Carolee Rainey Tells Listeners to Feel Fearless.

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With powerful melody and strong, anthemic voice, Carolee Rainey’s Feel Fearless EP offers a positive and life-affirming message. Exuberant and joyful, Rainey gives folk rock a jubilant spin.

 

Evoking comparisons with Stevie Nicks and Ricki Lee Jones, Rainey is nothing if not uplifting. The songs on her potent debut mini-album reflect inspirational and empowering messages lyrically, while the music is solid, strongly singable, and will delightfully lodge in listeners internal musical repertoire for a long time.

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Philosophically, Rainey says she views life as a journey – “get on the train and ride with me…got a lot of room for my new audience…you on board?” She asks that listeners tune in to her songs because “they’ve got life, wisdom and lightness even if they can get rather lonely and dark. What can you do? We all live in our private villages.”

All the same, Rainey, who has worked as a visual artist as well as a singer-songwriter and exhilarating performer, knows how to connect her audience and with it. Take in the gypsy-like joy in “Mystic Rose,” or the spiritual bliss in “Listen to the River,” and any personal inclination toward isolation will dissolve in the infectious pleasure that Rainey clearly takes in her work. The latter tune, inspired by a location in Big Sur, Calif. that has captivated the artist, has a definite LA-vibe. The now East Coast-based musician says “My heart may be in winter, but my soul is in the sun,” a sentiment that comes through vibrantly in this cut. Her song “Feel” is equally emotional, cutting to the quick of both loss and joy.
The mini-album’s first single, “Deal with the Devil” is the most rock-like tune; but the over-riding theme of the record is simply to create work that is both positive and thoughtful while being musically fun.
Tight backing musicians create compulsively listenable support to Rainey, including Doug Yowell, Richard Hammond, Thad DeBrock, and Clifford Carter on acoustic piano and keys.
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Rainey says she was inspired to cut her record while attending a Rickie Lee Jones concert. Working as a painter, she found that “virtually one day, I just didn’t have the calling to wake up and create from a blank canvas…it was a transformation that was filled with angst about what my next creative endeavor would be…” until she attended the concert. She found Jones’ performance galvanizing, and immediately began to write her own songs. “It was the next stop on the train for me,” she says.
Get on board with Rainey’s “tracks” and see where her journey takes you. The EP drops the end of April. Follow Rainey on Facebook for the latest release news. Check out her sound and look on YouTube.
– Genie Davis; photos via Carolee Rainey music

Mexican “Queens” – La Gringa Bar and Grill

 

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Like Los Angeles, New York is hardly a slouch of a city when it comes to amazing restaurants. But for Angelenos visiting the east coast, after the wealth of stellar Mexican eateries in L.A., choosing south of the border cuisine in the Big Apple can sometimes feel like the last selection on a “where to dine” list.

But surprise: during a recent east coast visit, La Gringa Bar and Grill changed our minds, about a lot of things. Not only about choosing Mexican cuisine, but about dining outside of Manhattan.

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Located in unassuming Rego Park, Queens – a short subway jaunt from the heart of NYC and adjacent to trendier Astoria, La Gringa Bar and Grill is a revelation. Introduced to the venue by a local friend, the spot afforded one delicious surprise after another: starting with an Elote appetizer. Street corn has always been a favorite, and here, it’s served with the corn already cut off the cob, with cotija cheese and Mexican crema mixed in, attractively filling a large glass rimmed with red chili powder.  Served with a wedge of lime and a sprinkling of cilantro, we could’ve had ten of these, but then we wouldn’t have been able to eat the perfectly crisp fish tacos, or the beautifully balanced poblano relleno, filled with shrimp and topped with fresh avocado. Served with black beans and well-seasoned rice,  the juicy carnitas were a hit with the carnivores in our group, as was a thick, smoky chicken mole. 

We were impressed with the stylish food presentation, the from-scratch flavors, and the fresh produce.

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Drinks from the bar were also great – with an ample selection of mezcal and tequila, and a variety of house special margaritas, there were plenty of choices worth celebrating. Dessert? We had caramel flan that was letter perfect, but better still were the round churro balls – think donut holes in style – with chocolate dipping sauce.

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The restaurant also offers catering and party room rentals.

La Gringa Bar and Grill is located at 63-354 Woodhaven in Rego Park. For more information visit www.lagringagrill.com

 

 

Cinematic Mad Love – Fou d’Amour

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The darkest of dark comedies or a strangely seductive decent into insanity? In Mad Love (Fou d’Amour) a comic morality tale and a terrifying depiction of a monstrously deluded man merge. Highly charged and tinged with eroticism, the story of a small town priest’s romantic foibles makes for compulsive viewing.

 Set in an isolated French village with a fecund green landscape, the film begins with the beheading of its protagonist, a priest (Melvil Poupaud). With his head lying untended in a corner away from the bloody guillotine, the priest begins to narrate his story, and what brought him to his death.

