foxtongue: (Default)
Boca Del Lupo, one of Vancouver's most spectacular theater companies, has a free outdoor show for PuSH this year, La Marea. It starts tomorrow:

A man has just had a motorbike accident... An insomniac tries to get to sleep... A couple has their first kiss... A man stands on a balcony escaping the party that rages on behind him...

When strangers walk past you on the street, do you ever start imagining what they are thinking? Where they come from? Or what they are doing there at the very moment you glance upon them?

At night and in real time, moving from the pavement to illuminated windows, from balconies to café terraces, La Marea presents nine different stories—intimate snapshots that bring the zero hundred block of Water Street in historic Gastown to life for the opening of the 2011 PuSh Festival. These fictional scenes are repeated over the course of the evening in shop windows and on street corners, where audience members can observe the characters’ inner thoughts through projected subtitles.

"It’s an adventure... like a visit to a film set, without the camera crew getting in the way. This isn’t just a play in multiple episodes, it’s an experience touching on the beginning of love, the end of love, and everything in between." - Montreal Gazette


January 18-22, 7pm - 9pm.
Outdoors / Site-specific.
The zero-hundred block of Water Street in Gastown (between Abbott St and Carrall St).
foxtongue: (beseech)
Second Level Wizards Awesome Events Society, a Vancouver not for profit society, is hosting their second H.P. Lovecraft-themed convention and film festival. Join us for a live performance by local Cthulhu rockers The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets with Scythia folk metal, short films from around the world, live burlesque performance by Little Miss Risk, the inaugural Miskatonic Middleschool Annual PTA Bake Sale, (Bake Sale proceeds to BC Children’s Hospital Foundation), and the world premiere of the ‘Thickets newest music video 20 Minutes of Oxygen.

What: Cthulhupalooza II Lovecraft Convention & Film Fest
When: Feb 19 2011. Media Welcome (Event Begins 7PM)
Where: Rickshaw Theatre 254 E Hastings St.
Details: Tickets are $15 at the door and online at secondlevelwizards.com.

Celebrate your enthusiasm for forbidden tomes, ancient space gods and eldritch cake by joining us on Feb 19. Prizes for the Miskatonic Middleschool Bake Sale competition are provided by our generous sponsors, entrants should contact us to register at info@secondlevelwizards.com and for rules and regulations. Roaring ’20′s period costume welcome. It’s tentacular!

Check online at www.cthulhupalooza.com and www.secondlevelwizards.com for more information on Cthulhupalooza II, registration, vendor tables and other details. Sponsored by Kerberos Productions.
foxtongue: (moi?)
DSC09847

Tony is in town for a long weekend this week, released from Microsoft's gray walls by U.S. Thanksgiving, a holiday that celebrates giving the locals smallpox blankets. Or something. Wierdos. Anyway, quite handily, this weekend is one of my favourite Vancouver events, the East Side Culture Crawl!

So! Great!

*does a little dance*

Also, tonight is APHRODISIA, a dance party/alt local fashion/art show at W2, curated by Ash Turner and hosted by Crystal Precious.
And, for those with tickets and a word in, tomorrow is Global Warming.
foxtongue: (have to be kidding)
Dear annoying man who always bombs around my apartment with an offensively loud dirtbike at inappropriate hours,

It is two:twenty in the morning. You do this a lot. It is always a problem, but right now especially so. Please stop. There are three inches of snow on that cobblestone street. Today you are waking the neighbors and you might die. Though you are apparently a terrible human being, I'm sure there are people who would be sad if you were dead.

Thank you.

Signed,

the girl who always wants to steal your fucking spark plugs.


edit: I just confronted him. he was out getting smokes, in this snow, without a helmet, with a stoned passenger, who also had no helmet. he might maybe seem nice, but dude, really?
foxtongue: (b&w tony & jhayne)
Seattle's big post-burn arty dance-party, Seacompression, is this weekend, so I'm off to Seattle today, back on Monday. Last year we arrived late and missed most of the shows, but we're hoping to ride-share with someone this year and have a better time. (Also, this time we're wearing much warmer clothes, just sayin'.) Due to my dislocated ankle and other injuries, it's been maybe an entire year since I've gone dancing, so it's going to be extra exciting to get out there and shake some groove-thing.

