Victoria-based Noedy HD is joined by local singer Edie Duponte for this special concert, featuring French jazz classics.
This concert was recorded at Tom Lee Music in Langford, B.C., audio and video by Victoria Radio and sponsored by CPF BC & Yukon and CPF Saanich Chapter and the City of Victoria.
Setlist:
Cāest Si Bon – Henri Betti
La Mer – Charles Trenet
Les Yeux Ouverts -Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt
La Belle Dame Sans Regrets- Sting
Musicians:
Saxophonist Noedy Hechavarria Duharte
Bassist Phil Albert
Drummer Damian Graham
Piano Attila Fias
Check out other Jazz in Spring concerts. Show Schedule at cpfLIVE.ca
14 February – Romantic jazz music for St Valentineās
27 February – Black History music celebration – in the spirit of the great black composers
18 March ā Fabulous French jazz songs and music from timeless classics
27 March – Jazz concert with live art creation on stage during jazz music performance
3 April ā Noedy HD’s original music compositions based on Cuban inspirations
Kid CudiĀ quietly paid homage to Kurt Cobain during with his wardrobe choices onĀ Saturday Night Live last night. The rapper played two cuts off his latest album, Man on the Moon III: The Chosen, and during his first performance (āTequila Shotsā) wore a green cardigan reminiscent of CobaināsĀ famousĀ MTV UnpluggedĀ sweater. The outfit also paid tribute to Chris Farley with a t-shirt donning an image of the formerĀ SNLĀ cast member.
For his second performance (āSad Peopleā), Cudi sported a long, floral dress. The bold choice was a nod to the dress Cobain wore during a 1993 photo shoot with UK music magazine The Face.
The tribute was well-timed, as this week marked the 27th anniversary of theĀ Nirvana frontmanās death.
Cudi has long-admired Cobain and last year got a photorealistic black and whiteĀ tattoo of the grunge icon wearing a Daniel Johnston t-shirt.Ā āI try to use [Cobain] as my muse whenever I can,ā he said in a past interview withĀ GQ.
Outside Roloās, which opened in Ridgewood this January. Photo: Christian Rodriguez
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Luisaās family has lived in the same apartment building on Onderdonk Avenue in Ridgewood since she was 10 years old. Now, she worries that time will come to an end. Last year, when Luisa (who asked to only use her first name) found herself working out of the apartment, she started to notice how quickly changes in the neighborhood were happening. Local property values had skyrocketed, and she says her landlord has said, many times, sheās thinking about selling. āIf she were to put it up for sale, we would be evicted in a matter of just closing your eyes,ā Luisa fears. āWe donāt have a lease,ā she says, āso there are very real concerns that I do have.ā
While she says thereās no immediate threat to her family, sheās worried that may change any day now. She spent the summer listening to the drilling and construction along Onderdonk Avenue, including for Roloās, a new restaurant from a trio of former Manhattan chefs. āIt was just this nightmare for me,ā Luisa says, ābecause I knew what was happening.ā
Roloās is the kind of low-fuss, New American place you might expect from four veterans of Danny Meyerās Gramercy Tavern who wanted to open a casual, outer-borough dining room. Roloās sells eight kinds of pickles, pineapple-rum Negronis, homemade focaccia, fresh pasta, and containers filled with slow-braised lamb ragù. A recent review in The New Yorker said it offered āa taste of New York.ā Howard Kalachnikoff, one of the chef-partners, calls it, āJust a simple, neighborhood restaurant, focused on cooking over a wood-burning grill.ā The goal of opening, he explains, is āto put down some roots and then see what happens after that.ā
Pandemic dining restrictions meant Roloās opened first as a market with only takeout and delivery.A few weeks ago, the owners put out some tables, and they have a warm-weather streetery structure in the works. Eventually, Kalachnikoff imagines diners dropping in a couple of times each week, and he wants to stay in business for a long time. Ben Howell, another partner, adds, ānothing would make us happier than if some of the young adults that come here now come in in 15 years with their kids, when their kids are graduating.ā
Due to the pandemic, Roloās opened in January as a grocery store, selling everything from single-origin spices to De Cecco pasta, and takeout business. Photo: Christian Rodriguez
Indeed, some neighbors donāt see any drawback to the arrival of Roloās or the buildingās renovation. āIām not aware of any negatives,ā says Paul Kerzner, a 49-year member of Community Board 5. āI walked into that building about a month ago when that was finished,ā he recalls. āI was tickled to death when I saw that the graffiti was coming down and the boards that were up were coming down, and weāre going to get glass back again.ā
