Oakland

Dress up for the Meow + Howl-O-Ween Drive-Thru!

Halloween at East Bay SPCA! Free for all. Say HOWL-O to East Bay SPCA shelter dogs. Masks required.

Dogs and Cats most welcome! How often do you hear that? Free prizes and treats for the kids – 2 and 4 legged. Wear your costumes and mask. You’ll remain in your vehicle and take a tour through the event, visiting with staff and adoptable critters.

Saturday, Oct. 31, 1-3pm

East Bay SPCA: 8323 Baldwin in Oakland

Drive thru and enjoy!

  • Costumed kids (and pups!) can drive by for a fun pupstop and say Howl-O to East Bay SPCA animals
  • Candy and non-food treats will be available for kids
  • Fun East Bay SPCA activity book to take home
  • Plus, optional treats to take home for dogs and cats
  • Pet costumes available for suggested donation

Can’t make it to Howl-O-Ween? You can help the EBSPCA out with a donation. Whether you are fostering one litter of kittens, buying a bed to keep a shelter dog off the ground or making a donation matched by your employer, your action counts! It takes all of us to keep East Bay dogs and cats healthy and in good homes. Find out how to play your part today. And to keep their pantry full! You can donate, volunteer or foster. Details here.

Did you know? The East Bay SPCA has helped injured, lost and abandoned animals since 1874! They serve Alameda and Contra Costa Counties at sites in Dublin and Oakland.

Images courtesy of EBSPCA website and FB. Ginger’s World drawing by her friend Peter Hobbs Di Grazia.

Ginger approves of this event! She once was a shelter dog.

By |2020-10-28T17:14:57-07:00October 28th, 2020|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Oakland’s Kingfish Pub Wins Best Dive Bar in California!

Thrillest, an online newsletter that tells you where to eat, drink and have fun, recently determined the best dive bars in every state in the U.S. Out of all the cities and towns throughout California, the Thrillest authors chose a legendary bar in Oakland. Here is what Andy Kryza and Matt Lynch wrote on Sept., 19, 2017, about Oakland’s very own Kingfish Pub.

“With dive bars in hip cities increasingly faced with the wrecking ball, the Kingfish’s survival is something of a Cinderella story… provided Cinderella’s voice was too raspy from Virginia Slims to sing properly, and her mouse friends were actually rats. With condos encroaching on its space, the place got saved by Oakland’s Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board, then was straight-up loaded onto a trailer and moved down the street. So what changed? Nothing. The ceilings still require a tall man to duck upon entry and the intense shuffleboard games rage on. Hell, if we didn’t know better, we’d think that some of the patrons never even got up from their seats as the building was moved. And if they did, it was the first time that it happened in decades. ”

Read the whole article.

Kingfish Pub is located at 5227 Telegraph Ave in Oakland. (510) 655-7373. You may want to put Kingfish Pub on your weekend to-do list once you read their story on the homepage of their website.
By |2017-09-22T14:06:14-07:00September 22nd, 2017|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Blues & Jazz on the East Shore of the Bay

In search of the best clubs for Blues & Jazz along the east shore of the San Francisco Bay, we asked

Jeff Tauber on sax

Jeff Tauber on sax

Saxophonist Jeff Tauber for his advice and got the whole story. Some clubs are listening rooms and others are bars and lounges. Easy links to their websites will get you to their music calendars.

Ashkenaz – is still happening at 1317 San Pablo Ave in Berkeley. African, Blues, Hip Hop, Reggae, World Beat and other genres. Ashkenaz is dedicated to providing dance and music from traditional cultures all around the world, featuring local and international bands.

the backroom – 1984 Bonita Ave in Downtown Berkeley – books all acoustically-based genres, including Jazz, Blues, Folk, Bluegrass, Americana and more. It’s an intimate, comfortable venue with no food or drink other than water or soft drinks. Adults can BYOB. Local musician Sam Rudin wants to keep the music venue small and comfy with a Steinway grand piano on stage and thrift shop overstuffed chairs below.

