Did You Know? (Celtic Session)

That the Celtic session at Alchemy is an open jam session of Celtic musicians?  I assumed they were a group, but during Saturday brunch at Alchemy, the musicians performing such lively and beautiful music are jamming.  Emerald Rae and Bob Jennings often perform together, along with Sean Connor who was missing today, and was replaced by Flynn Cohen, who normally plays the bluegrass session during Sunday brunch.  They are great musicians, just look at the blur of Emerald and Bob’s hands as they play the guitar and violin.  I got to sign some books and meet some new people, including Phil and Lynne who love reading Good Morning Gloucester and going to Alchemy.  Phil it turns out is also a parking angel (bet you never knew there was a parking angel).  He walks down the street with a pocket full of quarters and pops them into meters that are expired to save people from getting tickets.  So there are probably a bunch of GMG readers out there who do not have a ticket to pay thanks to Phil.  Just another example of how great Cape Ann people are.

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com

Did You Know? (My God, How Great Thou Art!)

 

That through the pure outflow of Universal energy, EJ has just secured a gallery space on Rocky Neck at 77 Rocky Neck, G3?  The space is incredibly cool and will feature a Good Morning Gloucester Gallery of artwork by our beloved Joey C., Sharon Lowe and Paul Frontiero.  EJ’s paintings, photos, book, cards, Cape Ann Treasure Boxes, etc. will be there as well as awesome 3d photography by Chris Murray.  There will also be a guest artist exhibit space (see mocked photo above), for 8 guest artists to have 2-week exhibits during the season.  There will also be an exhibit space for three dimensional works, if you are a sculptor, potter, or other three dimensional works artist.  If you are artist or know an artist who might be interested in having an exhibit on Rocky Neck this summer, please visit http://www.khanstudiointernational.com/goodmorninggloucester%20gallery.htm for more info, or email me at khanstudio@comcast.net.  In addition, the studio space will offer affordable printing (notecards and art prints up to 13×19), matting, packaging and framing services for artists.  This service is to allow artists to affordably exhibit and market their work.  The general public and artists who require archival or higher end framing should continue to use the services of Theo at House of the Raven, Ylva at Artemis, or whichever framer you generally use. 

Watch out people, the power of the Universe is driving this, and we are going to rock Rocky Neck this summer!  My God, how great thou art!

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com

Fly Amero ~ This week’s special guest Rocky Kramm @ The Rhumb Line


Prime Rib Specials!
Wednesdays Only!

Hello everyone!

Wednesday, April 27th
Special Guest: ROCKY KRAMM!

One of the Rhumb Line’s most
creative and talented performers!
Dinner with Fly Amero: 8 – 11pm
*Each week features a special, invited musical guest
Dave Trooper’s Kitchen…
Prime Rib Dinner –
 $9.95 (while they last)
Prepared fresh weekly by “Troop”… always good!
Sincerely…
I hope to see you there!  🙂 ~ Fly

CONTACT: SHRED1946@YAHOO.COM

Lunch: Thurs-Sun.

Dinner every night  5pm-10pm  

Closing time 1am

THE RHUMB LINE BAR & RESTAURANT


40 Railroad Ave

Gloucester, MA 10930

 (978) 283-9732 today!

Did You Know? (Jalepeno’s Benefits Susan G. Komen)

 

Liz Dooley pictured with husband, Morgan Crane (you remember, the ones who wouldn’t let winter go).  Well Liz is doing the Susan G. Komen 3 Day Walk for Breast Cancer, and this post is about a fundraiser Jalepeno’s is hosting to help her reach her fundraising goal.

Monday, May 2 – Doors open at 4:30. Live music 6:30 to 9:00 pm. Come anytime.
86 Main Street, Gloucester
http://www.jalapenosgloucester.com/

For those of you who enjoy great Mexican food and LIVE MUSIC, please join us at Jalapeno’s Mexican Restaurant in Gloucester on Monday, May 2. ColdStream*, an acoustic quartet, will be providing entertainment from 6:30 to 9:00 pm. There will also be raffles for Captain Bill’s Whale Watch tickets, an iPod Shuffle & two gift baskets.   

Jalapeno’s will donate 10% of the nights proceeds to Susan G. Komen for the Cure on Liz Dooley’s behalf to help her towards her fundraising goal of $4,300. All proceeds benefit breast cancer health and research.

