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San Fransisco street named for Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia during celebration of legendary band

San Fransisco street named for Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia during celebration of legendary band

New York Post2 days ago
A few hundred people gathered Friday to name a tiny San Francisco street after legendary Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia on what would have been his 83rd birthday and as part of a citywide celebration to mark the band's 60th anniversary.
Harrington Street, which is one block long, will also be called 'Jerry Garcia Street.' He died in 1995, but the band's popularity has only grown as younger generations discover the Dead's improvisational music, which blended rock, blues, folk, and other styles.
Garcia spent part of his childhood in a modest home in the city's diverse Excelsior neighborhood.
5 Harrington Street, which is one block long, will also be called 'Jerry Garcia Street.'
AP
He lived with his grandparents after the death of his father, Jose Ramon 'Joe' Garcia.
'I hope that you all get a chance to enjoy the music, dance, hug, smile,' said daughter Trixie Garcia, growing emotional during her brief remarks. 'Cherish what's valuable, what's significant in life.'
Tens of thousands of fans are in San Francisco to commemorate the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary with concerts and other activities throughout the city.
The latest iteration of the band, Dead & Company, with original Grateful Dead members Bob Weir and Mickey Hart, will play Golden Gate Park's Polo Field for three days starting Friday.
An estimated 60,000 attendees are expected each day.
Formed in 1965, the Grateful Dead often played for free in their early years while living in a cheap Victorian home in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
The band later became a significant part of 1967's Summer of Love, and the Grateful Dead has become synonymous with San Francisco and its bohemian counterculture.
5 A few hundred people gathered Friday to name a tiny San Francisco street after legendary Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia on what would have been his 83rd birthday.
AP
5 Garcia died in 1995, but the band's popularity has only grown as younger generations discover the Dead's improvisational music, which blended rock, blues, folk, and other styles.
AP
On Friday, fans in rainbow tie-dye and Grateful Dead T-shirts whooped and cheered as the sign was unveiled.
Nonfans with shopping bags and some using walking canes maneuvered around the crowd on what was for them just another foggy day in the working-class neighborhood.
Afterward, devotees peeled off to pose for photos in front of Garcia's childhood home.
5 Formed in 1965, the Grateful Dead often played for free in their early years while living in a cheap Victorian home in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.
AP
5 On Friday, fans in rainbow tie-dye and Grateful Dead T-shirts whooped and cheered as the sign was unveiled.
AP
Jared Yankee, 23, got the crowd to join him in singing 'Happy Birthday.'
Yankee said he flew in from Rhode Island for the shows.
He got into music about a decade ago.
'It's a human thing,' he said of his impromptu singing. 'I figure everyone knows the words to 'Happy Birthday.''
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Grateful Dead: 60 Years of Celebration
Grateful Dead: 60 Years of Celebration

Forbes

time41 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Grateful Dead: 60 Years of Celebration

