Peace Demonstration in Hollywood 2007


March 17, 2007. I join about ten thousand people at Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street in Los Angeles to rally and march for peace. Foremost in our intentions is to stop funding the Iraq War and bring home the troops, but, clearly, most of us demonstrators see this war as only part of a larger war of the military-industrial complex and the super-rich upon the poor and middleclass of all nations, and upon the environment. We march for social justice and sustainability all over the planet.


Dr. William Hooks, M.D., a radiologist from Rancho Cucamonga, was working for the day as a documentary photojournalist for ANSWER Coalition, the organizers of the march. He is talking with an indigenous Bolivian woman, who is leafletting to gather support for President Evo Morales and the Bolivian solidarity movement.

Eric Howard, who I met at Kim Cooper and Richard Schave’s wedding last June, showed up on his bike.

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Stephen Frank Gary welded and painted this beautiful, large peace symbol, titled  Dreamcatcher Peacewheel.


One very small counter-protest of Christian Fundamentalists appeared at the opening rally, but, otherwise, the world smiled upon our march.


A group of young men sang and played “Give Peace a Chance,” and a group of young women began dancing in the street.


This, in turn, got the women marching with Code Pink to sing and drum “Give Peace a Chance,” and a woman from KPFK walked beside them, recording them for a program.


I carried my usual handmade sign with its positive message, and some of artist Stephanie Farago’s famous bumperstickers “My God Loves Your God,” which I bestowed upon anyone who spoke to me admiringly of them.


We walked to Hollywood Boulevard and Highland Avenue, where we attended a rally at an outdoor stage in front of the famous Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. US Congressional Representative Maxine Waters, founder of the Out of Iraq Caucus, exhorted us to call, email and fax our congressional representatives and tell them not to approve the Pelosi/Murtha plan with its huge supplemental budget for the war. We roared our approval and support. After Rep. Waters, actor Martin Sheen spoke, thundering like God Himself, and after him, actresses Mimi Kennedy (representing Progressive Democrats of America) and Laura Dern.



Next, the legendary singer/songwriter Jackson Browne, a mainstay at events of this sort, performed two of his protest songs, the second one with two singers who also performed later with the band Ozomatli.


Singer/songwriter Ben Harper, eerily recalling a young Richie Havens singing at peace marches during the Vietnam War, who also performed his own protest songs.


Ozomatli, a Grammy Award winning band from Los Angeles, played an entire set. It seems as if all of the band members play more than one instrument, sing, and even dance a bit, and they change roles to perform in a variety of ethnic styles, sometimes within one song: salsa, rap, Arabic, hiphop, and mariachi.


Jackson Browne joined them on the last song of their set.


The demonstrators signalled their solidarity.


Next, Iraq Veterans Against the War spoke.


The Gabriela Network, a feminist group based in the Philipines, protests in particular the effect of war on women and girls, in the form of abductions and rapes, and prostitution surrounding army bases in third world countries.


Jerry Rubin, not the Yippie political activist (who died in 1994), sells political bumper stickers most weekends near the Santa Monica Promenade, and he was on Hollywood Boulevard for the peace march.


Pacifica Radio station KPFK, the voice of the left in LA for nearly five decades, had a canvas available for painting at the their booth, to advertise a day of boycotting gasoline on May 1.

Here’s a slide show of all 51 of my photos from the demonstration!

Kraig Grady and Cory Beers at the Red Dragon


On March 8, I set out to hear Kraig Grady and Cory Beers perform (on hammered dulcimer and tabla, respectively) at Red Dragon Studios, a combination recording studio and small night club in Hollywood, near the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Highland Avenue.


The Dragon caters to a youngish, darkly boho sort of crowd, epitomized by the friendly, informal and punked-out ticket seller.


I felt at home; I grew up in this neighborhood, and, when I was in high school, I would go out to clubs in Hollywood that allowed teens, like the Garret and the Blue Grotto, places where we kids could chill out, listen to music, and talk with people older than we were who weren’t trying to tell us what to do. The Dragon has a bar, so no teens, but the twenty-somethings talked with me happily.


There actually IS a red dragon in the Red Dragon, the sort that performs the Lion Dance and eats money at Chinese New Years events. It didn’t look red in the gloom of the ceiling where it hung, but when I aimed a flash at it, I discovered it really is quite garishly red. It presides over a gaggle of red Chinese paper lanterns, fans and umbrellas in a black painted room.


