August 2006
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BOOK
Kathan Brown: Magical Secrets About Thinking Creatively
(Crown Point Press)
While traveling in Scotland in 1959, Kathan Brown found an etching press that some artists had hidden in the backyard of a rooming house so it wouldn’t be melted down for scrap during World War II. She took the press back to San Francisco by freighter and used it to set up an etching workshop called Crown Point Press. In the half century since, working with such artists as Wayne Thiebaud, Richard Diebenkorn, Nathan Oliveira, and John Cage, Brown has learned a fair amount about how artists make art, and she’s distilled those lessons into 13 “magical secrets.” The result is a delectable hybrid of etching primer, art essay, and creativity manual, brimming with photographs and descriptions of the artists at work, along with color reproductions of the pieces in question. There’s a DVD of Brown lecturing on the subject, too. While the lessons apply most easily to the visual arts, the book is a thrilling window onto the creative process, and a potent inspiration to go out and make some art of your own. A-
DASHKA SLATER
CD
Various Artists: Berkeley Guitar 2006
(Tompkins Square)
For the most part, folk music is considered a lyric-driven genre. Back in the ’60s, though, some of the most impressive acoustic guitarists—John Fahey, Robbie Basho—forsook the verbal altogether. Last year, a new label called Tompkins Square released Imaginational Anthem, highlighting similarly minded 6- and 12-string guitarists from past and present. Berkeley Guitar goes one step further, offering multiple tracks from three current East Bay–based practitioners: Adam Snider, Matt Baldwin, and album producer Sean Smith. Snider’s tracks are the prettiest, touching on delicate folk and country patterns (“The Anger of God” recalls Dave van Ronk’s original version of “House of the Rising Sun”), while Baldwin’s tunes (especially “Split (Part 2)”) stick the closest to traditional blues, offering the most tension and movement. Smith’s numbers are ethereal and meditative, meandering in circular patterns like an Indian raga. All three wrest the acoustic guitar away from the coffeehouse warbler, proving that sometimes you can say more
without words. B+
DAN STRACHOTA
BOOK
Peter Schrag: California
(UC Press)
Old news, quite possibly tragic: California has over the past 25 years been as badly governed as a wealthy, humming nation-state could possibly be. New news, courtesy of Peter Schrag, the state’s underappreciated answer to Garry Wills: we haven’t completely screwed it up yet! In a book worthy of wide attention—the provocative subtitle calls California “America’s high-stakes experiment”—the intellectually limber author takes stock of the forces remaking the state into a test case of a teeming, postindustrial, insanely diverse democracy. Those forces include epic Third World immigration, of course. But also the willy-nilly ballot initiative system, “restrictive
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