Grateful Dead photographed in NYC, June, 1967. Publicity photo from the exhibition and coffee table book: An American beauty - Grateful Dead 1965-1995. © Ron Rakow / Retro Photo Archive Courtesy of the artist and David Kordansky Gallery What is it about the Grateful Dead that had tens of thousands of fans heading to Golden Gate Park last weekend for the three-day celebration of their sixty years of music? And tens of thousands more streaming the shows on or seeing the final show in Imax theaters or listening to the performances on Sirius XM. In Los Angeles, the David Kordansky Gallery has an exhibition of photographs, An American Beauty: Grateful Dead 1965-1995 on view until August 16th, and have also put out a gorgeous coffee table book of the exhibition and that includes many more photographs, curated by Jay Blakesberg and his daughter Ricki Blakesberg, with text by Kordansky high school friend, fellow Deadhead and content curator at Kordansky, poet Stuart Krimko, available at the gallery and online. Wall of Sound, Oakland Coliseum, Oakland, CA, June 8, 1974. Publicity photo from the exhibition and coffee table book: An American beauty - Grateful Dead 1965-1995 Alvan Meyerowtiz/ © Retro Photo Archive, Courtesy of the artist and David Kordansky Gallery The Dead's fans span several generations and have outlived many of the original members including Ron McKernan (Pigpen), Jerry Garcia, and Phil Lesh, From the original line up only Bob Weir (who was the youngest member) and Mickey Hart will perform at this weekend's celebration. Bill Kreutzmann, one of the original drummers now lives in Hawaii where he performs with Mahalo Dead, and Grateful Mahalo. In Golden Gate Park, Weir and Hart will be joined by their Dead & Co, confreres John Mayer, Jeff Chimenti, and Jay Lane. Opening acts for each night are Billy Strings, Sturgill Stimpson, and Trey Attanasio. I saw the Dead many times in high school, several times later while Garcia was still alive and have, more recently, been to several Dead & Co, and Wolf Brothers Shows. If I try to think back to what made the band compelling in its original incarnation, surely part of it was the stamina of the band. The New Riders of the Purple Sage often opened the evening with Jerry Garcia sitting in on pedal steel. They would play for two hours or so, and then the Dead would come on and play for anywhere between three to five hours. What grabbed the audience, then and now, was the feeling of being taken on a voyage, or in many cases a trip, where the evening was one long performance, and it became a game or a matter of insider cred to guess what song they were playing and admire how it morphed into what they would play next. They played a lot of cover songs but when they did, it was always as if it was their song to begin with, and their interpretations could add a layer of emotion be it wistful, joyous, or boastful. Grateful Dead, Mary Poppins Umbrella Festival and Be-In, El Camino Park, Palo Alto, CA, July 2, 1967. Publicity photo for An American Beauty: Grateful Dead 1965-1995, David Kordansky Gallery © Ron Rakow/ Retro Photo Archive, Courtesy of the artist and David Kordanasky Gallery In those early days, when Pigpen was on the keyboards and was one of their main vocalists, Good Morning Little School Girl , could be a drawn-out blues jam heavy with lascivious intent. And when they played St. Stephen was an almost reverent incantation into the darker reaches of the universe. Garcia was like some great artisanal weaver, threading the notes and sweet tones of his guitar into the band's rhythms, playing his electric guitar in ways inspired by his bluegrass and blues background. When the Dead ended the night playing Not Fade Away and Johnny B. Goode you were satisfied but wanted to come back for more. No two performances were alike, and the shows were not all equally good in quality, but attending allowed you to discuss various set lists, songs, etc.… They drew one further into the Dead's world. At times, there was a feeling one had at those shows, an experience, that I can only compare to what golfers, surfers, and skiers are chasing – that moment when you leave the specific and become part of the whole. Dead fans have been chasing those moments since the 1960s. Deadhead dancing at Grateful Dead concert in Lewiston, ME on September 6, 1980. Publicity photo from the exhibition and coffee table book An American beauty - Grateful Dead 1965-1995 © Jay Blakesberg, courtesy of the artist and David Kordansky Gallery The Grateful Dead were pioneers in allowing audience members to tape their performances and take as many photos as they liked. Many articles and even a Harvard Business School case study have been written about how while other bands focused on record sales, the Grateful Dead gave priority to touring. The Dead focused on audience engagement. The bootleg recordings, photos and merchandise offered at what came to be known as Shakedown Street outside the concerts, built a database of fans, first as a mailing list, and later through email, allowing for direct ticket sales and bypassing ticket agencies and brokers, allowing them to control their revenue streams. Today we would look on the trading of recordings, which they encouraged by having 'taper' areas at concerts to insure better recordings, would be described today as content marketing. To return to the An American Beauty exhibition at Kordansky Gallery and the lavish book they produced. The text by Stuart Krimko is a thoughtful account of Grateful Dead history along with his own musings on their songs, the experience of seeing them in concert, the various band members over time, and their impact on their fans and society at large. The photos are curated by Jay Blakesberg and his daughter Ricki Blakesberg and grow out of an exhibition they mounted in Haight Ashbury that was expanded to a show at the Sphere in Las Vegas when Dead & Co., did their residencies there, and became this exhibition and catalogue. Among the photographers included beyond Blakesberg's own work are images by Rosie McGee, Ron Rakow, Paul Kagan, Elizabeth Sunflower, Herb Greene, Alvan Meyerowitz, Ben Haller, Jeffrey Price, Marianne Mayer, Bruce Polonsky, Adrian Boot, among others. Many of those photographers were present for a panel conversation at Kordansky Gallery for the opening of the exhibition moderated by Stuart Krimko, and Journalist Shirley Halperin. Ron Rakow and Rosie McGee told great stories about the early days of the band. There were stories about 'Bear' Owsley, and his important contributions, chemical and soundwise. And Ron Rakow told a great anecdote about his job interview with Jerry Garcia. Are these the greatest photos or the best photos ever shot of The Grateful Dead? Or the ultimate collection for a fan? Maybe not. But what I found particularly compelling is that they give you a sense of the band, as young and not so young, and the overwhelming feeling that the people taking the photographs were there, not as tourists, not purely on assignment, but as an extension of the band, as part of the experience. There is a section of photographs just on the crowds attending, which is great because like the bootlegs and photos, they extend what the Grateful Dead have come to mean. When I looked at the photos at Kordansky Gallery and in the book/ catalogue, I had the feeling of being there myself. That feeling is what makes these photographs so worth seeing, and is the same feeling all those attending, streaming or listening to Dead & Co, were chasing last weekend and will keep chasing.

