General


GeneralAdministrator on 24 Oct 2006 06:53 pm

Jennifer Abrahamson will appear to discuss her new book, Sweet Relief: The Story of Marla Ruzicka on Friday, December 1, 7:30 pm at the Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar St, Berkeley. With the music of Phillip Machingura. Marla was a fearless activist who was killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq while documenting Iraqi civilian casualties. Tickets: $10 advance, $12 door, available at independent bookstores, or at 415-255-7296 X 253.

GeneralNina on 21 Sep 2006 11:00 am

Check out today’s New York Times, where Bruce Koball, the Hillside Club’s technical director, and his sound-engineering talents make a fun front-page feature.

GeneralAdministrator on 18 Jun 2006 11:20 am

Come meet some of the most outspoken women of our times: mommy bloggers. Grace Davis runs marathons and her family plus a personal blog, State of Grace, and raised more money than established relief funds through her Hurricane Katrina Direct Relief blog. Jenny Lauck’s known for her irreverently hilarious blog, Three Kid Circus, and as cofounder of group blog Mommybloggers.

Our other panelists include professional blogger Mary Tsao, who writes for BlogHer and Literary Mama as well as her personal blog, Mom Writes. Lisa Brewer Canter, who worked in music licensing before motherhood, blogs candidly about life with husband software entrepreneur Marc Canter and two young children at lisa.blogs.it. A surprise mommy blogger might appear from momsrising.org, a new organization dedicated to supporting the rights of mothers and families.

Admission is $10 for pizza and drinks, and the panel discussion, which starts around 5:45 and ends at 7. Feel free to bring family, including children ($5 admission) – we have a room where they can play and we’ll enlist a supervisor on the spot. The Hillside Club is wheelchair accessible.

GeneralAdministrator on 18 May 2006 10:18 am

Is the Future of Music Now?
Berkeley Cybersalon
5-7 p.m., Sunday, May 21
Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar St., Berkeley

Given the invasion of music sharing technologies introduced by Napster, MP3 and Liquid Audio in the 90’s, and the wildfire adoption of the iPod cum iTunes, a new crop of digital music companies (and some old ones) are finding new ways to provide us tunes without losing their shirts in the process.

Shedding some light on new ways to make listeners pay to play are Gerd Leonhard, author of “The Future of Music Manifesto”; Tom Conrad, CTO of Pandora, which is decoding the algorithms of music in order to better match a listener’s musical tastes; Ann Greenberg, cofounder of ION, which was sold to Gracenote, one of the largest music databases on earth; Brian Zisk, founder and board member of the Future of Music Coalition; and Amy Tobin, singer, composer, and multimedia show producer. Moderator is Andrew Keen, producer of the podcast site www.aftertv.com {http://www.aftertv.com/}, and author of “The Great Seduction,” to be published in 2007 and named after Keen’s eponymous blog.

$15 at the door includes dinner, drinks, and salon. All sessions are podcast and audience participation is highly encouraged.

GeneralAdministrator on 25 Apr 2006 10:50 am

You are invited to the Hillside Club’s Spring Benefit & Auction
A celebration of Berkeley’s past, present and future community.

Friday, May 12th, 6 ’til 10 pm
$25 includes dinner. No-host bar.

The evening begins with a visit by Bernard Maybeck and Julia Morgan, played by David Usner and Mary Beth Barber, reappearing to talk about their architectural plans for Berkeley. Thanks to playwright Belinda Taylor, dramaturge Erin Johnson, and costumer Dianne Ayres, you won’t be sure if these former Berkeleyans are real or only actors.

Our Berkeley Movers & Shakers panel will feature:
- Joan Blades, MoveOn.org, co-author of the Motherhood Manifesto;
- Patrick Kennedy, developer;
- Wavy Gravy/Hugh Romney;
- Mandy Aftel, perfumer;
- John Solomon, founder “How Berkeley Can You Be” parade & restauranteur.

Other benefit highlights: a historical slide show, avant-garde musical performance, and silent & live auctions. Donors include: Ajanta, Cesar’s, Chez Panisse, Linda Fairchild Gallery, Terracroft Tiles, North Berkeley Frame Shop, The Craftsman Home, Metro Lighting, Poulet, and more.
Please note: no credit cards.

