Friday, December 3, 2010

Dean & Britta: Rock to Warhol

Last night at the IMA's Toby Theatre, indie-art band Dean & Britta entertained a packed house with a very mellow soundtrack accompaniment to Andy Warhol’s "Screen Tests."

A dark room full of darker sounds: in the dimly lit venue the band delivered its own blend of Velvet Underground-meets-Edie Brickel downer rock ballads, while onto a suspended white screen a series of short, but equally bleak, 8-mm style black and white "mug shot" images flickered above. Warhol's famous Screen Tests -- no dialogue, just beautiful people making love to the lens -- were captured in the early 1960s at his Factory, and feature posing by a who's who of yesteryear's hip, and wanna-be scensters—from Nico to Edie Sedwick, Dennis Hopper to Lou Reed.

Our favorite performance: Lou Reed enjoying a bottle of Coca-Cola (captured here with iPhone). Things do go better with Coke. However, my thirsty gang stuck with Jack on the rocks, vodka rocks splash of cranberry (they were out of limes), and white wine and bottled water -- happy that we could bring our adult beverages into The Toby.



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Friday, November 12, 2010

Tonic Ball Announces 2010 Lineup

Tonic Ball, the annual music and arts celebration benefiting hunger-fighting charity Second Helpings, announced the 2010 lineup of bands and artists who'll participate in this year's event.  The popular annual musical celebration, now in its 9th year, will take place next Friday, November 19th, at Fountain Square's Radio Radio and the historic Fountain Square Theater.  

More than 30 local bands will participate in this year's Tonic Ball, each taking turns performing their favorite Beatles songs and one or two originals.   The musical fun begins at 7pm.
 
Tonic Gallery

All is not aural. Beginning at 5pm, right across the street from the Ball, Tonic Gallery will showcase donated submissions from Indy's top visual artists - all for sale for as little as $100.  Bidding begins at 5 pm. Auction closes at 8 pm.

 
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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Hoosier Pickers Descend Upon State Fairgrounds

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Vintage fans from around the state and around the country flocked to the Fair Grounds this weekend in search of treasures. Fueled by a mix of hard times  and inspired by the free admission, thousands turned out for the Stewart Show Flea Market.  While the crowds were respectable,  some vendors we met complained that there were more lookers than buyers this year, and that folks were driving a hard bargain. “The economy means that buyers are tight down to the last dollar.”
My folks and I decided to do a booth after many years away from the game, and reintroduced Jim Kraks and Gewgaws at the show.  We had a great time, met some fun folks and got to pass along some of our favorite finds to new collectors. We’ve relaunched Jim Kraks & Gewgaws, and plan to offer vintage and retro shoppers a wide selection of relics, rarities, and collectibles. “We only buy what we like,” Jim Kraks founder Irv Rheins, my dad, told me. That way if it doesn’t sell, it goes back on the shelf in our house!”



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Monday, November 8, 2010

"Pure Prine" November 19 and 20 in Madison, IN!



By Tim Brickley

   Our little musical, "Pure Prine: The Music Of John Prine" will hit the road for the first time later this month in a stripped-down, "theatrical concert" version debuting November 19th and 20th at the Riverrun Theatre in Madison, IN. Presented by the Cultural Continuum of Madison, and co-produced by both the Phoenix and Riverrun Theatres, the show will differ somewhat from the original Phoenix production of earlier this year - mostly in the lack of the elaborate bar set (we'll suggest the bar on a mostly-bare stage with some tables, a jukebox, etc.) Also, lovely and talented Jenni Gregory (waitress "Angel" in the show) must be pretty darn well showing her marvelous pregnancy by now, which is going to add in interesting dynamic to the various overlapping love triangles onstage.

   As you may know, "Pure Prine" was conceived by Phoenix Artistic Director Bryan Fonseca, a near life-long Prine fanatic, and it tells the interwoven stories of six characters in a bar, playing and singing approximately 30 Prine classics, with no dialog - the songs tell the story. Besides myself and Jenni, the rest of the cast is: the marvelous talented couple of Tim Grimm and Jan Lucas-Grimm. Bloomington singer-songwriter Bobbie Lancaster, and Phoenix stalwart Michael Shelton.

   Showtime is 7:30PM each night, and the Rivverun Theatre is at 125/127 E. Main in beautiful, downtown Madison. Click here to get your tickets now. In related news, a deal is in the works to bring "Pure Prine" for a run in Chicago early next year (it's coming right up, you know...) Stay tuned for details.
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Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Ann Still Dancing Downtown

 
Ann Dancing by artist Julian Opie in front of Old Point Tavern on Mass. Ave. The art installation is part of the permanent public art collection in the city.