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As self-justifying in death as he has been in life, he tells of his arrival in the small town of Albon, apparently transferred after rumors of an untoward sexual dalliance in a less isolated town. As played by Poupaud, above, the priest is a magnet for the unsatisfied women of the town, including a wealthy widow, Armance; a lusty milkmaid, Odette; and several other pliant women. With Armance’s help he starts a soccer club and a theater group, supplementing his priestly and carnal duties to stave off boredom.

As a religious mentor, the priest is sorely lacking in virtue, but he infuses the town with a lively spirit, providing activities both innocent and lustful that engage many of the town-folk.

His secret trysts and non-secular activities are briefly questioned by a priest from a neighboring town and his superior, but any concerns are sloughed off, and the priest’s rather idyllic existence is allowed to continue.

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But then comes the arrival of Rose (Diane Rouxel), a stunningly lovely and innocent young blind woman who joins his theater group. The two initially seem somewhat evenly matched in both their passion and secretiveness; Rose arranges their initial clandestine meetings under the nose of her grandmother. Rose is as much seductress as she is seduced, appearing before the priest naked, clad only in a sheer veil. But, of course, none are so blind as those who will not see, to paraphrase the Old Testament.

123635_-_h_2015As inevitable as the slice of the guillotine, things do not stay idyllic for long. Rose becomes pregnant and the priest becomes unhinged, first abusing Rose, then begging her forgiveness. It is Rose, however who gives the priest his penance, denying him access to her, and leaving the village for a time.

Despite spending a week in the woods waiting for God’s answer to desperate prayers and renouncing some of his more earthly pleasures, when Rose returns to town, ready to give birth, the reason for the priest’s date with the guillotine becomes horrifyingly clear.

While the film’s tone never wavers from the darkly comic tone set by its self-aggrandizing narrator,  it does darken in its penultimate moments, when the priest eliminates the threat to his ministry.

Somewhat surprisingly based on a true story, the film has the look and feel of a fable, from its bucolic village setting to the justice of the priest’s beheading. Although set in the 1950s, this tale could be told anywhere in time,  one of both madness and vanity. Visually, director Phillipe Ramos, who also serves as his own cinematographer, has created images that are steeped in a kind of fairy-tale quality, rich and damp, with stone buildings and dusty stables something that transcend time.

As lyrical and licentious as its narrator, Mad Love is about a delusion that reaches even beyond the grave, its wry sense of humor leading viewers to a complicit involvement in the priest’s twisted confessionary story.

Heartopia: Have a Heart

SantaClarita_flyer_moresquarishThis Friday, February 9th, Just in time for Valentine’s Day, The Main and The City of Santa Clarita are presenting, Heartopia, an exhibition featuring selected works from artist Jennifer Korsen. Heart themed art, cocktails, and an interactive installation –  a fitting celebration of five years of community outreach showcasing past collaborations from Korsen’s What’s in Your Heart Project.
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The event will feature installations, new mixed media work and pieces from the artist’s private collection which will be sold in an online auction hosted by Bid27. There will also be T-shirts and posters for sale featuring the event’s signature pattern, above. The evening’s proceeds will go towards What’s in Your Heart Project, a platform created by Korsen to connect community with charitable organizations inspiring creative expression through art, which began as an exercise with a leadership group of high school girls in South LA.
Korsen says “Heartopia is really different than anything I’ve ever done! It features my largest installation to date, as well as a few other fun interactive installations and surprises. I created an immersive world of hearts, and am highlighting some of my favorite pieces from my collection to raise funds for my community projects. We will have live screen printing from Family Industries and I’m hoping for a really unique and special evening.”
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The event is a fundraiser, and Korsen is auctioning off some of her personal collection to help raise them. “For every $500 in art sales, I will be donating a workshop to a local school or institution that can be chosen by the buyer, if they like. It’s a new way of doing this, but I’m excited to get my work in some new homes and further that by bringing my art to the community as well. It’s kind of like a buy one, give one kind of thing,” she says. “They get original art at a great price and the workshop gets donated to people who would benefit from it. And I get some room in my studio to create more art.”
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The heart shape is the common thread that connects all of Korsen’s work. “I have everything from sculpture to installation to paintings, mixed media pieces and more. I love exploring new mediums and pushing myself to stay creative and find new ways to incorporate my heart. I do a solo show every February, so keeping it fresh is a really fun challenge.”
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She began creating hearts 9 years ago. “I was doing a lot of anatomical collages, and after doing one heart out of some fancy paper it kind of just stuck. I got obsessed and kept doing more and more. I haven’t run out of inspiration yet and I’m hoping I never do!”

The event takes place February 9th, 7 – 11 pm at The Main, 24266 Main Street in Newhall.

Genie Davis, Photos: Fanny Chu