Come enjoy the evening and support the Hillside Club – Berkeley’s oldest community club – showcasing the vibrancy that is Berkeley.

GeneralAdministrator on 16 Feb 2006 08:15 am

BERKELEY CYBERSALON: The Future of Radio

5-7 p.m., Sunday, February 19, 2005
The Hillside Club
2286 Cedar St., Berkeley

Radio is changing in two radically divergent ways: big broadcasters like Clear Channel that rely on advertising are buying up little stations, while subscriber-based satellite channels, public radio channels, and podcasts are proliferating. What’s a listener to do?

Come hear from experts in public radio, commercial radio, and the mechanics of radio what you can expect from radio in the future and how you can make intelligent choices about your future and radio as well.

Carol Pierson, President and CEO
Carol Pierson represents community radio at the national and regional level with Congress, the FCC, funders, and networks, as well as other national and regional organizations. To further NFCB’s role as a supporting umbrella for its various constituencies, she worked with the Native American stations following up on the Inter-Tribal Native Radio Summit and with the Latino controlled stations to organize the Latino Station Summit. In addition to providing organizational and fiscal leadership, Carol works to develop resources that will help NFCB members in revising The Public Radio Legal Handbook; writing Digital Audiocraft; direct consulting with stations on management, operations, planning and board development.

Prior to NFCB Carol served as Program Director and Director of Radio Productions at KQED-FM in San Francisco for ten years. Previously, she was Assistant Station Manager, Director of Operations and National Programming Director at WGBH-FM in Boston. Her radio career started at WYSO in Yellow Springs, OH, where she was Public Affairs Director and Assistant Manager for three years. In her spare time, Carol sings soprano with the La Peña Community Chorus in Berkeley.

Gregg McVicar — Independent Producer — http://www.radiocamp.com/
Gregg McVicar grew up in Walnut Creek, listening daily to KPFA, underground KMPX and progressive KSAN. Starting in college radio, he has worked at numerous commercial and non-commercial stations and created programming for all manner of radio outlets, including early experiments in “pay radio” and Internet distribution. One of his innovative documentary series was the second radio program ever distributed on the Net (the first was a Net-only show, “Geek of the Week”). He holds a master’s degree from the Annenberg School for Communication at USC and was instrumental in creation of The California Channel, the cable TV channel featuring live gavel-to-gavel coverage of the state legislature.

Since establishing Pacific Multimedia/RadioCamp in 1990, Gregg has produced national documentaries such as “The Privacy Project” (1991), “Hell’s Bells: A Radio History of the Telephone (1993) and “Computers, Freedom & Privacy” (1994-95). For the past seven years, he has hosted and produced the national Native music program Earthsongs, heard nationally on some 65 stations and on the Web. He is also host and producer of a new national eclectic music program, UnderCurrents, heard on 19 stations.Gregg is also a member of the volunteer staff at KPFA and an adjunct professor at California College of the Arts where he teaches radio classes.

Tim Pozar
Tim Pozar is a communications consulting engineer specializing in microwave engineering for government and commercial applications. He was an early entrepreneur and developer in the Internet startup area, by co-founding a number of companies such as TLGnet (San Francisco’s first ISP), Brightmail (first commercial anti-spam company) and Omniva (digital rights management). Previous to this, for 25 years Pozar was a radio broadcast engineer for commercial and non-commercial radio stations.

Pozar is active in community wireless networking. As such he is a co-founder of the Bay Area Wireless User Group. Pozar is also leading an effort, called Bay Area Research Wireless Network (BARWN), to study the issues (such as scaling, sustainability, etc) of deploying wireless high speed Internet access for urban and rural settings to address digital divide issues. The BARWN network is currently being built out through the San Francisco Bay area. The infrastructure is based on very low-cost unlicensed equipment. Pozar has also published a number of papers covering the regulatory issues in the United States and engineering of high speed wireless networks.

Roger Coryell
Strategic Marketing Director and Internet Director, Bonneville
International Corporation San Francisco

Roger Coryell’s job is “making sure commercial radio remains relevant to our listeners and advertisers in the future.” As part of that job, he oversees webcasting, podcasting, wireless initiatives and HD Radio efforts for KOIT, KDFC, and 95.7 Max FM in San Francisco, and manages the websites and online listener clubs for the three stations.

