Patricia Sauthoff
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Patricia Sauthoff became the arts and culture editor of the Santa Fe Reporter in 2006, after spending several years of exploring the scene on her own. In addition to her work at SFR, Patricia is an adjunct professor at the College of Santa Fe, teaching courses in both journalism and religious studies. She was a frequent contributor to KSFR's now defunct "Cinema Talk" and spends the time that she's not out and about exploring Santa Fe's cultural landscape sewing, knitting, riding her bike and reading (mostly Japanese) novels.
photo: Anne Hayunga |
Stories by Patricia Sauthoff
SFR TALK: Animal Footprints
Don Kimball is an animal-rights activist with Peace and Justice for Animals who has worked around the country since 1989 to protect animals
CD REVIEW: Joe West
Joe West releases a CD for kids. Kinda.
Ringmaster
Jeremy Bleich's diversity makes him the right music geek to compose the sound for Circus Luminous.
Interview with Shelley Hirsch
Shelley Hirsch has a way with words. Actually, the writer, singer, musician and performer has her way with words. Hirsch manipulates the boundaries of language and sound to create stories that encompass both the immediate surroundings and the larger world.
Hot Rocks
Massage therapist Norah Harris, who has been practicing the art of hot-stone massage for six years at Ten Thousand Waves, talks rocks with SFR.
Bad news bears
Cory Murchy returns to Santa Fe and brings his ass-kicking band along for the ride. And the chile.
SFR TAlk: 'Magick' Maker
Amber K is the nationally recognized author of True Magick: A Beginner’s Guide, Pagan Kids’ Activity Book, Heart of Tarot: An Intuitive Approach and several other books on Wicca. She has been a practitioner of the religion for more than 30 years and is the executive director of Ardantane, a nonprofit pagan learning center and seminary located near Jemez Springs, NM.
Shy Guy
Phil Elverum is a unique kind of shy. The artist, who began his musical project as The Microphones and has since switched to the moniker Mount Eerie, lets his emotions fly when he writes and performs songs, yet keeps his distance from the audience by closing his eyes through most of the set and singing as if he were in the room completely alone.
Post-Folk
Pillars and Tongues mixes the down-home sounds of a country porch band with an emotional and psychedelic vibe that commands its listeners’ attention, while it allows the audience to melt into the sound that floats around them.