual data and recommends creation of a task force. The last item is the Pipeline (housing) report with the number of multi-unit projects approved, built and low-income units within the projects. The report confirms what is visible on the street, not enough affordable housing is being built and there is an excess of market rate (overpriced) units. -more-