Also for those in Seattle, Cherie has a book signing tomorrow at the Northgate Barnes & Noble at 6 p.m. Y'all should come down and meet one of the princesses of pulp and support a local artist by buying a copy of her newest novel, Dreadnought, sequel to her run-away steampunk zombie success, Boneshaker.

Vancouver is hopping this weekend too. Tonight is the Fullmoon Steampunk Extravaganza, (w. The Gentle Infidels, Darker the Sky, Corset, and our very own DJ Spaz), from 7 p.m. - 2 a.m. at Century House on Richards st, and tomorrow is this year's Work Less Party Party Halloween Party Masquerade Ball, from 8 p.m. - 2 a.m. at the Japanese Hall, 487 Alexander Street.
foxtongue: (femme)
Jess Hill
Everybody Sing
, Jess Hill at the Railway Club, backed by Ms. Rad Juli and Michael.
foxtongue: (b&w tony & jhayne)
Now that was a SPLENDID weekend.

Nicole and I hosted a pot-luck at my place on Friday, based on a delicious giant ham and a big dead bird. I also made Eight Hour Eight Bean & Lentil soup for the vegans and vegetarians, which takes more than eight hours, but involves eight hours of constant stirring, as well as potatoes, steamed broccoli, and garlic portobello mushrooms with red peppers. It was an old-fashioned feast, and about twenty wonderful people came, most with their own delightful contributions, like home-made pulled pork sandwiches or berry wine. My oven lied a little about how hot it was, so we didn't get to eat any chicken until around 9:30, but excepting that: COMPLETE SUCCESS. We all had so much food and good company that the last guest didn't stumble out to a cab until 2 a.m. (Tony, sadly, didn't make it until after midnight, as work prevented him from catching an earlier bus into town, but I set aside a plate for him.) Once again, thank you to everyone!

Saturday was just as great, as it was Duncan's Dress-Up-Like-Duncan Surprise Birthday Party and A Mad Dash for the Down & Out: Tom Waits Tribute Night! I went to his party dressed as Cake Fight Duncan, in boxer shorts with a cake crown made of a birthday card and safety pins. It was a pleasure to attend, even though we left early to make sure we would get to Tom Waits night in time to get in, and it was a pleasure to catch up with some people I hardly ever see.

The Tom Waits Tribute Night was another sort of thing altogether. Completely incredible, it was gloriously mad gypsy dirty yet soulful and sweet, like circus music dancing through love songs with boots on. Some of the acts played it sinister, sandpaper rough and intense, while others sang as if their honeyed throats were on fire, a broken hearted sound that could only be put out with poetry or glass. My heart could have burst, it was so full with joy and pride for my friends. It was an astounding show, as memorable as a favourite birthday, as inspiring as only an insanely talented trumpet player twisting out a solo on top of a hammond organ can be. I'd tell you some highlights, but I'm sure if I tried, I'd describe the whole show.

The after party was pretty nice too. I spent most of it on the couch, curled up by a fire, swaying into the early morning surrounded by warmth and more music, singing a little and catching up with old acquaintances I dearly adore. Tony and I were almost the last to leave, starting our walk home just before dawn, safe from the chill with each other. We lucked upon five raccoons after only a block or two, a family, maybe, playing together, foraging along the sidewalk. When we got close, we stood very still, until they got used to us as we crept along beside them. One of them, slightly braver than the rest, tiny paw raised, body tense with investigation, came up and touched my leg three times, like casting a spell. It worked, we were enchanted, and smiled all the way home.

Sunday we spent almost the entire day cuddled up in bed, exhausted from being up so late, but glad for it. We forgot completely about the live Jonsi webcast concert, so we watched movies on my laptop, (Return to Oz, Reign of Assassins, & Ghostrider), and poked at the internet until it gave us some of what we need for Halloween, content anyway. Amazon provided Laika's dog costume trimmings, minus a collar and dogtag, and another site had actual soviet space patches covered in bad-ass rockets and lightning. The next thing we need are matching flight suits, but I'll be in Seattle next weekend, and there's a rather epic military surplus store there that should set us up. Aside from that, the only thing missing are my four antennae, which I expect to find at Circuit City or a Radio Shack.
foxtongue: (Default)


The enchanting Jess Hill says, "Each artist will draw melodies from the sky and underbelly of the wide, wonderful, sometimes woe filled world of Tom Waits and bring them to life under the two suns at Commercial and 5th. The last time we threw this kind of party the joint was crammed to the rafters with a SOLD OUT sign by 9pm. Don't hesitate to commit this date to memory dearies, the venue is a tight squeeze and if you're late you'll be outside watching the windows steam up.

