Since 2001, Yo La Tengo have spent most nights of Hanukkah performing eight nights of sold out benefits during the Festival of Lights. This year, they’re scaling back the eight nights to a single one night, which will livestream on Friday, December 18 at 8pm ET, from The Greene Space at WNYC & WQXR.
Since their inception at Maxwell’s in their former hometown of Hoboken, NJ, before moving to The Bowery Ballroom in downtown Manhattan, the shows featured surprise guests including John Oliver, Ray Davies, David Byrne, Syl Johnson, Sarah Silverman, Lucinda Williams, and Graham Nash.
This edition of the stripped-down Hanukkah concert will stream live from The Greene Space’s Lower Manhattan studio, and in doing so, keeps two decades of Yo La Tengo tradition alive. The three-hour performance features the classic format of an opening act, a comedian, and then a set by Yo La Tengo.
Theatre Within, the non-profit behind the Annual John Lennon Tribute charity concert since 1981, has announced that its milestone 40th Annual John Lennon Tribute Concert will again offer a free livestream exclusively at LennonTribute40.org, from Wednesday, December 23 at 7pm thru Friday, January 1 at midnight ET,
This program, the third installment of music and memories produced in Lennon’s honor, will feature a new performance by Steve Earle, recorded especially for the Tribute’s finale showing. The stellar line-up also includes recent John Lennon Real Love Award Honorees, Patti Smith, Natalie Merchant and Rosanne Cash, plus Jackson Browne, Taj Mahal, Jorma Kaukonen, Martin Sexton, Keb’ Mo’, Joan Osborne, Bettye LaVette, Shelby Lynne, Marc Cohn, Willie Nile, Lucy Kaplansky, Nicki Richards, The Kennedys, Ron Pope, and Music Director Rich Pagano.
In addition, the livestream tribute includes reflections on the music of John Lennon, social impact by rock photographer Bob Gruen, Double Fantasy producer Jack Douglas, radio personality Dennis Elsas, music critic Anthony DeCurtis, and playwright V (formerly Eve Ensler).
In a statement, Yoko Ono said:
John has been a loving spirit now for nearly as long as he was with us on earth, 40 years. Through all that time, Theatre Within has celebrated his music and message with its beautiful annual tribute, which helps makes possible its programs for those impacted by cancer, including the John Lennon Real Love Project songwriting workshop. This is such a wonderful way to honor John and the values he stood for.
This year, in partnership with Gilda’s Club NYC and Gilda’s Club Westchester, Theatre Within has provided 135 free workshops, all available online – in songwriting, art, meditation and much more – for children, teens and adults impacted by cancer.
Theatre Within invites John Lennon fans to make a donation in any amount by texting “TRIB40” to 41444. All proceeds will empower Theatre Within to continue its free programs for NY-metro cancer community through 2021.
The GrassRoots Festival of Music & Dance launches its Save Your Roots campaign and live-stream benefit at the State Theater in Ithaca, NY on December 19, at 7 PM EST. The campaign hopes to raise $100,000 to prepare for the 2021 festival season.
Like almost all festivals around the world this year the GrassRoots Festivals were forced to cancel their annual festivals due to COVID-19. The GrassRoots Festival started back in 1991 and sought to inspire positive change in communities through the communal celebration of world music, art and dance. It all started as a sold out, one night, benefit to raise money for the fight against AIDS at the historic State Theatre in Ithaca, NY. It has since evolved into three, separate annual four-day -vents in Trumansburg, NY, Shakori Hills, NC and Miami, FL.
The GrassRoots Festival is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. They, unlike some larger festivals, don’t have large pools of corporate sponsors. One of the reasons GrassRoots strays away from large corporate sponsors, is they want to keep their festival an authentic experience for participants and free from the boundaries of corporate influence. Though, the festival’s livelihood is in danger due to the lack of income in the 2020 year due to COVID-19. Their solution to trying to help the festival survive and thrive is by launching the Save Our Roots campaign.
The campaign has a goal of raising $100,000 that will culminate with a special live streamed event from the State Theatre in Ithaca, NY on December 19, 2020 at 7 PM EST.
Each donation or ticket purchased through the campaign will help ensure that the GrassRoots Festival Organization stays afloat. Currently the campaign is 61% funded with $61,421 and 17 days remaining to donate. So far, 375 people have donated to the cause.
People who donate $50 will receive a custom GrassRoots Festival T-shirt. One hundred dollar donations will receive their name on a GrassRoots Festival commemorative tree. Those who donate $1,000 will receive ten, four-day passes to any grassroots festival of their choice. People who donate $2,000 will receive ten, four-day passes to any grassroots festival of their choice plus two all access dream team lanyards. People can also donate a custom amount. Donations can be made here.
