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thursday september 25 Dave Brubeck: Best known as the progenitor of cool jazz in the '50s (and for "Take Five," one of the all-time standard-bearers of cool), the West Coast pianist/bandleader is a giant of jazz--period, and no modifier required. Granted, the Brubeck sound cracked open the door, far off...
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thursday
september 25
Dave Brubeck: Best known as the progenitor of cool jazz in the '50s (and for "Take Five," one of the all-time standard-bearers of cool), the West Coast pianist/bandleader is a giant of jazz--period, and no modifier required. Granted, the Brubeck sound cracked open the door, far off in the future, for dishwater fusionists like Russ Freeman's Rippingtons (see the Sounds listing in Thrills), but can you really blame the guy who planned the party for the mess the party crashers made of it? And despite the Brubeck band's use of classical motifs--and partly because of its groundbreaking incorporation of world-music rhythms--Dave's golden-age crew was and remains a darling of the party set; it's hard to hear something like, say, "Blue Rondo a la Turk" and not dream of martinis--extra-dry. But because of that party-band reputation and the group's inarguable popularity, it's taken a while for critics (especially the snooty jazz kind) to warm to the notion of Dave Brubeck as visionary--but he was, and is. The 76-year-old shares the stage with fellow California keyboardist David Benoit (a Brubeck disciple) and the Daves' merged combos on Thursday, September 25, at the Orpheum Theatre, 203 West Adams. Showtime is 8 p.m. Tickets range from $30 to $38, available at Scottsdale Center for the Arts and Ticketmaster; call 994-2787 or 784-4444.

Basically Balanchine: Ballet Arizona has opened its season with this homage to the "father of American ballet"--an all-Balanchine program that includes "Serenade: A Dance in the Light of the Moon," "The Four Temperaments: A Dance Ballet Without Plot" and the jazzy "Rubies" (the middle movement from the late choreographer's ballet Jewels). Final performances are on Thursday, September 25; Friday, September 26; and Saturday, September 27. All start at 8 p.m. in Center Stage at Herberger Theater Center, 222 East Monroe. Tickets range from $9 to $34.50, available at the center and Dillard's; call 252-8497 or 503-5555.

Robert "Bilbo" Walker: Here's something you don't hear every day: a black, Delta-born bluesman, nicknamed after a white, segregationist Southern politician, blue-yodeling the Anglo-country standards "The Wild Side of Life" and "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels"--but this bluesman pulls off the musical desegregation with a powerfully raw, singular style. Now based in Bakersfield, California--!--and considered a beloved eccentric back home in Mississippi, Walker's really a musical maverick on the model of Chuck Berry. Guitarist/vocalist/cotton farmer Walker once worked, in fact, under the stage name "Chuck Berry Jr.," and "Bilbo" shares Berry's predilection for the duckwalk and, yes, country music, as well as Chuck's general otherness (onstage, 59-year-old Walker typically wears an atrocious wig and a tux custom-made for the prom from hell). Robert's warm and wonderful first disc, Promised Land, features two Berry covers (including the title track), plus masterful translations of tunes by others, including Sam Cooke, McKinley Morganfield (a.k.a. Muddy Waters), J.B. Lenoir, B.B. King--even Hoyt Axton. Showtime is 9 p.m. Thursday, September 25, at the Rhythm Room, 1019 East Indian School. The cover is $5. Call 265-4842.

"Inescapable Histories": The retrospective of the career of New York-based sculptor/eco-artist Mel Chin, the product of China-born parents and an upbringing in a racially mixed neighborhood in Houston, Texas, addresses Chin's deep concerns for personal and Earth history, human rights and, most notable, the environment. (Mel is likely best known for his large-scale piece "Maquette for Revival Field," a living sculpture that substituted "hyperaccumulator" plants for his usual medium of marble and was inspired by the "Revival Field" project focusing on the "green remediation" process of removing heavy metals from contaminated soil.) "Inescapable Histories" continues through Sunday, November 9, in the Mezzanine and Lower galleries at Scottsdale Center for the Arts, 7380 East Second Street. Viewing is free; hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays (to 8 p.m. Thursdays), noon to 5 p.m. Sundays. Call 994-2787.

friday
september 26
"Harkins Anniversary Film Festival": The independent Valley chain celebrates its 64th year in show biz with this annual, best-deal-in-town spate of value-priced classics. The fest opens Friday, September 26, and continues daily, through Thursday, October 2. The lineup: Giant (1956) at Centerpoint 11, Mill and University in Tempe; Vertigo (1958) at Shea 14, 74th Street and Shea in Scottsdale; Lawrence of Arabia (1962) at Christown 11, 19th Avenue and Bethany Home; A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) at Bell Tower 8, 51st Avenue and Bell in Glendale; and Cabaret (1972) at Fiesta 5, 1520 South Longmore in Mesa. (All of the films are unrated except the latter, which is PG.) Admission to each screening is 25 cents; all proceeds benefit the United Way. For details see Showtimes or call the individual cinemas.

The Makers: If you've only got time, money and energy for one garage-punk show this week, make it the one by these self-proclaimed "kings of lowlife lobotomy rock" from Spokane, Washington, on Friday, September 26, at Hollywood Alley, 2610 West Baseline in Mesa. (If you've got the resources for two, check out New Jersey's Swingin' Neckbreakers; see the Sounds listing in Thrills.) The Makers (original name: the Haymakers) play savage, snot-nosed, nonfancy stuff that calls to mind early '70s Stooges and Pretty Things. The Fells, the Breakmen, and the Medieval Knievals open; the all-ages show starts at 8 p.m. Tickets are $7 in advance, $8 the day of the show, available at Dillard's. Call 820-7117 or 503-5555.

