Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, June 01, 2022, Page 20, Image 20

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THE OPENING ACT
JUNE 1�8, 2022
STAFF
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SUBMIT NEWS
Submit your event information
by Monday for publication the
following week (two weeks in
advance is even better!).
Go! Magazine is published
Wednesdays in the  Wallowa
County Chieftain and Blue
What we’re into
New releases
HUBERMAN LAB PODCAST
‘CARRY ME HOME,’
MAVIS STAPLES AND
LEVON HELM
I
never loved science as a kid.
During my pre- and post-sec-
ondary education, not one teacher
explained science in a way that
engaged my curiosity and got me
excited. Yes, I left academia with a
full appreciation of the scientifi c
method and an understanding of
the orderly progression of scientifi c
understanding from hypothesis to
experimentation to analysis to — if
you’re lucky — a conclusion.
But it wasn’t my thing.
Until now.
A few months ago, I stumbled
onto the Huberman Lab Podcast.
The podcaster is a neuroscientist
named Andrew Huberman who is a
professor of neurology and ophthal-
mology at the Stanford University
School of Medicine, and he heads
the Huberman Laboratory.
Huberman, an engaging and
articulate 46-year-old, makes neu-
roscience more accessible to the
general public.
The researcher takes information
from peer-reviewed scientifi c stud-
ies in reputable journals and gives
his listeners (and YouTube viewers)
podcasts.apple.com
tools they can use to improve their
brain function.
From Huberman, I’ve learned
science-backed ways to learn faster
and better, improve my sleep and
ward off mental fatigue. He doesn’t
just open the toolbox and hand out
tools — he talks about the mecha-
nisms that allow the tools to work.
I’m now fascinated by such things
as circadian rhythm, autonomic
arousal, brain plasticity and a host
of other topics.
Huberman was also a latecomer
into the world of science. He says
he didn’t take school seriously until
after his fi rst year of college. An en-
counter with a phenomenal profes-
sor kickstarted his fascination with
neuroscience.
Now Huberman is passing that
fascination on to the rest of us.
— KATHY ANEY, PHOTOGRAPHER AND
REPORTER, EAST OREGONIAN
Thursdays in The Observer, Baker
City Herald and East Oregonian.
ADVERTISING AND
SUBSCRIPTIONS
1124 Adams Ave
La Grande
541-624-3113
ome eff orts to bring
musical legends to-
gether feel contrived, like
they were cooked up for a
between-albums payoff .
Occasionally, though, when
the convergence isn’t cal-
culated, the moment just
needs to be preserved.
Such is the case with
“Carry Me Home,” a newly
released recording of a
memorable encounter
between Mavis Staples
and Levon Helm during the
summer of 2011. In front
of an audience at Helm’s
Woodstock, New York, stu-
dio, the pair rocked their
way through a 12-song set
of soul, gospel and road-
house blues that pulsates
with gusto and joy.
It’s reminiscent of
Helm’s Grammy-winning
“Ramble at the Ryman,” a
live recording of a 2008
Nashville concert, but with
S
Mountain Eagle. It publishes
Baker City Herald
541-523-3673
The Observer
541-963-3161
East Oregonian
541-276-2211
Wallowa County Chieftain
541-426-4567
Blue Mountain Eagle
541-575-0710
Hermiston Herald
541-567-6457
RAISING THE CURTAIN
ON THIS WEEK’S ISSUE
Bluemtnoutfitters.com
Mon-Sat 10-6, Sun 12-4
one of the world’s great
singers sitting in.
Not that Helm and
Staples were at the peak of
their powers. Helms would
die within a year after a
long struggle with cancer,
and Staples turned 72 that
summer.
Still, on this night they
laid it all out there. Staples’
voice is full and strong, her
approach typically fearless
and downright sassy. Helm
chimes in on a raucous
version of “The Weight,”
but he hangs back for the
most part.
There’s an overtly
political cover of Curtis
Mayfi eld’s classic “This Is
My Country” that includes
complaints about Tea
Partiers who want to take
the country back to the
1950s or ’60s. The politics
won’t be for everybody,
and things have changed
considerably since, but the
sentiments are delivered
with conviction.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS