MATT ALBER AT THE ENGLERT!

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Wednesday, August 18, 2010 at 8:00 PM

Tickets on Sale: Now!

Ticket Availability: Box Office and Online

Seating: General admission

More Info: http://www.reverbnation.com/mattalber
$17 in advance
$20 at the door

OPENING FOR MATT ALBER:
Alexis Stevens

Description


Matt grew up singing in choirs. Big ones. Little ones. Classical ones. Ones that traveled the globe and ones that did jazz hands. Choir is where he learned to feel ok. At practice he got to make something beautiful as part of team. Like an athlete, he watched himself get better at something his body and mind were making together. He got to dance and laugh and thrive. Even when his voice cracked, his value was never questioned.

Outside of choir, Matt usually felt intimidated or deficient in some way. He spent a lot of his teen years skulking around after school and at a fundamentalist Christian church. He finds much of his music is about healing from that experience.

He went on to study music and writing with some wise and fearless masters. With a pocket full of sunshine he moved to California to find his kindred. These days he spends his time with truth-tellers from every walk of life, and he is finding more and more of them.

Matt also directs a choir of his own in Los Angeles. The audition is fairly simple– if you’re 60 or up, sing with Heart, and can bring something to the potluck, you’re in. Most of them are also gay and lead incredible lives.

Matt also enjoys taking photos of strange things, working on Macintosh Computers, wearing headphones, Levi’s jeans, and all of his instruments were gifts from friends. (For those seeking a more impressive biography replete with accolades, awards and magazine quotes: please forgive him, for he got too sleepy trying to write one.)

OPENING FOR MATT ALBER:
Alexis Stevens
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Leslie & The LY’s — Iowa Women’s Music Fest Kick-Off!
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Categories: Around Town, Arts & Entertainment, Current Events, Upcoming Events

Ames ranks No. 9 — Iowa City No. 68 in ‘Best Places to Live’

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the Press-Citizen

CNN and Money magazine have published their list of the top 100 small towns in which to live, work and raise a family, and three Iowa towns have made the list.

Cracking the top 10 all the way up at No. 9 is…wait for it…Ames — home of Iowa State University.

Ames, Iowa

CNNMoney.com touted all of the wonderful things to do to keep busy in the bustling college town, about a half-hour drive from Des Moines.

“If the people who live here get bored, they have only themselves to blame,” the website wrote of Ames. “Besides Iowa State’s cultural and athletic offerings, Ames boasts 36 parks, a bustling shopping district, and a new aquatic center.”

Of the town’s athletic offerings, CNNMoney.com offered this: “The high school boys basketball team, girls tennis team, and girls golf team are state champions.”

Iowa City also made the top 100, clocking in a No. 68, just ahead of West Des Moines at No. 75.

Iowa City, Iowa

“When residents aren’t in the presence of university students and great writing, they can be found enjoying the annual Iowa City Jazz Festival and the nationally known acts it brings at the campus’ Old Capital building,” according to the site, the misspelling of “Old Capitol” notwithstanding.

On No. 75, West Des Moines:

“The community has an impressive roster of activities, including free weekly yoga classes in front of the city’s town hall and various events in ‘Valley Junction,’ the city’s historic downtown.”
The full entries for the Iowa towns on the list (all 100 can be found athttp://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bplive/2010/top100/):

9. Ames, IA
Population: 60,000
Unemployment: 4.3%
Pluses: Jobs galore, welcoming vibe
Minus: Cold winters

Unemployment at 4.3%? That’s not a misprint: Ames is the home of Iowa State University, which employs 9,000, and there are lots of biotech and agriculture jobs nearby. Like many states, Iowa has trimmed university funding, but the school has not had to make drastic cuts.

If the people who live here get bored, they have only themselves to blame. Besides Iowa State’s cultural and athletic offerings, Ames boasts 36 parks, a bustling shopping district, and a new aquatic center.

Sports are big in this town: The high school boys basketball team, girls tennis team, and girls golf team are state champions. But the friendliness of the community is what newcomers tend to remark upon most.

Says Craig McFarland, 55, a financial adviser who moved here with his family in 2006: “Our first day, a neighbor came over with cookies.”

Iowa City, IA
Top 100 rank: 68
Population: 73,000

The city is home to the University of Iowa, but it’s not just any old college town.

Thank the rich literary history and in particular the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, whose graduates include John Irving, Flannery O’Connor, and T.C. Boyle. In fact, UNESCO designated Iowa City as the world’s third “City of Literature.”

When residents aren’t in the presence of university students and great writing, they can be found enjoying the annual Iowa City Jazz Festival and the nationally known acts it brings at the campus’ Old Capital building. –J.S.

West Des Moines, IA
Top 100 rank: 75
Population: 55,000

Feel like you’re always looking for something new to do? Look no further than this affluent suburb 15 minutes from downtown Des Moines.