Britt Maries’ – 1369 Solano Ave in Albany – The owner is turning Britt Marie’s Wine Bar & Restaurant into a community music venue so local musicians have an opportunity to play and customers can enjoy a Jazz supper club type of venue, much like in the 1940s. Dancing also. Tauber  on sax and Craig Browning on keys played there recently. They are two latter day jazz men committed to playing the songs the way they were written –  soft, melodic and lyrical.

The Cheese Board Collective & Pizzeria (2 doors down)  – 1504 and 1512 Shattuck Ave in Berkeley – Offers up Blues and Jazz and even during lunch! The Pizzeria backs up, but the line moves quickly. “Kickin’ the Mules Blues Band” plays there.

Chris’ Club – at 656 Benicia Road in Vallejo is dubbed the world’s best eclectic dive bar. Call (707) 552-2916 to find out when they will have a Blues Jam. They have live Music every Thursday, Sometimes on Friday and Saturday (Check their Facebook). Thursdays include Live Blues 7-11pm, with World Famous Do It Yourself NY Steak BBQ and BBQ Oyster Bar on the Back Patio.

Everett & Jones Barbecue, located at the entrance to Jack London Square at 126 Broadway in Oakland, hosts Saturday Night Blues from 9pm – 1am. On Fridays there are two venues: Q’s Lounge – 8pm-12midnight – a relaxed environment with the latest in live Soul and Jazz, up close and personal. Dotha’s Juke Joint – 9pm-12midnight – brings you down home live Blues in a funky-chic setting with a plate of the best BBQ in town. Check who’s been playing!

– A true neighborhood bar dating back to the 1940s. 860 San Pablo Ave in Albany – Blues & Funk. Open Mon – Sun 3pm –

Terrence Brewer

2am. Check out B-Side Cypher: We the People video talking about Session Tuesday jam.

The Ivy Room – A true neighborhood bar dating back to the 1940s, presents a variety of entertainment and a meeting place for the entire East Bay community. 860 San Pablo Ave in Albany – Blues & Funk. Open Mon – Sun 3pm – 2am.

Jupiter – a European-inspired beer house and premiere alternative Jazz venue  at 2181 Shattuck Ave in Downtown Berkeley. A two-story lounge with a two-story beer garden, fire pits and heaters, Jupiter offers up handcrafted beers & ales along with wood-fired pizza, Jazz, Blues & Latin music. On Fridays they serve food until midnight!

The Sound Room – home of Bay Area Jazz & Arts at 2147 Broadway in Oakland. According to Tauber, some of best Bay Area musicians play here. Proceeds from their food and drink sales pay the rent and utilities and proceeds from ticket sales pay for the band and sound equipment. Of note – all of their wines are on some level, associated with Jazz.

Starry Plow – 3101 Shattuck Ave in Berkeley – is still going strong since the 70s with Grunge, Rock, Irish and Blues. Thursday nights are filled with Funk Soul, Hip Hop, Jazz and Latin music. Check out who has played there! Always the Revolutionary Irish watering hole, Starry Plow serves locally sourced pub-comfort food and lots of different beers, wine and non-alcoholic beverages.

Yoshi’s – 510 Embarcadero West in Oakland’s Jack London Square – is at the top of Tauber’s list , having built a reputation for being one of the most respected Jazz Clubs in the Bay Area with great Japanese cuisine. It now can seat 310 people, yet still maintains its intimate vibe. They have expanded to include broader genres now to appeal to a variety of musical tastes, though you can always find Jazz and Blues on their calendar.

Editorial Note – one more: The 7th St. Cafe (the old Rev Cafe)  is bringing BLUES back to the neighborhood at 1612 7th St in West Oakland. Karaoke Nights on Saturday at 8pm and Comedy on Sundays at 8pm. 7th St. Cafe features  the 7th St. Blues Band and has Blues Jams often on Fridays and other nights. Call and find out what’s going on – (510) 444-7746.