While Kraig and Cory set up, a DJ blared and a series of Powerpoint projections of LA people and scenes in slide show rotation illuminated the stage.


By comparison, Kraig and Cory’s music was an oasis for the mind, heart, spirit and soul. Kraig’s hammered dulcimer had magnificent overtones that sometimes sounded to me like a Muslim call to prayer. Cory brought four dayan (the higher drums of the tabla set) and tuned each one to a different note in the scale in which Kraig’s instrument was tuned, so that the drum functioned more like a bass melodic instrument.


Many of the young club crowd stood motionless and listened, enchanted by the cascade of sounds.


Kraig and Cory played without haste and without pause for about 45 minutes.


After Kraig and Cory packed up, the band Kaora took the stage, five young men in black with a purposeful rock demean. Their fans were pleased to see them. I’d already had enough high volume electronics for one night from the DJ, so I thanked Kraig and Cory, and headed home, very happy.

Doctor Stella Resnick’s Secret of Happiness


I had dinner the other night with Dr. Stella Resnick, a friend for over thirty years now, and a famous psychotherapist specializing in sexuality and pleasure. She had just moved her practice into a beautiful new office in the Flynt Building at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and La Cienega just south of West Hollywood, and her book The Pleasure Zone: Why We Resist Good Feelings & How To Let Go and Be Happy beamed from her bookshelves in half a dozen languages (I think she told me it’s in print in nine languages right now). I had to have one, and, happily, she wanted a copy of my CD What Living’s All About, so we traded inscribed copies.


Stella’s book to me is a philosophy of life. It’s about living in the moment and appreciating it to its fullest. It’s about breathing to relaxation. It’s about bonding, love, and nurturing, as well as being truly present to receive these gifts. Certainly, with Stella’s expertise, she has plenty of wise words about the sexual experience, and also about spirituality, pain relief, laughter, play, movement, and emotional communication. I am greatly enjoying this read and recommend it heartily!

The North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island


Thursday, March 1, I accompanied open source software inventor and exponent Richard Stallman on a visit to the composer, musician, ethnomusicologist, humorist, philosopher, and musical instrument inventor and builder Kraig Grady at his home in Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, otherwise known as the North American Embassy of Anaphoria Island. (Anaphoria is the name of a medical condition inwhich the eyes look up.)  “Everyone here is an exile,” noted Kraig, adding that, in the one and only article of the Anaphorian constitution, if you are harmonious with everyone and everything else on the island, you are thereby a native.


Kraig produces a world ethnic music show on KXLU 88.9 FM in Los Angeles called The Wandering Medicine Show, specializing in music from traditions that regard music as medicine. It’s on Wednesdays from 8-9 p.m. Pacific Time, live streaming at kxlu.org. Naturally, his shelves bulge with music books, sheet music and recordings, and you can’t get through the kitchen door without inadvertently playing the hanging chimes. Richard Stallman and I are both world music fanatics, so we all listened to and traded recordings for a couple of hours. I came home with recordings of Inuit throat singing, Georgian choral music, a Ruth Crawford Seeger song of social commentary, songs from Latvia, Spain, and South India, plus three Anaphorian Island music CDs by Kraig Grady: The Stolen Stars, Beyond the Windows Perhaps Among the Podcorn, and Anaphoria: The Creation of the Worlds. An embarassment of riches!


My favorite of his instruments is the bass vibraphone (also referred to as meru bars or low bars), with eight inch in diameter sections of PVC pipe as resonators.


Kraig also takes existing instruments and modifies them to produce microtonal scales. The pitches of the vibraphone keys can be lowered by shaving off from under the center of the keys, and raised by shaving away at the ends, Kraig explained to me. He has also retuned a small foot pump organ (larger than a medieval portative organ and smaller than a contemporary full sized organ), taking it out of well tempered tuning so that it can be played with the microtonal vibraphones.  


This vibraphone contains a twenty-two microtone scale, recalling the instruments of Harry Partch.


Kraig performs not only his compositions on his instruments, but shadow puppet dramas which he writes, and for which he creates the puppets in traditional Indonesian style. Owing to the complexity of setting up these shows, he offers them once per year, at the end of May. For a schedule of his performances, go to Kraig’s concert schedule page and email him to join his mailing list.

