* - ■ I HE P ori la n d O bserver • M ay 15, 1996 P age Ç B3 VzZ) ENTERTAINMENT Taste Of J azz QTlje |Ja rtk u tò (Db serbe Seattle’ s Folklit'e Festival Set For Memorial Day Weekend Jigsaw, contem porary folk m usic band, will preform at Folklife Festival. Celebrate world cultures at one of the nation's finest ethnic and traditional arts festivals. The North­ west Folklife Festival returns to the Seattle Center for its 25th year and offers an incredible lineup of dance and musical performances, art ex­ hibits, a vast international market filled with handmade crafts and imported items, traditional food and a whole lot more. The Festival packs all the enter­ tainment and fun into four days over Memorial Day weekend, May 24- 27, from 11 a.m. to midnight at the Seattle Center. Admission is free thanks to sup­ port from Northwest Folklife and the Center. The Northwest Folklife Festival provides unique opportunities to celebrate and participate in ethnic and traditional art from around the world. Each year, the Festival attracts nearly 200,000 visitors and hosts over 6,000 participants represent­ ing more than 100 countries. Japanese taiko drums, Scandi­ navian Hambos, Eastern European line dances, African marimbas, old- time fiddle music. Native Ameri­ can storytellers and more fill the Festival’s 17 stages with over, 1,000 dance and music performances and activities. Mabuhay, Pilipinas! is the title of Northwest Folklife’s 1996 folk­ lore project and translates to “Long Live the Philippines.” This year, the Northwest Folklife Festival pro­ vides a look at the rich and diverse cultural heritage o f Filipinos and Filipino Americans. The project includes music and dance performances, an all-day sym­ posium addressing important Fili­ pino issues and a variety of exhibits in the Folklife Museum. L-R: Benny Wilson, Paul Knaulls, Mel Brown Ron Steen. In front, Hank Swarn. One of I995’s most successful jazz events was Portland’s first Taste of Jazz, a leisurely cruise up the W illam ette River on a 3-deck sternwheeler with three dozen of the city’s best jazz players delighted a sellout crowd of 450. With the immense success of the first event, the sponsors immediately went to work on Taste of Jazz 2, now set for Sunday, May 19, again aboard the Columbia Gorge sternwheeler. Boarding time is 3:35 p.m. Sun­ day,May 19,atS.W. Frontand Stark, alongside Waterfront Park. The Pat O ’Neal Riverboat jazz Band will Marilyn Scott: Take Me With You “Marilyn Scott, a power-packed engine blast with first class musical pipes, is a turbo-charged gem.” -Jazz Times Combining her passions for jazz, pop and Brazilian flavors with a nat­ ural affinity for classic R&B, the veteran vocalist draws from myriad of influences to create a sound and style completely her own. Scott’s Warner Bros. Records debut album “Take Me With You” offers a roadmap to the soul o f a true original, with a career as dynamic as the songs she sings. Co-produced by longtime cohorts Russell Ferrante and Jim my H aslip (o f the Yellowjackets), with select tracks helmed by Michael Colina, Ray Bardani, Brazilian singer/guitarist that's focused on the future. “I’ve been fortunate to work with Russell and Jimmy for so many years,” says Scott o f the trio’s con­ stantly evolving creative process. “We all have the same tastes, same values and an instinctive knack for knowing what works and what doesn’t. Havingtheircapableartistic input behind me helps raise my own standards several notches. We wrote new tunes, but also dug deep for older material which we could apply a 90’s arrangement to.” Marilyn Scott Dori Caymmi and the legendary George Duke, the collection brims with snapshots o f Scott’s past and possesses a socially conscious eye Oregon Lotlcrg Building Art Opportunity Ihe Oregon Arts Commission is conducting a ‘Call for Artists’ to submit proposals for the inclusion of public art for the Lottery Building in Salem, OR. Three sites for the inclu­ sion o f public art for the Lottery Building have been identified with a total budget of $63,000 for public art. The deadline for this opportuni­ ty is Friday, May 31,1996. Visual artists, artist teams and craftspeople, both emerging and es­ tablished, in all medias are eligible an encouraged to apply. Proposals will be selected by an independent selection committee composed of,he project architect, visual arts profes­ sionals, and agency and community representatives. Call 503-986-0085. Salem Rodeo Days The 4th annual Salem Rodeo Days is May 17,18 ,19 a, the Ore­ gon State Fairgrounds, Salem, OR Salem Rodeo has been approved by the Professional Rodeo Cow­ boys Association, and includes: 3 PRCA performances, 7 exciting rodeo events plus the Wild Horse Race. There will also be a food and family activity area and a carnival. A portion of the proceeds will ben­ efit The Boys&GirlsClub, DARE, and Oregon Mounted Posse. Ro­ deo tickets can be purchased at Coastal Farm stores or Double ‘H’ Western Wear. ▲ television. He would like to see more “middle-of-the-road" stories where the focus is not on a criminal offense or how