Dust off your bowler hat, and garter belt, and hurry down, the bourbon won't last forever!
See you at sea, in the alley and below the moon on October 16th at Cafe Deux Soleils"

Particularly exciting are Jess, Tarren, and Maria in the Shower. They rock more than socks. They rock EVERYTHING.
foxtongue: (b&w tony & jhayne)
Today I am putting together a set of Ikea shelves as an act of devotion, running the pieces through my hands like rosary beads, expressing a sweet swell of affection with every screw and wood dowel. On half a whim, Tony and I went to Ikea yesterday, fount of all things storage solution, to unearth a set of shelves to go under my computer desk and slaughter all of the spaghetti cord monster clutter there. We found some that seemed perfect - tiered, white, with a cut away back for cords - but fifty freaking pounds. Not being drivers, either one of us, it was decided that walking the flatpack box to the skytrain would count as an adventure, if a somewhat dubious one, in part spurred by the fact that we both need significantly more exercise and that the station, while a few blocks away, was in no way far. An idea which would have been completely fine if we had walked down the correct highway, which we did not.

Instead of turning down Highway 1 we stubbornly continued along Lougheed, completely ignorant of our missed turn. Eventually we found a gas station and called a cab to rescue us, but not before Tony, bless him, insisted on carrying the unwieldy box alone for about twice the distance as would have been required to get to the train station, all up-hill, proving without a doubt that he is willing to carry my damned metaphorical books as far as a boy can and still walk the next day. And so, today, here I sit, surrounded by computer parts, boards, and pages of wordless instruction manual, assembling the shelf like Lego for grown-ups, breathing his name into every piece so that it may stand in my room as an unobtrusive yet significant statement to love.
foxtongue: (moi?)
Crash Test Dummies Crash Test Dummies

At my insistance, Tony and I blew off all of our other plans to go to the Crash Test Dummies concert at the Chan last night, which turned out to be an acoustic show promoting their new album, Ooh Lah Lah, the first music they've released in six years. (Also for sale, Ellen Reid's out-of-print opus, Cinderellen, which we also scored. Purr.)

It was epic. I am inspired.

Oh my stars.

That is all.
foxtongue: (Default)
  • 50 years of cyborgs: I have not the words.
  • First footage of this year's Dr. Who christmas special.

    I had the excellent luck of sharing the train back to Vancouver from Seattle with Cherie yesterday morning, as she happens to be the Guest of Honor at Vcon this weekend. It was a delightful treat to see her again, it's been wretchedly long since we've cut up a dance floor. She's been too busy promoting her steampunk novel, Boneshaker, and being nominated for the Hugo to be social. Luckily, with such delightful reasons for absence, the heart can only grow fonder. The sequel, her latest book, Dreadnought, just dropped this week, and I'd recommend snagging as soon as you can. I brought Boneshaker to Burning Man and read it three times just on the ride there.

    I'm also going to be attending Vcon this year for the first time. So many friends are involved that it's more than a little silly that I've never been. (For example, Micheal, the fellow that picked Cherie and I up from the train station, brought us to my place, interviewed her, then took us for lunch, turned out to be Pauline's father, because Vancouver is small and the sci-fi geek population even smaller than that.) It starts this afternoon and goes until Sunday, with a Steampunk themed dance on Saturday night.
  • so listen

    Aug. 5th, 2010 12:54 pm
    foxtongue: (Default)
    Vancouver is erased today by the souls of dead trees, smoke from fires up North and in the interior. It sifts down to the street, obscuring the horizon, clouding the city with a fog of trapped white ashes so thick you cannot see downtown from my balcony, like a television trick to hide the edges of a sci-fi set. The mountains are shadows, almost invisible in spite of their size. Above us, the sky is mediocre, streaked with only the barest smudges of pale teal, while the sun is reduced to a dark orange spot with visible edges, the burned heart of a glass flower fresh from the forge, bright yet safe to look upon directly. Light is muted in every direction. We are living in a light box. There are no black shadows.
    foxtongue: (Default)
    365:2010/06/26: after dinner on our way to galleries
    After dinner, on our way to galleries.

