Posted inCulture

Self Righteous: DeNiro and Pacino take on water at every turn

Even the dynamic duo can’t save this disaster. Expectations abound for a movie co-starring Al Pacino and Robert De
Niro. Their only recent movie together, Heat, although considered
brilliant by most observers, had just one scene in which they were on
screen together. In their new film Righteous Kill, they are Siamese
twins, cop buddies, together in virtually every scene.

And let's be
honest, these two can carry a mediocre film on their collective backs.
They both have careers which need no buoying up, and if any two actors
working today could be called living legends, it's probably these two.
What's
not derivative these days in a cop movie? We start with the killings of
people whom the world would not miss: child rapists, Russian mobsters,
a seedy collection of low lives whose deaths probably serve to improve
the lives of others in New York.

Posted inFood & Drink

Quick Bites – The Walk of Wine: Promenade du Vin

Pouring a little out for a cause. One event that helped put Bend on the culinary map is the annual
Sagebrush Classic, a golf tournament that hosts a lavish feast
featuring famous chefs from around the country. With no shortage of
golf courses, or those who love to golf, other such events have
sprouted up in Central Oregon such as the Ghost Tree Classic. This year
the prominent wine tasting fundraiser, formerly known as Wine by the
River, paired up with the Ghost Tree Classic and changed its name to
Promenade du Vin. Organized before the Friday dinner that commanded
$300 per seat, the Promenade du Vin was casual, affordable and
benefited a great cause: the Hospice Center of Bend and La Pine.
Stretching
out over the lush lawn in front of Pronghorn’s grand clubhouse,
wineries hosted tastings under white tents. Over 25 wineries displayed
their wares, offered tastes and gave event goers a chance to talk with
wine makers. There were seminars on chocolate and wine and a Master
Wine Competition. Along with wine makers there were also a few artisan
cheese makers, including Tumalo Farms, which sampled its fabulous
Remembrance and Classico, and an Irish dairy called Kerry Gold.
Moonstruck Chocolates added some sweetness to the mix, as did Extreme
Chocolate and Meeteetse Chocolatier.

Posted inFood & Drink

Quick Bites – The Walk of Wine: Promenade du Vin

Pouring a little out for a cause. One event that helped put Bend on the culinary map is the annual
Sagebrush Classic, a golf tournament that hosts a lavish feast
featuring famous chefs from around the country. With no shortage of
golf courses, or those who love to golf, other such events have
sprouted up in Central Oregon such as the Ghost Tree Classic. This year
the prominent wine tasting fundraiser, formerly known as Wine by the
River, paired up with the Ghost Tree Classic and changed its name to
Promenade du Vin. Organized before the Friday dinner that commanded
$300 per seat, the Promenade du Vin was casual, affordable and
benefited a great cause: the Hospice Center of Bend and La Pine.
Stretching
out over the lush lawn in front of Pronghorn's grand clubhouse,
wineries hosted tastings under white tents. Over 25 wineries displayed
their wares, offered tastes and gave event goers a chance to talk with
wine makers. There were seminars on chocolate and wine and a Master
Wine Competition. Along with wine makers there were also a few artisan
cheese makers, including Tumalo Farms, which sampled its fabulous
Remembrance and Classico, and an Irish dairy called Kerry Gold.
Moonstruck Chocolates added some sweetness to the mix, as did Extreme
Chocolate and Meeteetse Chocolatier.

Posted inFood & Drink

Sushi for the Masses: Mio brings the dollar down on Japanese cuisine

Mama Mio, affordable sushi in Bend? Bonzai!When someone mentions sushi as an option, the dollar signs often start
flashing in diners’ minds. That’s because the commonly held notion is
that this Japanese culinary treat is expensive and not really that
filling. Mio Sushi is trying to put an end to that perception and is
doing so not with mini boats, conveyor belts or pre-made rolls, but
with freshly made dishes ranging from traditional nigiri sushi to
Americanized house rolls.

A welcome addition to Cascade Village Mall,
Mio Sushi is located across from The Bungalow Tropical Bar and Grille
and is the first of the Portland-based chain to open outside the
Portland area. The interiors are very similar to the Portland
locations-clean, cool colors, modern fixtures, an ample sushi bar and
LOTS of staff yelling “irasshaimase” (please come in!) when you walk in
the door.
We started out our meal with the kid-pleasing miso
soup ($1.50) and edemame ($2.94). Slurping savory soup right out of the
bowl and popping salt beans from the pod kept our two kindergarteners
happy while we filled out our sushi order.

