Blast from the Present Lansing's David Cooper Blows His Way to the Top See Page 13 2 City Pulse • January 15, 2020

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Blast from the Present Lansing's David Cooper Blows His Way to the Top See Page 13 2 City Pulse • January 15, 2020 January 15 - 21, 2020 www.lansingcitypulse.com Locally owned A newspaper for the rest of us Blast from the present Lansing's David Cooper blows his way to the top See page 13 2 www.lansingcitypulse.com City Pulse • January 15, 2020 Bringing the best of Folk, Roots & Dance to the Greater Lansing Area $5 2020 concert season student tickets to all shows! All events begin at 7:30pm unless noted Friday, Feb. 28 th Friday, Jan. 17 18 Annual James Keeleghan JigJam From the Midlands of Ireland Mid-Winter Canadian Invasion II Singing & Friday, March 6 Friday, Jan. 24 Kyshona Folk Festival Tim Grimm and JAN. 31-FEB. 1 Ben Bedford Hannah Community Center, Frday, March 13 East Lansing The Steel Wheels FRIDAY CONCERT Friday, Feb. 7 The Fabulous Heftones and Friends Friday, March 20 Lynn Miles Friday, Feb. 14 Canadian Invasion IV House of Hamill (7:30) Sweet Water Warblers Liz Carroll, world-renowned Irish fiddler, Rachael Davis, May Erlewine, Friday, March 27 with dancer extraordinaire, Nic Gareiss Lindsay Lou and harpist Maeve Gilchrist (8:45) Joshua Davis SATURDAY Friday, Feb. 21 COMMUNITY SING Dan Chouinard Cheryl Wheeler Friday, April 3 Song Leader Frank Youngman Come sing fabulous songs WITH a Minneapolis and Seth Bernard treasure (7:30) Sunday, Feb. 23 8 SINGING & MUSIC WORKSHOPS Friday, April 17 SATURDAY, NOON - 4PM Molsky’s Mountain Drifters Bruce Molsky, Allison de Groot, Low Lily, including fiddler Stash Wyslouch Lissa Schneckenburger FREE CHILDREN’S CONCERT WITH MARK DVORAK Thurs., Feb. 27 Friday, April 24 SATURDAY, 11AM Scott Cook Emma’s Revolution Canadian Invasion III with Pat Humphries SINGINGFESTIVAL.COM and Sandy O. For info on tickets, venues, performers, monthly contra dances, Fiddle Scouts & more, call 517-337-7744 or th visit www.tenpoundfiddle.org 45 season! City Pulse • January 15, 2020 www.lansingcitypulse.comLorem ipsum 3 Favorite Things Britta Urness and her brass watering can Thursday, January 23, 2020 • 7:30 PM Claude Bolling - Suite for Flute and Jazz Piano Richard Sherman, Flute Bijan Taghavi, Pianist Rodney Whitaker, Bass Randy Gelispie, Drums Music, Myth and Mystery The Absolute Music Chamber Series offers its eleventh season at the acoustically-su- perior Urban Beat Event Center in Lansing’s old Town. In this highly welcoming space, everyone sits only a few feet away from the musicians to experience chamber music up close and personal. Concert guides introduce the artists and their programs and facilitate an after-concert discussion among the audience and the musicians. This talk-back provides a chance for the audience to connect with the musicians and understand the passionate process that creates a performance. Concert Guide: WKAR’s Jamie Paisley. In the Old World soirée tradition, light refreshments are served following every concert. Buy tickets online: absolutemusiclansing.org or at the door Urban Beat Event Center, 1213 Turner Street Lansing, Michigan 48906 in Old Town R Britta Urness, 38, is a familiar ing her plants. Using this can always face in the Lansing art world. She felt delicate and proper, as if I were e eda spiritsirits is a former academic adviser in the pretending to act grown-up with a r dc r art department at Michigan State house of my own. That, and water- University and, in November, started ing the plants was much easier than Distillery & Cocktail Bar on a new career path as a studio edu- peeling potatoes. cator at the Broad Museum MSU Art At an interactive art exhibit once, Lab. Beyond that, her own artwork I was asked to draw what I’d grab will be on display in a show called from my house in a fire onto a post- “Sorry, I’m Not Leaving,” opens at 6 card. I immediately thought of my Oatlander p.m. Friday (Jan. 17) at the Lansing brass watering can and took pleasure Art Gallery & Education Center, 119. in drawing its shape. There’s some- S. Washington Square, Lansing. thing about the graceful curve of the My favorite thing is a 1970s Ethan spout and the fact that it’s sturdy and Allen brass watering can. Being brass. Today, I used it to water a good brass, it tarnishes easily, but I recent- collection of small plants that I keep ly shined it up by using ketchup, and in a set of McCoy pottery planters. it worked great. Very satisfying. While you can easily buy a cheap After my Great-grandma Emma plastic watering can at a dollar store, passed away, it was something spe- I take pride in having a special tool cial I chose from her house. While for the job. It’s not the only thing I other family members were attached have of my grandma’s, and it’s cer- to her