    Save On Art

    Save On Art, a gallery show at the Hastings Space presenting some of Vancouver's street art scene.

    jerm ix

    Local street artist Jerm IX showing his chest tatoo designed by illustrator and street artist, Basco5.

    cheaper show

    The Cheaper Show no. 9, 200 artists, 400 pieces of art for $200 each, hosted at the W2 Storyeum space on Cordova.

    confident

    Tony examining a wall of some of the more interesting and colorful art.
    foxtongue: (femme)
    WAR DECLARED, by The Dark

    WAR DECLARED
    , a new poster from Vancouver street artist, The Dark.
    foxtongue: (Default)
    "2010 marks the 20th anniversary of the Celebration of Light (originally known as the Symphony of Fire), an international fireworks competition which has attracted the world’s leading fireworks designers and is considered one of North America’s top pyrotechnic competitions."

    As with every year, I will be going down to First Beach with a giant blanket and a tall stick with something bright on top, (the better to stand out from the crowd), and making a group camp by the water's edge, near the slide, right in front of the barge.

    Bring yourselves, more blankets, and snacks to share. Also, please RSVP!!
    Try to arrive early, as the beach fills up fast and there's only so much space.


    LOCATION:

    Google map of the blue blanket campsite.

    DATES:

    •Wednesday July 21st 2010 – USA Night
    •Saturday July 24th, 2010 – Spain Night
    •Wednesday July 28th, 2010 – Mexico Night
    •Saturday July 31st, 2010 – A Tribute to China

    Note: I may not be setting up on July 24th, as I plan on checking out the potential sad disaster of the indoors Illuminares Festival in Gastown at Storyeum before heading over to the beach.

    CAMP SET UP:

    5:00ish.

    FIREWORKS TIME:

    10:00PM – Rain or Shine
    foxtongue: (Default)
    rubus strigosus
    Mushrooms and bok choy simmering in butter and black pepper, the windows all open, sentences running through my mind, practiced words falling off my tongue like dry, pressed flower petals, to divide fractions, invert the second fraction and multiply, to multiply fractions, multiply the numerators, then multiply the denominators, reduce all to their lowest terms, attempting a memorization of everything I can before my tests this weekend. A gift, but terrifying. I am more hopeful than I was a week ago, but I can't stop feeling doomed. According to the website, the five tests take seven hours and twenty-five minutes to complete. Doomed.

    Tests aside, this upcoming weekend looks fun. Not only is there going to be a steampunk minicon at Barclay Manor on Saturday, World Cup is wrapping up this weekend, which means my neighborhood, Commercial Drive, will be closed to cars and open to PARTY!! Flags, shouting, free food, noise-makers, facepaint, dancing, music, and thousands of people gleefully losing their minds from how utterly freaking awesome it is that some guys in ridiculous socks kicked a ball around some other guys in ridiculous socks and between some posts. Wahoo! Seriously, though, it's epic. EPIC. People travel from as far away as Portland to celebrate here. I came out of the last celebration with a frighteningly scarlet sunburn because my trusty SPF 75 was washed off by an intensely enthusiastic restaurateur shouting ITALIA! ITALY! ITALIA! and spraying the crowd with shaken bottles of champagne. Fwish. No more sunscreen. And rainbows everywhere. Did you know champagne makes especially pretty rainbows when misted through the air? Me neither, not until that party.

    Also coming up: The Vancouver Folk Festival from July 16-18th, the Celebration of Light nee The Symphony of Fire, (USA July 21st, Spain July 24th, Mexico July 28th, and China July 31st), and a castrated Illuminares Lantern Procession on July 24th for those who want to try and cram thousands of people into a small building after parading their children through Crackton.
    foxtongue: (Default)
    A friend of mine is considering moving to Vancouver to attend UBC, but doesn't know anything about what the city is like. Here's what I sent her in response to a request for a basic run-down of places to live. Did I miss anything? Can you think of any other essential information to add?

