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    Jazz in August...Charlie Parker Festival -- concerts, art, readings and more! Stay tuned for details; sign up on our mailing list. (see contacts for more information)
  • Yolene Legrand Calendars

    2009 wall calendars featuring the art work of the internationally known, Haitian-born, New York artist Yolene Legrand are now available for purchase at Tribes. This beautiful calendar, on high quality semi-gloss paper is 12" x 12" and has different images for each month.

  • Charlie Parker Festival(link)


    August 7, 2008- August 29, 2008
    Venue: Tribes Gallery
    Address: 285 East Third Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10009

    Thur. August 7th, 6-9 pm: “Bird in the Bush” – Group art exhibition

    7 pm: Live music by Search

    Artists include: Itziar Barrio, Dianne Bowen, Stephanie Colonna, Robyn Desposito, Nikki Johnson, Hilary Maslon, Kelley Meister, Grace Rim, Emily Steinfeld, Angela Valeria, Chin Chih Yang, Alessandra Zeka

    Sun. August 10th: “Dead Bird Films” (Films from the year of Charlie Parker’s death)

    In Tribes Garden

    8 pm: Ryder Pales – Live Concert

    9 pm: Film Screening – “The Man With the Golden Arm” (1955 Frank Sinatra)

    Tues. August 12th: 7-9 pm: Piano and Cello Duo featuring Francesca Tedeschi and Noelle Casella

    Sat. August 16th: “Bird in the Bushes”

    In Tribes Garden

    5 pm: Poetry Reading featuring Erich Christiansen, Steve Dalachinsky, John Farris, Merry Fortune, Yuko Otomo, Amy Ouzoonian, Eve Packer

    7 pm: Live Music - Will McEvoy Ensemble

    8 pm: Live Music - Bobby Sanabria’s Quintet

    Sat. August 23rd: “Love Does Not Make My Cat Play Ragtimey”

    8 pm: Multimedia Performance and music featuring Sabrina Chapadjiev, Joseph Keckler and Chavisa Woods

    Sun. August 24th: In Tribes Garden

    6 pm: Acoustic Jam – Flash-Back Puppy Band featuring Denmark’s Carsten “Nado” Kragelund Adrian Chan, Cello plus an Open Mic

    Fri. August 29th: “Charlie Parker Birthday Block Party” – Free!

    2-9 pm: Day-long Street Fest featuring:

    An Artist Flea Market

    An Open Mic in the East 3rd St. Community Garden.Sign up begins at 2 pm and the event lasts until 5 pm (all types) with featured poets Jennifer Blowdryer, Steve Dalachinsky, Hattie Gosset, Tom Savage, Danny Shot, Chavisa Woods, and Susan Yung

    7 pm: Street Concert featuring the Stumblebum Brass Band

    Contributions are accepted at the door $7

    This event is sponsored in part by: Capital One Bank, Poets and Writers, Loisaida Drugs, the DCA, the L Magazine, Astor Wines & Spirits, Chez Betty Café, Councilwoman Rosie Mendez, Phil Hartman, Anyssa Kim, Robert Mnuchin, Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn and other private donors.


  • Events Calendar

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Saturday September 13th 2-4pm Memorial reading of I Dream About You Baby, poems by Lester Afflick at the St. Marks Poetry Project located at 131 East 10th Street @ 2nd ave.





poem-idreamaboutyou.jpg

Fly By Night Press is proud to announce the publication of I Dream About You Baby, poems by Lester Afflick.

Book release Party July 19th 2008 4-5:30 pm @ The Bowery Poetry Club- Readers TBA



Latest Reviews

The Inheritance of Loss - reviewed by Sarah Goodwin-Nguyen

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“Goose-bumps”: Louise Bourgeois at the Guggenheim Museum in New York - by Peggy Cyphers

Installation view of Spider Couple, Untitled, and Untitled at Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2008
© Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation New York
Photo by David Heald
“Goose-bumps”: Louise Bourgeois at the Guggenheim Museum in New York
June 27,2008 - September 28, 2008
Review by Peggy Cyphers
Louise Bourgeois’ Retrospective, currently on view at the Guggenheim Museum […]


