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Davis

Davis, California

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Arts & Culture

Column: Opera and iPads

Prior to last Saturday at 8 p.m., I was an opera virgin.

Breaking out of societal chains, photographs bring light to sub-cultures

Pictures of derelicts, vagabonds and punks run amok in the Richard L. Nelson Gallery exhibit "Wonderers." Guest curated by Matthias Geiger, the show features seven different photographers as they capture the roving, wandering and uprooted existence that many are living to this day.

Operation: Restore Maximum Freedom Festival X

On Oct. 2, KDVS 90.3 FM presented the 10th installment of the Operation: Restore Maximum Freedom Festival at Plainfield Station in Woodland.

Hip-hop/punk band Shinobi Ninja brings signature “swag” to UC Davis

Proudly displayed on Brooklyn-based hip-hop/punk band Shinobi Ninja's MySpace is this excerpt from a review by Radio Exile's Dan Berkman:

One-woman play Tilly No-Body: Catastrophes of Love examines life of German playwright’s wife

From tonight to Oct. 24, the Department of Theatre & Dance, in collaboration with Sideshow Physical Theatre, presents a brand new play entitled Tilly No-Body: Catastrophes of Love at the Mondavi Center's Vanderhoef Studio Theater. Tickets are $15 for students.

Davis opens its doors to art lovers at 2nd Friday ArtAbout

In Ireland, Friday night revelers traipse from bar to bar sampling drinks in what's known as a "pub crawl."

Artsweek

THIS WEEK IN DAVIS: Kero One; Donnie Darko: Free Screening; Los Lobos

CD review: Two Door Cinema Club

Interesting fact: The name for this Irish trio came about when one of the band members mispronounced "Tudor Cinema," the name of the local movie theater. This relatively lesser-known band has come out with a high-energy electropop/indie rock album that will keep you tuned in the whole way.

CD review: Maroon 5

For all those people who still ache for the days when Maroon 5 had just released their brilliant first album, Songs About Jane, kiss those heartaches goodbye! Okay, well maybe not goodbye, but the sultry rock band's new album, Hands All Over, is a definite improvement from their second album, even if nothing will ever compete with that first album's unparalleled success. Hands All Over goes back to a more melodic, acoustic direction, much like their first album.

Column: Paging 30 Rock

A pack of wild dogs took over and successfully ran a Wendy's! The sewer people stole my skateboard! I once saw a baby give another baby a tattoo -

Hooting for Howl 

Howl appears at first to be one of those quirky indie films that are so popular at Cannes right now because their low budget makes them feel honest, or less commercialized so to speak. Regardless of what genre Howl fits in, I believe that it is honest, and more importantly rich in both wisdom and human rights.

Celebrating a generation

On Oct. 7, 1955, at a student-run gallery in San Francisco called Six Gallery, a poet named Allen Ginsberg read a poem entitled "Howl" which ignited a series of stimulating shocks and ultimately, a movement known today as The Beat Generation.

English saxophone master to give workshop and free concert

Evan Parker will perform at the Technocultural Studies Building on Monday at 7 p.m. Preceding the free concert will be a workshop at 4 p.m.

CD review: Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross

Nine Inch Nails founder Trent Reznor is the mastermind behind the trippy, electronica-infused score of the geek-chic flick The Social Network. Fittingly, the harsh beats and seductive synths seem to have crawled right out of a computer. This score ain't John Williams - though a few tracks feature typical piano themes, go ahead and break this baby out at your next dance party.

Local artist is “chalk” full of ideas

On a large chalkboard toward the back of the Starbucks at University Mall in Central Davis, artist Tom Corbett's original works of art add color to a typically black and green establishment.