    Out by UBC is expensive. Closer in is Kitsilano, where the yuppies live. It's more expensive than other areas, but it's nice, and there's basement suites that are under a grand. Trees everywhere, beaches, lots of fit people jogging with dogs. Features a 24 hour vegetarian restaurant, boutiques upon boutiques, good coffee, and a nice little movie theater.

    I live over by Commercial Drive, which is like a smaller, less late night Capitol Hill, minus the gay district slant, and without night clubs or artist lofts. It's gentrifying, but still high in hippie content. Commercial Drive is where to find cheap organic food, musicians, lesbians, new parents, people with dreadlocks, and surprisingly good video rentals. It's also got one of the two 24 grocery stores. Think bicycles, dyed hair, tattoos, alt culture, and marijuana. It's easy to meet people here, it's cheap, it's friendly, and it's where most of the art comes from. You're welcome to stay in my livingroom on the fold-out couches for awhile when you're here, until you find a good place to settle in.

    There's two other corridors that are fairly good to live, Cambie St and Main St, and if you can manage to live in between the two, you'll get the best of both worlds. Main street is where the hipsters live, and with them come cliques, expensive indie clothes, some good food, some excellent coffee, and a lot of people with similar bad hair-cuts. Most of the apartments nearby are cheap because they're horrible, but you'd have a lot of neat neighbors, if you ever find a way to meet them. Closer to Cambie is more where people want to raise their kids, very middle class, lots of elementary schools, but it's recently gained a subway line, so the landscape there is going to change soon. Go too far west, though, and you hit a money wall. Too far east and you're over by Fraser/Clark, one of the highest break-in areas in the city.

    Next is downtown's West End. Central, high density, the majority being apartments within a square of four major streets. To the North is Robson st, which consists of shoe stores, high end clothing, expensive restaurants, and tourist tat. West is Denman St, (and Stanley Park), which is where you'll find stores that only sell cupcakes, cake, or ice-cream. South is Davie St, the gay corridor where things like bus-stops and trash cans are painted barbie pink, there are some night-clubs, and the other 24 hour grocery store. East is Granville St, where the drunk kids club-hop, and Yaletown, where money pools, as well as pretension.

    North-East is Crackton, the poorest postal code in Canada. You can find a lot about it online, where it's called the Lower Downtown East Side. It's not as generally dangerous as people might think, but nor is it safe to randomly wander. (As an example, it's where the Picton brothers stole their women off the side of the street to torture and kill for fun on their farm.) It's like the worst of Oakland, but instead of racism, it's drug use. I used to live there because it was cheap, but it destroys you as a human being. It should never be normal to witness bus-stop stabbings, having to use weapons on your walk home from work, or waking up with your door wedged shut by a dead body.
    foxtongue: (the welsh got you)
    Tony and I have tickets to see Evelyn Evelyn, (Amanda Palmer and Jason Webley as conjoined twin sisters managed by a mad svengalian Sxip Shirey!!), tonight at Venue. Such an audacious concept, put together by such splendiferous people, can only be amazing. You know it, I know it. Come on out and play! Tickets are still available for $25 at Ticketmaster, livenation.com, Zulu, Red Cat, and Highlife Records.
    foxtongue: (sci-fi kitchen)
    Dine-Out Vancouver started this week, an annual food festival that involves wickedly-worth-it expensive restaurants offering three course menus for either $18, $28, or $38* per person. (This doesn't include drinks, tips, or taxes). Running from April 26 - May 6, it's a wonderful opportunity - delicious, cheap, and super fun. There's around 200 restaurants involved, which can make it seem a little overwhelming, but they all have searchable on-line menus posted, and easy to find phone numbers for reservations. (The trick is to always call them in. The place you pick might claim on-line that they're full up, but anyone with experience with this knows better.) They're sorted alphabetically, by price, or by the type of cuisine they offer. Scroll down to the middle of the page to find the Search Box.

    So now you're all properly In The Know, where are you planning on going?


    *I admit I loved it more when it was $15/25/35.

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