Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Out and About – Summer 2015 (Part 2)


Tomorrow is the autumnal equinox, an astronomical event that marks the end of summer here in the northern hemisphere. A good time, then, to conclude my two-part series, "Out and About – Summer 2015! (For Part 1, click here.)

I begin this second installment with two images from the vigil against weaponized drones that I participated in last weekend at Camp Ripley, MN. In the image above I'm pictured with my friend Sue Ann. For more images and information about both tes issue of weaponized drones and this particular event, click here.



Above: On Thursday, September 3, I was part of a three-person delegation from the Catholic Coalition for Church Reform (CCCR) that met with Interim Archbishop Bernard Hebda at the chancery of the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis. (It was actually the archbishop's birthday that day, and he's pictured holding the gift we brought him.)

Yes, it's quite astounding how far we've come! After all, it wasn't that long ago when CCCR was denounced by the former archbishop, John Nienstedt (see here and here.) And now here we are being welcomed at the chancery! In the past, I've always been there in a very different capacity (see, for example, here and here.)

I'll share my thoughts about our September 3 meeting in a later post. For now, here is how the meeting was described by CCCR to the group's Lay Network.

Thanks for all the prayers and encouragement for CCCR's meeting with Archbishop Bernard Hebda. Michael Bayly, Art Stoeberl, and Paula Ruddy, CCCR Board members, met with him on Thursday afternoon, September 3.

Our purpose was to request Archbishop Hebda's support for an open and broad consultation process before the appointment of the next archbishop.

The good news is that he and the Archdiocesan staff have already begun planning for eight listening sessions throughout the archdiocese during September and October. They will focus on the needs for leadership in the archdiocese and the qualities of leadership the people perceive to be necessary here. In addition to listening sessions, they are planning other methods of communication too, written opinions, electronic surveys, etc. This is the kind of communication process we were hoping for, and we are grateful to the Archbishop and his staff.

Archbishop Hebda was welcoming, friendly and down to business. He is open to input from us and took notes on the suggestions we made for venues.

Now our job is to participate in this process and to urge everyone we know to come with us. We can't be apathetic now. If we hope to get the kind of leadership we say we want, we must turn out in numbers and speak up. Do we hear an Amen?

We will let you know when and where as soon as we have that information.


Commenting on the meeting, Archbishop Hebda told the National Catholic Reporter:

I was pleased to meet with three members of the CCCR and was delighted to learn that they share my interest in engaging in a wide consultation of the faithful in assessing the needs of the archdiocese. I was also happy to share with them some of the preliminary plans for that consultation, and appreciated their input and offer of collaboration.


UPDATE: Fall Listening Session Series Aims to Shape Archdiocese’s Future – Maria Wiering (The Catholic Spirit, September 20, 2015).



As I mentioned in Part 1, since the beginning of the year my good friend Pete and I have been meeting every Thursday morning for breakfast. We thought it would be fun to get a photograph of us at every new restaurant we visited. And it has been!

In the photo above we're in the lovely garden of Cafe Southside in Minneapolis – Thursday, August 27, 2015.




Left: At the Nicollet Diner, Minneapolis, September 3, 2015.




Right: At Our Kitchen Diner, Minneapolis, June 25, 2015.


Left: At the Blackbird Cafe, Minneapolis, July 30, 2015. I think it's fair to say that the Blackbird is our favorite breakfast place so far.

That's a copy of Winston Graham's The Loving Cup on the table. It's the tenth novel in Graham's Poldark series of historical fiction. I introduced Pete to these novels at the end of last year, and he's almost finished reading all twelve! He also enjoyed the recent Poldark BBC TV series, as did I! And good news! . . . The second season of Poldark is currently being filmed in Cornwall.




Above: On Thursday, September 17, my friends Tom and Darlene White invited me and a number of our mutual friends to dinner at their new home in St. Louis Park. Pictured from left: Darlene, me, Kathleen, Brigid, Paula and Tom.



Above: With friends George and Joan.



Above: Dinner at what I've come to call "the French Quarter," the welcoming St. Paul home of my friends John and Noelle. Pictured clockwise from left: John, Noelle, Brittany, Phil, Curtis, Liana, and Amelia – August 23, 2015.


Left: With Eddie, the "wonder dog"!

Above: Ziggy!



Above: At the August 9, 2015 Dignity Twin Cities mass with friends Jim Smith and Fr. John Brandes. You may recall that John is the inspiration for the character of "Father Brandon" in my semi-autobiographical Wild Reed series, The Journal of James Curtis.




Above: Cloud City! . . . The view of downtown Minneapolis across Lake Calhourn – July 2015..



Above: At right with friends Rick, Neil and Jim – August 1, 2015.


