May Day Song by Verandah Porche and Patty Carpenter

Sue Katz and Verandah Porche at the May Pole at Packer Corners Farm

Winter’s done for back-to-the-landers.

First blush of May is peeking through

Loosen the guy wires. Come and meander.

Climb up to our cosmic view.

Tie a torn sheet to the maypole.

No need to know what stories they tell.

Lovers in transit spin out of control

so dance till you’re dizzy: Hello, fare-thee-well.

Don’t look down till you reach the top.

Don’t look back at what’s left behind.

Flying barefoot over the brambles,

years are streamers intertwined.

Do you remember the banner years?

Kids split our lap, Death showed his face.

Love may return or disappear

Like peaches from the orchard and “Amazing Grace.”

Don’t look down till you reach the top.

Don’t look back at what’s left behind.

Flying barefoot over the brambles,

years are streamers intertwined

Sing into wind. Come what may,

let tomorrow be yesterday,

like peaches from the orchard & amazing grace.

Patty Carpenter & Verandah Porche

In Which My Drawings are Featured in a Coffee Table Architecture Book

spaced out-cover

I neglected to write to you last spring about the publication of Alastair Gordon’s SPACED OUT, Radical Environments of the Psychedelic Sixties (2008, Rizzoli). A gorgeous coffee table architecture book about the wiggy shelters my friends built back in the day, for us, it’s more like a family album. It’s an absolutely fun read/look.

“If you don’t have recourse to memory or the spaces themselves, Alastair Gordon’s crucial new book, Spaced Out, will bring you closer to a time when architecture was expanding its horizons…Architects today have a lot to learn from these hippies.”– Metropolis Magazine (6/18/08)

I was thrilled to have my work included in the book, and curious to see which drawings Alastair would choose include. This color page is from Being of the Sun (Harper & Row, 1973), which I co-wrote with Ramón Sender Barayón and illustrated and designed myself. The illustrations on the facing page are from my first book, Living on the Earth (Bookworks, 1970, Random House 1971 and 2000, Gibbs Smith, Publisher, 2003, Echo Point Books and Media, 2021).

Alastair wrote about Living on the Earth with a waggish smile in his voice.

I was honored to be in the august company of environmental-activist designers like the folks at Drop City, an early Colorado artists’ commune, whose geodesic domes made of sheet metal recycled from roofs of cars at the wrecking yard became their signature visual.

I met Paolo Soleri, the architect who designed and was building Arcosanti, back in the 1960s when he did a fundraising talk and slide show at my mom’s house in L.A. As a result, I wrote about Arcosanti in Living on the Earth.

Here’s an interior photo of Soleri’s semi-subterranean home and studio, Cosanti, in Scottsdale, Arizona.  I made a pilgrimage to both of Soleri’s architectural wonders in November 2000, during my epic 8 month book tour for the 30th anniversary edition of Living on the Earth and the release of my first CD, Music From Living on the Earth.

Two November Concerts in the San Francisco Area with Joe Dolce!

Joe Dolce and I, along with Nick and Tanya Alva, did a live radio interview and performance at 10 PM PST, Thursday, November 13, 2008 on KPFA Pacifica Radio in Berkeley, on Derk Richardson’s show Hear and Now, followed by two concerts in the next two days, one in Sebastopol and one in San Francisco.

web sized-Concert poster-5 stars.jpg

Joe Dolce and I are friends from our commune days in the early 1970s. He lived for a while at Star Mountain, the music commune I started in 1971 with the money from the Random House advance for Living on the Earth. We also both lived on Maui in the 1970s.  He’s been living in Australia for nearly 30 years now, but we’ve been in touch by email, and he visited me in Hawaii four years ago.

Recently Nicholas Alva created the Morningstar musical, based on the story of Morningstar, the first Open Land commune, which begat Wheeler Ranch (where I wrote Living on the Earth), which begat Star Mountain (where I met Joe Dolce). Nick solicited original music from people who lived on those communes, and selected some of mine, some of Joe’s, some by Ramón Sender Barayón, and some by Lou Gottlieb, the founder of Morningstar, philosopher, and comedian/bass player of the Limeliters.

Joe, Nick and I cooked up the idea of this concert by email, and I insisted that Nick reprise Joe’s and my songs from the show with the original cast (in full hippie regalia) as a grand finale. And so it is.

Do come if you’re nearby, and please forward this blog post to any of your friends in the Bay Area who might want their minds expanded over that weekend.