But for others, Roloās is something more than a destination for a quiet weeknight meal. āIām so excited because I like this kind of food,ā says Laura Duarte, who, with her siblings, opened her own restaurant, Las Chilangas, just before the pandemic hit. āBut the way we think about this type of restaurant opening ⦠I know the rent is going to increase so much.ā
Katy Knight, a former community board member who was raised in the neighborhood by a single mother, says itās crucial for New York to maintain affordable areas like Ridgewood: āThat was something I talked about at one of the first community meetings that I went to,ā she explains, āabout the way we need to preserve this kind of neighborhood if we want to see a city where there was going to continue to be a middle class, or where people who come in without money might have a chance.ā
As another community advocate puts it, Roloās is a āvisible manifestationā of the gentrification that threatens Ridgewoodās residents. āYou are either for it, or youāre not ā there is no in-between,ā says Raquel Namuche, who has lived in the neighborhood for 15 years and started the Ridgewood Tenants Union, or RTU, an organization dedicated to, in their own words, fighting displacement. āWe all want nice things,ā says Namuche. āThey just shouldnāt come at the cost of working-class tenants whoāve made Ridgewood their home for more than a decade.ā
The market at Roloās. Photo: Christian Rodriguez
The main reason that Roloās, specifically, has gotten this much attention is because of its ties to a neighborhood real-estate developer. One of the restaurantās partners is a local real-estate investor named Stephen Maharam. A former textile company heir who sold his familyās company to Herman Miller for $156 million in 2013, Maharam is also an investor and business partner of local developer Kermit Westergaard, who has bought 11 buildings in the neighborhood, eight of them in an area that one resident now refers to as āKermitville.ā (Roloās is named after Westergaardās dog.) To its critics, Roloās is simply the most prominent sign that all of Ridgewood could soon be transformed into something else, and it raises an urgent question that gets asked all too rarely: When a neighborhood is poised to undergo a big transition, what happens to the people who have been there their entire lives?
āItās very much a symbol of what Kermitās doing in the neighborhood itself,ā Namuche says of the restaurant, āand I think thatās why people have had such a reaction to it.ā (Much of that reaction has played out on an online community group, where Roloās became such a frequent topic earlier this yearthat one member tried to divert the conversation by challenging others to post photos of food from anywhere else.)
For his part, Kalachnikoff says he understands his neighborsā concerns about his restaurant: āWeāre bringing something cool and easygoing and dependable and fun and affordable to the neighborhood ā Iām surprised there just arenāt more places already like that,ā he explains.
āEvery individual has a right to do whatever business they do,ā says Adrian King, a longtime resident and the owner of Kingās Juice Bar on Seneca Avenue, but he believes itās disingenuous to claim development is always in the best interest of the neighborhood. āYouāre not from the community. You need to make yourself part of the community.ā
Adrian King opened Kingās Juice Bar in 2016. Photo: Christian Rodriguez
Even though the controversy around Roloās is new, the friction regarding the new developments in the neighborhood dates back to at least 2014. That is the year that Namuche started the RTU and the year that Westergaard and Maharam bought a couple buildings, including one at 68-38 Forest Avenue.
Raised on the Upper East Side, Westergaard had moved into Ridgewood some years earlier, and received some attention for his interior-design work after the New York Times wrote about his renovation of his Stockholm Street home. With the help of investors, he bought a couple neighboring houses, and then eventually a handful of other properties. At 68-38 Forest Avenue, one of the existing tenants was Maria Thompson, who lived there with her family. She remembers that, at the time, the building was ākind of so-so,ā but that construction on the building eventually became āunbearable.ā According to Knight, the apartment was being renovated out from under Thompson, but Westergaard says the building āwas clearly poorly managed and was in terrible condition,ā and that he worked for nearly two and a half years to resolve issues, including lead-paint violations and raccoon infestations, before deciding he had to get out the tenants.
