What? Is it still summer?

There’s so much music and fun tonight and tomorrow that you’d think it was the height of the tourist season.  Click here for the latest updates.

TONIGHT, Saturday, September 28, 2013

ROOTS 66 1:00 pm Listen to ROOTS 66 ROOTS 66 americana classic rock blues

8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

2:00 pm  GARY DOLINSKI

Solo
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

Orville Giddings 2:30 pm Listen to Orville Giddings ORVILLE GIDDINGS

with Ken Steiner
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

3:00 pm  QUENTIN CALLAWAERT

Solo
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

3:30 pm  ERIC WILSON TRIO

Bluegrass with Eric Wilson, John Hicks & Jon Stone
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

4:00 pm  FOZZIE HILL

with Rocky Kramm
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

Michael O'Leary 4:00 pm Listen to Michael O'Leary MICHAEL O’LEARY

Celtic Music Sunset Sail. Sailing ‘seisiun’ of trad songs ‘n tunes on the Lannon. schooner.org
63 Rogers Street, Gloucester, MA

Phone: 978-281-6634

4:30 pm  LISA MARIE

with Silvertone Steve
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

Dan King 5:00 pm DAN KING

Acoustic Roots Session with Dan King till 7pm
75 Essex Avenue, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: (978) 283-2122

FREE SHOW
5:30 pm  ALEK RAZDAN AND A-TRAIN

Starts at 5:20
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

6:30 pm  DR. IRON CROW & HIS TRAVELING MEDICINE MUSIC SHOW

Starts @ 6:15 featuring Ric Saint Germain, Frank Hawks, Ken Steiner and Tod Ellyson
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

Honky Tonk Women of Gloucester 7:00 pm HONKY TONK WOMEN OF GLOUCESTER

HONKY TONK WOMEN of Gloucester support Mayor Carolyn Kirk for re-election, fundraiser dance
Rogers St., Gloucester, MA
7:30 pm  GERRY RYAN & CHARLIE ORTOLANI

Indoors. Advance Tickets $12 @ Gloucester Music & Plum Cove Grind, $15 at the door
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

8:00 pm  CRAZY MOON

6 Wonson Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-758-1210

Cape Ann Symphony 8:00 pm CAPE ANN SYMPHONY

Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique & Dvorak Cello Concerto
36 Lincoln St, Manchester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-281-0543

KBMG 8:00 pm Listen to KBMG KBMG

with J.B. Amero Evening Dance Party – Advance $12 at Door $15
8 Vulcan Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-381-9522

8:00 pm  MEGAN MCKENZIE BAND

Bridge Deck – Pop/Rock/Soul
75 Essex Avenue, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: (978) 283-2122

FREE SHOW
8:00 pm  MUSIC AT EDEN’S EDGE

Featuring violinist Daniel Stepner
11 Pirates Lane, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-270-4463

8:30 pm  JOE THOMAS

2 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-879-4622

FREE SHOW
9:00 pm  WILDFIRE

27-29 Harbor Loop, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-283-6342

FREE SHOW
9:00 pm  FUNBUCKET

65 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-281-6565

FREE SHOW
9:00 pm  MIKE O’CONNELL BAND

blues/rock/jam
25 Rogers Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-281-0223

FREE SHOW
Groove Therapy 9:30 pm Listen to Groove Therapy GROOVE THERAPY

40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA

Phone: 978-283-9732

FREE SHOW

TOMORROW, Sunday, September 29, 2013

3:00 pm  MANHATTAN SHORT FILM FESTIVAL

a unique experience, extending beyond its headquarters in New York City
37 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966

Phone: 978-546-7391

Barbara and Al Boudreau Jazz 5:00 pm BARBARA AND AL BOUDREAU JAZZ jazz

11 Rogers St., Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: (978) 282-7399

FREE SHOW
5:00 pm  CRAZY MOON

6 Wonson Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-758-1210

6:00 pm  ANNETTE DION

Fundraiser for the Gloucester Docksiders
2 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930

Phone: 978-879-4622

FREE SHOW
Michael O'Leary 6:00 pm Listen to Michael O'Leary MICHAEL O’LEARY

Celtic Music Session, 6-9pm. Trad songs ‘n tunes with string players Bob & Jennifer Strom.
7 Central Street, Manchester, MA

Phone: 978-526-7494

FREE SHOW
Dan King 8:00 pm DAN KING

Open Mic with AnnMarie
40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA

Phone: 978-283-9732

FREE SHOW
The Wilkins Noise 8:00 pm Listen to The Wilkins Noise THE WILKINS NOISE

Joe Wilkins w/ The Royal Suns – Feat. Rory Walsh, Eric Reardon, Scott Noring, and Steve Burke
208 Rantoul Street, Beverly, MA 01915

Phone: 978-524-0005

FREE SHOW

Airstrike ! The Instinct ! The Little Richards ! Hot Lemon ! Radio Control ! The Hive Community Center 11 Pleasant Street, Gloucester, MA

 

 

the hive 9.28

WhenToday
Time6:30pm

Clear 67°F
Description
Airstrike !
http://airstrike.bandcamp.com/

The Instinct !
http://theinstinct.bandcamp.com/

The Little Richards !
http://thelittlerichards.bandcamp.com/

Hot Lemon !