Alicia tells a story at Studio E in Sebastopol, California.



Rock on the Rock Festival


April 13, 2008, Hazu, Japan. Meet Shige and Mik-chan, the organizers of the Rock on the Rock Festival in Hazu, a beach resort just outside of Nagoya city. Shige owns a nightclub in Tokyo called The Loft Project, where I am invited to play next on my next tour. Mik-chan produces music events in Nagoya. This is their tenth year producing this festival.


They did this festival with a lot of style. For one thing, all of the musicians and staff were guests in a first class hotel…


…with a view of the ocean from every room and TWO onsen (hot springs spas) downstairs.


I was issued an All Access Pass, so I could go anywhere during the festival..,


…and a festival t-shirt…


…with my name on it as a headliner. Wow!


Here’s the festival schedule. I play in the afternoon on the second day.


Kaorico gave me a gorgeous set of new clothes to wear at the festival…


…and she sold my books and CDs at her booth…


…and what a booth it is…


…complete with driftwood sculpture.


Here’s Kaorico with one of her staff at the festival, both resplendant in Little Eagle clothes, handmade in India in a fair trade factory from organically grown cotton.


Next booth over from hers is the Slow Turtle (referencing the Slow Life movement) t-shirt booth, owned and produced by her ex-husband and dear friend Haru.


I love Haru’s sign “Welcome to Heaven.” That’s how it felt at the festival that day.


Looking down to the dome stage and the beach from Kaorico and Haru’s booths…


…and the driftwood gate through which festival goers passed to visit the booths.


Behind the booths was a picnic area for staff only, overlooking the ocean, with barbeque grills beside the tables. We were offered trays of vegetables, fish and meats, which we could grill on the barbeque. Kaorico and I made a vegan selection and she grilled it for us. Oishi! (Delicious!)


Down by the dome stage, where I played later, stood two more booths…


…one of which, Paraiso, was a beauty salon that also sold records and books.


The next day at the hotel, owner of Paraiso told me he’s going to carry my records and books in his store!


Before my set, I enjoyed listening to an avant-garde piano and drum duo…


…And just before my set, the world music band Tayuta, with their wonderful singer, Hirono.


The audience was dancing wildly to their music.


The day after the festival, I met the members of Tayuta in the hotel lobby and we planned to meet again in Tokyo.


My wonderful translator, Mackie, is the leader of a rural commune based band called the Mountain Rockers.


We kept telling jokes. We had the best time. People said we were like an old married couple.


I couldn’t have wanted a more ideal environment to present my music as that psychedelically decorated dome. I’m playing my Pro Series Traveler Guitar, a great little electric guitar that fits in the overhead compartment.


Of course, I also brought my good old workhorse Guild F45CE, in a sturdy Gator flight case. I need two guitars when I perform, so that I don’t have to bore the audience by re-tuning the guitar every time I change from standard to open tuning.


The next day, Kaorico and I drove back to Hayama, and were blown away by a sunset view of Mount Fuji as we passed the town of Fujikawa (Fuji River).

The Eagle’s Nest


On April 10, Kaorico Ago, founder, owner and designer of the fabled Little Eagle Designs, Japan’s premier natural fiber folkwear clothing company, met me at Tokyo’s Narita International Airport. She treated me to a quiet green car seat on the airport express train to Zushi, where we were met by her kindly father, known to me only as Papa-chan (Papa Dear), greeted at the front door by her sweet mother, introduced to me as Michiko-baba (Grandma Michiko), and Kaorico’s athletic and musical 12 year daughter Ryoo. I slept deeply at their home. The next morning I looked out from the balcony of Kaorico’s third floor room (which she sacrificed for my stay; she slept in another room) to the coastline of Hayama, the closest beach resort town to Tokyo.


Kaorico is, IMHO, a woman of deep spirituality, which expresses itself in her activities (walking in Dennis Banks’ Long Walk for Freedom), her company’s motto (“live for journey, on the road forever under the blue sky”), and her decor (lots of natural and handmade things, and lots of altars).


Here is her “on the road” altar.


I offered her a print of my four “Feeling Good” paintings and she placed in on one of her driftwood altars.


In her living room, with a sunken dining area in the center…


..Kaorico served our elegant breakfast: miso soup with tofu and green onion, Michiko-baba’s homemade pickled cucumbers, a small green salad with grated daikon and strips of nori, and rice.


