New All Ages Live Music Venue in San Diego: The Marquee

Saturday night, Roger and I were edging to go out. We hadn’t made any plans for a babysitter and noticed that Tan Sister Radio was playing in a venue called The Marquee in Golden Hill and texted Aaron, the band’s guitarists to find out if it was indeed all ages. After confirming that the place was all ages, Roger and I took a gamble that it was suitable for Thomas and his young ears to go (yeah, we are still looking at getting baby muffs). I looked up the venue and saw that it was an old church converted into a venue for local artists and musicians. Cool. This should work.

After walking up a wooden stair case decorated in twinkle lights, we paid the $8 suggested donation and took the time to explore the place. Immediately you walk into the main hall where there are white vinyl pews (couches) facing the alter (stage). There is art hung from walls and a balcony that houses the board for the new sound system. There is a small room that served as a sort of green room in the back (that also had access to the one bathroom). This room also proved to be a great respite for us for taking Thomas away when he became fussy. There was food available that we later found out was left over from a wedding that afternoon.

The line up was all acoustic acts for the evening (yes, Tan Sister Radio reworked their set for this gig). The acts included Tan Sister Radio, Folding Mr. Lincoln, Allied Gardens and Dave Booda. We managed to stay for nearly three sets before needing to leave.

We got a chance to talk to Gill S.O.TU., the guy who books the Marquee. Super cool guy. We found out that the venue’s capacity is 180 (even with the last of restrooms). Their schedule includes:

Mondays: Dance Night
Tuesdays: Open Mic Night (Train of Thought)
Wednesdays: Writers Workshops and Movie Nights
Thursdays: Hip Hop (Boombox Sessions)
Fridays & Saturdays: Live Acoustic Music Nights (Acoustic San Diego)

The place is beautiful and inviting. Definitely check it out or consider booking an event there. I know I am.

Adventures in Baking: Scones

I found this simple scone recipe in this book called “Six Ingredients or Less” by Carlean Johnson that I just had to try. It actually turned out delicious. This ended up being my lunch for today.

Ingredients
2 cups flour
1/4 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup chilled butter, cut up
3/4 cup milk

Preheat oven to 400ΒΊF.

In a medium mixing bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Add butter and cut in with two knives or a pastry blender, until mixture resembles small crumbs. (I use my new food processor which worked well.)

Add milk and mix just until combined; mixture will be sticky. (Optional – Add any of the following ingredients for more flavor: fresh lemon or orange peel, chopped nuts, chocolate or white chocolate chips, dried apricots, raisins, dried cranberries, fresh or dried blueberries. I added dried cranberries.)

Place on a greased baking sheet. Flatten the dough into about a 3/4-inch thick round. Cut into 8 wedges, but do not separate. If desired, sprinkle lightly with sugar (Hell yeah, I did this!). Bake 15-18 minutes or until lightly browned and cooked through. Makes 8 scones.

Bar to Bar

While we were at Blind Lady Ale House in Normal Heights, Roger and I discussed how you have to reference local bars by what they used to be. With recent developments for many bars in the central San Diego area leaves most locals struggling to keep up saying, “What is that place called again?” Here is a reference of recent bar turnovers for those who are having a tough time:

Scolari’s Office = The Office
Buster Daly’s = U31
Shooterz = True North Tavern
San Diego Sports Club = The Ruby Room
Zombie Lounge = Radio Room
Chaser’s = Soda Bar
Dinos = Bar Pink (Pink Elephant)
Hamburger Mary’s = Urban Mo’s Bar & Grill
Sparky’s = Hamilton’s Tavern
Wolf’s/Rebar = Bluefoot Bar & Lounge

For better or worse, things change. It is hard not to hold on to the past but embrace the awesome things that are appearing.

North Park Art Community Drama: Is this really necessary?

North Park Nights are officially moving to the 3rd Saturday of the month starting in March in an attempt to separate from Ray at Night which will continue to be on the 2nd Saturday of the month. What does this mean for the hundreds of people that attend the event(s) each month? Well, it could mean a couple of things…
1) There will be two Ray at Night events (most people really don’t know about North Park Nights as an event) OR
2) Both events will suffer since half the galleries belong to one of the two groups.

So you might be asking… what in the world is going on? Why would the businesses split the event in two? What is the difference? Well, I will attempt to explain the nonsense:

Ray at Night was started in 2001 by Gustof Rooth, owner of Planet Rooth gallery on Ray Street and an informal collective of art galleries in the North Park area (artist buddies) to bring together the artist community and create an “art scene” on Ray Street. The event involved bringing in a band, opening the galleries and giving out free food and drinks. The following businesses are part of the Ray at Night collective:
* Planet Rooth Studio Gallery
* Santos & Cirello Gallery
* San Diego Art Department
* 4 Walls Gallery
* Obr Architecture
* raystreetstudios.com
* Sharp Studio Gallery
* Luxe Hair Studio
* Soul Ryde
* Enclothe

North Park Nights technically started in October of last year by the San Diego Art Institute as a non-profit organization of a broader collective of art galleries, theaters, studios and supportive business. These businesses and artists want to promote art in the community rather than just create a scene for drinking and hanging out in the street. The event expands beyond Ray Street to include the dance studios on 30th and some of the restaurants and clothing stores. Check out the map and list of the 36 participating North Park Nights businesses.

Each of the North Park Nights events will be themed, with March’s theme being “It’s Complicated,” a group showing featuring controversial themed artwork and events in various businesses and galleries. At the core of the theme stresses the complicatedness of the “break-up” between Ray at Night and North Park Nights.

I really don’t think the intention of North Park Nights is to completely exclude the Ray at Night businesses… only to the extent to convince them that it is more about the “art” than the “scene”. But what neither group realizes is that the public doesn’t give a care about the drama and truthfully will barely notice the difference. Guaranteed that the Ray at Night businesses will be open on North Park Nights events and visa versa. Ray at Night events will be smaller, contained on Ray Street but will still be jumping with art scenesters. Take your pick. More art for all of us.

Derby Social Networking

If there wasn’t enough social networking sites out there already with facebook, myspace, friendster, twitter, yahoo groups… now there is more. Someone in the derby community created yet another place to post things and get to know other derby people from around the world.

Introducing, Derby Nation a site for all your derby connections. Not limited to skater’s… open to skaters, refs, coaches, staff and volunteers… both male and female.

The site creators encourage you to: “Post your bout and event dates. Share pictures. Create groups for your league or team. Chat on the message boards. Blog about derby life.” It is easier to use than myspace and has less junk than facebook. It is completely customizable for both those who know html and those that would rather not ever have to learn codes.

Will this catch on? Today, there was just over 600 members signed up worldwide and it looks like that it just was released a few days ago. Each individual must be “approved” before your account is completely set up. Mine only took minutes. It is definitely worth a look to see if it is worth your time and effort πŸ™‚