Ok, this week I'm going to close JayceLand for a while while I'm gone. Last year I faked it while I was away, but as you might already
know, I'm working on this project called
The Bike With 2 Brains
for
Burning Man
(The Man, Black Rock City 2003, NV)
which starts in a couple weeks. But first I'll be out in Denver to visit some people. If you're dying to send me a letter, try:
Jason
Camp CampCampCamp in Alternative Energy Zone
Catharsis and 5:00
c/o BRCPO
Burning Man
Gerlach, NV 89412
Anyway, I pretty much did a regular (if a little light) update for this coming week and some highlights until mid-September, but I thought
I'd let everyone "play at home." It's the Do-It-Yourself JayceLand Kit. Here's the instructions:
First, open the following links to find out what's going on around town. I recommend tabbed browsing for neatness.
Little Theatre's "Coming Soon" page usually shows a couple movies that aren't actually scheduled to appear in the coming week. Get on the mailing list and wait for the update.
The Keg Sports Bar is kind of a typical sports bar, but early on they tried having bands.
The Landmark Society of Western New York has a virtually unusable events page. It works by showing the next chronological event, but what if I want to look ahead? Dates would be nice.
Daily Perks has a decent and generally accurate calendar.
Starry Nites's calendar is also accurate but the information is often abbreviated for space, so check Freetime for details.
Rochester Public Library's calendar has events listed all over and it used to be updated much more frequently.
RIT's College Activity Board CAB has always been incompetent (even when I was there way back years ago) but might as well look to see if anything is going on.
RIT's Java Wally's occasionally has a show or something worth checking out.
RIT Events Calendar is probably someone's project that won't work next year.
Eastman Theatre Calendar is generally accurate but a bit sparse on details ... lots of stuff is free or cheap and it's probably worth going to almost anything.
Ossia New Music lists cool alternative-style music shows when the school year starts.
Rochester Contemporary has a stylized website, but the events list has proven to be sporadically unreliable, but their home page is usually accurate if there's something going on.
Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra no longer lists shows in any usable way as best I can tell. The shows are always too expensive, but I like to know if there's something I'd be willing to pay that much for.
Geva Theatre lists a calendar, but you really have to peruse the press releases to know what's going on.
Downstairs Cabaret has a clumsy calendar, but it's not too bad once you get used to it.
Eastman House added a flashy new calendar which actually seems to work; plus it's very accurate.
The City of Rochester lists press releases at the bottom of the page and it's a handy way to see what they're scheduling. The e-mail updates are pretty useless as events past by a week often get sent as current.
Carbon Records calendar lists almost exactly the same things as A|V Space with a few exceptions all around town.
Jambase occasionally has a show that I haven't caught any other way.
Whole Lotta Shakin' is about the radio show but there's a small event list centered around the rockabilly nature of the show.
WITR events calendar pulls from Freetime and Bug Jar calendars as well as other sources and there's a handful of surprises now and then.
Garage Pop Records lists, well, the Garage Pop shows. Even if listed elsewhere, this is the most accurate source for their shows.
RocWiki events page is user-updated, so sometimes people take the time to put in some unique thing.
WBER has a local concerts calendar, but "local" means all over New England (which isn't so bad in itself) but they often list shows on the wrong day, time, venue, or city (i.e. some venues in Rochester are listed as Buffalo and vice versa.) They seem particularly anti-local-music.
VisitRochester calendar worst calendar design yet: alphabetical order with no priority for repeating events
Freetime is the backup plan to catch anything that isn't above.
Next, find information on all the bands and performers that you haven't seen. I search out
GarageBand.com,
MySpace.com,
and
Google.
For MySpace, try "myspace.com/BandNameWithNoSpaces" (capitalization is ignored) and if they use "the" at the beginning of their name,
try it with and without the "the." For Google, try a couple different things with the band name: in quotes, then look for a URL by removing
all the punctuation from their name and searching ... try appending "band," "music," "rock," or "rocks." For the ones you have seen, check
your notes and give a description.
