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About The daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1961-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 2017)
OCTOBER 12, 2017 // 15 dining out A STORIA C ORNER D ELI SUBMITTED PHOTO ◆ Local ◆ Fresh ◆ Gourmet See for full menu ECIAL! for 22 SP TU ES All orders take-out $ 3 8TH & L, ON THE S EAV IEW BEAC H APPROAC H 3 60-642-7880 BURG ER NITES RETURN OC T 18TH 304 37th Street | Astoria, OR 97103 503-325-7768 Y PIZ Z A DA Piz 2 zas Swing Fever 503.325.7414 bakedak.com #1 12th Street, Astoria, OR North Coast and Peninsula Now offering soups, paninis, beer & wine. Come check out our new addition. You don’t need to zip to come sip. 503.861.9875 92111 Highlife Rd, Warrenton www.highlife-adventures.com Imagine Your Restaurant Advertised Here! ILIES FAM OME! C WEL Hungry Harbor GrillE 3 13 Pa c ific Hw y, Do w n to w n Lo n g Be a c h, W A 3 60-642-5555 • w w w.hu n gryha rb o r.c o m OUR N EW FAL L HOURS ! 11 AM – 8 PM M ON – S AT 9 AM – 8 PM S UN 503.755.1818 www.camp18restaurant.com Favorite stop to & from the Coast Great pub grub & craft beer Seaview, WA ▪ 360.642.4150 shelburnerestaurant.com Advertise Y our Restaurant Here! Continued from Page 4 Count Basie and Duke Ellington are but a few recognizable names from the era. Vocalist and crowd favorite Denise Perrier is backed by trombone, bass, guitar, saxophone, clarinet and drums, plus additional vocalizing from the group. “This music is our pas- sion,” Swing Fever founder Bryan Gould said. “We’re crazy for the classic tunes from the 1930s and 40s. It’s romantic, torrid and witty.” Swing Fever not only plays music but talks about it: colorful stories, histori- cal anecdotes, biographical sketches about the music and the people who created and performed it. Did you know that Nat King Cole was a starving musician in 1943? And that when he wrote his fi rst hit, “Straighten Up and Fly Right,” he sold it for $50? The rest, as Gould would say, “is history.” Doors swing open at 6 p.m. for a no-host wine bar. At 7 p.m., Swing Fever ups the tempo. Get ready to tap your toes and clap your hands. “Watch out — you might catch Swing Fever, too!” Gould said Music at the Mission 1157 N. Marion Avenue Gearhart 503-717-8150 www.mcmenamins.com There’s a new twist on the Water Music Festival this year. San Francisco’s Music at the Mission Chamber Players will perform in the Leadbetter Lighthouse in Ocean Park. Towering high in the sky, the lighthouse is on the grounds of the private 60-acre Lead- better Farm estate. On Saturday evening, Oct. 14, the fi re-breathing dragons guarding the gates, along with tireless festival volunteers, welcome ticket holders at 6 p.m. for a no-host wine bar. The Chamber Players perform at 7 p.m. The concert repeats on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 15. Gates open at 1 p.m. for a no- host happy hour. The concert follows at 2 p.m. “The Lighthouse seats 100, which is pretty amazing when you think of a lighthouse — it gives you some scope of the size,” Diane Marshall, the festival chairwoman, said. “It provides fabulous sound, too.” Saturday evening sells out well before the concert date, she said; offering two different times allows the festival to offer more people the opportunity to attend the chamber music program in a remarkable setting. Music at the Mission Chamber Players is a small, elite group of musicians who gather several times a year to perform at Mission San Jose in Fremont, California, in a series they call “Chamber Music Outside the Box.” “Our goal is to continuous- ly strive for artistic excellence by providing audiences with provocative, engaging and high-caliber programs,” said Rhonda Bradetich, the group’s fl utist. Six musicians demonstrate their expertise on fl ute, piano, double bass, violin, cello and viola. Their program includes Bach, Mozart and Prokof- iev, and will feature Franz Schubert’s Piano Quintet in A Major (aka the “Trout”). ‘Icing on the cake’ In keeping with the festival’s ongoing dedication to music programs in area schools, student performances precede each concert. On Friday night, the Ocean Beach School District student jazz trio opens the evening with Christopher Lake and Tristan Trudell, accompanied by Tom Trudell. On Saturday and Sunday, vocalist/pianist Elle Personius is front-and- center. On Monday morning, Oct. 16, Music at the Mission play- ers will continue the WMF Education Outreach program, sharing their talents with area students. Each year, a portion of funds raised goes back to music programs in the school district. Locals lodge, transport and feed the visiting musicians. “WMF volunteers do just about anything they can to help,” Marshall said. “Then the musicians put the icing on the cake, so to speak.” CW