Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Farm at the Arb: AppleJam 2021

Minnesota Landscape Arboretum: Farm at the Arb: AppleJam 2021

Farm at the Arb is the place to be Saturday night, September 25, for our 3rd annual AppleJam.

Enjoy the family fun featuring an apple-related scavenger hunt, apple bingo, lawn games, and concessions including beverages from Excelsior Brewing Co.

Enjoy music from the Daisy Dillman Band from 6:00-8:00 p.m.

Cost

$10 members
$25 non-members
$5 kids (15 and under)

Register

Click here to register

You may cancel your reservation up to September 4, 2021 and receive a partial refund (event cost minus $5). No refunds will be granted after September

Featuring

 

Red’s Savoy Pizza Truck will sell Jumbo slices of Cheese, Pepperoni and Sausage Pizza for $7 per slice. Cash, credit card and ApplePay accepted.

BUY TICKETS

 

North Artist: Rachel Lime Made One of the Boldest Local Albums of the Year

North Artist: Rachel Lime Made One of the Boldest Local Albums of the Year

Rachel Lime’s “A.U.” album cover –  Photo by Alan De Leon Taverna

Minnestoa Monthly: Every time Rachel Lime sings, it’s an invitation to an alternate universe that is mythic, vulnerable, and revealing. And while music has always been a part of her life, only recently did it become more than a hobby.

Growing up in central Minnesota, Lime took piano lessons and played flute in her high school band. When she was 13 years old, she shared recordings online for the first time. They feature her turning poems from her favorite books into songs. Somewhere in her childhood home, there’s a computer with files of poems she wrote back in 2006. “It’s second nature—I’ve always written,” she says.

Lime’s technique broadened and sharpened by the time she created her 2021 debut album, A.U., which explores themes of loneliness, longing, and her Korean heritage. Like a collection of mythologies, the album brings together scenes welcoming you to the black woods, to a bedroom at night, or to a sweet day in July. Released in June, the beautiful compositions draw from traditional Korean instruments, like the Gayageum and Janggu, as well as violin, flute, guitar—plus a lot of production on MIDI synthesizers.

Her song “Silla” was loosely inspired by the 7th-century Korean ruler Queen Seondeok. “It was just something I want to put out there in the world,” she says, about referencing her cultural background. “There’s a real value to someone who’s Korean listening to it and being able to connect with it on a different level. Because they’re like, ‘This is our thing.’” She remembers getting that feeling when listening to Korean electronic music artists like Peggy Gou and Yaeji.

A.U. came together serendipitously at a time when Lime was getting more serious about pursuing music amid grad school studies. In the second half of 2019, she played her first show at Moon Palace Books in south Minneapolis. “It was something I put together because I really wanted to. I felt like I was getting to that next step,” she recalls.

In the winter that followed, she thought about recording a collection of songs. When a trip planned for mid-March of 2020 fell through because of the pandemic, she had a week to do nothing but write.

Despite the album’s themes of loneliness and longing, it came together through community. Around that time, a Seattle-based friend, Bobby Granfelt, reached out about a record label he was starting called Inside Voices. The connection provided motivation and support to shape the album. A.U. became a collaboration with artists within the queer and BIPOC communities that Lime belongs to. She acknowledges that her role as a musician gives her a position of privilege that wouldn’t be possible if not for other artists of color who have helped her along the way.

Her Bandcamp website includes a lengthy list of acknowledgements: friends, collaborators, investors—plus legendary astronomer Carl Sagan. “My music isn’t mine; I can only create it because of others,” she says. “You don’t see all the people behind the scenes who enable all this to happen. How do I pay that back in material ways to other people?” Lime has since relocated to New York and is working on new music.

In performance, she sees Rachel Lime, the musician, as an alter ego that gives her the freedom to be playful and performative with gender. “It’s like drag—it’s deeply self-expressive in an intentional and authentic way,” she says. Working with local director Alan De Leon Taverna on her music videos, and with Pang Zoua Thor and Miz Frozean on her hair and wardrobe, she has honed a brash, colorful persona.

Femininity, as played by her characters in music videos, becomes a form of gender performance that she says she doesn’t usually embody naturally. Referring to her music and performance, she says, “There’s a vulnerability and riskiness in being unconventional.”

Listen to Rachel Lime’s A.U. at rachellime.bandcamp.com

 Basilica Block Party 2021 – Minneapolis, MN

 Basilica Block Party 2021 – Minneapolis, MN

We’re excited to share the Cities 97.1 Basilica Block Party is back this year!
The Cities 97.1 Basilica Block Party began in 1995 as a fundraiser to help pay for the structural restoration of The Basilica of Saint Mary. Today, proceeds from the event benefit the Basilica Landmark, which preserves, restores and advances the historic Basilica of Saint Mary.
No photo description available.