the subject overcame oppres­ sion or other racial hardship “Viewers need to see more Black people in stories where race is not an issue, where it’s not even men­ tioned,” said Wasbotten. Wasbotten also believes that television news producers and reporters should slow down the pace of news stories, take the time to offer possible explana­ tions about why crimes happen, and choose visuals and soundbites more carefully. Wasbotten, a White 26-year-old New York native, said growing up in a racially mixed neighborhood strongly influenced his perceptions Flood damage caused a tempo­ rary shutdown of the Oregon Muse­ um of Science and Industry, but the landmark museum is on the road to recovery with a Grand Re-Opening celebration slated for Memorial Day weekend. Festivities will kick-off with a re-opening ceremony Friday, May 24th at 10:00 a.m. “We are coming back with a re­ newed sense of spirit, and a comm it- ment to provide top notch customer service,” remarked Ed Gibson, pres­ ident of OMSI, during a recent inter­ view. As part of that new commit­ ment, OMSI officials are making the museum more accessible by reduc­ ing and simplifying pricing for indi­ vidual attractions and offering new membership options. The museum will open with Star Trek: Federation Science in the Changing Exhibit Hall, Orion Ren­ dezvous and Sky Watch in the Murdock Sky Theater and Antarcti­ ca, The First Emperor Of China, and Destiny In Space in the OMNIMAX Theater More PowerTo You! anew permanent exhibit which examines electricity and its role in the history of the northwest will be on display in the Trubine hall. Other weekend activities will in­ clude live science demonstrations, exhibit hall tours, a STAR TREK look-alike contest and a memorial Day ceremony alongside the USS Blueback. You’re Invited To The Cultural Recreation Band's Spring Concert At Matt Dishman Community Center 77 N. E. Knott of people who are different from him. “I’ve always been aware that TV, especially TV news didn’t reflect my reality, or the reality of my friends of color,” said Wasbotten. “This study will hopefully, in some small way, help to change that.” Saturday, May 18, 1996 6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. $10 Donation Raffle— great prizes For Tickets call 287-7512 FASSTE 4 OM, SUN, MAY 19, I99C sri in h iiii 11 < i i the mi i m n ii uvri Ed Washington and Craig Berkman join other com m unity leaders in posing with the Olympic torch a s it m a k e s a brief sto p in Portland. perform dockside as ticketholders head down the gangplank. Tickets to the Taste of Jazz 2 are available at ticketmasters, the Port­ land Center for the Performing Arts, Portland State University. A gour­ met box lunch will be part of the ticket price The cruise is a project of the Mt. Hood Festival of Jazz Instrumental W orkshop, chaired by Bobbye Brown and Mel Brown. It benefits the workshop’s scholarship fund, sponsored by Beacock Music. This summers version brings to­ gether more than 40 jazz artists, in- OMSI To Re-Open Blacks Still Seen Negatively By TV Continued from Front eluding the Pat O ’Neal Riverboat Jazz Band, the Art Abrams Swing Machine big band and a nonstop jam session featuring a baker’s dozen instrumentalists. Also starring will be singers Kelly Broadway and Sweet Baby James Benton. Driving the jam will be pianists Darin Clendenin, Randy Porter and George M itchell, bassists Tom Wakeling and Joey Seifers and drum­ mers Gary Hobbs and Keith Warner Homs include saxophonists Warren Rand and Renato Caranto, trumpeter Bobby Bradford, trombonist Cleve Williams and guitarists Hank Swam and Dan Faehnle. The 1996 cruise will give Portlanders a chance to hear new and veteran jazz players. The Bradford- Williams-Swarn connection harks back to the ‘ 50s and ‘60s, when these players were part ofNorth Portland’s exciting club action and afterhours jam sessions. The cruise will give listeners the opportunity to hear newcomers sing­ er Broadway and guitarist Faehnle as well as bringing Sweet Baby James into the fold. With all the jazz talent set to per­ form, cruise customers can also expect to hear some surprises. With the 40- some artists already booked, other Portland jazz folks may be heard, too. TRAD JAZZ/DIX1ELAND:PAT O’NEAL RIVERBOAT JAZZ BAND BIG BAND JAZZ: ART ABRAMS SWING MACHINE VOCALS: SWEET BABY JAMES BENTON. KELLY BROADWA1 N O N S T O P JAM S E S S IO N : RANDY P O R T E R . G E O . M IT C l_____ DARIN CLENDENIN. TOM WAKELING. JOEY SEIFERS. KEITH WERNER. GARY H OBBS. WARREN RAND. RENATO CARANTO. CLEVE WILLIAMS. B O B B Y B R A D F O R D . DAN FA E H N L E . HANK SW A R N t i f i , I s ti I S «: I. »Il J T I T I ti 1 . t i T M .4 s T t i ■■ - » K K ■■ <> X II Í A 4 N , I« M IM IC M l I A W W « » « I, U » II I« « ■ 411» ♦ ROY HARGROVE 1. M A Y 2 : C A S S A N D R A W ILS O N & C O U R T N E Y S A T . M A Y 2 5 ir TICKETS AT Ml TICKETMASTER OUTLETS. MUSIC MltKNHIUM 1 ALADDIN 101 Of FICt OR CHARGE I t PHONE 224 1490 ____________________________________ 4 P IN E ' S V ti « « X «: m I ■ • I. a II M N I I» £4 SUBJECT TO SERVICE CHARGE 1