Posted inFood & Drink

Sushi for the Masses: Mio brings the dollar down on Japanese cuisine

Mama Mio, affordable sushi in Bend? Bonzai!When someone mentions sushi as an option, the dollar signs often start
flashing in diners' minds. That's because the commonly held notion is
that this Japanese culinary treat is expensive and not really that
filling. Mio Sushi is trying to put an end to that perception and is
doing so not with mini boats, conveyor belts or pre-made rolls, but
with freshly made dishes ranging from traditional nigiri sushi to
Americanized house rolls.

A welcome addition to Cascade Village Mall,
Mio Sushi is located across from The Bungalow Tropical Bar and Grille
and is the first of the Portland-based chain to open outside the
Portland area. The interiors are very similar to the Portland
locations-clean, cool colors, modern fixtures, an ample sushi bar and
LOTS of staff yelling "irasshaimase" (please come in!) when you walk in
the door.
We started out our meal with the kid-pleasing miso
soup ($1.50) and edemame ($2.94). Slurping savory soup right out of the
bowl and popping salt beans from the pod kept our two kindergarteners
happy while we filled out our sushi order.

Posted inNews

John Butler at the Athletic Club of Bend: 9.9.08

Here’s a rundown of JBT’s show in Bend on Tuesday night. We’re still trying to get some video and pics up here … bear with

Here’s a rundown of JBT’s show in Bend on Tuesday night. We’re still trying to get some video and pics up here … bear with us, they’ll be up soon.

We hadn't made it out to a show at the Athletic Club of Bend yet this
summer, but we'd heard a thing or two about how shows go down at this
venue. Rumors have graced our ears of draconian no standing/no dancing
decrees, picket fences segregating VIPS from general admission peasants
and a smattering of other no-fun policies.

So, one can understand why we had our guard up when we arrived at the
ACB last night to see the John Butler Trio drop into Bend for the
second time in a matter of nine months. But after JBT's fellow
Australians Crash Symphony opened the show and Butler walked onto the
stage much of the crowd (the one's who weren't sipping wine from Eddie
Bauer coolers) STOOD UP, in direct violation of the rumored rules. By
the time John Butler shouldered his banjo and blasted out "Better
Than," these standing folks had charged the stage, flooding what we
thought was the "reserved section" and for the next two hours, it was a
real-live rock concert. And the best part…no security or venue
management personnel did anything to stop it.

Posted inCulture

C’est La Ski: Rage Films unofficially launches winter with Such is Life premier

Super FloatyThe growing cold, the occasional frost, the ski shop sales: Winter is
just around the corner. With last year's epic snow season still in the
back of our minds and the last patches of the deep snow pack still
holding in the mountains, dreams of bottomless powder and of floating
smoothly into the pillowy abyss below creep back into our subconscious.
While we mere mortals may only realize our winter desires on the
weekends, saving our on-hill heroics for deep REM sleep, elite skiers
from around the world further the limits of possibility to feed our
fantasies in the form of the ski film. And the debut of these mountain
flicks has become as synonymous with winter's return as the first
snowfall.
For years, Bend's Rage Films has charged ahead into
exotic locales and enough shots of our own backyard to hype up the
eager crowd. This year's release, Such is Life, is no exception,
delivering an ample dose of kickers, bottomless Japanese powder, one of
the most brutally awesome haircuts ever, and the creativity and quality
we’ve come to expect from this crew.

Posted inMusic

SF or Bust: We get down at the first-ever Outside Lands fest

Editor’s note: Terribly agoraphobic, Sound Check couldn't muster the courage to get
out of our Central Oregon comfort zone to check out the brand spankin'
new Outside Lands festival in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. So,
knowing that we couldn't let this event go uncovered, we sent intrepid
Source contributor Kaycee Anseth-Townsend southward.

Serious music lovers often equate a festival schedule
with a tapas menu: scrumptiously delicious, but portions too small to
satisfy. That's how the first-ever Outside Lands Music and Arts
Festival in Golden Gate Park left me feeling.
A festival
experience is really about scale: The scale of a city you've never been
to, guided by an overpriced and inaccurate tourist map where an almost
2,000 acre park is shrunk to the size of ten city blocks, which is only
realized when suddenly you've walked ten miles and haven't even gotten
to the park yet. The scale of 60,000 people and the eerie silence of
such a large crowd that was heard when the sound system died twice
during Radiohead, amplifying the shared experience to those it didn't
annoy. As I waded through a sea of corn-based and fully-compostable
beer cups after Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers left the stage Saturday
night, the multitude of cups a visual hangover from the day.