Unfortunately Birdland Jazz has closedBirdland Jazz (Birdland Jazzista Social Club)  – 4318 Martin Luther King Jr Way in Oakland is open Fridays, Saturdays & Sundays starting at 8pm (like the old Blues Clubs in West Oakland), featuring Jazz, Blues, Latin Jazz or Jazz Jams. They depend on volunteers and donations. Volunteer and become a Jazzista! Jeff Tauber, our club guide, plays at Birdland now and again. Another group that started in a garage in Berkeley, now has moved to Oakland. You have to read the history.

Tell us your favorite Blues and Jazz venues.

By |2017-03-24T13:52:19-07:00March 24th, 2017|Tags: , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Music You Don’t Want to Miss in Oakland this Weekend!

Terrence Brewer @ Mindful Music Academy

Sat., Feb. 4, 8pm

Guitarist Terrence Brewer presents an imaginative reinterpretation of his favorite Wes Montgomery album Full House. Full House is the seventh album and first live jazz album by American jazz guitarist Wes Montgomery, recorded at Tsubo in Berkeley on June 25, 1962. The Tsubo had been opened by Glenn Ross in Sept. 1961 with jazz radio station, KJAZ-FM

Brewer is joined by saxophonist Steve Heckman, pianist Tim Campbell, bassist Adam Gay, and drummer Isaac Schwartz.

Brewer was recently proclaimed by long-time music scribe, David Becker (SF Examiner/AXS.com), as the San Francisco Bay Area’s #1 Jazz Guitarist.

Brewer has lead his various groups in nearly 2500 performances in the last 8 years,performing to sold-out crowds at the 52nd Annual Monterey Jazz Festival, the world famous Yoshi’s at Jack London Square, Yoshi’s San Francisco, SFJAZZ Jazz Festival and countless other venues.

Take a listen.

Jim Bennett of KCSM continues the winter season with his curated In The Moment concert series dedicated to continuing the legacy of Jazz as a living art form.

Advance tickets or buy tickets at the door and mention KCSM to receive a $5 discount.

Mindful Music Academy, 5776 Broadway in Oakland’s Rockridge District

Gerald Albright Photo/Cary Gillaspie

Gerald Albright Photo/Cary Gillaspie

Gerald Albright @ Yoshi’s
Fri., Feb. 3

Gerald Albright is one of the biggest stars in R&B, contemporary and straight-ahead jazz.

He started playing piano as a young boy in South Central Los Angeles and one day picked up his piano teacher’s sax. He now is a saxophone master, a musician’s musician, as he is called.

Beginning in the late ’80s, Albright recorded many successful solo albums while he was also playing with an impressive roster of popular R&B artists. His influencers were James Brown, Maceo Parker and Cannonball Adderley.
Take a listen.

He is extremely popular! Fri. 8pm show sold out. 10pm show still has tickets available. (Both shows sold out on Sat.) Doors: 9:45 pm / Show: 10:00 pm. Buy tickets online.

Yoshi’s,  510 W Embarcadero in Jack London Square in Oakland

Young People’s Symphony Orchestra @Scottish Rite Center

Sat., Feb. 4, 8-10pm and Sun., Feb. 5, 4-6pm

Program

Miller – Scherzo Crypto

Jonathan Altman & Angela Wu Photo/Vladimir Gurevich

Jonathan Altman & Angela Wu Photo/Vladimir Gurevich

  • Featuring YPSO Concerto Competition Winners:
    • Wieniawski – Violin Concerto No. 2 – Angela Wu, violin
    • Korngold – Violin Concerto – Jonathan Altman, violin

Rimsky-Korsakov – Scheherazade

Music Director/Conductor – David Ramadanoff with 102 YPSO musicians

i-xwM5cVmYoung People’s Symphony Orchestra (YPSO) is California’s oldest youth orchestra and the second oldest youth orchestra in the United States. Their mission is to guide young musicians to achieve excellence within an orchestral setting.