Buckminster Fuller at the Whitney Museum - by Rebeccca Lossin

Review by Rebecca Lossin
While living in an underwater dome is not something most Americans dream of past the age of five,  “Buckminster Fuller: Starting With the Universe,” on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art, is much more than a nostalgic contemplation of unrealized utopia.  Placing a dome over mid-town Manhattan to in order […]


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DEL REALISMO MÁGICO A LA CIENCIA FICCIÓN - Por Linda Morales Caballero

Es difícil abarcar una novela como The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (algo así como La corta y fantástica vida de Oscar Wao) de Junot Diaz merecedora del Premio Pulitzer a la mejor novela de 2007.
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PENOBSCOT NATION MESSAGES - by Candece Tarpley

My Chippewa friend has Penobscot Nation messages
posted on her front door
left there by her lover who lived with her before.
I can’t say I was sorry to see him go
cause he didn’t know how to party
or hang with our jazzy gleeful flow
He would often scream and was kinda mean
thinking we weren’t in the know
his favorite saying […]


Bukowski and Vietnam

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            Back in March, I read at the 4th annual “Praise Bukowski” night at the Bowery Poetry Club.  I did the poem I had rehearsed, “Something for the Touts, the Nuns, the Grocery Clerks, and You.”  But in preparing earlier in the evening, I came across a sequence of poems that I […]



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Every summer, Hollywood lights up the screen with the clash of heroes and villains. But this year, it seems there is a strange urgency. It was more than simple excitement at well-made movies — it felt like Hollywood was battling not our boredom, but our anxiety. For the past few years we’ve heard people suggesting […]



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The Pink Letter: a review of Broken Flowers by A. Biduck

Broken Flowers is Jim Jarmusch’s latest American mainstream/art film, which tells a story of Don Johnston (Bill Murray), a middle-aged bachelor who finds himself single again after his latest girlfriend, Sherry (Julie Delpy), dumps him because he cannot commit. Upon her exit, Don doesn’t even attempt to win her back. Rather, he just sits back on his luxurious leather sofa watching The Private Life of Don Juan in his huge, soulless house, which reeks of emptiness. This same day, incidentally, he receives an anonymous letter in the mail with no return address from an ex-girlfriend of 20 years ago that says he has an 18-year old son from her. It also says that her son (or is it his son?) is in search of meeting him.A couple of days after receiving the letter, Don opens it in front of his next door neighbor, Winston (Jeffrey Wright), an immigrant from Ethiopia who has a Sherlock Holmesian persona and a serious interest in private eye work. Don’s initial reaction to the letter — like every other reaction to his life — was deadpan. As he started to give the letter some serious thought, it began to have a deeply and emotional affect over his present reality. He began to regret the past, and cursed with bewilderment, he was mystified with unanswered questions and complex thoughts. As the film progresses, the viewer comes to the realization that this Don Juan like character is more sullen and withdrawn — a kind of disgrace rather than a reverence. Nevertheless, Winston’s private eye investigations to finding a solution to the mystery of the pink letter, embarks Don on a cross-country journey to revisit four of his past girlfriends. In fact, Winston sets up the entire trip, including renting cars, and booking hotel rooms and airline tickets in order for Don to find out which of his past girlfriends was the author to this anonymous pink letter. Don, at first, is reluctant to even set out on this journey, but, nonetheless, he gives in to Winston’s ambitious persistence and determinate coaxing, and arrives unannounced at four of his ex-lovers houses with pink flowers in order to solve the mystery of the pink letter. Therefore, without Winston’s private eye ambition, Don would probably just continue to ignore reality, and, rather than facing his problems, would let life pass by.