Posted inNews

John Butler: The WHOLE interview

Shelby Harwood chatted it up with Australian roots rocker John Butler and here’s the full transcript of that interview which is MUCH longer than the

Shelby Harwood chatted it up with Australian roots rocker John Butler and here’s the full transcript of that interview which is MUCH longer than the portion that appeared in the print edition. Enjoy all you faithful JBT fans…

It seems like you've been on tour almost non-stop since Grand National
came out last year, but you said in an interview at Lollapalooza that
you had enough songs for a new album, how do you find time to write
with such a busy schedule?

I'll actually take a bit of a break after this tour and just chill out,
write more songs and do nice things like visit the beach with my
family, and then I'll see how I go and just record an album. We're
looking to kind of probably, now that we're kind of getting more
established in all the territories we're going to give everybody a
little less. Usually what happens is you go really hard at the
beginning and kind of get everybody on board and then once everybody's
on board you don't really need to tour three or four times a year, you
know, it's actually probably dangerous to do that because everybody you
know gets sick of you. You know, we'll start coming back once or twice
a year, and that will leave a little bit more time for all kinds of
stuff. You know, it takes a long time to get it to that place - whether
it be in America or Australia or Europe - and you just kind of have to
dig in for a while you know?
I was actually living in Australia last year when Grand National came
out in March and was wondering what's it like being so huge in
Australia - getting daily radio play and being blasted over the sound
system at City Beach on a regular basis for example - and then coming
to the US as a relatively unknown act? Is it strange or do you like it
better being somewhat anonymous?

It's to be expected, you know, there's a big difference between
mainstream popularity and underground popularity, which is what I guess
we kind of have over here now after seven or eight years of [touring]
America. It just takes time, you can't expect things to transfer from
one country to the next unless you have some sort of world-wide hit,
which comes with it's own dangers. There's several bands from Australia
that have had major world-wide hits - no one's ever heard of them and
then they're big around the world and then it's hard to kind of
maintain that. So we kind of do it in the opposite way. We kind of just
build it up from the ground up and what it kind of means is by the time
you're kind of getting to where your status is in the well-known
region, it's solid and it just stays for a long time. That's kind of
what's happened in Australia, every step of the way it's grown slowly,
it's never been like a huge splash and so by the time we were big, the
roots were very deep, it wouldn't really matter what storm came by,
what we built … it wouldn't be knocked over. So that's pretty much what
we've built over in America, it just hasn't hit mainstream yet, but
it's a very solid place to be and I don't have a problem with that.
 

Posted inMusic

Year Around Folk: In its 13th year, Sisters Folk Festival has roots in music and its hometown

Mr. Red on Blonde himself, Tim O’Brien finally makes his way to the Sisters Folk Fest this weekend.It’s late in the afternoon on a late

Mr. Red on Blonde himself, Tim O’Brien finally makes his way to the Sisters Folk Fest this weekend.It's late in the afternoon on a late August Thursday afternoon and that means Brad Tisdel is in his office and working late. It's only eight days before his labor of love, his raison d'etre (for the French speaking, or perhaps the hyperbolic), the Sisters Folk Festival takes flight. There's plenty of "i"s left to dot and "t"s to be crossed before the 13th installment of the roots music celebration, but Tisdel, the local singer-songwriter as well as the festival's artistic director, still makes time to talk about his hometown's cultural engine.

"The idea is to take a three-day music festival and make it have a year-around presence that's educational and also entertaining for the community," Tisdel says of the Sisters Folk Festival's standing in Central Oregon.

For several years now, the festival's presence has been felt on every page of the calendar whether it be through the Americana Project, Tisdel's in-school music education program, or perhaps the winter concert series, which this past year brought another solid lineup of national touring acts to Sisters. And as if the reach of the Sisters Folk Festival influence isn't expansive enough, Tisdel also recently launched Musical Memories, an inarguably innovative program that brings local musicians into senior communities to play tunes from yesteryear.

If you add in the Americana Song Academy, a songwriter’s summer camp of sorts that precedes the festival, it might be easy for some to forget that there are still three days at the beginning of September where the Sisters Folk Festival itself still exists. Starting on Friday and extending through Sunday while overtaking much of Central Oregon's favorite cowboy town, Sisters Folk is boasting a lineup this year that's full of national performers and as strong as any past gathering.

Sign up for newsletters

Get the best of The Source - Bend, Oregon directly in your email inbox.

Sending to:

Gift this article