Piano Playin’ Preacher & Willie “Loco” Rock Dog Bar tonight

If you’ve never seen Preacher Jack, now’s your chance.  Imagine the guy from this video and Willie “Loco” on the same stage.  Whew!  Get ready to ROCK!

And if that weren’t enough, T MAX, is releasing his new CD SHAKE!  All tonight, all free.  At the Dog Bar.

For those of you who can’t fit into the Dog Bar, there’s lots of other great music tonight too.  See full music lineup here.

Walls are going up at 11 Pleasant Street!

Pictures coming tomorrow, but if you’ve got some time and construction skills you can still come down and help until about 3:00 today!

Check out this video if you wanna know what’s going on…

“Art, Rock’s!” Compass Rose

“Art, Rock’s!”

Compass Rose

 Clue on the 6:30pm post tonight 04/14/2012

Gloucester Webcam of The Day- Gardner Winchester Computer Services Gloucester Harbor Cam

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This Webcam and more can be found at www.gloucesterwebcam.com

This www.gloucesterwebcam.com local webcam portal project was an idea I had last year to have as many webcams streaming from local businesses or organizations as possible which highlight the incredible vistas that we as people that live and work here get to enjoy each and every day.

The idea was to have the organization install the webcam, have them embed the webcam feed on their own websites as well and have a link to each business website on the Gloucester webcam portal website to showcase their business as well.

Tim Blakeley from Gloucester Bytes provided the initial installation at ridiculously cheap cost because he believed in the project.

Community Stuff Saturday

 

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Book review: Joe Garland’s Lone Voyager

Mike the Truck Driver, who lobsters out of Salem when he’s not on the road, reviews and reads from Joe’s biography of Howard Blackburn.

Not exactly safe for work. Mike likes salty language (what local doesn’t?), but his review of Joe’s book is admiring and sincere.

A distinct podcast voice!

link:

http://seakayakingdotnet.podbean.com/2012/04/11/mike-the-truck-driver-reviews-lone-voyayger-joe-garlands-biography-of-howard-blackburn/

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Musician, singer and storyteller David Coffin and his daughter Linnea Coffin perform songs from the maritime tradition in this family program for all ages. Following the performance, children and their families are invited to visit the CAM Activity Center from 12:00 to 2:00 p.m. Spin the ship’s wheel, examine maritime artifacts, complete a map quest and create watercolor paintings of ships at sea. A great way to kick off school vacation week! Free and open to the public; sponsored by the Goldhirsh Foundation.

David has performed throughout New England since 1980. Widely known for his rich baritone voice, he is particularly adept at getting the crowd to join him in song. His impressive collection of musical instruments includes concertinas, recorders, penny-whistles, bombards, gemshorns, cornamuse, shawm, rauschphieffe (or, as he explains, "generally anything that requires a lot of hot air"). Many of these instruments are used in his interactive school enrichment program "Music from the King’s Court: Exploring the Early Winds." Linnea Coffin is a performer in her own right; as a dancer she featured prominently in this past year’s Christmas Revels as the skeleton and has danced at Carnegie Hall. She continues to be willing to sing with her Dad.

Introduced in September 2005, Saturday Showcase is designed to bring families and children into the Museum to share enriching experiences. The focus is on the visual and performing arts, with strong ties to Cape Ann. Painters, musicians, dancers and storytellers are among the artists who have presented programs.


Two new training classes offered at the Y, lifeguard Training and Water Fitness Instructor Course-

 

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Tourism Commision Meeting Tuesday, April 17, 2012 – 6:00 p.m.

GLOUCESTER CITY COUNCIL
9 Dale Avenue, Gloucester, MA 01930
Office (978) 281-9720              Fax (978) 282-3051

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* WORKSHOP *
Sponsored by
The Ordinances & Administration Committee
A Standing Committee of the Gloucester City Council
Tuesday, April 17, 2012 – 6:00 p.m.
Kyrouz Auditorium – City Hall
AGENDA
(Items May be taken out of order at the discretion of the Committee)

    CC2012-015 (Hardy/Cox) Amend GCO Chapter 2, Article V, Sec. 2-471 to 2-476 re: Tourism           Commission

Videos- Gloucester’s Compass Rose Custom Tattoo With Owner Matt Maguire

Check out Their Website Here and Alicia Pensarosa’s previous coverage of Compass Rose Here

Compass Rose Custom Tattoo Is located at 35 Main Street Gloucester.