Left: Friends Walter, Barry and Raul.




Twice this summer friends and I attended the free concerts held at the Lake Harriet Bandshell. Early in August we saw the Brass Messengers (above), while on August 21 we saw The Pines (right).

Below: Friends at Lake Harriet – August 21, 2015. From left: Joan, George, Carla and Kathleen.






Above: With my good friend Raul – July 2015.



Above I've mentioned it many times before that Raul has one of the best views in Minneapolis! His Uptown apartment looks southwest over Lake Calhourn, and affords some stunningly beautiful views.



Above: The Minneapolis Aquatennial, an annual celebration of the city's lakes, rivers and streams – Saturday, July 25, 2015.

More than 250,000 people attended the fireworks show in the city's riverside Mill City district. I was there with my friends Eric, Kyle and Pete (right).





Left: With Pete – July 25, 2015.



Above and left: At the weekly Wednesday afternoon peace vigil sponsored by the Twin Cities Peace Campaign and WAMM – August 26, 2015.

Since 1999 this weekly vigil has been held on the Lake St./Marshall Ave. bridge which spans the Mississippi River and links the "Twin Cities" of Minneapolis and St. Paul.



Above: Friends Tim and Colleen at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts for a Free Arts Minnesota event– August 2015.

The sculpture at right is by Igor Mitoraj and entitled Eros. Notes the MIA website:

Eros, depicted bandaged and marred by cracks, points out the contradiction between the ideals of strength and beauty and the inherent fragility of the human condition. Life is precious because it is fleeting. And love causes both joy and heartache. The post-modern monumental scale of Eros also suggests the glories and failures of entire civilizations.



Above: A summer evening meal with friends on the rooftop of my friend Raul's apartment. From left: Barry, Walter, Henry, Ron, Jeff and Raul,



Above: A birthday brunch for my friend Brian – August 30, 2015. From left: Rick, Brian and me. We're at Pannekoeken in St. Louis Park!


Left: Out to dinner with friends Raul, Brittany and Phil . . . before going to see the film Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet at the Lagoon in Uptown, Minneapolis – September 3, 2015. We're at the Amazing Thailand restaurant in Uptown and I'm still dressed in my more formal attire from my visit earlier in the day with Archbishop Hebda!

The Prophet is a great film, and I definitely recommend it. Here's a little of what Variety's Peter Debruge has to say about it:

Think of Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet as a gift: a work of essential spiritual enlightenment, elegantly interpreted by nine of the world’s leading independent animators, all tied up and wrapped in a family-friendly bow by The Lion King director Roger Allers. A longtime passion project for producer Salma Hayek (credited here as Salma Hayek-Pinault), Lebanese philosopher-poet Kahlil Gibran’s cherished guide to life, death, love, art and so forth doesn’t naturally lend itself to big screen interpretation, and at first, the pic’s framing device seems too silly for such soulful subject matter. But the freshly scripted wraparound doesn’t shy away from grown-up concerns, while potentially broadening the book’s reach to younger audiences as well.


And here's a snippet of The Salt Lake Tribune's Sean P. Means' review:

Gibran's messages of living simply and thankfully, of transcending national, ethnic and religious divides with kindness and honesty, retain their universal appeal in this rendition.

The Prophet, the movie, is an artful introduction to the uninitiated, and for Gibran's fans a beautiful reminder of the book's thoughtful approach to life.



Above: Friends (from left) Brigid, Carol, Kathleen, Ken and Sue Ann – August 2015.



Above: Protesting weaponized drones at the weekly Lake St./Marshall Ave peace vigil – September 2015. For more on this issue, click here.




Above: Standing by Lake Minnetonka at the Port of Excelsior, Minnesota – September 5, 2015.



Above: Friends (from left) John, Noelle, Brittany and Val – September 16, 2015.



Above: On Sunday, September 6, 2015, I joined with around 50 others in Minnehaha Park to show solidarity with the hundreds of thousands of people undertaking the dangerous journey to Europe from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, and other war-torn parts of the world.

For more images and information about both this issue and event, click here.



Above: My friend David took this photo. It shows 26-year-old Syrian American and University of Minnesota law student Suzan Boulad, who was the key organizer of the September 6 solidarity rally for the refugees of Syria and the world.

That's me in the background at far left. I'm usually so intent on taking photos at events like this that I often don't get in many of them!

For more images and information about both the issue of refugees and this particular rally, click here.




Above and below: With friends at the 27th Minneapolis Greek Festival - St. Mary's Greek Orthodox Church, September 12, 2015. From left: Joan, Steve, Carla and me.



Above: Friends (from left) Joan, Steve, Carla, Raul, Karam and Archana – September 12, 2015.