The community has an impressive roster of activities, including free weekly yoga classes in front of the city’s town hall and various events in “Valley Junction,” the city’s historic downtown.

Whether you’re into shopping at farmer’s markets, checking out car shows, or combing through antiques, there’s something here for almost everyone. –J.S.

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Stay close to home this summer

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via Hoopla blog

You deserve a vacation. You’ve worked hard, waited out the long winter and now it’s time to relax. But how can you unwind with the price tag of your summer getaway looming overhead?

The answer? Stay local.

Iowa offers a heap of alternatives to big summer vacations, right in our backyard. Save money and skip frustrating air travel, without losing any of the fun.

Traveling Iowa wine trails

If your dream vacation is spending afternoons sampling wine and taking in scenic Napa Valley with your closest girlfriends, tour a handful of Iowa wineries instead.

For less than the cost of a plane ticket to California you can spend the week navigating one of Iowa’s five wine trails. Several wineries offer complimentary – that’s right, free — tastings, and you can take home a bottle of your favorite blend for anywhere from $8 to $20 depending on the variety.

Of course, one can’t live on wine alone, so pack a picnic lunch to enjoy with your vino as you take in the view at your winery of choice. And when you’ve tasted all you can, treat yourself to a room at an on-site bed-and-breakfast like the one at Eagles Landing Winery in Marquette.

Not sure where to start in planning your trip?
Check out the Iowa Wine and Beer website,
www.iowawineandbeer.com, for an A to Z list of wineries, maps for each of Iowa’s wine trails and links to the wineries’ and vineyards’ individual sites.

A Las Vegas alternative
Looking for a long weekend of gambling, partying, and taking in a few shows? Few places encompass the party atmosphere better than Las Vegas. If you’re flexible with your dates, you can get to Sin City for less than $200. But add in the cost of shows, club entry, overpriced drinks and food and the bill for a weekend away can easily get out of hand. Instead, try an Iowa casino and resort and use the cash you’ll save to try and win big at the slots, blackjack tables or track.

You have your pick of destinations. Head to Riverside Casino and Golf Resort if you want to enjoy a round of golf or spa treatment between poker hands, or Prairie Meadows in Altoona if you can’t decide between betting on the ponies and plugging your money into slots. Dubuque’s Diamond Jo Casino recently underwent a serious upgrade, moving the former riverboat casino to land and adding Cherry Lanes bowling, a live entertainment venue in the Mississippi Moon Bar and four quality dining options – including every casino’s must-have, a buffet. Or check out the Isle of Capri in Waterloo for live entertainment, fine dining and oh, yes, some gambling action.

With so many options, choosing a casino will be more difficult than shouting out black or red at the roulette table, so visit the Iowa Racing and Gaming Commission’s website, www.iowa.gov/irgc, for a complete list of licensed Iowa casinos and links to their sites.

All about the family
Staying local can reduce the stress of family vacationing to a dull roar. By keeping car time to a minimum, you can curb the back seat fighting and “Are we there yet’s?” and avoid the hassle of navigating airports with a stroller and toddlers.

If swimsuits and waterslides are your family’s style, check out Grand Harbor Resort and Waterpark in Dubuque. Their Huck Finn II Tree house will keep the kids entertained with water cannons, slides and squirt guns, while you feed your adventurous side on the 200-foot water tube slide. Slip into dry clothes and visit the National Mississippi River Museum, enjoy a walk along the river and take a ride up the historic Fourth Street Elevator. The resort offers family packages that include water park tickets, breakfast and a pizza dinner along with accommodations; and since the water park is indoors, your vacation is weather proof.

If water-sliding in the sun is more up your alley, head to Lost Island in Waterloo. In addition to many waterslides, there’s a lazy river, plenty of shallow spots for the kiddos to play and the park has go-karts and a golf course.

Want a more rugged backdrop for family memories? Iowa has more than 70 state-run parks to choose from. Pack up your tent, fishing poles, hiking shoes, and s’mores fixin’s and pick the park closest – or farthest — from you, depending on how far you want to tote the tots.

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WIND TURBINE ON UI CAMPUS

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Wind Turbine Installed on UI Campus Follows National Trend


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National Trend Reaches U Of I

Workers installed a 2.4-kilowatt wind turbine on the University of Iowa campus Tuesday, part of a national trend of using the devices as educational tools.

The UI’s 37-foot structure, similar to those built at other universities, will provide training for students in an experimental engineering class.

The installation of the white wind turbine on south end of Madison Street took under two hours to complete, and the turbine is officially up and running.

James Johansen, a former teaching assistant for the experimental engineering class, said students should enjoy working with the turbine.

Hands-On Experience for U of I Students

“It is rare that you get hands-on experience — they will actually get to play with it,” he said.

This unique training has been serving as an educational benefit for other universities as well.
Montana State University installed a 2.4-kilowatt wind turbine in November 2008.