Doors open at 4:30 until 10 pm. Jalapenos is located at 86 Main Street in downtown Gloucester.

Please spread the word to anyone you know on the North Shore – the more the merrier and the bigger donation to the 3 day!

*ColdStream is a four-piece acoustic band made up of 2 guitarists, a bass player and a mandolin player. They specialize in three and four part harmonies. Their music ranges from soft rock to pop, soul, Irish, Americana, country, English folk and classic rock. They are a staple in the southern New Hampshire restaurant circuit playing to warm receptions everywhere.

There is no cover charge, so anyone who likes live music and good food will be benefiting a good cause by just showing up!!!

Best,

Liz
 

2009, 2010, 2011!
http://www.the3day.org/goto/LizzieD

Five Unique Species Of Birds In One Field Of Vision Down The Dock

What I failed to mention was that there were two adult eider just to left of my frame.  Incredible coincidence having all these birds together.

Did You Know? (Lanesville Community Center)

Photos by E.J. Lefavour

That until about 1942, the Lanesville Community Center building was the Ahola Dairy Barn?  The Lanesville Community Center was founded in 1954 by a forward thinking group of neighbors who purchased the old dairy barn to use as a gathering place for the residents of Lanesville, and it remains a prized possession of the community. Consisting of a main building sitting on 2.7 acres of recreational green space and managed by a board of directors, its purpose is to assist, encourage, promote, and undertake such activities as will contribute towards the educational advancement of adults and children in the community in the areas of art, local history, agriculture, and emergency preparedness, and advance the social, recreational, physical, moral, spiritual, and cultural lives of its citizens. The Center has been the site of many a pig roast and clam bake, political meeting and square dance, as well as a haunted house at Halloween.  Historian, Barbara Erkkila who wrote Hammers on Stone: A History of Cape Ann Granite and A History of Lane’s Cove, was the past secretary of the LCC and tracked all events held there for a period of about 40 years.  The records are now in the archives at the Cape Ann Museum. 

The Center is in the final stages of some pretty major improvements, funded by a $15,800 CDBG Grant from HUD through the City of Gloucester, and supplemented by a 60th Anniversary Capital Campaign.  They have installed 2 new handicap accessible baths and a new kitchen area, and are currently finishing the new concrete slab with radiant heat floors.  Pictured are volunteers Dave and Randy Young, Butch Roth and Jim Flint.  Butch Roth created the stars in the floor, which will become memorial stars, the first being for Helen Jacobson who passed this winter at the age of 92.  $1,000 in memorials was raised in her name.  Jim Flint (you remember Jim from the Sacred Heart Church), has been the President of the LCC for four years, and expects that Phase 1 of the work will be completed by May 1.  The Center will then be available to rent (at very reasonable rates) for weddings, parties, funerals, meetings, etc.  The Center is also used for ward meetings and is the voting location for Ward 4-2, and is free for community service events.  Art in Lanesville in August and the Lanesville Music Festival in September are also held at the Center.

The LCC is always looking for volunteers, so if you live in the area and want to help, or if you are interested in renting the space for a function or meeting, visit their website at http://www.lanesvillecommunitycenter.org/ for contact and rental info, and check out the video of Jim in the buff!

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com

Peg O’Malley Wants You To Know That Addison Gilbert Hospital is in Imminent Danger


Addison Gilbert Hospital is in imminent danger

image

NOW is the time YOU must act.

This coming Tuesday, April 26 at 7PM at Gloucester City Hall

Presentation to City Council by Peg O’Malley RN

Partners for Addison Gilbert Hospital

    Northeast Health (owner of Beverly Hospital and AGH) is actively involved in negotiations for a sale or merger with NO GUARANTEES that a full-service ER at AGH will be preserved.  Their final decision on which organization (Lahey, BI/Deaconess, Vanguard, or Steward) to go with is expected within a matter of weeks.

    That decision will determine if AGH lives or dies.  We must make it crystal clear to all "players" that AGH must remain open with all the services we need.

    The Gloucester City Council and Mayor Kirk, along with the Rockport Selectmen and Citizens at the Town Meeting, have recently passed and sent (to Northeast Trustees, the Attorney General, the Commissioner of Public Health, and the four potential "partners") resolutions demanding a written guarantee,from Northeast and any future owner, that at a minimum, all 8 services legally required for a full service ER at AGH will be protected.