Likewise, search for any venues you don't already have info on. Use Google to find if they have a website. Up until today I was using
Maps On Us
but they recently broke all the old links, so every one of my address links is broken. I took a crack at using
Google Maps
but it's not perfect.
Then it's pretty easy to set up a list of things going on, putting each day in vague order of morning, afternoon, early evening, and
night. Find out which shows you think you'll like and mark them. Find one or two shows each week that people should really go to.
After that it's no big deal ... just write an essay about what you did last week and throw in some intelligent philosophy.
Repeat each week.
M O V I E S
Kontroll(at
The Little)
- Some strange movie about a bunch of outsiders who live in an outsider world.
Balzac et la petite tailleuse chinoise(Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress, at
The Little)
- [straight from IMDb:] A boy sent to a Maoist "rehabilitation" camp in the mountains falls in love with the village tailor's granddaughter.
Broken Flowers(at
The Little)
- An accomplished lothario goes on a hunt for a son he never knew who's now 19 years old.
August 18
Over at
The Bug Jar
(219 Monroe Ave.)
starting around 9 p.m. is
Gil Mantera's Party Dream
whom I describe thusly: "it's as if they grabbed disco, synth-pop, and power-pop by the balls and demanded all their money — and collected the payout."
[source:
Bug Jar calendar][18+]
Tonight, Friday night, and Saturday night at 9:30 p.m. is the
River of Light
laser show at
The High Falls Gorge
(Pont De Rennes Bridge.)
[source:
City Hall press release][all ages]
Today at
A|V Art Sound Space
(#8 in the Public Market, off N. Union St., formerly The All-Purpose Room)
is the start of
Two Please,
photographs by
Scott Laird
with a sound installation by
Joe Tunis. The show runs until September 10.
[source:
artsound website]
Starry Nites Café
(696 University Ave., formerly Moonbeans)
is hosting their weekly
Open Mike Poetry
tonight at 7 p.m.
[source:
Starry Nites calendar][all ages]
Tonight is another
Tuesday Nature Nights Guided Bike Ride
from 6:15 p.m. to 8 p.m. of the
Aug 23ÐGuided Bike Ride, High Falls Neighborhood
Meet at the Pont de Rennes, behind the Centers at High Falls. Ride will visit the Susan B. Anthony and Corn
Hill Neighborhoods.
[source:
City Hall press release]
Poor People United
meets tonight and every Wednesday at 7 at
St. Joseph's House of Hospitality
(402 South Ave.)
[source:
the proverbial grapevine]
Tonight from 8 to 10 is an
Open-Mic Comedy Night
at
Daily Perks
(389 Gregory St.)
While once it was a workshop type of environment, it's now more-or-less a regular open mic ... by default it's still a place to try out new stuff.
[source:
Daily Perks calendar][all ages]
The Dryden Theater
at
George Eastman House
(900 East Ave.)
will be presenting
The Bunny Remakes
starting at 8 p.m. Animator
Jennifer Shiman
will be on hand to talk about her works of Internet Flash-based, bunny-starred, short animations of famous movies and to discuss her other works.
[source:
Eastman House calendar][all ages]
I guess there's no Bug Jar Fest this year at Highland Bowl ... it was scheduled for today but alas, without me around there's just no point, now is there?
[source:
the proverbial grapevine]
In theory, there is another
Emerging Filmmakers Program
tonight at
The Little
(240 East Ave.)
at 9:15 p.m., but I haven't heard anything about it so your guess is as good as mine.
September 2
V-J Day
The Dryden Theater
at
George Eastman House
(900 East Ave.)
will be showing
Clockwatchers
starting at 8 p.m.
A group of temps work through their bland jobs, but even at this seemingly inconsequential level, corporate greed is always in play. Preceded by the short film
Lovely.
