John Lewis's picture
June, 15th 2013

Maryland Traditions Festival Today!

Baltimore magazine

Two years ago, we cited the Maryland Traditions Folklife Festival as "Best Arts Showcase" in our Best Of Baltimore issue. The Zionaires, a local gospel group (pictured), stole the show in 2011. Today, you can head down to the Creative Alliance in Highlandtown and see what all the fuss is about. This year's fest features a legendary doo-wop group (The Swalllows), the city's best jazz band (Lafayette Gilchrist and the New Volvanoes), a cameo by a jazz master (saxophonist Carl Grubbs), a bluegrass band (The Carroll County Ramblers), Cambodian musicians and dancers, a Guatemalan marimba group, and a Native American dance troupe. There will also be workshops for egg decorating, yarn painting, pinata making, blacksmithing, and letterpress printing. And you can grab a slice of Smith Island cake! Did I mention that's it's free? What else do you need to know? Get down there—it starts at 11 am, and goes until 7 pm. 

John Lewis's picture
June, 14th 2013

Blau, Winik at Ivy Tonight

Baltimore magazine

Local authors Jessica Anya Blau and Marion Winik celebrate the release of their new books—The Wonder Bread Summer and Highs in the Low Fifties, respectively—at the Ivy Bookshop tonight. Both books make good beach reads, though they're hilarious in wildly different ways. I guarantee you'll never look at a bag of Wonder Bread the same way! Tonight's festivities begin at 7 pm. 

John Lewis's picture
June, 12th 2013

Byrne-ing Down the Meyerhoff

Baltimore magazine

David Byrne makes something of a homecoming tomorrow when he returns to Baltimore for a show with St. Vincent at the Meyerhoff. Byrne grew up in Arbutus and graduated from Landsdowne High School before going global with Talking Heads. Since that band combusted, he’s launched a record label, made a bunch of cool artwork, written an excellent book, continued to make good music, and rebuffed offers for a hits heavy/cash grab tour with his old band mates. The man exudes integrity and can still bring the heat, as this clip with St. Vincent (see below) makes clear. Although the pair’s Love This Giant album felt tentative, they seem to have hit their stride on this tour. For more evidence of that, download the free Brass Tactics EP. 

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John Lewis's picture
June, 12th 2013

Life-Changing Art: Darryl Jenifer (Bad Brains, White Mandingos)

Baltimore magazine

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

The Temptations’ In a Mellow Mood album opened my musical sensibilities, especially songs like “A Taste of Honey,” “Young Lovers,” and “Ole Man River.” Imma pop that album on right now and learn.

Most folks know Darryl Jenifer as bassist for Bad Brains, the legendary punk band out of D.C. He’s also a member of The White Mandingos, an intriguing group that also includes Sacha Jenkins and the alt-rapper Murs (real name Tyrone White, hence the White Mandingos band name). When asked what each member brings to the group, Jenifer says that “Sach brings the salt, Murs brings the pepper, and I bring the Bad Brains FVK (“Fearless Vampire Killers”) Extreme/Fire Burn Babylon Hot Sauce. Together, we create a spectacular platter.” The Mandingos’ debut record, The Ghetto...

John Lewis's picture
June, 7th 2013

Whirligig Artist Remembered

Baltimore magazine

I called Rebecca Hoffberger after hearing that visionary artist Vollis Simpson, creator of AVAM’s signature whirligig, had passed away at the age of 94. Hoffberger had just returned from the funeral, driving all day to North Carolina and back, but she was definitely in the mood to talk about Simpson, a longtime friend.

“After seeing his whirligigs, I couldn’t imagine anything else as the centerpiece of our campus,” said Hoffberger, who puts Simpson’s Whirligig Farm in North Carolina on a par with Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers and Leonard Knight’s Salvation Mountain. “He’s one of the three greats in America, when it comes to scale and original production.”

Hoffberger said Simpson was beloved in his home state, and people lined up to get into the funeral. Many in attendance talked about being profoundly moved by Simpson’s work, and they also spoke of his integrity and keen sense of humor. “He seemed to get happier and happier as he got older,” said Hoffberger. “He was a great artist and a great man.”

Next time you're in Federal Hill, stop by AVAM and pay your respects. And if you're heading south later this year,...

John Lewis's picture
June, 4th 2013

Laura Lippman, Sujata Massey at the Ivy Tonight

Baltimore magazine

Two of the city's finest writers, Laura Lippman and Sujata Massey, will be at The Ivy Bookshop this evening. Massey will be talking to Lippman about her latest book, And When She Was Good, which just came out in paperback. It's about time we stop pigeonholing Lippman and Massey as mystery writers. They're great writers, period. And Massey has an intriguing book coming out in August, a historical novel called The Sleeping Dictionary. Tonight's event starts at 7 pm.

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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