    Now, It’s YOUR turn.

    By being at City Hall Tuesday night, you will demonstrate to Northeast and everyone else, that the people of Cape Ann stand united in demanding that AGH will be protected.

    You don’t want to wake up someday soon to read in the Gloucester Times that AGH is closing and ask "Why didn’t anybody tell me?"   You’ve been warned while you can still DO SOMETHING about it.

    Because this is a presentation, the Council’s rules dictate that I’m the only one allowed to speak about AGH at this meeting.    I will certainly ask that an OPEN MEETING for EVERYONE to speak on AGH be scheduled very soon.  I urge each of you to personally contact the City Councilors to make the same request.

    Bring your kids, your spouse, your relatives, friends and neighbors.  All Cape Ann people should attend.

For more info, call 283-9911 or email pego56@comcast.net

Happy Easter

Photos and Video by E.J. Lefavour

Out of the sad and forlorn mist, the sun rose in all its glory and magnificence this morning.  Wishing everyone abundant blessings this Easter Day, including chocolate bunnies that are not hollow.  These are some photos and a video of the Annisquam Village Church sunrise service at Squam Rock.  It was quite magnificent and magical.  The bagpipe added a special touch, and the purple beam of light captured by the camera coming from the rising sun was amazing.  Did you know that the color used in the sanctuary for most of Lent is purple, red violet, or dark violet? These colors symbolize both the pain and suffering leading up to the crucifixion of Jesus as well as the suffering of humanity and the world under sin.  But purple is also the color of royalty, and so anticipates through the suffering and death of Jesus the coming resurrection and hope of newness that will be celebrated in the Resurrection on Easter Sunday.  At one point, a flock of 5 herons circled in the sky above the congregation.  Pure magic.

T. S. Eliot Quote Of The Week From Greg Bover

image

April 19, 2011“April is the cruellest month” from The Wasteland, 1915

T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)

Though born in St. Louis , Eliot’s family had New England roots reaching back to the Salem witch trials and deep into Harvard yard. He attended Milton Academy and spent summers on Cape Ann (see The Dry Salvages), later studying at Harvard, Oxford , and the Sorbonne. In later life he renounced both Unitarianism and his American citizenship in favor of Anglicanism and the United Kingdom . Eliot is often cited as the greatest modern poet, and The Wasteland as one of the most important poems, of the 20th century.

Greg Bover

PS As far as I can discover, Eliot spelled "cruelest" with two L’s in the original.

Gregory R. Bover

Did You Know? (Church of the Sacred Heart)

 

That Mass was first celebrated in Lanesville in 1850, and that services were held for several years in Village Hall?   The Sacred Heart Church was erected between Lanesville and Bay View in 1876.  Rev. Thomas Barry, officiating also at Rockport, had charge of the church for several years.  Sunday school was organized in 1855. Mary Eva Phillips (1913 – 2010) was active in the Catholic Church, a member of the Carmelite order and a Eucharistic minister at the Sacred Heart Church in Lanesville. 

The Church was decommissioned in 2005 and purchased by Geoffrey Richon.  In 2006, Jim Flint was visiting from Seattle with some friends living in Salem and saw an ad for a church for sale.  He had been searching for a church to buy in Seattle.  Instead he found and fell in love with the Sacred Heart Church and purchased it from Richon in 2006.  These are some before and after photos of the Sacred Heart Church (the front of the Church as it used to look, the back of the church now with Jim in the photo, the back of the church as it used to look, one of the stained glass windows as it still remains, a very old photo of the alter and another shortly before decommissioning, the view now looking toward the kitchen window where the alter used to be, and the reverse view looking away from where the alter was – in this shot you can see some of Les Bartlett’s scroll quarry photos on exhibit; the last photo is of two pieces of wood that Jim uncovered during renovations behind the old stairs.  This to me was the coolest part.  The pieces of wood are written on with pencil.  The larger one says: “Joseph P. Hart 1877, Lanesville, Mass. Carpenter & Joiner (Dec. 14) Verry cold and windy day.  No snow on the ground.  I am building the stairs today. Yours _____ (can’t make that word out), J.P. Hart”.  The smaller piece of wood simply says: “J.P. Hart Lanesville Decr. 14, 1877”.  I just love this old message in a bottle kind of thing where someone long gone has left behind a part of him or herself to be discovered at some unknown future date.  I’ve tried, unsuccessfully so far to find out anything about our carpenter, Joseph P. Hart. 