Basically Balanchine: See Thursday.
"Inescapable Histories": See Thursday.

saturday
september 27
"Vampires and Fallen Angels: The Secret World of Fritz Scholder": Followers of the world-infamous, Minnesota-born, Arizona-based painter/sculptor and noted obsessive will see a startlingly different side of Scholder in this exhibit, which features various objets d'odd that Fritz has gleaned from his globetrotting pilgrimages--and the artist's own riffs on the possessions (which, truly, seem to have possessed him). The show, held in honor of Scholder's 60th birthday, is broken down by themes: "The Mysteries of Egypt," "Magic and Sorcery," "Saints and Sinners" and "Cults of the Dead." It opens Saturday, September 27, and continues through Sunday, December 14, in the Orme Lewis Gallery at Phoenix Art Museum, 1625 North Central; PAM's David Rubin curated. Viewing is free; hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays (to 9 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays). Call 257-1880 or 257-1222.

Slim Dunlap: The exceptional rock guitarist wasn't featured on Let It Be, Tim or Pleased to Meet Me, but a former Replacement's a former Replacement. Dunlap upped the accessibility level of the world's greatest defunct rock band on its last true album, 1989's Don't Tell a Soul, for which he's been alternately lionized and damned; this corner continues to vote for canonization. Dunlap's scheduled to open for Dead Hot Workshop on Saturday, September 27, at Long Wong's, 701 South Mill in Tempe. Showtime is 9:30 p.m. Call 966-3147.

Fiesta Bowl Duck Race: The odds in the 10th-anniversary edition of this wildly popular rubber-ducky race (scheduled a full month earlier than usual this year) are long, but if you adopt a duck for $5, and if it's one of three in each 10,000 sold containing a grand-prize promissory note, and if your duck crosses the finish line before the other 64,999 or so ducks, you win a cool mil and a new-model pickup. Prerace activities start at 9 a.m. Saturday, September 27, at PERA Park, 68th Street and Continental in Tempe; the duck "dump" is at noon at the nearby Salt River Project canal. Duck adoption is available by calling 276-3825; proceeds benefit the Scottsdale Prevention Institute and the nonprofit Fiesta Bowl. For general information, call 350-0900.

Basically Balanchine: See Thursday.
"Harkins Anniversary Film Festival": See Friday.
"Inescapable Histories": See Thursday.

sunday
september 28
"A Procession: Paintings by Philip C. Curtis": The Scottsdale-based "Magritte of the Old West," now 90 and suffering from impaired vision, is a Western surrealist nonpareil. A former Works Progress Administration muralist and one of the founders of Phoenix Art Museum, Curtis is honored with this retrospective by the Arizona State University Art Museum. "A Procession" opens with a reception for the artist from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, September 28, and continues through Sunday, January 4, 1998, at the facility at Nelson Fine Arts Center, located at 10th Street and Mill, on the ASU campus in Tempe. Viewing is free; hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 5 p.m. Sundays. Call 965-2787.

"Harkins Anniversary Film Festival": See Friday.
"Inescapable Histories": See Thursday.
"Vampires and Fallen Angels": See Saturday.

tuesday
september 30
Othello Royal Premiere: Britain's Royal National Theatre enacts Shakespeare's intimate tragedy for an audience that includes England's Princess Royal (a.k.a. Her Royal Highness Princess Anne) and actor Michael York at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, September 30, in Center Stage at Herberger Theater Center, 222 East Monroe; the semiformal event is the official kickoff for the UK/AZ Festival (see Wednesday). Sam Mendes of London's Donmar Warehouse directed the Bard's work about the noble title character (David Harewood), who loves the purehearted Desdemona (Claire Skinner) and is loathed--and viciously victimized--by that nasty little man named Iago (Simon Russell Beale). (Skinner is one of the stars of the PBS series Chef!; see the related story on page 73.) Premiere tickets are $150 and $200; if available, they're at the Herberger (252-8497). The first regular Othello performance is at 8 p.m. Wednesday, October 1; more shows are scheduled Thursday, October 2, through Saturday, October 4. The run marks the RNT troupe's first Arizona visit, and only U.S. appearance in 1997. Regular tickets range from $40 to $50, available at the Herberger and Dillard's (503-5555).

"Timothy Archibald: New Works": The talented former New Times staff photographer, now based in California, gets a "posthumous" show of his own, centering on his "suburban icons" and left-field character studies. "Archibald" and its companion installation, "Destination Unknown," open with a reception from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, September 30, and continue through Friday, October 24, at Shemer Art Center and Museum, 5005 East Camelback. Viewing is free; hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays. Call 262-4727.

"Harkins Anniversary Film Festival": See Friday.
"Inescapable Histories": See Thursday.
"A Procession: Paintings by Philip C. Curtis": See Sunday.
"Vampires and Fallen Angels": See Saturday.

wednesday
october 1
UK/AZ Festival Opening Ceremony: The metaphorical ribbon-cutting for the fest--which features scads of artistic, cultural, educational and trade-related events in October and beyond--is slated for 11 a.m. Wednesday, October 1, at Symphony Hall Terrace, located at Second Street and Adams. Special guests include Princess Anne (also scheduled to be on hand at Tuesday's Othello Royal Premiere; see above) and the Arizona National Guard 108th Army Band. Admission is free. For info about this or other UK/AZ events, call 258-6055.

"Timothy Archibald: New Works": See Tuesday.
"Harkins Anniversary Film Festival": See Friday.
"Inescapable Histories": See Thursday.
Othello: See Tuesday.
"A Procession: Paintings by Philip C. Curtis": See Sunday.
"Vampires and Fallen Angels": See Saturday.

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