Beretta Fires Back With a New Mod Look After 17 Years in the Mission
Beretta Fires Back With a New Mod Look After 17 Years in the Mission

Eater

time43 minutes ago

  • Eater

Beretta Fires Back With a New Mod Look After 17 Years in the Mission

is an award-winning food writer living and eating in San Francisco. Her work has appeared in Food & Wine, Bon Appétit, the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, Eater SF, and Edible SF. The original Beretta on Valencia Street has officially reopened as of Sunday, August 3, revealing a new mod look with the same strong cocktails and pizza. After 17 years worth of stirring the risotto, some adventures in pandemic delivery, and all of the Valencia bike lane rigamarole, it was definitely due for a refresh. The team shut down for six weeks worth of deep renovations, and are now promising a refreshed Beretta. 'To reassure the people who love Beretta, it's not like we're not scratching everything and starting from new,' promises Adriano Paganini of the Back of the House group. 'It's just a version that's being polished up. In some ways, it's going back to what made Beretta special to start with.' Previously Beretta leaned into dark wood and leather, industrial light fixtures, and a few Victorian flourishes, like black floral wallpaper and a bird perched in the curled cursive logo (of the same era as Portlandia's 'Put a Bird On It'). Now designer Nathan Reed is reimagining the space in Italian retro-modern, loosely channeling a mod aesthetic from the '60s. That looks like new wine — red marble, twisted wire light fixtures, sleek molded chairs, and a couple of abstract murals in black and gold. They repainted the exterior in warm gold and toned up the interiors with mahogany and cherry hues. The interior of Beretta. Michelle Min In its early days, Beretta proved a smash success by leading with strong cocktails at recession prices. Even in the depths of the downturn, you could squeeze in at the bar, order a bourbon or rye drink for $9, and feast on fava bruschette. They're bringing back the Beretta classics originally developed by star bartender Thad Vogler, including the Acadian (rye, sloe gin, absinthe, honey, lemon) and Dolores Park Swizzle (white rum, absinthe, lime, maraschino). Beverage director Caterina Mirabelli's new-school options — a pretty pink Dust Till Dawn (mezcal, prickly pear, calamansi, ginger) and spicy Mojave Road Trip (vodka, pineapple, ancho verde, basil), for example — join those throwbacks. Chef Fredy Lopez has been in this kitchen since before the beginning — he worked at the Last Supper Club before it became Beretta, and he now oversees the menus at both Beretta and Delarosa. After several years of dealing with delivery options, Paganini is especially excited to flip back to bar snacks worth sitting down for. Expect a fun selection of stuzzichini and antipasti, from bite-size caponatina agrodolce (sweet and sour eggplant) and zucchini scapece (fried zucchini with mint and vinegar), to small plates of carpaccio di polpo (octopus carpaccio) and fritto misto (fried squid, prawns, fennel, and peppers). A cocktail at Beretta. Michelle Min The Roman-esque pizza still hits that slightly thinner and crispier crust, and seasonal toppings will spin as often as always, like a new white pie piled with stracchino, mortadella, and pistachios. Beretta only introduced pasta in the last few years, and there will be agnolotti pinched around roast chicken and marsala mushrooms, and an inky new linguine nere tossed with prawns and 'nduja. It's always had a reputation for risotto, however, so don't miss those comforting dishes rich with beef ossobuco and earthy porcini. Beretta originally opened on Valencia Street in 2008 on a foundation of cocktails and pizza. For over a decade, the bar stayed open every day of the week until 2 a.m., attracting an industry crowd and vibing into the night. It won't be open that late going forward. 'The business isn't there anymore, unfortunately,' Paganini says. 'I wish it was.' But like the vast majority of his restaurants, it will still be open on Mondays, for any cooks who could use a swizzle on their day off. A dish at Beretta. Back of the House group was established in 2009, a year after Beretta's debut, and now the company operates 42 restaurants and counting. The current lineup includes Italian trattorias Corzetti and Tailor's Son, Latin hotspots Lolinda and Cubita (formerly El Techo), colorful vegan fare from Wildseed, and countless burgers from Super Duper and fried chicken sandwiches from the Bird. A second location of Beretta started as a pop-up on Divisadero Street in 2020, then wound up sticking around; no changes to that location for now. Before he was a burger maestro of the Bay Area, Paganini grew up as the son of a tailor in Milan, rose through the ranks as a chef in London, and became a restaurateur in San Francisco, when he moved here for love in the '90s. His first restaurant was Cafe Adriano, followed by Pasta Pomodoro, which grew to 40 locations at one point, but all had closed by 2016. When Paganini and his partners took another shot on Beretta, he says they poured everything they had left back into that one restaurant. 'It could have been the end of our restaurant careers. So we were very lucky that this restaurant worked, and worked amazingly well.' Beretta is known for its pizza. Michelle Min So Beretta has always been a comeback story, and it's exciting to see Paganini take a break from opening new restaurants, to swing back and polish up his Cal-Italian classic. He personally ate at the bar every week, and grew close with chef and partner Ruggero Gadaldi, who died a few years ago. 'Beretta has always had an important spot in my heart,' Paganini says. 'I think of it very fondly, because of that, and because it was the first restaurant of our comeback.'

