John Lewis's picture
May, 24th 2013

Route 50 Detours

Baltimore magazine

Arts lovers on their way to the beach this weekend have a few reasons to pull off Route 50. That’s because, as noted in our April issue, the Eastern Shore continues to shed its rep as a cultural backwater—Mencken called it a “forlorn corner” of Maryland that “succumbed to its poor white trash, who determine its ideas and run its affairs”—and emerge as a viable, and vital, spot for art and culture. Here are a few suggestions…

turrell easton

Don’t miss the James Turrell exhibit—yes, that James Turrell—at Easton's Academy Art Museum. Turrell, a 1984 MacArthur genius grant recipient, is considered one of our greatest living artists. He’s known primarily for a decades-long effort to transform Roden Crater into a monumental work of art near his Arizona home. Turrell also lives, part-time, in Oxford, about a 20-minute drive from the Easton gallery, where he’s installed one of...

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May, 16th 2013

John Waters at the Howard Theatre

Baltimore magazine

John Waters’s comic genius lit up D.C.’s Howard Theatre last night. Appearing a half hour ahead of the scheduled 8:00 start—in the Q&A afterward, Waters said he was surprised to hear himself introduced at 7:30 and had to hustle onstage—he immediately paid tribute to the venue’s storied past and cited the many iconic African-American musicians/bandleaders that played the Howard back in the day. He noted the restored theater’s upscale look, comparing it to the dining room in The Poseidon Adventure, and mentioned attending shows at the Royal in Baltimore. Looking around the Howard, in its present state, makes it even more baffling that our city tore down the Royal, but that’s a rant for another day.

Over the next 90 minutes, Waters delighted the crowd—a great mix of young/old, black/white, gay/straight—with a deft mix of bawdy humor, sharp observations, and intellectual bravado. I can’t think of any performer who gives his audience more credit for being smart and open-minded. It's a winning combination that allows him to riff about sexual fetishes, race relations, Justin Bieber—who once told...

John Lewis's picture
May, 11th 2013

Life-Changing Art: Toshi Reagon

Baltimore magazine

What piece of art changed your life? How did it affect you?


In 1976, the American Folk Life Festival lasted all summer on the mall. My mother (Bernice Johnson Reagon) produced a section called the African Diaspora. There was a church building with open sides; a front porch—Florida Ave Grill prepared the food; a winding lane, like a train of booths; and the booths had chefs cooking food, people doing hair, basket weavers, sculptors, and Flora Molton, the most amazing street singer, had a booth. I saw Black Music from all over the world: blues, jazz, folk, fife and drum, musicians and dancers from Ghana, Senegal, and Nigeria, and pop-and-lock contemporary dancers. Sweet Honey In The Rock sang on the front porch. You could see this every day. It was incredible.


It let me know I was incredible. The sky was the limit. I learned the amazing ways people figured out how to live and how to craft a necessary thing—a basket, a stew, a...

John Lewis's picture
May, 10th 2013

The Genius of American Idiot

Baltimore magazine

My 13-year-old son, Levi, walked into the Hippodrome a bit warily for Green Day’s American Idiot musical. He expected watered-down versions of favorite songs servicing a Broadway-friendly narrative that stripped away the original album’s power. It didn’t help matters that he’d seen Green Day at the Patriot Center last month and was blown away by Billie Joe and crew. Well, guess what? Levi approves of the play, and I wholeheartedly agree.

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John Lewis's picture
May, 8th 2013

?uestlove Gushes for Globe Poster

Baltimore magazine

Okayplayer recently posted this video of Nardwuar presenting ?uestlove with a Motortown Revue poster by Globe, the legendary show poster firm that operated in Baltimore for 80+ years. As you can see, it's a direct hit. I'm not surprised, because a) ?uestlove is such a music geek and b) I pretty much did the same thing in 2006. At the outset of an interview prior to a Roots show at Ramshead, I gave ?uestlove an Otis Redding Globe poster, and he was truly awed by it—as in jaw dropping, "where did you get this?" awe. And like in this video, he immediately began riffing about one of the obscure opening acts.