Roger has a longer radio resume than he likes to admit to, working since 1973 in almost every job in commercial and public radio (including Program Director, Account Executive, Morning Personality, News Director, production Director, Traffic and Continuity Director, Chief Engineer and Webmaster) for a number of commercial and public stations in the Bay Area, New England, and the San Joaquin Valley. He was also an early adopter of webcasting technology, and currently operates non-commercial streaming channels TwangCity.com and SoulShack.net.

Doors open at 5:00 and a $10 donation is requested for wine and cheese. Everyone is welcome, and the Hillside Club is wheelchair accessible.

Directions:
By car: From Oakland or the Bay Bridge, take Hwy 80 and exit at University, make a quick RIGHT under the freeway and onto the frontage road, and turn RIGHT at the 4RENT sign onto Cedar St. Continue straight two miles past Shattuck and park. From the Richmond Bridge, take Hwy 80 and exit LEFT at Gilman, turn RIGHT on San Pablo for a few blocks, and LEFT on Cedar St. 1.5 miles past Shattuck, and park.

By foot/bicycle: From downtown Berkeley BART, go north on Shattuck, and east on Cedar St. This is an easy and safe 15-minute walk.

GeneralAdministrator on 26 Jan 2006 05:33 pm

Exploring The Adirondacks: An Architectural Tour of A Great Rustic Tradition
by Steven Engelhart, Executive Director, Adirondack Architectural Heritage

Thursday, March 9th, Lecture at 8PM.

Come a little early - the doors open at 7:30PM - or stay a little late and enjoy conversation and refreshments. Proceeds benefit Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association. Tickets are $12, available at the door (Hillside Club members $8). The Hillside Club is at 2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley.

The lecture will highlight one of the special regions in the country where arts and crafts design is a major influence in the furniture and architectural style. The area is The Adirondack State Park in the northern section of New York State. The Park, a six million acre mixture of public and private lands and the largest park in the continental United States, was established in 1894. It includes vast forests, hundreds of mountains, thousands of lakes and ponds, and miles of wild and scenic rivers. During the late 19th century, sportsman and others came to the Adirondacks seeking recreation and revitalization int eh wild places of the region. The slide lecture will show how resident builders and professional architects developed a rustic style of architecture that is best represented by a series of building complexes know as Great Camps. These buildings and their furnishings were typically built for wealthy urban clients and constructed with a variety of local, natural materials so that they were harmonious with the rugged Adirondack landscape.

Steven Engelhart is the Executive Director of Adirondack Architectural Heritage (AARCH), the regional historic preservation organization of the Adirondack Park. Among AARCH’s many activities are: sponsoring a series of tours of historic places during the summer and fall; conduction workshops; publishing a newsletter; staffing Camp Santanoni; and provides technical assistance to individuals, organizations and local governments. Steven is a native of the Adirondack region and has a master’s degree in historic preservation for the University of Vermont. He authored Crossing the River: Historic Bridges of the AuSable River.

Following the slide presentation, information about a six-day AARCH tour will be discussed. The tour dates are September 9-15, and a detailed itinerary will describe the daily travel to Great Camps, historic buildings, and other sites of interest.

For more information, e-mail jeffrey@sellon.com, call 415-332-7026 or visit the Hillside Club website at www.hillsideclub.org.

GeneralAdministrator on 10 Jan 2006 03:59 pm

NWN/2 (New Works in the Nabe/the second)
8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Friday, January 27, 2006
The Hillside Club Concert Series
Hillside Club, 2286 Cedar St., Berkeley
www.hillsideclub.org/concerts
$15 general/$10 Hillside Club members/seniors/students
Admission includes attendance at a “Meet the Artists” reception after the
performance

The Hillside Club, one of Berkeley’s oldest cultural institutions, announces the second “New Works in the Nabe” (NWN), a cross-genre
showcase where working artists debut new material. Unique in the Bay Area, NWN is a recurring event where musicians, writers, actors, dancers, and filmmakers dress-rehearse their latest. An evening of juried performances, NWN gives talented local artists a space to try out their newest work in front an audience enjoying a historical Arts + Crafts venue with gorgeous acoustics.