After breakfast, I took at long hot soak in the furo overlooking a bamboo grove.


After the bath, I repacked my things for a three day jaunt to Hazu, a beach town outside of Nagoya city, to sing at a rock festival where Kaorico and her staff will be selling Little Eagle clothes.


We packed up Kaorico’s car and drove for six hours to Nishio, where the Little Eagle warehouse is.


This is no ordinary warehouse. For example, check out the door handles on the front door. Handmade from driftwood with peace sign hardware.


The staff were busy coating wire hangers with strips of rags to make funky-elegant shabby-chic, recycled, display hangers.


Sakura, the ten-year-old artist daughter of Kisaki, the warehouse manager, was busy weaving strips rags into a beautiful fabric.


Kaorico (on the left) and her staff were delighted to see each other, and preparations for the clothing booth at the festival were going apace. Another example of Kaorico’s shining heart and soul in the material world.

Morningstar, the Musical

While I’m touring in Japan, I’ll be missing the entire run of Nick Alva’s, Morningstar, an original musical play based on the story of Lou Gottlieb’s pioneering open land commune, which gave rise to nearby Wheeler Ranch commune, where I wrote and illustrated Living on the Earth. I’m so sorry I will miss it, for this will be the first time my songs have been incorporated into a stage production.  They’ll be sung by a dancing ensemble in full hippie regalia! I saw a work-in-progress version of the show (photo above) in September 2006 at the Communal Studies Association Conference. I hope someone videos it this time.

If you are within striking distance of Cotati, in Sonoma County, California (60 miles north of San Francisco, just off Highway 101) in May 2008, do catch one of their shows!  Below is a photo of some of the current cast:

morningstar musical photo.jpg

An Evening at Tangier


On February 27, 2008 I met my friends Gwendolyn and Brandon at Tangier Restaurant in the Los Feliz area of Los Angeles to hear them and their friends play in two bands. I’m the second from the left. On my right is Shereen Khan, fiancee of Douglas Lee, whose band would perform first, and back-up singer in Brandon’s band Quazar and the Bamboozled, which played last. The alien princess on the right is Gwendolyn, wife of Brandon Jay (aka Quazar), and a star singer/songwriter/guitarist in her own right. She was substituting for another back-up singer who was not feeling well that night.


Tangier has loads of ambiance, including a patio wall imported from the city of Tangier in Morocco.


I turned on the flash so I could see the details of the wall.


Warming up for the bands, a lovely young singer/songwriter/guitarist. The bar crowd listened and cheered.


Douglas Lee plays the glass harmonica, an arrangement of crystal goblets in a wooden box; the goblets are pitched by adding specific amounts of water.


Inside the glass harmonica. Douglas told me he keeps his hands extremely clean to play this instrument. I’ve owned and loved a classical recording called Music For Glass Harmonica since the 1970s. Previous to hearing Douglas in Gwendolyn’s band at the release party of her Celtic psychedelic folk CD Lower Mill Road at the Bordello Bar last August, I’d never heard a glass harmonica played live before.


Imagine my surprise when Douglas played an entire set of jazz standards (plus one bluesy original), starting with “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat,” and “Caravan.”


His instrument gave an otherworldly cadence to these tunes, even as he was surrounded by a jazz instrumentation of upright bass (Robert Petersen), piano (Scott Doherty), drums (Brandon Jay)…


…and saxophone/flute/clarinet (Paul Pate).


Brandon’s drum kit was no ordinary drum kit, but a melange of “found percussion” along with a floor tomtom, a timbale, and a set of bongos.


In the midst of the set, Douglas switched to musical saw, played with a violin bow, from which he produced “Dream a Little Dream of Me,” and “In the Still of the Night.”


Douglas also played a set of jaw harps on a couple of other tunes, beautifully. I don’t think I’d ever heard that instrument in a jazz setting, either.


When Brandon returned to the stage to front his ‘60s rock band Quazar and the Bamboozled, he had donned a frilly formal shirt, a stovepipe hat, and sparkly silver platform shoes! Even his piano had sparkling mirror tiles on it. He sang and played all original songs, in the vein of Elton John, Dr. John the Night Tripper, the Rolling Stones, and Leon Russell. Considering that he and the rest of the band were BORN at the end of the ‘70s and in the early ‘80s, it was astonishing how they captured the sound of ‘60s rock, and made it even more fun and funny.