Above: On Saturday, September 19, 2015, I made a number of new friends when my friend Pete invited me to join him and his friends at a street party in downtown Minneapolis. From left: Peter, Bret, Tim, Jim, Chris, Sarah, Pete and Tim.




Summer 2015 Wild Reed posts of note:
Something to Celebrate
In the Garden of Spirituality – Anthony de Mello
Mill City
Interiors
Summer Blooms
Unique . . . Yes, You!
Progressive Catholic Perspectives on the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 Marriage Equality Ruling
Recalling a Visit to the Missions of San Antonio and Remembering Bartolomé de Las Casas, a "Passionate and Prophetic Defender" of the Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
"Can the Klan!"
The Devil (We Think) We Know
LGBT Catholics to Pope Francis: Let Us "Work Together Towards Creating a Church Where All Families Know That We Are Truly Loved and Welcomed"
"I Caught a Glimpse of a God"
Celebrating the Unique and Influential Kate Bush
Prayer of the Week – August 3, 2015
"Say Her Name" Solidarity Action
Remembering Dorothy Day's Response to the U.S. Bombing of Hiroshima
Return to Mill City
For Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Well-Deserved Honor
Kittredge Cherry on the Queer Goddess Origins of the Feast of the Assumption
Remembering Julian Bond, 1940-2015: "Tireless Champion for Civil and Human Rights"
Remembering and Honoring Dorothy Olinger
Love Is Love
Jim Smith on the "Tears of Love and Faith" of LGBTI People and Their Families
The Choice (and Risk) That Is Love
Meanwhile in Cornwall . . .
Rallying in Solidarity with the Refugees of Syria and the World
In Australia, "Something to Celebrate"
Vigiling Against Weaponized Drones
Buffy Sainte-Marie Wins 2015 Polaris Music Prize

See also The Wild Reed's 2015 Queer Appreciation series:
Vittorio Lingiardi on the Limits of the Hetero/Homo Dichotomy
Reclaiming and Re-Queering Pride
Standing with Jennicet Gutiérrez, "the Mother of Our Newest Stonewall Movement"
Questions for Archbishop Kurtz re. the U.S. Bishops' Response to the Supreme Court's Marriage Equality Ruling
Clyde Hall: "All Gay People, in One Form or Another, Have Something to Give to This World, Something Rich and Very Wonderful"
The (Same-Love) Dance Goes On

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Out and About – Summer 2015 (Part I)
Out and About – Spring 2015 (Part I)
Out and About – Spring 2015 (Part II)
Australian Sojourn – March 2015
Out and About – Winter 2014-2015
Out and About – Autumn 2014
Out and About – Summer 2014


Monday, September 21, 2015

Buffy Sainte-Marie Wins 2015 Polaris Music Prize

I'm happy to share the following from the website of the Polaris Music Prize.

Buffy Sainte-Marie has won the 2015 Polaris Music Prize for the album Power In The Blood, besting the nine other albums on the Polaris Short List.

Sainte-Marie performed the songs "Power In The Blood" and "Carry It On" [see below] during her Polaris Gala set.

The Prize, which goes to the best Canadian album of the year based on "artistic merit without regard to genre, sales history or label affiliation," was determined by a Grand Jury of 11 music media professionals drawn from the greater Polaris jury pool of roughly 200 writers, editors, broadcasters, DJs and personalities from across the country.

The 2015 Polaris Music Prize Short List was:

AlvvaysAlvvays
BADBADNOTGOOD and Ghostface KillahSour Soul
BraidsDeep In The Iris
CaribouOur Love
Jennifer CastlePink City
DrakeIf You’re Reading This It’s Too Late
Tobias Jesso Jr.Goon
The New PornographersBrill Bruisers
Buffy Sainte-MariePower In The Blood
Viet CongViet Cong


Congratulations, Buffy!




Above: Buffy at this evening's Polaris Prize gala,
held at the historic Carlu in downtown Toronto.


Reports Billboard magazine:


The 2015 Polaris Music Prize awards began with Buffy Sainte-Marie when she opened the gala awards show in Toronto with two songs, and ended with her album, Power In the Blood, declared the Canadian album of the year.

. . . “I bought everybody’s album and listened to every cut; they’re all so good,” a beaming Saint-Marie said from the stage. “Thank you all so very much. And to the Polaris Prize in general. Just the idea that it’s all genres; it has nothing to do with record sales so there’s no payola. I’ve got an Academy Award and a Golden Globe and a couple Junos and a Gemini Award — this is the only one I’ve ever heard that gives the artist money.