paintings, candy dishes or tainly not the most valuable thing I quilts, I gravitated towards this prac- own, but after my cats, I’d scramble tical brass beauty. to rescue this funny can due to the During the summers as a kid, I gentle memories and rituals I asso- straight bourbon spent a lot of time at her house, hav- ciate with it. ing afternoon tea with her, learning (This interview was edited and aged 4 years to sew and reading pre-teen paper- condensed by Rich Tupica. If you back books sprawled out on the floor. have a suggestion for Favorite She had me do household chores for Things, please email rich@ 2000 Merritt Road, East Lansing her and my favorite thing was water- lansingcitypulse.com.) 4 - 11 p.m Thurs & Fri; 2 - 11 p.m. Sat; 4 - 10 p.m. Tues, Wed & Sun 517-908-9950 4 www.lansingcitypulse.com City Pulse • January 15, 2020 VOL. 19 ISSUE 23 (517) 371-5600 • Fax: (517) 999-6061 • 1905 E. Michigan Ave. • Lansing, MI 48912 • www.lansingcitypulse.com ADVERTISING INQUIRIES: (517) 999-5061 or email [email protected] PAGE CLASSIFIEDS: (517) 999-6704 EDITOR AND PUBLISHER • Berl Schwartz 17 [email protected] • (517) 999-5061 ARTS & CULTURE EDITOR • Skyler Ashley Women in jazz will celebrate MLK Day [email protected] • (517) 999-5068 EVENTS EDITOR/OFFICE MANAGER • Suzi Smith [email protected] • (517) 999-6704 PRODUCTION • Abby Sumbler PAGE [email protected] (517) 999-5066 22 STAFF WRITERS • Lawrence Cosentino [email protected] • (517) 999-5065 Kyle Kaminski • [email protected] Guy Yehuda ignites the Lansing Symphony Orchestra (517) 999-6710 SALES EXECUTIVE PAGE Lee Purdy • [email protected] • (517) 999-5064 29 Contributors: Andy Balaskovitz, Justin Bilicki, Capital News Service, Bill Castanier, Ryan Claytor, Mary C. He Ate She Ate: Amanecer Mexicano Cusack, Tom Helma, Gabrielle Lawrence Johnson, Terry Link, Kyle Melinn, Mark Nixon, Dennis Preston, Carrie Sampson, Nevin Speerbrecker, Rich Tupica, Ute Von Der Heyden, David Winkelstern, Paul Wozniak Cover Distribution manager: Garrett Clinard • (517) 999-6704 Art Delivery drivers: Garrett Clinard, Dave Fisher, Dale Gartner, Jack Sova, Gavin Smith Photo by Dickie Hill Photoworks Interns: Matthew Stine • [email protected] NOW AT 10:00 A.M. SUNDAYS on FOR DESIGN City Pulse • January 15, 2020 www.lansingcitypulse.com 5 PULSE NEWS & OPINION FOR True love’s kiss DESIGN In the children’s fairy tale of yore, Snow discrimination will continue to White took an ill-advised bite from the evil churn through the federal court queen’s poison apple. The deathlike sleep system. We are not lawyers and induced by the toxic fruit could only be won’t attempt to dissect the legal broken by the kiss of true love. arguments on both sides, except We offer the popular Disney para- to say that the case will likely turn ble as a metaphor for the City of East on whether the city’s regulatory Lansing’s ongoing legal skirmish with the actions exhibited hostility toward Country Mill, a local apple orchard that the family’s religious beliefs rather unapologetically discriminates against the than maintaining neutrality. LGBTQ+ community by prohibiting same We prefer to reflect on the phi- sex marriages at its farm in Charlotte. As losphical principles involved in the a result, the city – the first in the nation to city’s fight to protect its ordinance ban discrimination on the basis of sexual prohibiting discrimination on the orientation — contends that it can legally basis of sexual orientation, a bar Country Mill from selling at the munici- practice the Country Mill owners Coffee Bar at pal farmers market. freely admit, defending their ban Horrocks Farm Market As a new year unfolds, we hope and on same sex marriages as an 7420 W Saginaw Hwy., Lansing wish the Country Mill owners would set exercise in religious freedom. Only Bill Simpson correctly iden- aside their litigious pursuits and do the Yet, as others have observed, tified this month’s Eye for Design right thing: Living up to the biblical exhor- freedom is a two-way street. It as the coffee bar at Horrocks Farm tation to “love thy neighbor,” the orchard is ironic, not to mention anti- Market. Horrocks has grown expo- owners could remedy the ill effects of their thetical to common sense, that case, the right of the Country Mill owners nentially since its opening in 1959. The poisonous fruit by allowing the kiss of true the Country Mill owners demand the city to participate in a city-sponsored event, store, which encompasses 70,000 love between same sex couples at their accommodate its discriminatory religious in violation of the city’s anti-discrimination square feet, has satellite locations in facility, just as they do for heterosexual beliefs, while attempting to deny the city ordinance, can be viewed as injuring the Grand Rapids and Battle Creek. The couples.
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