Jim Flint has continued the community spirit of the structure by hosting monthly potluck and game (scrabble, cards, etc.) nights to allow the community to enjoy the majestic and beautiful space he has so lovingly created.  Jim says that when he is sitting outside at the front of the house on Washington Street/127, he still occasionally catches people crossing themselves as they drive by.

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com

Pathways For Children Events April 26th and May 9th

Pathways for Children, located at 29 Emerson Avenue in Gloucester, is offering a free parent workshop, Caring for Ourselves~ Caring for Others on May 9th from 6:00 – 8:00PM.  Nationally recognized parent educator, Dr. Lonnie Carton, author of “No is a Love Word”, will teach techniques to reduce stress & improve health through yoga.  We are all able to best care for children when we remember to care for ourselves!  Dinner and a copy of “No is a Love Word” are included.  Please join us for this special evening.  Preregistration is required.  Please contact Amy Larsen @978.281.2400 x 120, alarsen@pw4c.org or sign up at the Pathways reception desk.

Pathways for Children welcomes you to join us in Addison Gilbert Hospital’s Longan Room, Gloucester on Tuesday, April 26th from 6:30 to 8:00PM to learn techniques to calm any new baby’s cries and help your baby sleep longer with best-selling author & pediatrician Dr. Harvey Karp’s Happiest Baby on the Block method.  To register or for more information contact Amy Larsen @978.281.2400 x 120 or alarsen@pw4c.org.

Safe Boating in Cape Ann Waters

Date: Tuesday Evenings 5 Sessions from April 26th to May 24th

Time: 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

Event: Safe Boating in Cape Ann Waters

Place: Essex Shipbuidling Museum ( 66 Main Street , Essex , MA )

            Waterline Center

Safe Boating in Cape Ann Waters at the Essex Shipbuilding Museum
Essex Shipbuilding Museum will offer a 5 session Safe Boating course from April 26th to May 24, on Tuesday evenings from 6 to 8 PM. The course will be taught by Gardi Winchester II of Gloucester and will cover topics such as emergency preparedness, line handling and knots, and navigational hazards, all in the context of the waters of the Cape Ann area.

For more information or to register please visit our website: www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.org
or email: education@essexshipbuildingmuseum.org.

Essex Historical Society and Shipbuilding Museum

978-768-7541 http://www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.org

WAAAAAAA! The Unintentional Bird

WAAAAAAAA! Unintentional Bird!

The Montreal Announcers whinng about an Unitenional Bird?

Where are they when a Few of their Fans BOO the National anthem of the USA!

I’ve been guilty of a few unintentional Birds myself. And to those who have received them, I’m truly sorry.

GO B’s!!

 

 

Catch: At the Tusinski Gallery

Catch, at the Tusinski Gallery until May 22nd.

Catch, a show at the Tusinski Gallery on Main Street in Rockport, opens today, Earth Day, and runs through May 22nd.

Catch features the work of artist Nina Samoiloff, as she collects and collates the pieces she finds on the beaches of Rockport (documented on her blog, also called Catch) before creating sculptures and photographs of her finds. But the artist’s beach finds aren’t the usual gallery suspects, the carefully edited and crafted work involving natural driftwood, shells, or even beach glass. Catch features items of a different sort, all of them man-made — the artist even uses cut lumber, washed up on the beach, instead of naturally-occurring driftwood in her pieces. The show is a sobering and impressive collaboration between man and nature, truly an expression of the time we live in, for better or for worse. A time in which we make permanent stuff to use for a very temporary moment — like water bottles, for instance — before throwing this same stuff away, much of which ends up in the eternal ocean before rolling back onto the shore — and back into our lives.

My sculpture and my obsessive morning ritual of picking up of plastic on the beach (which I document and post on my blog Catch) are symbiotic, without the one the other would not exist. Both are discarded products of a consumer society, and both are a challenge to me as to how to present these items artfully to the viewer. The beach lumber sculptures are a combination of my industrial design education and my desire to recycle. Each piece of lumber speaks to me, it’s shape, texture, color or the nails protruding from it have the potential to become part of a bigger finished sculpture.

– Nina Samoiloff