Cape Ann Brewing Just Killing It With This Tasty Haddock Sangie

Joey C Tip of the day-

Hold the tah tah sauce and order a side of cocktail sauce to spice this bad boy up.   Then drizzle a little of that killer diller home made hot sauce they got behind the bar and you’ve got yourself a fan-freaking-tastic Haddock sandwich.  Boom!

Big ups for the nice crispy fries as well.

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Halibut State Park- A Great Take

I don’t know how I’ve gone 44 years of my life without ever going to Halibut State Park.  It is a perfect day adventure for next to zero cost.  Pack a picnic lunch and just go.  Go with your lover, go with your family, go with your friends, go with your dog or just go alone.

It is a GEM.

Here’s a link- Halibut State Park

Then and Now

A few weeks ago I received a wonderful gift from Terry Hutchinson of Freeport, Maine. It was a collection of post cards from 1909 to the mid-twenties of Gloucester and vicinity – mostly Annisquam. Terry grew up in the Riverdale section of town and is an avid reader of GMG.

I think Terry’s gift should be shared, so I will post the cards (funny how that has a different meaning now) along with current views of the same scene.

The first is identified as “Town Landing, Gloucester” and I’m pretty sure it’s Harbor Cove. Let me know if you disagree.

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A Full House at Essex Shipbuilding Museum

 
A full house on Wednesday evening at the Essex Shipbuilding Museum’s Waterline Center.

A talk by Robert Booth…
“When Salem Ruled the World, 1790-1830”
Most readers know Salem only for the city’s notorious witch trials. But years later it became a very different city, one that produced America’s first millionaire (still one of history’s 75 wealthiest men) and boasted a maritime trade that made it the country’s richest city. Westward expansion and the industrial revolution would eventually erode Salem’s political importance, but it was a shocking murder and the scandal that followed which led at last to its fall from national prominence.


Robert Booth, a native of Marblehead, Massachusetts, grew up on salt water, racing sailboats, and working as a lobsterman. He is an authority on historic architecture and maritime culture, having reasearched the histories of hundreds of houses and their occupants, from Nantucket to Maine. He helped to rescue America’s last surviving Revolutionary War privateering base, which was moved from Marblehead to Derby Wharf in the Salem Maritime Historic Site, a federal park devoted to seafaring. He works as executive director of the Center for Clinical Social Work, a national advocacy and education association for members of the largest mental-health-care profession in the country. His guidebook, Boston’s Freedom Trail, has stayed in print for nearly thirty years, and he writes about history for the online version of The Boston Globe. He is Curator Emeritus of the Pickering House (1664) of Salem and is the founding director of the online Salem History Society. He resides in Marblehead with his wife and children.

Booth’s latest book…

Death of an Empire: The Rise and Murderous Fall of Salem, 
America’s Richest City (Thomas Dunne Books, St. Martin’s Press, 2011)
“A complex and well-researched yarn, Death of an Empire chronicles the little-known history of this relatively brief period of wealth and good fortune for a Massachusetts seafaring center, along with its economic downfall amid the rise of industrialization in the United States. It also recounts a lethal conspiracy and scandal that robbed Salem of whatever remaining luster was left after the city’s golden age. Booth, a local historian – and sometime lobsterman – grew up in Marblehead and knows the territory of which he writes with authority.”
–The Boston Globe

http://www.amazon.com/Death-Empire-Murderous-Americas-Richest/dp/product-description/0312540388

K-9 “Mako” joins Gloucester Police Department

Mako from the Czech  Republic  joined the Gloucester Police about 7 months ago.  Officer Genove and Mako  gave a demonstration to pre-school class outside the police station.

 

 

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