How to forcibly cram your friend into a photo booth

[via Joshua Cobos on Instagram]

P.S. If you’re a fan, perhaps let Joshua know.

Our digital city

The fine folks at BAYCAT, who spend their days teaching and empowering Bayview-Hunters Point youth, are in the midst of a 7-week fundraiser that involves Instagram and hashtags! Each week, there’s a theme (such as last week’s: “our digital city”). Anyone can post photos that illustrate the theme, and each week a judge judges the best ones. And for every photo submitted, BAYCAT gets $1. And at some point down the road, the best overall photo wins some prizes.

This week, I’m the judge, and I picked the above photo. The below photo is runner up.

The next theme is “unexpected art.” Submit your entries via Instagram, Twitter or Facebook, using the hashtag #BAYCATbyYou

Prints by Joshua Cobos

Our boy Joshua Cobos, of the popular Bad Blood with Joshua Cobos series, wants you to have some physical copies of his work:

I moved to Los Angeles about three months ago and have slowly been setting up my studio off Sunset Blvd in Hollywood. Upon unpacking, I found the collection of prints I had made while living in San Francisco. While I love and cherish the memories formed through collaboration and exploring, I have decided to not print these works in any other form. Instead, I would like to share these photos with my friends and compatriots of Photography. I hope they find a good home.

Read on for further details.

Falling in love can change a place

Our pal Valerie, in the latest entry on her blog about subletting in different neighborhoods all over SF, tells the story of a spring romance, and how it made the Mission feel (and how it continues to make the Mission feel, even now that it’s long over):

We finally happened when I moved to Bernal a few months later. I was loitering around 22nd Street when I bumped into Donald and his friends at the Latin American Club. I politely asked how he’d been and if he’d decided on New York. He was going to leave in May. We realized we were going to be neighbors during my stay in Bernal, and joked about how we would throw rocks at each others windows and find ladders so we can climb through, just like in Clarissa Explains it All.

That night continued with peanuts and whiskeys at The Homestead. I suggested we go back to my office and eat Girl Scout cookies but we ended up making out the whole way back to his house.

Read on for the whole story.

[Photo also by Valerie]

Advice regarding change

[via Tara Taylor]

Interview with Broken Social Scene’s Brendan Canning, who performs Wednesday in the Mission

Brendan Canning, who released his second solo LP a few weeks back, performs this Wednesday at the Chapel, so we asked our pal Jarid Maged, a legit BSS scholar, to perform a Q&A. Here it is:

Jarid: Back when the Broken Social Scene Presents solo records were released, they sounded to many like bonus BSS albums, so much so that BSS band mates toured in support of those records, and their songs later resurfaced at BSS shows. This album, however, is very different. No Broken Social Scene Presents, no Arts & Crafts (rather, your own Draper Street Records). You Gots 2 Chill is so laid back, so beautiful, that I’ve found it really hard to call this a true sophomore solo record (in the wake of Something For All of Us). What was it that steered you in this direction?

Brendan: It’s true. The BSS presents series was more of a way more Kevin and myself to have a final and unequivocal say on how our albums should sound without having to check with everyone. Everyone in BSS had their own bands: we did not; and so I suppose YG2C is really my first solo effort and my new band has no direct affiliation to BSS. Although Greg Calderone, multi-instrumentalist in my band, starred in This Movie is Broken.

For the past fifteen years or so I’ve been playing more and more acoustic guitar, so much so that I would say it’s my primary instrument. That is the inspiration behind this album. A lot of years of collecting riffs, developing my style
and then finally the opportunity to breathe and make some creations that I’ve wanted to make. The first installment if you will.

With this record, did you feel at all liberated with distancing yourself from Broken Social Scene Presents? Given that this is the first solo record since the hiatus was announced, did the core members of BSS – or your own time in BSS – have any influence at all on the final product?

Ohad Benchetrit of BSS/Do Make Say Think and myself collab’d on Post Fahey and Makes You Motor at his studio Th’ Schvitz. Those tunes were finished before I did the bulk of this record with Steve Singh, also a band mate and high school chum.
He also runs a home studio, Hutch.