If you'd like to check out more of these amazing and awesome posters, head over to the Creative Alliance and see their current Globe exhibition—it includes the Motortown poster!—curated by MICA grad student Chloe Helton-Gallagher.

And here's that Nardwuar vid...

...

John Lewis's picture
May, 8th 2013

Neutral Milk Hotel Coming to Baltimore

Baltimore magazine

You might recall that Neutral Milk Hotel's Jeff Mangum played two nights at St. John's 2640 Space in 2011. Well, he must have liked the venue a bunch, because it appears NMH will be kicking off its North American tour at 2640 on October 11th. All of Pitchfork nation will be turning out for this one, and tickets go on sale this Friday at noon (at Red Emma's, Charmington's Cafe, and through missiontix.com). Elf Power opens. I see local legends Half Japanese will be opening a handful of other dates, including an October 25 show in Asheville with Daniel Johnston. Wow.  

John Lewis's picture
May, 3rd 2013

Kix at Merriweather Tonight

Baltimore magazine

Kix, Baltimore's best-known "hair metal" band, kicks off the M3 Fest at Merriweather Post Pavilion this evening. WASP co-headlines tonight's show, while Bret Michaels, Twisted Sister, Great White, and many others are on tomorrow's bill. Although Kix got lumped with all the hair metal groups in the 1980s, that wasn't entirely fair, because Kix had enough punk intensity, Stones swagger, and good humor to transcend that limited genre. The band's new Live in Baltimore CD/DVD convincingly drives home that point, and you can check out my review in our May issue. The M3 Fest also promises two days of amazing people watching! 

John Lewis's picture
May, 3rd 2013

Beach House Adds Area Show

Baltimore magazine

Fresh off last week's rapturous homecoming gig at the Lyric, Beach House has confirmed a June 6th show at D.C.'s 9:30 Club. The Lyric concert was perfect in every way, from Lower Dens' and Yo La Tengo's lively opening sets to Beach House's sublime show and pitch-perfect song selection. They get extra points for the artful lighting, designed by guitarist Alex Scally.

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May, 2nd 2013

CenterStage in NYTimes, on PBS

Baltimore magazine

CenterStage’s The Raisin Cycle is already getting national media attention, in today’s New York Times and on PBS. An ambitious undertaking by the theater’s artistic director Kwame Kwei-Armah, it nods to Lorraine Hansberry’s classic A Raisin in the Sun with rotating repertory productions of the Tony-winning Clybourne Park, written by Bruce Norris as a response to Hansberry’s play, and Beneatha’s Place, which Kwei-Armah wrote in response to Clybourne Park.

“I find Clybourne Park to be a brilliant play, all that we want a modern play to be—a magnificent catalyst for a debate,” Kwei-Armah told The Times. “However—and I don’t think Bruce set out to do this— but connotationally, the play says that whites build and blacks destroy.”

The piece praises Kwei-Armah for taking such a bold artistic gamble, noting that it’s possible because his...

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April, 29th 2013

Lazarus Announces Retirement

Baltimore magazine

MICA President Fred Lazarus has announced that he’ll be retiring next year after 35 years on the job. During that time, Lazarus has utterly transformed the school, upping its national stature and developing strong community ties at home. Under Lazarus, the school expanded significantly and turned the Station North area into a hub of artistic activity with great commercial potential.

In a memo to colleagues, Lazarus said that when he became president in 1978, he promised to stay for three to five years, a stint he exceeded by three decades. He also thanked the college for “taking a risk” on someone who wasn’t an artist and had no previous experience in higher education. “I am even color blind,” he noted.

Longtime MICA Trustee George Bunting, Jr. praised Lazarus’s visionary leadership. "My association with Fred goes back to 1978 when I chaired the search committee that selected him as MICA's president, and it was one of the best decisions in which I ever have participated," Bunting said in a press release. "Since then, Fred's vision, energy, and talents have transformed MICA into a national leader in arts education, a world-class institution, and one of Baltimore's true jewels. His leadership has inspired me, and...