“It’s real important,” she explained, “because it’s become almost impossible for an artist to tour with a band and with instruments. The airlines are just killing us . . . It’s getting so hard to travel now for high school and college sports and music programs with their instruments and their gear . . . so I’m asking the music community, please put your heads into that and figure out a way so not only arts, but also sports can be supported.”

Sainte-Marie is a long-time activist, dating back 50 years, and often uses her time in the spotlight to highlight causes and issues, including Native rights, war and peace, and government greed, which also inspire her songs. Her anti-war anthem “Universal Soldier” has been covered by everyone from Donovan to Chumbawamba and Jake Bugg, and addiction confessional “Cod’ine” by Donovan, Janis Joplin and Courtney Love.

Her new album, Power in the Blood, includes the title track, which is her spin on the Alabama 3 song, and UB40’s “Sing Your Own Song.” She also rerecorded “It’s My Way” from her 1964 album of the same name that prompted Billboard to name her Best New Artist five decades ago.

“The biggest difference between Power In The Blood and other albums that I made . . . is that this one got heard,” she added, thanking her record label True North, management Paquin Entertainment, and her three producers, Chris Burkett, Michael Phillip Wojewoda and Jon Levine.


One of the two songs that Buffy performed tonight at the Polaris gala was "Carry It On," which is actually a reworked version of her 1976 song "Look At the Facts." About "Carry It On," Buffy said the following in a July 2015 interview:

[In my song "Carry It On"] I’m just pointing out that we live in this incredible world and yet, because of human boneheadedness, we are under threat of shooting ourselves in the foot. It’s not something to be afraid of. It’s something just to step up to. You know, it’s like doing the dishes; you’ve got to do it all the time or it piles up on you. I know that it's down home and folksy, but that’s kind of my attitude to the world. I’m not a combatant, at all. I’m really into alternative ways of looking at things. It comes naturally to me to do so and then to try to pass that on to people who are being advertised to death and conned in every which way. Buy this, buy that. Life is simpler than that. . . . It isn’t money that makes the world go around. I really believe that. That is the corporate hallucination by which we are controlled. It’s not as if we have to get up in arms and go and fight the world. No. You don’t. No, no. Stay calm and decolonize.


Related Off-site Links:
2015 Polaris Prize Goes to Buffy Sainte-Marie — Along with $50,000 – Nick Patch (The Toronto Star, September 21, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie's Power In the Blood Wins Album of the Year at 2015 Polaris Music Awards – Karen Bliss (Billboard, September 21, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie Wins Polaris Music Prize – Josh O'Kane (The Globe and Mail, September 21, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie Beats Drake to Win Polaris Music PrizeThe Guardian (September 22, 2015).
Oscar Winner Buffy Sainte-Marie Collects the 2015 Polaris Prize – Hugh McIntyre (Forbes, September 22, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie Wins Canada’s Polaris Prize – Andrew Chow (The New York Times, September 22, 2015).
Singing Her Own Song for Decades, Buffy Sainte-Marie Picks Up Prestigious Prize – Deirdre Fulton (Common Dreams, September 22, 2015).
Q&A with Polaris Prize winner Buffy Sainte-Marie – June Chua (Daily Brew, September 23, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie on Winning the Polaris Prize, Viet Cong, and Indigenous Activism – James Wilt (Vice, September 24, 2015).

For The Wild Reed's special series of posts leading-up to the May 12, 2015 release of Power in the Blood, see:
Buffy Sainte-Marie and That "Human-Being Magic"
Buffy Sainte-Marie's Lesson from the Cutting Edge: "Go Where You Must to Grow"
Buffy Sainte-Marie: "Sometimes You Have to Be Content to Plant Good Seeds and Be Patient"
Buffy Sainte-Marie's Power in the Blood

For more of Buffy at The Wild Reed, see:
For Buffy Sainte-Marie, a Well-Deserved Honor
Buffy Sainte-Marie: Singing It and Praying It; Living It and Saying It
Buffy Sainte-Marie: Still Singing with Spirit, Joy, and Passion
Something Special for Indigenous Peoples Day
Buffy Sainte-Marie: "The Big Ones Get Away"

Recommended Off-site Links:
Blood on the Tracks: An Interview with Living Legend Buffy Sainte-Marie – Stephanie Wong Ken (Bitch Magazine, August 11, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie is Still Doing It Her Way – Sue Zalokar (Street Roots News, July 10, 2015).
The Fierce, Childlike Creativity of Buffy Sainte-Marie – Jacob Blicenstaff (Mother Jones, July 9, 2015).
Buffy Sainte-Marie: It's Her Way – Jim Tobler (Montecristo Magazine, June 15, 2015).
Legendary Native American Singer-Songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie on Five Decades of Music and ActivismDemocracy Now! (May 22, 2015).