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  • On her stunning new album The BPM, the multi-instrumentalist Sudan Archives explores the freedom of augmented reality and technology through the sounds of club music.
  • Consumer Reports expressed concern about high levels of lead in some two dozen protein powders, but only with repeated high exposure. Here's what to know before you make your next grocery run.
  • About 3 million glucose monitoring sensors were potentially affected by a production error that caused incorrect low glucose readings.
  • Wednesday Evenings, October 29, Novembe 5 & 12, 4:30-8:30 p.m. Ages 18+years welcome! Join us in the woodshop for this 12-hour woodworking skill-building workshop! Inspired by Japanese traditional shoji lamps, Instructor Michael Olin shares his take with students continuing their exploration of the woodshop and woodworking techniques. A shoji lamp is a light fixture with kumiko and rice paper inset into the frame to diffuse the light. Students will learn how to make their interpretation of a shoji lamp using pre-milled lumber using half-lap joints. We will practice layout and advanced techniques on the table saw to complete this project. We apply many of the same techniques in this class that we use in making full-size shoji doors. REQUIRED: Students must have taken our Intro to the Woodshop course in order to enroll in this class. If you have other woodworking experience, please leave details in the notes upon purchase and we will be in touch with you if we have questions. Materials are provided. We recommend students bring their own eye protection, ear protection & apron. Aprons for sale here. • Military & first responders discounts • Scholarships available • If this class is full, join the Interest List to be notified. • If you would like to be notified of future offerings, join the Interest List to be notified when new dates or spaces are available. San Diego Craft Collective on Facebook / Instagram
  • Stream now with KPBS+. Test cook Lan Lam makes a crowd-pleasing Stuffed Spatchcock Turkey. Equipment expert Adam Ried reveals our top pick for slicing knives. Test cook Erin McMurrer makes a crisp Shaved Celery Salad with Pomegranate-Honey Vinaigrette.
  • Gov. Gavin Newsom signed five laws advancing reparations for the descendants of enslaved people in California, but he vetoed five others. It’s a mixed record two years after the California Reparations Task Force issued its seminal report.
  • Late last month, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors authorized negotiations for the purchase of a Caltrans lot in Lemon Grove, where 60 sleeping cabins would be placed.
  • We look back on how the Padres performed this season following their loss to the Chicago Cubs. Plus, a roundtable discussion about San Diego's thriving theater scene and the storytellers behind it.
  • February 14 at 10 a.m. February 14 at 11:30 a.m. Featuring a San Diego Symphony Orchestra Percussion Ensemble Get ready to stomp, clap and groove as we dive into the rhythmic world of percussion! Featuring the electrifying Clapping Music and an array of drums, cymbals and marimbas, this interactive performance will have your little ones moving to the beat and making music of their own. Fun, lively and totally unforgettable! San Diego Symphony on Facebook / Instagram
  • Andrew McIntosh, Violin and Curator Vicki Ray, Piano Matt Kline, Double Bass San Diego New Music and the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library present "Ten Million Flowers," an evening of immersive contemporary works curated by violinist and composer Andrew McIntosh. Music will include works by Takemitsu, Miller, McIntosh, and Von Schweinitz, performed by McIntosh on violin, Vicki Ray on piano, and Matt Kline on double bass. Andrew McIntosh Andrew McIntosh is a Grammy-nominated violinist, violist, composer, and baroque violinist who teaches at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). As a solo artist he has performed at the San Francisco Symphony’s SoundBox series, Miller Theatre in New York, REDCAT, and festivals and concert series across Europe and the United States. As a chamber musician he is a member of Wild Up, the Formalist Quartet, and Wadada Leo Smith’s Red Koral Quartet. As a composer he was described by Alex Ross in The New Yorker as “a composer preternaturally attuned to the landscapes and soundscapes of the West,” and recent commissions include works for the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Calder Quartet, Yarn/Wire, and Ilya Gringolts. Vicki Ray Described as a “phenomenal and fearless” pianist, improviser, and composer, Vicki Ray is a leading champion of contemporary music. A founding member of Piano Spheres and head of keyboard studies at CalArts, she was the first recipient of the Hal Blaine Chair in Musical Performance. Ray has premiered countless works by today’s composers and has appeared at major international festivals, as well as on the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Green Umbrella series. Her recordings span a wide range, from Schoenberg’s "Pierrot Lunaire" to Reich’s "You Are (Variations)" and Cage’s "The Ten Thousand Things," which earned a 2013 Grammy nomination. Recent releases include Andrew Norman’s "Sonnets" with Nick Photinos, "YAR" with slide guitarist Scot Ray, and Daniel Lentz’s "River of 1000 Streams," named a Top 20 recording of 2017 by Alex Ross in The New Yorker. She also performs with the LA-based Partch Ensemble. Matt Kline Newly appointed Executive Director of San Diego New Music, Matt Kline brings a long-standing connection to the organization, having performed for nearly a decade as a double bassist, conductor, and composer. In addition to his work with SDNM, Kline has built an active career in contemporary music, performing with ensembles and at events such as Ensemble Modern, MusikFabrik, Monday Evening Concerts, and the Cabrillo Festival, and collaborating with composers including Krzysztof Penderecki, Eva-Maria Houben, Jürg Frey, and Wolfgang von Schweinitz. He holds a doctorate in music from UC San Diego, where his studies focused on contemporary performance, and he remains an active contributor to San Diego’s vibrant new music community. About San Diego New Music: San Diego New Music is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the public performance of notated music of the highest integrity and artistic caliber from the 20th and 21st centuries. We seek to advance the art form by promoting music composed with conceptual rigor, passionate energy and singular artistic vision. SDNM enriches the artistic culture of San Diego through the presentation of an annual concert series and the soundON Festival of Modern Music, and through fostering its resident performing ensemble, NOISE. In 1994, the only place in San Diego where you could hear an entire concert of 20th-century music was on a college campus. San Diego New Music pitched the idea of a concert series devoted to modern music and 20th-century classics at the Athenaeum. The concerts of modern music perfectly complement the exhibitions of modern art held in the Athenaeum’s galleries. In 1996, San Diego New Music presented its first season. The series was called "Noise at the Library," and the ensemble would later adopt the name, as well. San Diego New Music and the Athenaeum have been happily co-presenting concerts of new music ever since. For more information on the organization go to www.sandiegonewmusic.com. Athenaeum Music & Arts Library on Facebook / Instagram
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