NWN/1 featured novelist/artist Jonathon Keats; writer Susan McCarthy;
guitarist David Gans; pianist Ben Stolorow; and writer/performer Paulina
Borsook.

The January 27 2006 NWN/2 has in its lineup:
* San Francisco poet/comedian Whitman McGowan in the persona of Trungpa Bumbleche, channeling excerpts from the teachings of the Jura Lama;
* Oakland movement-artist Hilary Bryan dancing “Sacred Space”, a playful gryoscopic reimagining of Rudolf Laban’s formal theories of Space Harmony/Choreutics;
* Tiburon musician John Whitelaw playing transcriptions for bass instruments from the works of J.S. Bach;
* Santa Cruz writer Paulina Borsook presenting the spoken word/mixed media work “California on my mind/The things I’ll never write”

For more information, call Sylvia Paull at 510.527.0450

Artist bios:

Paulina Borsook (www.paulinaborsook.com), a Hillside Club member since 2004, is the curator of NWN.

Hilary Bryan (www.hilarybryan.com) is a dancer, musician, and movement analyst. Her choreographic work has toured internationally and she is a teacher of Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis. She is the founder and director of The Body At Work Movement Analysis and The Somatic Series workshops. “Sacred Space” forms part of the research for her MFA in choreography at UC Davis.

Whitman McGowan (www.whitmanmcgowan.com) aka Trungpa Bumbleche has been a poetry performer for decades, and has toured Europe several times in the company of rock bands. His spoken-word piece, “White Folks Was Once Cool Too”, is a cult classic. Upon meeting the exiled Jura Lama in the basement of burnt-out Swiss nightclub, he realized his true calling as a contemporary clairvoyant, bringing forth a gospel of nondenominational joy in the face of misery and doom. Returning home to San Francisco, he shared his revelations with local Buddhist hymnist Shaku Shinkoku, who gave him his new name, Trungpa Bumbleche. He has only just begun to publish and record under his new identity.

John Whitelaw, an accomplished electric bassist, has recorded with Texas rocker Roky Erickson, and has performed in a variety of venues, including gigs with the Ice Follies and jazz guitarist Barry Finerty.

GeneralAdministrator on 10 Jan 2006 03:54 pm

The Hillside Club Arts & Crafts Lecture Series Presents:
California Faience of Berkeley: a family perspective
 
Kirby William Brown (grandson of California Faience Company owner William Victor Bragdon) will present an illustrated discussion on the origin and history of the company, give biographical information on its founders–Chauncey Rapelje Thomas and William Victor Bragdon, and indicate the importance of California Faience in the Arts and Crafts Movement.  Color slides of California Faience pottery and tiles, along with pictures from company archives and family photos will illustrate the discussion.
 
Thursday, January 26, 2006 at 8:00 PM. 
Come a little early–or stay a little late–and  enjoy conversation and refreshments with other Arts and Crafts enthusiasts.  Proceeds to benefit The Hillside Club and The Landmark Heritage Foundation (Berkeley City Club, Julia Morgan, 1927).
 
Doors open at 7:30 PM  $12:00 at the door  (members $8.00)  The Hillside Club (Bernard Maybeck, reconstruction by John White, 1924) is located at 2286 Cedar Street, Berkeley, California.
 
For directions, check the Hillside Club website at http://www.hillsideclub.org/.
Information call 510  843-8982 or email TimLHansen@aol.com
 
Save the Dates—Mark your calendars:
 
Thursday, March 9, 2006 at 8 PM; Talk & slide presentation on The Adirondack Style, plus discussion of a planned architectural tour of The Adirondacks.
 
Thursday, April 27, 2006 8 PM,  To be determined. 

GeneralAdministrator on 30 Nov 2005 08:06 pm

At 7:30 pm on December 8, we’ll have a talk and slides by longtime and well-known Berkeley potter Mary Law, about her work as a ceramic artist and teacher. Mary received an MFA inceramics from Alfred University, and she hastaught there as well as at the California College of Arts and Crafts and San Jose State University.She has shown her work internationally. Mary specializes in functional and decorative pots —vessels for food, containers for flowers. You cansee samples on her website at www.marylawpottery.com and she’ll bring pieces to display. Admission is $5 for Club members, $8 for the general public.

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