Stella Rimington, Britain's first female MI5 spy chief, dies at 90
Stella Rimington, Britain's first female MI5 spy chief, dies at 90

San Francisco Chronicle​

time2 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Stella Rimington, Britain's first female MI5 spy chief, dies at 90

LONDON (AP) — Stella Rimington, the first female chief of Britain's MI5 intelligence agency and later a successful thriller writer, has died, her family said Monday. She was 90. The first woman to head a U.K. intelligence agency, Rimington was the inspiration for Judi Dench's portrayal of MI6 chief M in seven James Bond films. Her family said in a statement that Rimington died on Sunday 'surrounded by her beloved family and dogs and determinedly held on to the life she loved until her last breath.' MI5's current director-general, Ken McCallum, said that 'as the first avowed female head of any intelligence agency in the world, Dame Stella broke through long-standing barriers and was a visible example of the importance of diversity in leadership.' Born in London in 1935, Rimington studied English at Edinburgh University and later worked as an archivist. She was living in India with her diplomat husband in the mid-1960s when she was recruited by MI5, Britain's domestic security service, as a part-time clerk and typist in its New Delhi office. She joined the agency full-time after moving back to London in 1969 and rose through the ranks, overcoming rules that kept the most prestigious roles, such as recruiting and running agents, for men only. She worked in each of MI5's operational branches — counterespionage, counterterrorism and counter-subversion — at a time when MI5's work included sniffing out Soviet spies, infiltrating Northern Ireland militant groups and, controversially, spying on leftists, trade union leaders and other alleged subversives. Rimington acknowledged in 2001 that the organization 'may have been a bit over-enthusiastic' in some of its snooping on domestic targets during the Cold War. Rimington was appointed MI5 director-general in 1992, the first head of the organization to be named in public, and her tenure saw the secretive organization become slightly more open. Dench's first appearance as M, a role formerly played by men, was in 'GoldenEye' in 1995. The film's producers said the casting was inspired by Rimington's appointment. After stepping down in 1996, Rimington was made a dame, the female equivalent of a knight, by Queen Elizabeth II. Rimington later published a memoir, 'Open Secret' — to the displeasure of the government — and a series of spy thrillers featuring fictional MI5 officer Liz Carlyle. 'The Devil's Bargain,' published in 2022, introduced a new heroine, CIA officer Manon Tyler. Other women followed her top intelligence jobs. Eliza Manningham-Buller led MI5 between 2002 and 2007. Anne Keast-Butler became head of electronic and cyber-intelligence agency GCHQ in Metreweli was named in June as the first female head of the overseas intelligence agency, MI6. Rimington and her husband, John Rimington, separated in the 1980s, but moved back in together during the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020. 'It's a good recipe for marriage, I'd say,' she said. 'Split up, live separately, and return to it later.'

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