Radio Control !
http://weareradiocontrol.com/
All Ages 5 Bucks Doors at 6 30 pm

October Seacoast Nursing & Rehabilitation Center Newsletter

October Seacoast Nursing & Rehabilitation Center Newsletter

Thank you to the Friends of Seacoast!

The Friends of Seacoast has provided our facility with a new sound system which has enhanced the participation of residents who are hearing impaired in their leisure activities.

The Friends of Seacoast enhance the resident’s lives at the Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation Center with hours of enjoyment by providing the finances needed for the special entertainment, supplies and community outings.

Any and all donations to “The Friends of Seacoast” are gratefully accepted.

FYI- The Cape Ann Museum has provided passes for any Residents their families and staff  from Seacoast who would like to attend the Museum.

The Cape Ann Museum received a grant from “Mass Humanities” and will be offering Seacoast an on going program from September 2013 through June 2014 called  “The Power of Place”

This artistic expression project will include poetry, painting

A museum tour and art demonstrations within the Seacoast facility.

We are looking forward to many upcoming events with the support of the Friends of Seacoast including foliage trips to Turner Hill and to Russell’s Apple Orchid in Ipswich.

Dinner Theater with entertainment and special foods, The Schooner Adventure History Sharing program, weekly concerts and more……

Alison Cox,

Activities Director

Mike Murray’s Gloucester Visit

Hey Joey,   I visited Gloucester once again on Saturday and had great fun.

I sailed in the footsteps of my ancestors on the Thomas E Lannon schooner.

Had a fabulous dinner at Passports and lucked into a block party.

I mingled with locals and truly enjoyed my stay. This is what makes Gloucester so unique.

Now unfortunately I also entered into  the redundant mode. When I first entered Gloucester naturally I stopped in at Oakhill cemetery. 

The grass was mowed this time which was a plus. However, a 40 ft branch that crashed upon a good size section of headstones and completely engulfed them as you entered the cemetery has kept my in need of maintenance visitation streak alive and well.   I don’t know what it is about Gloucester and its lack luster upkeep of cemeteries but apparently they just aren’t important enough for people to care.  Either that or people are just have too much fun to pay attention? 

I will make the notification calls to Malden Catholic Cemetery division but how long would it remain like this if I didn’t visit ? How long has it been like this and has just been mowed around instead of proper maintenance?

I’ve learned to like Gloucester for what it offers in the present and to see it like it truly treats the past.

A Frustrated Gloucester fan

Mike

Raising the sail

They’re Here!

A pro team pulled up, just as I was cooking dinner. Of course I had to go investigate. Lots of different languages being spoken. I should have given them a tour of the Crow's Nest.
A pro team pulled up, just as I was cooking dinner. Of course I had to go investigate. Lots of different languages being spoken. I should have given them a tour of the Crow’s Nest.

Community Stuff 9/28/13

Cape Ann Museum to close for renovations
The Cape Ann Museum will close at 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 29 in preparation for a major renovation project. This transformational project will focus on four areas: updating the building’s infrastructure (mechanical, electrical, plumbing, lighting, fire and security systems) in the older parts of the Museum (1930s – 1960s); architectural enhancements to the interior of the more than 50 year-old spaces (new flooring, ceiling and finishes); capitalizing on underutilized spaces; and reinterpreting and reinstalling the collection in ways that better tell the Cape Ann story.
The Fitz Henry Lane, Davis and Folly Cove Designers galleries will be totally redesigned. By reconfiguring existing spaces, two new galleries have been created: a Central Gallery which will serve as the educational hub of the Museum, a gathering place where visitors are introduced to the Museum and its collections, and the Thacher Island Fresnel Lens Gallery devoted to the newly arrived 10 foot tall, one ton First Order Fresnel Lens. Visitors will greatly benefit from the improved basic amenities, including a wireless environment, a more gracious reception area, an expanded gift shop, personal lockers, and an additional restroom. Boston-based designLAB Architects is responsible for the overall design.
While the Museum will be closed, it will continue to offer a full schedule of programs off-site, often in collaboration with area cultural and educational institutions. Please visit http://www.capeannmuseum.org for current program listings and to keep informed of the progress of this very exciting project.
In many ways, the story of the Museum can be told through its architecture. Founded in 1873, the Museum settled in its first permanent home in the early 1920s. The gracious Federal period building (1804) on “Captain’s Row,” home of Captain Elias Davis, proved a good investment for the Cape Ann Scientific & Literary Society, as the Museum was first known. The Society’s collection grew and in 1930, it added a new gallery to display paintings, furniture and sculpture and an auditorium to accommodate cultural programming for the community. The 1960s brought the addition of a gallery to showcase the Museum’s growing Fitz Henry Lane Collection and another gallery for its maritime collection. The Cape Ann Scientific & Literary Society became the Cape Ann Historical Association. In the late 1980s, the Association purchased an adjacent building and created space for a library/archives, children’s room and a new wing for its maritime collection. A new gallery and sculpture garden were added in 2001. Fast forward to 2013 – The Association is now the Cape Ann Museum and updates to the earliest additions of the Museum are long overdue.
The Cape Ann Museum, located at 27 Pleasant Street in Gloucester, MA, celebrates the art, history and culture of this singular place. In addition to being a preeminent art museum with the single largest collection of paintings by Gloucester native Fitz Henry Lane, it houses an extensive collection of marine and granite industry artifacts and the largest collection of textiles created by the Folly Cove Designers. The Museum welcomes over 20,000 visitors annually.