In a 2016 complaint filed with the Department of Buildings, Thompson alleges that construction caused a gas leak in her apartment. āThis is one of the more delicate things I lived through when I was there,ā she says. It allegedly took several days for the leak to be fixed, and that same year, Thompson, who lived with her husband, son, daughter, and granddaughter, was forced to spend Thanksgiving and Christmas without heat or gas in her apartment. Westergaard says that he tried to fix issues āin an affordable way,ā but he had to come to terms with managing a building āthatās not safe or habitable.ā
Thompson was eventually evicted. She tried to fight it in court, but vacated the apartment in November 2017. When asked about this, Westergaard says that he never wouldāve evicted the tenants at 68-38 Forest Avenue if it were possible, calling that āthe one situation where I had something I wasnāt able to solve.ā
Now, Thompsonās old corner has a very different feel to it than it did when she lived there. The building is home to ForĆŖt Wines, a natural-wine store; the cocktail bar Sundown, which opened in 2017; Cafe Plein Air; and the soon-to-open pizzeria Panina. Upstairs, the apartments above the new retail remained vacant until this January, when each ā with new kitchens and flooring ā rented for between $3,400 and $3,600 per month, more than double the rent that Thompson paid when she lived in the building.
Maria Thompson used to live at the corner of Forest Avenue and Catalpa Avenue, what one resident now calls Kermitville Central. Photo: Christian Rodriguez
āI get that our apartments are on the higher end of the market on Ridgewood,ā Westergaard says. He explains that his goal is to buy vacant buildings in need of rehabilitation. One such building, also purchased in 2014, is 467 Woodward Avenue. When he purchased the property, Westergaard says the interiors were not salvageable, the faƧade was peeling off the front, and the extension was collapsing. āOf course the worse condition, the better from my perspective because itās just more exciting,ā he says. āItās more of a blank slate; you can go really crazy with it.ā That building is now home to an upscale co-working space and a one-bedroom apartment that leased for $2,640 last summer.
Along with the co-working space, 467 Woodward is also the headquarters for several companies, including Westergaardās Hooper and Keap, a development and management company that gut-renovates, as well as a company called Valkyrie, a real-estate broker in which he is a minority stakeholder. Listings on Valkyrieās website tout āRidgewoodās exciting progressive retail sceneā and call the area āan au courant retail community undergoing unparalleled boutique development.ā Two spaces are advertised as benefiting from āone of NYCās most rapid creative demographic shifts.ā Rental prices listed by Valkyrie can be twice or sometimes three times as much as other properties in the area, according to one survey by a group that was looking for a retail space in the neighborhood.
Westergaard also owns three buildings surrounding the Forest Avenue structure, all of which are filled with boutique businesses and renovated apartments asking higher rent than what has been typical in the neighborhood. Most recently, on February 24, he and investors bought another building, 880 Woodward, for $2 million, a 60 percent increase over what it sold for in 2017.
āItās extremely problematic when you have someone like Kermit, again, who just imposes himself in our neighborhood to carry out this extremely limited vision of how he thinks Ridgewood should develop,ā Namuche says. āIt does not include me, it does not include my mom, my dad, my neighbors on this block. You know, people that are of a different demographic. It includes people who want to pay or can pay $3,000 for an apartment with marble fixtures.ā
Westergaard and Maharam contest this characterization. āWeāre the opposite of, āHow are we going to make a quick buck off the neighborhood?āā Westergaard says. āWeāre investing in the long-term economic health of the neighborhood.ā And other tenants, both commercial and residential, speak positively of him as a landlord. āIn my time working with Kermit, I saw it as this guy really cared about the neighborhood, he raised his family there, and he was kind of bringing life back,ā says Lauren Nickou, an artist who was a tenant and employee of Westergaardās. āThere were a lot of empty storefronts. To bring in new businesses seems like a positive thing for anyone in the neighborhood.ā
But what happens if that investment comes as the expense of current residents who can no longer afford their homes? Janelle Jirau, who runs Slow Rise Bagels, lives in the apartment where she grew up. If she moved out, she says, she wouldnāt be able to afford another place in the neighborhood. āI know Ridgewood like the back of my hand,ā she explains. āSo for somebody to say, well, you have to move, letās say to, like, Corona or Elmhurst, I donāt know anything there.ā Sheās wary of anyone who stands to make money when residents have to move due to higher rent costs. āYou canāt say you want to be a neighborhood place if youāre trying to reshape the neighborhood,ā she contends. āAre you catering to Ridgewood, or are you catering to a Ridgewood youāre trying to create?ā
Of course, not all new business owners are looking to push out current residents. The RTU has found a somewhat unlikely ally in Mike Stamatelos, who arrived in Ridgewood after leaving a high-profile financial consulting job to open a coffee shop called Porcelain. He found a space at 880 Woodward Avenue that made him excited, in part because it had been built out as a set for the Martin Scorsese movie The Irishman and didnāt need as much work. He signed his lease in the spring of 2019 with Westergaard, who at the time was managing the property, enthusiastically noting the prospects of the neighborhoodās changing demographics.