 

The Great Ones Always Return

 Make your plans to rock with us now!

Friday, September 10, 2021 (All day) to Saturday, September 11, 2021 (All day)

Lineup

Great Clips Stage

AJR 9:15PM

Tate McRae 7:50PM

JP Saxe 6:30PM

Forest Blakk 5:15PM

AHA Sparkling Water Stage

Motion City Soundtrack 8:35PM

Ritt Momney 7:15PM

Remo Drive 5:45PM

Star Tribune Stage

Koo Koo Kanga Roo 7:20PM

26 BATS! 6:15PM

Mae Simpson Music 5:10PM

Great Clips Stage

The Avett Brothers 9:00PM

Spoon 7:40PM

Ripe 6:20PM

Jensen McRae 5:15PM

AHA Sparkling Water Stage

Black Pumas 8:35PM

Jade Bird 7:15PM

Zach Bryan 5:45PM

Star Tribune Stage

Diane (FKA D MILLS) 7:20PM

The Stress of Her Regard 6:15PM

Bora York 5:10PM

Because the health and safety of our Basilica Block Party and greater Twin Cities community is our number one priority, we will be implementing new entry protocols. Full COVID-19 vaccination or negative COVID-19 test result (taken within 72 hours of the event) will be required to attend. Please bring a photo ID plus either proof of vaccination or a negative test result for event entry.

Ticket Information

You can support The Basilica Landmark’s fundraising efforts by making a gift at thebasilicalandmark.org/give.

North Musician Charlie Parr: ‘Last of the Better Days Ahead’

North Musician Charlie Parr: ‘Last of the Better Days Ahead’

Charlie Parr is an American country blues musician. Born in Austin, Minnesota, he spent part of his childhood in Hollandale before starting his music career in Duluth. His influences include Charlie Patton, Bukka White, Reverend Gary Davis, Dave Van Ronk, and Mississippi John Hurt.

Since 2002, Duluth-based Charlie Parr has released more than a dozen albums exploring traditional blues and folk songwriting. His latest, “Last of the Better Days Ahead,” released on the Smithsonian Institution’s nonprofit record label.⁠

album title

 

“’Last of the Better Days Ahead’ is a way for me to refer to the times I’m living in. I’m getting on in years, experiencing a shift in perspective that was once described by my mom as ‘a time when we turn from gazing into the future to gazing back at the past, as if we’re adrift in the current, slowly turning around.’ Some songs came from meditations on the fact that the portion of our brain devoted to memory is also the portion responsible for imagination, and what that entails for the collected experiences that we refer to as our lives. Other songs are cultivated primarily from the imagination, but also contain memories of what may be a real landscape, or at least one inspired by vivid dreaming. The album represents one full rotation of the boat in which we are adrift—looking ahead for a last look at the better days to come, then being turned around to see the leading edge of the past as it fades into the foggy dreamscape of our real and imagined histories.”

Check out the official music video for “Last of the Better Days Ahead,” the title track and first single off from Charlie’s Smithsonian Folkways debut:

 

New album ‘Last of the Better Days Ahead‘ is now available on CD, LP, and digital. Order/stream here.
What’s next: An album-release show set for November 13 at the Palace Theatre in St. Paul. More at charlieparr.com
The Minnesota Monarch Migration Has Begun!

The Minnesota Monarch Migration Has Begun!

 Every August monarchs begin their long journey south!

‘They fly all the way down to Mexico to hang out during the winter! That’s a long trip for Minnesota-born Monarchs — about 3,000 miles! Monarchs use the same route to go to the same place every winter.’

Prairie wildflowers are essential for these beloved butterflies as they fuel up on pollen to travel thousands of miles to winter in California and the Sierra Madre mountains west of Mexico City, Mexico.

Minnesota Sate Parks and Trails play an important role in restoring and managing butterfly habitats on public lands throughout the state.

Look for them on their journey at state parks like: Buffalo River, Flandreau, Glendalough, Crow Wing, Sibley, and Wild River.

Where is the monarch migration?

ICYMI: The Monarch Was Adopted As The State Butterfly In 2000!

The monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus), also known as the milkweed butterfly, was adopted as the state’s official butterfly in 2000. The monarch is one of the few butterfly species that migrates north and south like birds do. Approximately four generations of monarchs are born in Minnesota each summer and live roughly four weeks; the exception is the last generation of the season, which survives about six months. Each fall, members of this last generation migrate to Mexico and spend the winter in a state of semi-hibernation. Monarch caterpillars appear to feed exclusively on milkweed, which grows throughout Minnesota. This male monarch distinguishable from his female counterparts by the thin black webbing throughout his wings and two highly visible black spots on his hind wings) was photographed on Lake Superior’s north shore near Illgen City.

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