The primary conflict of the film comes from the interplay between Don and Winston (the beating heart of their relationship), a relationship that is filled with frustration, drama, and comedy. In fact, Winston is the complete antithesis of Don being a happy middle-class family man with a great wife and a house filled with kids and pets. Don, on the other hand, is a single, white, unlively middle-aged guy, who made a wealth of money from computers.
Don’s journey turns out to be an emotional roller coaster. His four unannounced visits bring various new surprises, let-downs, and learning lessons to his present reality. The four women of the film include Sharon Stone, who plays Laura, a sensual and widowed closet organizer; Dora (Frances Conroy), a former hippie who became a bland real estate developer; Carmen (Jessica Lange), an animal communicator, and Penny (Tilda Swinton), an angry rural biker babe. This last visit is brief but turns out to be the most brutal. The film presents each acquaintance with awkwardness and humor, while maintaining a realistic quality that the audience can relate to and embody. As a whole, the movie has a mysterious quality to it and the scenes contain, like Don’s house, emptiness and longing. The audience experiences each scene with moods of laughter and forlornness, a quality unique to Jarmusch’s directing. One also gets a sense that the women in the film are all longing for love. Perhaps they are not begging for Don’s love, but they are still longing for it.

Jarmusch specifically wrote the role of Don Johnston for Bill Murray. Jarmusch says, “I don’t love Don Johnston. I don’t care about some rich guy that made money off computers, had pretty girlfriends and doesn’t know what he’s doing.” He continues, “I didn’t feel for him in the beginning, but I want to feel for him in the end.” At the beginning of the film it is hard to relate to Don or have any attraction or sentementality for him, namely because Don is more of the silent and passive type, not doing much and not saying much. He just mopes around appearing unaffected. He is more of the reactive type rather than the proactive type. As the film progresses we come to know that Don’s self is fragmented, but we don’t know why — it could be from any number of reasons. The ending of the film is left open-ended. We are left with some unanswered questions: does Don even have a son; has he forgotten an ex-lover? It is possible that Don may have a son, yet we are not exactly sure because the letter does not say that it is definite. And Don never thought to interogate the girls about the letter or about them having his son.

By the end of the flick, one does develop a kind of sentamentality for Don. And eventhough Don has self-created problems and he may not be a guy that we would want to be our partner or our father, we have a kind of likabitlity and affection for him. We feel for him. This raises two questions: what is there to like about Don, or better, how is Don a heroic character? One answer is that Don is more of a realistic character. That is, he is more human because he struggles, he’s flawed, and he has problems. Many critics interpret the ending as one without closure. On the contrary, I see the ending as very real and common to our lives. The reality is — and this is why the ending is a kind of climax for me — although our lives contain contradictions and our are selves are dirempted from our relationships with others, we are not always left with answers to our questions to why things are the way they are. Thus, we are forced to face acceptance. So, we need to take life as it comes and accept it for what it is. That’s why we must continue to move on — life goes on.


As a whole, the film, which mainly shows Don tracing out his past, is even more focused on living in the present moment. The audience is able to see this clearly, that is, they see Don for who he really is. So, the film teaches us that by not facing reality and accepting reality, we will get no where except wrestling with reality. In other words, when we do not face life problems or we run away from reality — like the dilmma Don is experiencing — the past will come back to haunt us. By the end of this film, Don, like the audience, is still left with open-endedness, unanswered questions, and not getting what t(he)y want(s). Although the film is slow-moving and deadpan — another common quality to director Jim Jarmusch, the film is loaded with unexpected surprises, fun, and laughs.

The lead-in song to the movie, which features Holly Golightly, is titled “There is an End” by The Greenhornes. The soundtrack features a wide array of artists, which gives the adding a Jamaican jazzy and upbeat feel to the film. Some artists include the Ethiopian composer and musician Mulatu Astatke, the legendary Marvin Gaye, the indie-rockers Brian Jonestown Massacre, Gabriel Fauré, and many more. It also features a three minute segment of Sleep’s “Dopesmoker.”

About the Director

Jim Jarmusch was born in Akron, Ohio on January 22, 1953. At the age of seventeen, he moved to New York City to study at Columbia University, and in 1975, he received a B.A. in English. He then went to Tisch School of the Arts at New York University to study film. This is where he made his first feature-length film, Permanent Vacation (1982), which was his thesis project. The film following this one, Stranger than Paradise (1984), was by far his most popular. Other feature-length films directed by Jarmusch include Down By Law (1986), Mystery Train (1989), Night On Earth (1991), Dead Man (1995), and Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999), and Coffee and Cigarettes (2003). He also made the rock video and documentary The Year of the Horse (1997) about the rock band Neil Young and Crazy Horse.