“It is a baby, but with all of the same characteristics as a commercial size turbine and is more manageable,” said Rob Larson, an assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at the school.

Similar to the UI’s, the turbine is used primarily as an educational tool, especially in Manufacturing Engineering Technology courses for seniors in the wind-application center, he said.

Educational Tool

The course is developed to monitor the software and other research on weather and the turbine.
“It happens right next door, so it seems more pertinent than studying it somewhere else — it gets students’ feet in the door as far as talking about something that is real,” Larson said.

In addition to adapting the turbine, a consecutive project is also in the making.

“The Wind Montana project is a program that is developing alternative-energy-technician courses,” Larson said, and five other campuses in Montana have such programs.

And the trend has grown nationwide

More than 60 American colleges and universities have wind turbines of varying sizes, according to the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education website — from Aurora College’s 0.85-kilowatt system to the University of Oklahoma’s 10.1-kilowatt turbine.

“We have seen an increase in institutions installing [wind turbines] — they have been ramping up over the last three years,” said Paul Rowland, the director executive of the association.

He believes universities are seeing the dramatic difference wind turbines are making on their campuses.

Those from the UI hope this is the case.

“Hopefully, seeing the turbine on campus will get other people involved — the more people hear about it the better,” said Sarah Horgen, the education coordinator of the UI Museum of Natural History, who attended the installation.

And the wind turbine offers more than educational benefits.

“I think everybody is happy to see some movement toward expanding renewable use and education,” Larson said. “And students are the ones who will deal with this in the upcoming years and don’t want to see oily beaches.”

By Kristin Callahan
Daily Iowan

DI reporter Lisa Brahm contributed to this report.

Categories: Around Town, Current Events

TOYOTA SCION JAZZ FESTIVAL

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Friday, Saturday & Sunday – July 2,3,4th

Success


Since its humble beginnings in 1991 as an intimate local gathering of jazz aficionados, the Iowa City Jazz Festival has transformed into a nationally recognized event with an average annual audience of more than 50,000. Over the years, the festival has featured some of the biggest names in jazz, including John Scofield, Paquito D’Rivera, Joe Lovano, Kenny Garrett, Roy Haynes, Dave Douglas, Bill Frisell, Joey de Francesco, Charlie Hunter, Greg Osby, Cubanismo, Pat Martino, Paul Motian, Don Byron, Andrew Hill, Carla Bley, Steve Swallow, Yellowjackets, Soulive, Patricia Barber, Sexmob, and Stefon Harris. A key ingredient in the ongoing success of the festival is its accessibility. Admission has always been free. The sponsors underwrite all costs of producing the event, allowing it to transcend socioeconomic barriers and provide free access to families and individuals regardless of income.

Impact


The Iowa City Jazz Festival makes a profound economic and cultural impact on Iowa City each year. Historically the summer season is a somewhat dormant time of year in Iowa City. Now, however, downtown is now one of the busiest hubs of economic and cultural activity in the state. Since the first Jazz Festival in 1991, the festivals have brought over a quarter million jazz fans to Iowa City with an estimated economic impact of more than seven million dollars.

Exposure


The National Public Radio program JazzSet has recognized the exemplary quality of the Iowa City Jazz Festival by recording the festival four times in the past eight years. Most recently, JazzSet featured Iowa City Jazz Festival broadcasts for three consecutive weekly shows nationwide. The festival has been named one of the “Top 10 Festivals in the Nation” by Downbeat magazine.

Innovation


From the beginning, the principal goal of the festival has been to present impressive level of musicianship. Each year the audience is treated to some of the very best jazz performers in the world. The festivals often feature cutting-edge musicians who have been cited top performers by their peers. From the Grammy-winning Neville Brothers, Poncho Sanchez, Paquito D’Rivera, Joe Lovano, and Yellowjackets, to Grammy-nominees John Scofield, Bill Frisell, Kenny Werner, Greg Osby and Brad Mehldau, the festival has brought some of the world’s most influential talent to its stage.

Education


A vital component of the festival is the focus on jazz education. Each year, the festival creates educational opportunities for students and aficionados through its Keyhole program. Young musicians from schools around the area are invited to perform at the festival and learn from such noted educators like Ron Carter, T.S. Monk, Jr., Ed Wilkerson, Kenny Werner, Paul McKee, Curtis Fuller, Geri Allen, David Berkman, and Dick Oatts in a focused and effective workshop setting. The festival has gained recognition as a supporter of local youth jazz groups by collaborating with both the Iowa City and West High jazz bands, featured openers at past festivals.

History


The Iowa City Jazz Festival has a rich history that spans the years.  Visit our Jazz Fest History Page to learn more.
Sheraton Iowa City Hotel Offers Special Rate for JazzFest Attendees

The Sheraton Iowa City Hotel is pleased to offer a special discounted rate to individuals attending the 2010 Toyota-Scion of Iowa City Jazz Festival. Click HERE for more information and to make your reservation.

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