Nels Cline and Glenn Kotche at the Echo


Last night I pilgrimaged to the Echo night club in Echo Park (just northwest of downtown LA) to witness Nels Cline and Glenn Kotche channeling the Divine. That’s what free improvisation music is to me when it’s performed by musical masters like these two. I’m a veteran listener, having been the consort for two years of one of the founders of the San Francisco Tape Music Center and co-inventor of the Buchla Box (Ramon Sender) and who has spent significant time partnering with the one of the first people to play the MiniMoog in jazz performance, and who also test drove the Moog Drum fro Robert Moog (Joe Gallivan). Joe introduced me to Nels at the Bell Atlantic Jazz Festival in June 2000 at the Knitting Factory in New York City, on the night both of their bands played.


I set my new Canon Power Shot on a slow shutter speed and ignored the manual’s warning that this would require a tripod. I was rewarded with the distortions promised, which I think evoke the spontaneity, abstraction and texture of the music.


The Echo’s oft used for DJ shows, and there are no chairs. Since almost all of the audience was under forty, no one minded. No sign out front, low lighting and shabby-chic interior, a gen x boho bar in the genre of, say, Galapagos Art Space in the Williamsburg arts district of Brooklyn.


Bunny art in the powder room!


Nels opened the first set, solo, modestly introducing it with “I have no idea what I’m going to do.” He switched on a tamboura box (analog drone synthesizer) with a half-step drone, and over it played an electric lap steel guitar, massively distorted by a crescent of large and small pedals, and other gear on a nearby table that comprise his synth without a console that kept him moving constantly. It was gorgeous.


Later, he used a sequencer that recorded and repeated his riffs as a background drone, while he induced every sound except a guitar from two electric guitars while conjuring a storm, a choir, a war by singing into a vocal effects processer. From his back pocket protruded a metal spring and an egg whisk for alien strum effects. Nels Cline is a force of nature.


Second set was a drum solo. Really. Well, OK, a one-man band solo. Glenn Kotche’s kit includes a glockenspiel, a small gamelan, an electric kalimba, a recording sequencer, a wild collection of cymbals including two cut into hanging spirals, at least four different kinds of sticks including a set of two bamboo sections, and a bunch of long skinny springs he pulled for their shrieks. I was most blown away watching him play a complex rhythm with a shaker in his right hand while playing a melodic solo on the gamelan and glockenspiel with his left. He encapsulated the Ramayana while dedicating one piece to the monkey armies of Hanuman. Glenn’s pieces were mostly original compositions from his recent CD, Mobile, but one piece was by avant-garde composer Steve Reich, who I met through Ramon Sender back in the early ‘seventies. Joe knows him, too.


For the third set, Nels and Glenn inprovised together. During the entire two hours of music, not one person in the sold-out house of three hundred people whispered to one another or looked away from the stage. Everyone was enraptured. Joe and Ramon both used to complain about the small demand for avant-garde improvisational music, but I realize now that their audience simply wasn’t born yet.


I met a dozen new friends that night, including lovely Shawni D., born in Hilo, Hawaii.


After the show, Nels told me he’d reviewed What Living’s All About on his website. I was touched. All genius, no arrogance, that man. I happily copied his review over to the WLAA reviews page of my site when I got home.

Dim Sum with the Hacker King, plus shisas and naugas


My website and blog run on cutting edge free software, set up by my friends and webhosts, Dumpling Feed, aka Richard Schave and Kim Cooper, whose wedding you saw on this blog last June. Fittingly, when the inventor of free software, and its biggest promoter, Richard Stallman, came to Los Angeles to lecture at USC and Caltech, Richard and Kim honored him with a stay in their home and a dumpling feed at their favorite dim sum restaurant, 101 Noodle Express, in Alhambra, a suburb east of downtown Los Angeles that is home to many Chinese-Americans and their businesses. Standing between Richard and Kim is Iwa, who was managing 101 Noodle Express the night of our feast.


We discussed election fraud at length, including the proprietary software of the voting machines. Richard Stallman maintains that the USA should use nothing but paper ballots, since they are recountable. “Even if the optical scanners are hacked, we can count them by hand,” he said. I concur. On the left is software developer and musician Lucas Gonze, on the far right is web and computer consultant Josh Cain. I forget the other two guys’ names, and hope someone will email me and fill me in.


So here I am with Richard Stallman: the Queen of the Freaks meets the King of the Geeks.