Like many major cities, Toronto’s changing with the times, becoming, like San Francisco, very tech heavy (and very expensive). When I think Toronto, the last thing that comes to mind these days is the ability to, well, Chill (yet you somehow seem to pull it off). I noticed you’ve lived on Draper Street for over two decades, so you’ve definitely seen a lot of things change around you. How much of your own Toronto experience played into the song writing and recording process?

Well it’s my life so Toronto is a huge part of where my inspiration comes from. From the filthy air, to the never-ending condo sprawl, to the beautiful people I get to see every day and the vibrancy that never lets me down. Most of the time. Your own sanity is your own responsibility.

There’s so much do-it-yourself all over this record, from the living room recordings, right down to the cover art. Broken Social Scene started out very DIY, and grew into one of the most influential bands (brands, even) in indie / Toronto music, providing the foundation for what would become one of most well-known labels in the business in Arts & Crafts. Do you see Draper Street Records growing into something more than You Gots 2 Chill?

I believe the phrase don’t put the cart before the horse should be heard. Baby steps.

Is there a story behind the voicemails, and the decision behind in putting some on the record? I heard that you still have a landline (“Long Live Land Lines” perhaps?). I’m picturing a tape recorder answering machine too, no?

No, just automated voicemail on the landline. I still like talking on a landline. I had a lot of riffs collected on my answering machine and it’s really a big part of my process so why not invite people into that world for thirty seconds?
Now it’s voice memos on the cell.

To date, the videos in support of the record (“Plugged In” and “Bullied Days”) are stunning low-budget films that have kept you almost entirely off-screen – needless to say, a bit of a change from that Brendan Canning as John Travolta character we saw in Something’s “Love Is New” a few years back. Why the decision to stay off-screen this time around?

No reason in particular-it just worked out that way and I like the fact I’m not really in the videos save for a cameo.
I leave certain creative decisions up to my partner in the label, Sarah Haywood.

So, visa issue in October; there seem to be more and more of these lately. First, that sucks (and I missed you in New York). What happened?

A boring and expensive and terribly annoying story which I won’t bore you with. I suppose the positive is that I was able to re-jig the band and swap out a couple members. After two shows we made three line-up changes. It just worked out that way.

Compared to the Broken Social Scene collective of somewhere between a dozen and two dozen touring members at any given time, relative to BSS tours, what’s life on the road been like this time around?

I love my new band and we’ve become a tight unit in a relatively short period of time. It’s very familial and a back to basics kind of tour. Snug in a van, long drives, winter frost with the finishing line in LA. I’m enjoying it for all it’s worth. My bandmate Greg and I jumped in Mara lake in the Canadian Rockies a few days ago. Extremely cold and life affirming. New band baptismal.

When I think Broken Social Scene live shows, chaos comes to mind. I have to imagine these shows are very different. Gone are the leg kicks this time around?

It’s true-there are no leg kicks. That is not to say this band doesn’t get very loud and proud but it is not a BSS show, this band is very much it’s own thing and it’s solid.

It’s been awhile (October 2011, in fact; for now, the last Broken Social Scene show in the US), but any San Francisco memories you’d like to share?

All SF gigs for BSS were ALWAYS memorable.

Our first shows at Great American Music Hall, Bimbo’s, the Filmore, Outside Lands, you name it. SF was basically top three in the world for BSS and it was always an event. I am forever grateful for the love we got in that town. That’s why we played our very last gig in North America in SF.

I will soon be touching down at the Phoenix Hotel and that is basically like saying I’m home.

It’s Christmas in the Mission!

[via Kristin]

Cool pie

[via Kristin]

Bike turkey!

Happy Thanksgiving from Mission Bicycle, via SF Bicycle Coalition on Twitter.

Public service announcement: DJ Purple *will* be doing his regular Thursday gig at Slate Bar on Thanksgiving

AND it’s also a final farewell party for Mission legend Isaac Fitzgerald:

Yes! We will be here for you Thanksgiving Thursday! All of you who are in town, desperately looking for where to go to escape your families or burn off all the calories you just ate, look no further!

Plus this is your last chance to say goodbye to Isaac Fitzgerald before he gets on the plane to NYC at precisely 2:01 AM! :)

Dance Karaoke with DJ Purple, fabulous singers, great company, top-notch drinks & the best pool table in the city!

Visit http://djpurple.com/ for more information and the “DJ Purple Dance Karaoke” songbook!

RSVP and invite your friends and loved ones!