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Hundred Waters, Forest Sun Kick Off MVFF35’s ASCAP Music Café at Sweetwater

Daytime performers from Oct. 11-13 also include Fairfax resident John Doe, who rose to fame in the punk band X, as well as Corte Madera duo Pomplamoose and emerging pop group 2am Club, which has deep Mill Valley roots.

From its inception in 1977 to this year’s 35th anniversary, the Mill Valley Film Festival and music have been joined at the hip, often to startling sonic results.

The festival's Music and the Movies events organized by Claire Wasserman and Stephanie Clarke have featured a broad spectrum of performers over the years, including Tangerine Dream, Ry Cooder and Harry Dean Stanton, as well as former Police drummer Stuart Copeland providing the live soundtrack to Francis Ford Coppola’s Rumble Fish.

A 1990 tribute to Saturday Night Live music director Hal Willner featured Mill Valley’s Bob Weir and a lineup that included Marianne Faithfull, Todd Rundgren, Charlie Haden and Michelle Shocked.

That tradition has continued in recent years, including inimitable events like last year’s raucous closing night of the Dakah Hip Hop Orchestra and the pairing of Marin sarod player Alam Khan and Weir and Rob Wasserman.

For the 35th anniversary, festival organizers have put music front and center throughout the 11-day event, from the star-studded Village Music All-Stars tribute concert at the Sweetwater Music Hall last Friday night to the Mill Valley ASCAP Music Café, a three-day series of daytime music concerts from an array of bands that hope to connect with filmmakers for possible collaborations.

The concerts, also at the Sweetwater, kick off Thursday at 1 p.m. with Bay Area troubadour Forest Sun and Hundred Waters, an alt-folk outfit with an electronic twist that hails from Gainesville, Florida, at 2 p.m.

Forest Sun’s rootsy Americana sound and laid-back California style was hailed by No Depression magazine as an “altogether a quiet joy in a raucous world,” while Hundred Waters drew some heavy praise from tastemaker Pitchfork.com, which said, “Their debut does more than enough to stand on its own, not only ambitious in its own right, but leaving little doubt about Hundred Waters' capability of handling wherever their ambition takes them from here.”

The Mill Valley ASCAP Music Café also includes a pair of Marin acts that have drawn their own share of acclaim. Pomplamoose, the Corte Madera-based duo of multi-instrumentalists Jack Conte and Nataly Dawn that rose to prominence in 2011 behind a series of Hyundai ads during the holiday season, will be performing at one of the showcases. The duo has been looking to connect with filmmakers. They perform at 3 p.m. Thursday.

And John Doe, co-founder of the acclaimed LA punk band X, recently moved to Fairfax and is looking to expand his film and TV work that includes landing his song "The Meanest Man in the World" on season four of Friday Night Lights. Doe plays at 4 p.m. Thursday.

The series includes six more acts through Saturday afternoon, capped by the 2am Club, the band founded by a pair of Tam High grads and named after the venerable Miller Ave. bar.

The 411: The Mill Valley ASCAP Music Café is Oct. 11-13 at the Sweetwater Music Hall and is open to all MVFF badge holder. Go here for more info.

 

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Jessica Mullins (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 12:18 pm
Thanks for the feedback, John. To my knowledge, we don't have a comments stream anywhere. DefinitelyRead More submit your comments here (it's the most efficient way to get your thoughts heard at the higher level): http://ow.ly/l4cyg
M. Kathryn Thompson May 21, 2013 at 09:54 am
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Bren April 22, 2013 at 04:13 pm
Is anybody else here getting multiple e-mail notifications of new comments by Jo Tog, and thenRead More clicking the link, only to find that they are actually old comments from Jo Tog, but with today's date on them? What's the deal? Did all his comments get flagged and deleted, and now he's re-posting them? Most curious.
Sierra Salin April 22, 2013 at 02:02 pm
Jo Trog, we live in a Corporatocracy, not a republic. We abdicated the Republic after 9/11, if notRead More before. Know the difference.
Hiba April 21, 2013 at 06:52 pm
Banning the sale in a free market economy is too strong. I believe people should be able to chooseRead More so long as the product is labeled correctly, and even placed in a section with a big sign that says "GM Food products". Would I buy it if I pass the section at the grocery store: NO.
A May 4, 2013 at 12:55 pm
Many people in Marin are already at 50% or more of their entire income to pay for housing. And weRead More have no rent control here in Marin which is the only way I've seen that most seniors have been able to stay in San Francisco for several decades. Regarding your statement: "Market rate housing generates tax revenues, which in turn pay for schools, parks, emergency services, etc." Low income people pay a lot of sales tax in Marin (which is really high) and that also supports these causes. If they don't have the money to pay property taxes to own property, then the fact is, they just can't pay it. Be thankful that a large group of the population in Marin makes enough money to own property and pay it (and turn around and sell their houses for a handsome profit as well, don't forget about that.) Some folks here are just SPOILED rotten. Perhaps you should lobby that Marin employers just pay people living wages so they can afford to become buyers here and pay property taxes instead of trying to lobby against housing for the poor. Goodness knows how many taxes child-free low income people have paid to support wealthy folks kids and schools here. We don't get any of that, either, but we still have to pay for it...
A May 4, 2013 at 12:53 pm
I've heard that Marin is already in violation (either state or federal, or both) of not havingRead More enough low income housing in the county for its population. I think the county is under pressure to come into compliance which it has been out of in this area for a long time. This can only serve to better the lives of low income and elderly people in our county and perhaps reduce homelessness as well which is something we sorely need to do. However, what is amazing to me is that what we are calling "low income" housing in Marin still costs $1K+ a month per person from what I can tell. That's not "low income". Someone paying that much needs to be earning about $4K a month to keep housing costs in the 25-30% range that every financial planner recommends for a basic budget. I see a lot of low income people working HARD full-time to earn $1,600 a month here in restaurants, grocery stores, retail, hair salons, gyms, even clinics. They can't afford to live in Marin so many of them commute in from the east bay and further north to work in Marin. That is what is not sustainable. Think about the gas and pollution and the quality of life in the community due to turnover because there is no personal interaction with the staff of a lot of these places anymore because they don't stick around for very long.