Since opening that November and struggling for several months, Stamatelos says that the pandemic actually helped his own bottom line, as he reopened more quickly than other neighboring businesses. But as business picked up, he began to get involved with RTU, and ā as the Black Lives Matter protests formed around the country ā he began to recognize his own role in the areaās gentrification. He had been a vocal supporter of the BLM movement, both on social media and with signage in his shopās window, but it was through a conversation with Namuche that he understood a problem he hadnāt thought about before. āI realized we are literally just capitalizing off of this type of marketing and not really doing it ourselves,ā he says. āI literally felt like the white guy coming from consulting, making a profit, capitalizing on social-justice issues because itās a hot topic, and I just felt like shit.ā
After that first conversation, Namuche and Stamatelos stayed in touch. Those conversations led him to see his own business āas part of the problem.ā Specifically, Stamatelos says that he started to wonder why all of Westergaardās tenants are a certain type of food-and-beverage business, appealing to a specific, often white demographic. āItās basically now that Roloās is open, there is a viable case to say that this is a ādestination,āā he argues. Ā Since the summer, Porcelain has become involved with the neighborhoodās homeless outreach project, making sandwiches weekly and posting a donation menu. āThe more Iām learning, the more I have this propensity to divest this place from the model it was built to be,ā he explains, āwhich is very much rooted in a capitalist standpoint.ā
Maharam acknowledges the pressure that rising rents puts on businesses like restaurants ā and wanted to avoid that for himself and his partners at Roloās. āWe wanted to own the building so we didnāt have to worry about ā knock on wood ā getting lucky and being successful and then finding ourselves priced out by the landlord,ā he explains.
Namuche says this is a pattern sheās seen before, having spent her life organizing housing activists around gentrification in Queens. āGentrification manifests in various ways, and it is very much a racist phenomenon,ā she offers. āI think because of the protests last year, people have to open their eyes a little bit more and think a little bit more deeply about how housing justice is really connected to racial justice.ā
Namuche thinks thereās a better way, and the RTU has been working on a campaign for equitable development that includes getting new small businesses to hire local working-class and immigrant tenants, and a community-led rezoning plan. āWe could set an example for how neighborhoods develop in a way thatās really equitable, in a way that could make it livable for everyone,ā she says. āThe only way weāre going to make a dent is if we grow a base of folks who are the most vulnerable and the actual targets. Our goal is to empower these immigrant families, working-class families, families of color.ā
Anuradha Hindi Full Movie – Balraj Sahani, Leela Naidu, Nazir Hussain – Superhit Hindi Movie
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Nirmal, a young man becomes a doctor, and starts his practice in Nand Gaon. He meets Anuradha Roy, a well-known singer and falls in love with her and they both get married. Anuradha gives up her singing and becomes a housewife. She soon gives birth to a daughter. But then a whirlpool of events occur which jeopardize her marriage.
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Rapper and singer Kid Cudi set off a buzz on social media after he performed in a floral dress on the Saturday Night Live episode that aired on April 10.
He confirmed on Sunday (April 11) that the dress, created by Off White CEO Virgil Abloh, was a tribute to the late Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain, according to NBC News.
RELATED: Kid Cudi Reacts To Landing His First No. 1 Hit On The Billboard Hot 100
His performance came the same week as the anniversary of Cobainās death by suicide on April 5, 1994. The dress is similar to one that Cobain wore on the cover of The Face magazine in 1993.
Cudi, whose real name is Scott Ramon Seguro Mescudi, received lots of love from some social media users for his sartorial tribute:
Of course, there were also some haters who commented on his look:
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Can Amalia and Penance protect the āorphansā in the first season of The Nevers TV show on HBO? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like The NeversĀ is cancelled or renewed for season two. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feelĀ frustrated when their viewing habits and opinions arenātĀ considered,Ā we invite you to rate all ofĀ the first season episodes of The Nevers here.