YPSO has performed in locations including Carnegie Hall; the Dean Lesher Regional Center for the Arts in Walnut Creek; San Francisco’s War Memorial Opera House; the San Francisco

Photo/YPSO

Photo/YPSO

Museum of Modern Art; Sanders Theatre, Memorial Hall, Harvard University; the Sydney Opera House, Australia; the Dvorak Hall of the Rudolfinium, Prague, Czech Republic; the Slovak Radio Concert Hall, Bratislava, Slovakia; the Golden Hall of the Musikverein, Vienna, Austria; as well as in venues in Anchorage and Fairbanks, Alaska; Scotland; the People’s Republic of China; and New Zealand.

Additional notes: Composer Andrew Miller says his 2014 composition, “Scherzo Crypto,” fuses two great loves of his life: orchestral virtuosity and brain-twisting puzzles. When the San Antonio Symphony commissioned a new work from him for their 75th anniversary season, he decided to compose a musical meta-puzzle: a piece with an answer that could be solved by adventurous listeners. “The only hint I will give is that the answer is the name of a musical instrument. This hidden instrument is somehow woven into the sound, continually appearing and disappearing,” he says. To depict the excitement and occasional panic of intense puzzle solving while a clock ticks down to zero, Miller made the instrumental parts wildly virtuosic, with a particular emphasis on strings and percussion.

Admission is FREE with a Suggested Donation of $15

Register online or at the door

Oakland Scottish Rite Center, 1547 Lakeside Drive, Oakland (map)

Photo/YPSO

Photo/YPSO

Want a Great Good Place for Books? Oakland has it.

Read a good book8761Montclair, a district of Oakland, is one of the easiest places to run errands. You can park your car in one spot and go to a drug store, Safeway, buy coffee, have lunch,  shop for clothes, buy some flowers, browse leisurely through A Great Good Place for Books and sit in the comfy book corner and peruse a book of interest.

You can anticipate your visit by reading their reviews online. Each month A Greatinside Good Place for Books chronicles their best sellers with detailed book descriptions. Staff picks on the website are also a great resource. For example, “If you liked The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown, then you’ll love Devotion by Adam Makos, Lanterne Rouge: The Last Man in the Tour de France by Max Leonard and The Three Year Swim Club by Julie Checkoway.”

32737635Owner Kathleen Caldwell also suggests her favorite books online. And this month she is promoting The Most Dangerous Place on Earth by Lindsey Lee Johnson.

The story takes place in the beautiful lush setting of Mill Valley, an affluent Marin County town that doesn’t seem likely to be dangerous. But according to GoodReads.com, “The Most Dangerous Place on Earth unleashes an unforgettable cast of characters into a realm known for its cruelty and peril: the American high school.” The story culminates in a high school party that goes wrong. (Many read this page turner in one or two sittings.)

One of the great things about this book shop is that it encourages you to read and everyone is friendly and shares book conversations. “The main part is community,” says Kathleen. “That is

Community Bulletin Board

Community Bulletin Board

what we celebrate here.” Prior to inheriting the shop, Kathleen managed all the book-reading and other store events. How wonderful and unusual to inherit a store full of books. It happened in 2005. “It was unexpectedly expected,” continued Kathleen. She went on to explain.

A Great Good Place for Books was co-founded by Helen Talley and Debi Echlin in 1998 in Montclair. Helen retired and one day Debi asked Kathleen if she would like the store after she was gone. Kathleen accepted and then unexpectedly, Debi passed away. “You are never ready for it. It was so unexpected. At first it was shocking and there was grief – I had lost my friend. But now running the store is second nature. The community of readers is what’s really important.” And the book community carries on today with that spirit of curiosity and sharing. You can see by the community bulletin board that the diverse community reaches out past the borders of Oakland.

Upcoming in-store events

A Great Good Place for Books is located at 6120 LaSalle Ave. in Montclair Village in Oakland (510) 339-8210

Store Hours:

Sun: 9am-5pm
Mon: 9am-6pm
Tue: 9am-6:30pm
Wed: 9am-6:30pm
Thu: 9am-6:30pm
Fri: 9am-7:30pm
Sat: 9am-6pm

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By |2017-01-11T20:02:45-08:00January 11th, 2017|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

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