Before we all went out for dim sum, I gave Kim the gift I’d bought her at Tata Bazaar in Naha City, Okinawa on Halloween – a shisa (an Okinawan gargoyle) made of fabric (most are made of ceramic or stone). It looks great with her collection of Naugas. Photographer Meeno Peluce, on assignment photographing Richard Stallman, took the shots above of her playing with it.  I took the one below, of the Nauga and the Shisa living toothily ever after in Kim and Richard’s library.

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A Walk Along the Palos Verdes Tidepools


My friend since infancy, Benida Solow, and I took advantage of post-rainy day clear skies to walk along the geologic fantasyland that is the tide pool area below the seacliffs of the Palos Verdes Peninsula yesterday.


In the words of geologist Ron Merritt Morris: “The Palos Verdes Peninsula is a tectonic fault block of seafloor sediments and volcanics draped atop a submerged mountain of metamorphic rocks that began rising out of the Pacific Ocean 1.5 million years ago.”


Or, as Earth Science World put it, “California’s Palos Verdes Peninsula contains more than a dozen distinct uplifted wave-cut terraces. Folded Miocene sedimentary rocks are exposed in the sea cliff.”


Although the tidepools did not teem with life…


…the abundance of mussel, snail, clam and abalone shells and fragments along the shore and the great swaths of beached kelp indicated a thriving community off shore. We did see a sea lion swimming nearby, a gaggle of cormorants on an offshore island, and a colony of well-fed semi-ferral cats living among the boulders between the shore and the parking lot.


Although most signs of humans having been there disgusted us (graffiti on the seacliffs and litter along the shore), one passerby left a pleasing sculpture of stacked rocks in a tide pool.


Benida found a magical rock, the size and shape of a human heart, and striated with sparkling quartz that suggested a jumping sea mammal. A fitting valentine from the earth and sea that she honors in so much of her work.

Why I Love Martha Stewart


What a resource on making and growing things by hand is Martha Stewart! She’s a goddess of DIY and recycling, two of the cures for the linear consumption outlined in  The Story of Stuff.

Look at her.  She even makes it look cool to keep chickens.

Yes, she is a billionaire media mogul with a reputed nasty temper who served time for insider trading. I personally that think she, of all the billionaires with nasty tempers who have done illegal things, was prosecuted was because over 98% of her corporation’s political campaign contributions went to the Democratic Party. I mean, compare her transgressions to those of, say, Dick Cheney. Nobody died. Nobody even got an ingrown toenail.

I gotta love a writer who reports that an unwanted square scarf, with four mismatched earrings or charms sewn to the corners becomes the perfect cover for a punch bowl on a hot buggy day. I made one immediately.

On March 9, 2003, the New York Times wrote about me:

“As the Martha Stewart of the hippie age, Alicia Bay Laurel wrote the book on living in do-it-yourself harmony with Mother Nature.”

That was not the first, nor the last time I’ve been compared to Martha Stewart, and that’s all right with me. Whatever else you may say about her, Martha Stewart brought self-reliance, organic gardening, up-cycling (craft-making from recycled stuff), folk art, goat cheese and wabi-sabi into the national conversation of a society drowning in its addiction to cheap and poisonous consumer goods.

Women On Horseback Save the Day

In 2006, in the Netherlands, about 100 horses were trapped by a flood in the middle of a rushing river on a tiny island. 18 of the horses died while the local fire department and the Dutch army both tried unsuccessfully to rescue them. Then four women on horseback rode to the rescue. Watch the movie.

My friend Lynn Nakkim, who owns a ranch with one hundred horses, and has midwifed and trained most of them, told me, “Horse whispering is the name men gave to the horse-training technique women have been using for the past  8,000 years.” 

A Great Day in Harlem


If one photograph could convey the jazz scene in New York City in the late 1950’s, this would be it.

Around ten one morning in the summer of 1958, 57 musicians representing three generations of jazz history showed up at 126th Street, between Fifth and Madison Avenues in Harlem to be photographed by Art Kane, a freelance photographer working for Esquire magazine. The photo was eventually published in the January, 1959 issue. This photo also became the basis of a documentary film produced by veteran radio producer, Jean Bach of New York. The film won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1994.  It’s available on DVD and VHS. 

It was at a screening of this film in the spring of 1996 that I first saw avant-jazz legend Joe Gallivan, who had been part of the jazz scene during that time in New York City, in concert on Maui.  By the end of that year, we had begun to find our way as a couple.