An HBO sci-fi drama series created by Joss Whedon, The Nevers TV show stars Laura Donnelly, Ann Skelly, Olivia Williams, James Norton, Tom Riley, Pip Torrens, Ben Chaplin, Denis OāHare, Amy Manson, Rochelle Neil, Zackary Momoh, Eleanor Tomlinson, Elizabeth Berrington, Anna Devlin, Kiran Sonia Sawar, Viola Prettejohn, Ella Smith, Vinnie Heaven, and Nick Frost. In the year 1896, Victorian London is rocked by a supernatural event that gives certain people (mostly women) abnormal abilities ā from the wondrous to the disturbing. But, no matter their particular āturns,ā all who belong to this new underclass are in grave danger. It falls to mysterious, quick-fisted widow Amalia True (Donnelly) and brilliant young inventor Penance Adair (Skelly) to protect and shelter these gifted āorphans.ā To do so, they have to face the brutal forces determined to annihilate their kind.
What do you think? Which season one episodes of The Nevers TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Do you think that The NeversĀ should be cancelled or renewed for a second season on HBO? Donāt forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.
Taja Sevelle LOVE IS CONTAGIOUS (Ben Liebrand Remix)
Label:
Paisley Park ā– W8127 (TX), WEA ā– 920984-0
Format:
Vinyl, 12″, 45 RPM
Country:
UK
Released:
1988
Genre:
Electronic
Style:
House, Synth-pop
TracklistHide Creditsā¼
A Wouldn’t You Love To Love Me? (Jellybean 12″ Vocal Remix)
Engineer [Remix] — Doc Dougherty
Producer [Additional Production], Remix — Jellybean*
Written-By — Prince
B1 Love Is Contagious (Ben Liebrand Remix)
Remix — Ben Liebrand
Written-By — Taja Sevelle
B2 Baby’s Got A Lover (LP Version)
Written-By — Bennett*
Creditsā¼
Executive Producer — Michael Ostin, Benny Medina
Producer — Bennett*
Notesā¼
A: Additional production and remix for Jellybean Productions, Inc.
B1: Remixed for D.M.C. (U.K.)
A, B1:
ā 1988 WEA International Inc.
Warner Bros. Music Ltd.
Original version available on the LP “Taja Sevelle” WX165
B2:
ā 1987 WEA International Inc.
Blaquett Music
From the LP “Taja Sevelle” WX165
Pressed at Damont Audio Ltd.
Distributed by WEA Records Ltd.
Made in UK
Barcode and Other Identifiersā¼
Barcode (Text): 0 75992 09840 3
Matrix / Runout (A Side label): W8127 (TX) A
Matrix / Runout (B Side label): W8127 (TX) B
Matrix / Runout (A Side run-out etching): W8127 (TX) – A1 DAMONT MT.1
Matrix / Runout (B Side run-out etching): W8127 (TX) – B1 DAMONT MT.1
“I Would Die 4 U” live from Landover, MD on November 20, 1984. Originally released on ‘Purple Rain’ (1984)
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Purple Rain remains one of historyās most important, indisputable, and influential albums, but youāve never heard it like this before. Purple Rain Deluxe boasts the official 2015 Paisley Park Remaster of the original tapes overseen by Prince himself in addition to a new ‘From The Vault & Previously Unreleased’ disc with 11 unheard gems from the storied vault. This is Princeās final word on his definitive masterpiece.
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Welcome to the Official Prince YouTube channel – celebrating the life, creative works and enduring legacy of Prince Rogers Nelson. Princeās fearless creative vision, musical virtuosity, and wildly prolific output graced the world with one of the most universally beloved bodies of work of all time. Princeās hit songs āPurple Rainā, āWhen Doves Cryā, āKissā, āRaspberry Beretā, and āLittle Red Corvetteā are just a small sample of his revolutionary blend of rock, funk, R&B and new wave pop that shattered barriers and empowered millions. In the 1980s, Prince made history by being one of the first black artists to have their videos in heavy rotation on MTV. The Prince Estate is proud to present these groundbreaking videos alongside all of Princeās releases to inspire and educate fans and celebrate Prince in his totality. Subscribe to the channel and check back for new additions, including music videos, performance clips, official Prince playlists, announcements, and more!