Monday, October 11, 2010

MoFoCo and Founders "Beer Share" This Wednesday



Grand Rapids, Michigan microbrewery Founders Brewing Company, well known for its handcrafted ales and lagers, is partnering with popular Broad Ripple eatery Monon Food Company for a special one day “Beer Share.”
The Founders Day Beer Share takes place this Wednesday, October 13th  at 7pm, and offers food and beer aficionados the opportunity to sample 5 different Founders micro brews and a specially-prepared menu of food "nibbles" and desert all for one special tastings price of $25.
  
 

Explaining the subtleties of each brew will be John Host, Regional sales representative for Founders Brewing Co., who’ll introduce attendees to Founders’ Centennial IPA, Red’s Rye P.A., Dirty Bastard, Porter and Breakfast Stout.  MoFoCo chefs have married each beer with ‘nibbles’ designed to highlight the unique quality of each micro brew. On the menu will be: apple walnut lettuce wraps; smoked salmon with fava bean puree and sun-dried tomato tapenade; coffee-seared beef with porter-hazelnut cream sauce and portabella mushrooms; and for desert a chocolate stout brownie with raspberries and crème Anglais.
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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

We the People Demand Justice

Around 50 people, many of them on motorcycles, gathered this afternoon at 56th Street and Brendon Way South Drive demanding justice for the family of Eric Wells. Wells was killed when he and the group of motorcyclists he was with including Mary Wells and Kurt Weekly -- were struck by a speeding police car while waiting at a traffic light. Behind the wheel of the squad car, a drunken police officer, whose blood alcohol far exceeded legal limits, plowed into the group.  The accident killed Eric Wells and seriously injured the other two riders, but because of sloppy police work by his fellow officers, the responsible drunken cop was not charged with being under the influence.
Public outrage has barely simmered down in the two months since the accident, and the family and supporters pledge to keep the heat and public attention on full blast to ensure that justice is done. 

Today they did that with prayers, their gathered presence and banners that read "Remember Eric Wells, killed by a drunk driver August 6, 2010" -- the word driver had been crossed out and replaced with COP" and "We the people demand justice for the Victims." 

The somber roadside crowd stood gathered around a small shrine, prepared a sunset candle vigil and waved to the approving honks of passing cars.

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Sunday, September 5, 2010

Tonic Ball #9: All You Need Is Love

Indy music and art fans lined the four corners at the intersection of Virginia and Woodlawn in Fountain Square last Friday, necks craning northward, following the sounds of "Get Back", which blasted from the rooftop of the Murphy Art Center.  A faux British bobby, in full regalia, paced through the collected crowd, while fans waved placards emboldened with the Fab Four's philosophic proclamation: "The love you make is equal to the love you take."

Performing under the "You Are Beautiful" sign was Beatles cover band, #9, an ensemble of local musicians  featuring Matt Mays, Scott Woolgar, Brian Deer, Bill Mallers and Andy Teipen, who formed especially for the event.


The street theater was all part of a guerrilla marketing effort announcing this year's Tonic Ball, at which local bands will perform their favorite Beatles' songs to help fight hunger in Indianapolis. The rooftop concert, an obvious nod to the notorious scene from Let it Be, was the brainchild of Ken Honeywell, creative director at Well Done Marketing and founder of Tonic Ball, an event that over the past nine years has become one of Indy's most popular nights of music and art -- benefiting one of the city's best charitable causes, Second Helpings.


"We started Tonic because we wanted to do something that would start to cross-pollinate the local music scene and give back to the community -- and hunger was the most important issue we could think of." Honeywell told Indy Social Media. "We took the idea to Second Helpings, they loved it, and here we are -- year nine."



Every year the city's best musicians and artists donate their time and work to the community kitchen which converts surplus food from local restaurants and groceries into nutritious meals for thousands of hungry children and adults every day.


"Hunger isn't going away," Honeywell noted. "Sadly, the need for Second Helpings' services continues to grow.  Second Helpings still does amazing work: feeding our hungriest neighbors and training underprivileged people for jobs in food service, all with food that was going to be thrown away."


Over the past decade, Tonic Ball has grown dramatically -- with some 40 local bands expected to take their turns on the stages of the Fountain Square Theater and popular nightclub Radio Radio on November 19th.

"Every year, the event becomes becomes more popular. More bands want to play, more artists want to donate, more people show up to be part of it all. We always want to make sure the show lives up to the hype," Honeywell said. "It always has. It's the one show of the year that, were I not involved, I'd still tell everyone they had to see."