Gwendolyn, now a go-go dancer from Mars decked out in white platform boots, eight ponytails, space alien facepaint, hot pants, rainbow serape, and multi-megawatt personality, blazed in the stagelights. Hiding in the shadows behind the singers, playing crunchy rhythm guitar, is art dealer Matt Chait.


Paul Pate turned up the volume on his saxophone next to the screaming back up singers Gwendolyn, Shereen Khan, and Jonathan Underle.


Rocket-propelling Quazar and the Bamboozled, the rhythm section: Robert Petersen (this time on electric bass), Dusty Rocherolle on drums, and Spidey on lead guitar. Too much fun!

Puffy Wears Living on the Earth Clothes

puffy in ABL dress-web.jpg

Posting from Jodi Mitchell, who lived at Wheeler Ranch commune when I did, in the late ‘60s and early ‘70s:

I have a new part time librarian gig staffing the groovy Teen Zone at
the downtown Oakland Public Library. I love this job, as I am
surrounded by teens and pop culture. We have a wonderful periodical
collection, and I love looking at Japanese fashion magazines, as they
are so much cooler and more creative and cutting-edge-trendy fashion
wise than we are in the dowdy old frumpy US of Ass. One of my favorite
mags. is called Cutie: it has the best ever fashions, and I get ideas
for my thrift-store outfits from it. They always spotlight a latest
rock band in each issue.. I can’t read any of it because it is all in
Japanese, but today I was reading the October 2007 issue and on page
118 they spotlighted the popular girl rock group Puffy wearing none
other than Alicia’s Living On the Earth fashion line. It is so awesome
to see this trendy, Japanese, teenager, contemporary fashion and pop
culture magazine with a very popular girl pop group wearing Wheeler’s
Ranch motifs . LOL! I love it. It made my day to see this. Thanks
Alicia. When I land my ultimate, high-paying librarian gig_I’m going
to buy one of these dresses! They are so cute!

Comments fellow commune alumna Judith Gips: Japanese cutting edge meets ‘70s California rural hipdom meets urban Oakland teens inthe fashion Zone…hoowee…

Alicia comments: If only they knew where I buy 90% of my fashion wardrobe:

The Goodwill!

Now Madonna, she knew…

Cuteness is a quality greatly cherished in Japan, in women, in kids, in animation, and in advertising and manufacturing.  Perfect name for a teen mag.

Sally French: “Fuzz and Fury”- Art Show on O’ahu

My dear, amazing friend Sally French is having another of her mind-bending art shows. We met at Wheeler Ranch, the commune where I created Living on the Earth, in 1971. Shortly after, we both moved to Hawaii, she to Kaua’i and me to Maui, and then Hawaii Island. We’ve not seen each other all that often, but we are sisters all the way.

Here we are visiting our cherished friend, artist Ira Ono, in Volcano Village, on Hawaii Island, in the studio of fiber artist Pam Barton. That’s Ira, Sally, me and Pam, left to right.

Year End Poems by Verandah Porche

HEART TO HEARTH

Old-fangled snow is the stuff of yarns:

The saga of our sagging barns;

The sled run down to kingdom come;

The ox roast when the twins got home;

Those purple finches on the branch

whose wings could launch an avalanche.

Myths are throws crocheted near stoves

as the Town truck garlands icy roads.

 

Verandah Porche

Winter Solstice, 2007

Note: I wrote this poem as a stocking scroll

for the elders in my town. The Town truck

driver’s name is Dickie Garland.

——————————-

ANAGRAMS 

º

HAPPY HOLIDAYS

Aphids’ holy yap

Shy hip payload

º

December observances un-anagrammed: Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Eid ul-Adha, Posada & Underdog Day

º

SOLSTICE

Is closet

        Cite loss

Lice toss

        Sect soil

Lies cost

        Set coils

Sit close

º

CHRISTMAS

Scarsmith

         Sacs mirth

Art schism

         Arch mists

Rich masts

        Stir chasm

Cram this

        Scam shirt

Hits scram

        Chi smarts

Cash trims

       Its charms

º

BOXING DAY

Bind gay ox

       Axing body

Bag id onyx

        A nix by god

º

NEW YEAR’S EVE

A weeny verse

        We eye ravens

Serve any ewe

        Seven-eye war

Say we’re even

        Wave ye sneer

Every sea new

        We reweave yens

We erase envy

º

VERANDAH PORCHE

Coven harp heard

         Preach overhand

LOVE-VOLE