 

Rockport Community Blood Drive

Sponsored by the Rockport Rotary Club

Friday, September 27 from 1-6 p.m.

Rockport Community House

58 Broadway

For an appointment, please call

1-800 RED CROSS (733-2767)

or visit

redcrossblood.org

Community Photos 9/27/13

Anthony Marks Submits-

Baby On Board, photos from Anthony Marks

IMG_5444IMG_5445Baby On Board

Teegan and her mother loved sailing on the Ardelle.


Curtis Sarkin Submits-

We currently have a rare calico lobster on display in our Aquarium.  Due to the black and orange coloration, we’ve nicknamed her “the Halloween lobster”. 

image-1

Fish on Fridays

The Fish on Fridays series is a collaboration between Gloucester photographers Kathy Chapman and Marty Luster. Look for various aspects of Gloucester’s centuries-old fishing industry highlighted here on Fridays.

Kathy and Marty continue this week with their interest in shellfish and a look at scallops harvested in waters off Cape Cod and sold at Intershell to local restaurants in Gloucester. Nico from Short and Main demonstrates preparing his Live Scallop Crudo. http://shortandmain.com

ScallopsCrateIntershell


ScallopsFromCapeCod

CroppedMartyImage-c_edited-1

 

scallopdinnerSaltMain
Photos © Kathy Chapman and Marty Luster 2013
kathychapman.com

slicesoflifeimages.wordpress.com
matchedpairs.wordpress.com

Video © Kathy Chapman 2013

Big Rubber Duck in Pittsburgh!

Live blogging of the Rubber Duck in Pittsburgh! The Pirates and the Reds are fighting it out this weekend for home field advantage. Pirates win and the Rubber Duck will be outside the stadium on Tuesday looking in watching the NL wild card game since she is 54 feet tall!

rubber duckpitt

Visiting Liv in Brooklyn: Roberta’s and the Doughnut Plant

Roberta's Brooklyn ©Kim Smith 2013

Here we are at Roberta’s in Brooklyn. The exterior looks very nondescript but what welcomes upon entering is a warm, vibrant interior.

Roberta’s is a high energy establishment with fabulous food and fabulous service. The lively, yet cozy, restaurant is always packed to the brim with an eclectic crowd–young people on dates, groups of  friends, families–with a line down the street, even in the dead of winter, and on week nights!

The key to Roberta’s success is not only their out-of-this-world delicious pizza, appetizers, seafood, salads, and veggies, but equally as important to their success is their ultra efficient and friendly wait staff, and super accommodating house policies towards the customer. Unlike one of the newer restaurants on Cape Ann, which absolutely will not allow any add-ons to their limited pizza menu (they want only to serve it as only they deem acceptable, and I say, come on–it’s pizza), Roberta’s has a complete menu of pizza toppings! Roberta’s menu is not terribly extensive (nor pricey), but because their’s is a select range of entrees, pizzas, and first courses, you don’t feel the menu is limiting. The produce is farm fresh (much is grown in Roberta’s garden), and the seafood sweet, melting in your mouth as only super fresh seafood does.

Roberta's Dinner Menu

As you can see from Roberta’s menu posted above, it is not vast, but neither is the menu restricted to 5 or 6 pizzas. 

Next stop is Liv’s favorite doughnut shop, The Doughnut Plant, which is well worth getting off the subway on the way to your destination, walking many blocks, stopping at the Plant for amazing doughnuts, and then walking back the same many blocks to hop back on the subway and resume your day.

VIDEO: Sawyer Free Library Art Auction Preview

Lisa Smith sent us this nice video by Cape Ann TV’s Becky Tober featuring Carol Gray with a preview of the art in this year’s Sawyer Free Library Art Auction on Wednesday, October 2 beginning at at 6pm with a preview party, entertainment and refreshments.