 

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Monday, August 23, 2010

Weekend Wiener: Sausagefest 2010

Local bands, beer and brats. Who could want anything more than that on a beautiful summer weekend in Indianapolis? How about a little gambling and a chance to dunk your favorite priest? The sixth annual St. Thomas Aquinas Sausagefest 2010 was that and more.
A wiener of a weekend! Indy's own Sun King Brewery provided the excellent beer, and a host of local bands (including Indy Social fave The Reacharounds -- Scott Sanders, Keith Carey, Ben Wah Salami with special guest guitarist John Byrne sitting in for master axeman Scott Ballantine -- pictured above) provided the goove. Parishioner volunteers and donations made the event possible, with all proceeds going towards maintenance and repair of the parish.


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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Pig in a Port

 
Anyone who has ever had an Indiana tenderloin knows that Hoosiers are hog-wild about their pork. This year, that love has been taken to a new level. Officials declared 2010 the "Year of the Pig" at the Indiana State Fair,  and to celebrate all things swine, a pig statue -- painted in the colors of the Hoosier Flag -- has been erected center stage at the Indianapolis International Airport.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Indy Lets It's Geek Flag Fly at Gen Con

Attendees of Gen Con Indy 

Calling all nerds. They came from near and far to let their geek flags fly: video gamers, fantasy freaks, card-playing kids and adults alike. Some came in costumes, outfitted as their favorite characters, others in kilts or covered in blood. They came for the promise of "the best four days in gaming" to the Indiana Convention Center this week to play Magic the Gathering, World of Warcraft, Dungeons and Dragons, Spoil or hundreds of other entertainments that made up Gen Con Indy.


Thousands of roleplayers filled the auditorium and corridors of the convention center, and spilled out into the halls and across the skywalks to the connected hotels. There were large rooms where attendees set up their games on long tables. There were official tournaments, draft games and pickup games alike. Not just fun and games. When not playing, Gen Conners gathered in an adjoining hall where a huge trade show took place. A full fledged bazaar where new wares were showcased, and festively-clad merchants and advents engaged in the the buying and selling of cards and dice, books, art and all things for the gamer enthusiast.








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Thursday, July 29, 2010

Brickley and DeMyer Rock Greek's Pizzeria



Local singer/songwriter Tim Brickley and fellow Bleeding Heart Larry DeMyer take requests from the patio crowd at Greek's Pizzeria in Broad Ripple, Indianapolis. Here Indy Social features an inspired rendition of "Sweet Jane." We particularly dig the loud horn that hoots approval as it speeds by the village eatery.
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Brickyard 400 Smallest Ever

Brickyard 400Image via Wikipedia
What if you threw a party and nobody showed? Well the 140,000 people who made it to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the annual running of the Brickyard 400 certainly do constitute a party, but a much more subdued one from year's past. This year's attendance was 23% lower than last year's NASCAR event, and 30% down from the 200,000 who showed up for the first Brickyard 400 in 1994. In fact, it was the fewest number of race fans to show up in the event's 17-year history.

Some blame the economy, some blame TV and the fact that many stayed home to watch the race on ESPN from the HD comfort of their living room sofas. Some say the bloom is off the NASCAR rose, in part because of rabid corporate sponsorship that covered every inch of the cars, the track, the drivers and the layers of the sport.

Corporations now seem to have grokked this, and so sponsorship dollars are way off as well. Allstate, which for the last 5 years had title sponsorship of the Allstate Brickyard 400, let it expire this year. The race ran simply as Brickyard 400 without a sponsor. All this is part of a national trend -- 20 of the top 50 sports ad spenders cut budgets in 2009. Some, such as AT&T Wireless and Chevrolet, cut them as much as 30 percent, according to a SportsBusiness Journal analysis of data from The Nielsen Cos.

And those lack of sponsorship dollars meant there was less money to spend on advertising and promotion.
The Brickyard 400 digital footprint, which includes a web site with archival footage and a blog and flickr page, was adequate but not enough to make up the lack of awareness from a dearth of TV and Print.







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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Meet the Tweeps

Ever wonder who the heck those folks behind your favorite tweets are in real life? Can these clever communicators handle a social world that extends beyond 140 characters?

Find out this and more, and get a chance to mix and mingle with Indy's twitchy thumb set this Thursday night,  as Metromix celebrates the Circle City's Top Ten Tweeps. The twittering event starts at 5 p.m. at Scotty's Brewhouse, 1 Virginia Avenue, downtown.
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