AUGUST 25, 2016 // 9 Enjoy an outdoor concert in Cannon Beach Baby Gramps, Luke Ydstie and Kati Claborn to perform Sunday, Aug. 28 SUBMITTED PHOTO BY DONNA CRISPIN Sign up for a basketry workshop Sept. 10 in Seaside. Transform invasive plant into a thing of beauty SEASIDE — Refashion the leaves of invasive yellow lag iris into a beautiful hand-made basket. North Coast Land Con- servancy will host iber artist Donna Crispin to teach a hands-on basketry workshop from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sept. 10. The workshop will be held at the conservancy’s Circle Creek Habitat Re- serve, located at the end of Rippet Road in Seaside. Participants will work outside or, if the weather is inclement, inside the unheated barn and are urged to dress accordingly. All materials will be provided; participants should bring a lunch and water as well as kitchen or basketry shears. You can see examples of Crispin’s work at donna- crispin.blogspot.com Crispin has been weaving baskets and other ibers arts for almost 30 years, incor- porating Paciic Northwest indigenous techniques, Japa- nese aesthetics, and materi- als and inspiration from the natural world. She has taught at Til- lamook Bay Community College, the University of Oregon, the Sitka Center for the Arts and Ecology, Lane Community College, the High Desert Museum in SUBMITTED PHOTO Donna Crispin will teach a basketry workshop Sept. 10. Bend, the Newport Paper Arts Festival, the Tolovana Arts Colony, the Sou’West- er Lodge and more. She has had basketry and fiber art shows in Oregon, Washington, California and Colorado, and has been a featured artist at the Can- non Beach Arts Association gallery. She is a member of the National Basketry Organization, the Colum- bia Basin Basketry Guild and the Natural Fiber Arts Group. Cost of the workshop is $60 and includes all materi- als; $10 of each registration supports NCLC’s coastal conservation work. For more information or to register, call NCLC Administrative and Outreach Assistant Lynette Villagomez at 503- 738-9126. CANNON BEACH — On the evening of Sunday, Aug. 28, the Tolovana Arts Colony will present a free concert in Cannon Beach’s downtown park. The event features Seattle’s legendary Baby Gramps, Astoria’s Luke Ydstie and Kati Claborn (of Blind Pilot), and more. “If you feel like being amazed,” wrote the es- teemed music critic Robert Christgau, “(Baby Gramps is) a better bet than most.” Indeed, Gramps’ funky, freaky, funny folk is eclec- tic, energetic, inclusive and expertly performed. Plucking and picking a steel-bodied, Nation- al-brand resonator guitar with seeming abandon and aplomb — as well as croaking, occasionally through an old metal mega- phone — Gramps tech- niques are both virtuosic and revolutionary. “He’s a performer with a style so distinct you’ll never forget it,” Christgau continued, writing for the Village Voice. As memorable as his guitar playing, so too is Gramps’ scruffy style, tone, humor and gravely vocal chords. The New York Times’ Ben Ratliff wrote that Gramps sounded like “Popeye after smoking an entire tin of Prince Albert.” Reviewing a collection of sea chanteys, Rat- liff christened Gramps’ performances “among the album’s best.” “(T)hat’s saying a lot,” Ratliff continued, “among the other contributors are Sting, Lou Reed, Lucinda Williams, Bono...” Springing from tradi- tions of early 20th century SUBMITTED PHOTO BY JOHN CORNICELLO Baby Gramps will bring his ragtime, blues and jazz to Cannon Beach’s downtown city park Sunday, Aug. 28. PHOTO BY JOSHUA BESSEX Kati Claborn and Luke Ydstie will open the concert. American ragtime, blues and jazz, Gramps’ catalog runs the gamut, from sea to land, serious to whimsi- cal, young to experienced. Indeed, these are songs for children of all ages. Among some of Gramps’ age-span- ning tunes are “Teddy Bears’ Picnic,” “Let’s All Be Fairies,” and “I’m Gon- na Eat Some Worms.” Setting the stage for Baby Gramps are Luke and Kati. From Astoria, the duo are best known as members of Blind Pilot where Luke (Ydstie) plays bass and Kati (Claborn) performs a myri- ad of instruments, including banjo, guitar, ukelele and more. Both also contribute backing vocals. When not on national tour with the critically adored group, Ydstie and Claborn are parts of the Alialujah Choir, Hook & Anchor, as well as regular collaborators with a make- shift family of musicians in the Astoria area. Last fall Ydstie re- leased “Collected Essen- tial Works,” his first solo album. The Coast Week- end called it “earnest, a blending of crisp, strummy, mid-tempo folk and sensi- tive, lilting, plucky Ameri- cana.” Claborn is featured on the album as well. She contributed lyrically and sung backup vocals. As Luke and Kati, the duo’s strength and center is singing in harmony — something they do in all the aforementioned groups. The concert itself starts at 6 p.m. But before, after and between performances, Cannon Beach’s DJ Beef will keep the music going with a cross-section of world, popular and eclectic selections. Hear the music start at 5:30 p.m. Located in Cannon Beach’s downtown city park, on Second and Spruce streets, across from Jupiter’s Rare and Used Books, the early evening event is free and open to all. Attendees are welcome to bring food, libations, picnic baskets, blankets, chairs and so on. The event is produced by the Tolovana Arts Colony with support from Cannon Beach’s Tourism and Arts Commission. For more information, visit tolovanaartscolony.org, email tolovanaartscolony@ gmail.com, or call 541- 215-4445.