[source:
Eastman House calendar][all ages]
Tonight at
Monty's Krown
(875 Monroe Ave.)
is good surf-rock influenced punk-rock from
The Priests,
and the recently reunited punk-influenced hard-edge rock from
The Purrs
starting around 10:30 p.m.
[source:
GaragePop e-mail][21+]
The Dryden Theater
at
George Eastman House
(900 East Ave.)
will be having another installment of
Surprise Cinema
starting at 8 p.m. where they'll show some unique or rare film ... something for the cinephiles out there — plus, it's free to Eastman House members.
[source:
Eastman House calendar]
This evening at 8 p.m. in the
Dryden Theatre
at
George Eastman House
(900 East Ave.)
is another installment of
Surprise Cinema
where one of the curators gets to pick some piece of cinematic history that you'll likely not see elsewhere.
[source:
Eastman House calendar]
Tonight is the closing reception for
Two Please,
photographs by
Scott Laird
with a sound installation by
Joe Tunis
at
A|V Art Sound Space
(#8 in the Public Market, off N. Union St., formerly The All-Purpose Room.)
[source:
artsound website]
Today through Tuesday is the
Celebrating Our Erie Canal Heritage at Corn Hill Landing
event at, well, the new
Corn Hill Landing
(Exchange Blvd.)
with lots of free stuff and cheap boat rides.
[source:
City Hall press release]
Tonight at
The Bug Jar
(219 Monroe Ave.)
is retro rock-and-roll band
The Makers,
punk-rock, hard-rock, and a little rockabilly from
The UV Rays,
and fun, gimmicky heavy metal band
Blüdwülf
starting around 9:30 p.m.
[source:
Bug Jar calendar][18+]
About the title ...
This week it's nothing clever ... I'm just going to take some time off.
This page is Jason Olshefsky's list of things to do in Rochester, NY and the surrounding region (including Monroe County and occasionally the Western New York region.) It is updated every week with daily listings for entertainment, activities, performances, movies, music, bands, comedy, improv, poetry, storytelling, theater, plays, and generally fun things to do.
The musical styles listed can include punk, emo, ska, swing, rock, rock-and-roll, alternative, metal, jazz, blues, noise band, experimental music, folk, acoustic, and "world-beat."
Events listed take place during the day, in the evenings, or as part of the city's nightlife as listed.
Oh, and it's spelled JayceLand with no space and a capital L, not Jayce Land, Jaycee Land, Jace Land, Jase Land, Joyce Land, Jayce World, Jayceeland, Jaceland, Jaseland, Joyceland, Jayceworld, Jayceeworld, Jaceworld, Jaseworld, nor Joyceworld. (Now if you misspell it in some search engine, you at least get a shot at finding it.)
While I'm on the topic of keywords for search engines, this update includes information for Thursday, August 18, 2005 (Thu, Aug 18, 2005, 8/18/2005, or 8/18/05) Friday, August 19, 2005 (Fri, Aug 19, 2005, 8/19/2005, or 8/19/05) Saturday, August 20, 2005 (Sat, Aug 20, 2005, 8/20/2005, or 8/20/05) Sunday, August 21, 2005 (Sun, Aug 21, 2005, 8/21/2005, or 8/21/05) Monday, August 22, 2005 (Mon, Aug 22, 2005, 8/22/2005, or 8/22/05)
Tuesday, August 23, 2005 (Tue, Aug 23, 2005, 8/23/2005, or 8/23/05) and Wednesday, August 24, 2005 (Wed, Aug 24, 2005, 8/24/2005, or 8/24/05).
indicates an event that's a preferred pick of the day ... probably something worth checking out.
indicates a "guaranteed" best bet for the particular genre of the indicated event.
links to a band's page on GarageBand.com which offers reviews and information about bands.
links to a band's page on MySpace.com which is a friend-networking site that is popular with bands.
is an event that is "non-entertainment" for the masses such as practice sessions, open jams, etc.