The live-stream benefit is being hosted by Yes Darling (Ryan Montbleau & Hayley Jane) and features live performances by the GrassRoots All-Stars, Jeb & Tara of Donna the Buffalo, Driftwood, Richie & Rosie and appearances from Jim Lauderdale, Preston & Keith Frank, Keith Secola, Dirk Powell, Cortadito, Fabi World Music & more. The live-stream has a suggested donation of $10. Tickets can be bought here.
For more information of on the GrassRoots Festival of Music & Dance and its Save Your Roots campaign and live-stream benefit visit their website.
The 2020 iteration of Everett Bradley’s holiday funktacular comes to fans in the form of Holidelic: Home With Papadelic, hosted by Bradley himself in the comfort of his own home. Bradley plays the role of Papadelic, Funk’s Father Christmas, a mashup of George Clinton and Santa Claus, who goes to the videotape deck for an engaging strut down Santa Claus Lane.
On Thursday, December 17, Bradley will pour over performances from the past that are heavy on the funk, featuring holiday-themed songs written by Bradley and brought to life by an array of top shelf noise makers.
I wanted to create something that would celebrate the idea of being at home, but also the excitement that the holiday season brings. To be transparent, this special was actually somewhat inspired by the pandemic, but I didn’t want to give it any credit. We’re just trying to keep it all positive.
Everett Bradley, Papadelic
Holidelic was originally slated for a newly established five-week holiday run at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in Manhattan’s West Village, as part of a new 2020 partnership. This year, The Lucille Lortel Theatre will present a virtual Holidelic experience that will be redirected straight into our homes in the interest of public safety, but not at the expense of some real Yuletide fun.
Newly directed by acclaimed writer and director, Michael Heitzman, the COVID-19 revision of the much-loved funk revue now has an opportunity to do good at a time when it’s needed most. The show will be free for all to watch and all donations will go to the SAY Organization (Stuttering Association for the Young), a favorite charity of both Bradley’s and The West Village’s Lucille Lortel Theatre.
Tune in live on Thursday, December 17 at 8pm ET on Papadelic’s Facebook and YouTube channels
Americana quartet We Banjo 3 are back at it again with a festive holiday livestream on Friday, December 18. Dubbed “A Winter Wonderful,” the evening will feature a special WB3 performance, plus musical sets by Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn, Skerryvore, The Whileaways, BackWest & Ajeet and more.
Debuting in the U.S. in 2012, Ireland’s We Banjo 3 have since fine tuned their knack for seamlessly converging shared and varied traditions of Americana, Bluegrass, and Celtic music. With a pop-sensible song-craft to create a truly unique and gratifying signature sound.
The Galway and Nashville-based quartet, comprised of two sets of brothers, Enda & Fergal Scahill and Martin & David Howley, continually push musical boundaries while maintaining an un-wavering devotion to the essential audience experience.
In lieu of a regular touring schedule this year, WB3 has found alternatives to physically taking the stage during the shutdown. Connecting with fans through various online performances, fan Q&A’s, live interviews, poetry and book excerpt readings, general banter about topics of interest, and more, WB3 has taken a personalized approach to creating fan experiences.
The one night only livestream from We Banjo 3 is $20, with limited edition merch bundles available. Click here to purchase tickets and for additional info.
From La Bamba to Kiko, having gone Disney and recording a holiday album, Los Lobos has been around for nearly half a century and continues to break new ground with their blend of Tex-Mex, country, R&B, rock and roll, and traditional Mexican songs. Louie Pérez, drummer, guitarist and lyricist for Los Lobos has faced the struggle of the music industry shutdown, but looks forward to “Still Home for the Holidays” livestream from Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach, CA on Friday, December 11 at 10pm ET/7pm PT.
In 2019, Los Lobos released Llegó Navidad, a Latin Christmas album recorded in Los Lobos’ home in East Los Angeles, featuring Spanish-language holiday songs. Translating as “Christmas in here,” the first holiday release from Los Lobos continued to demonstrate the versatility of a band well-versed in mixing rock n’ roll with blues, folk, soul and traditional Mexican music. Instead of relying on over-played seasonal standards for Llegó Navidad, Los Lobos and friends researched and collected nearly 150 different traditional (and not-so-traditional) Christmas songs from North, Central and South America.
Los Lobos (L to R) – Louie Pérez, Conrad Lozano, David Hidalgo, Steve Berlin, César Rosas
Pérez talked with NYS Music over the weekend about the current state of writing with bandmate David Hidalgo, how venues and bands are faring at this time, and the legacy of Ritchie Valens.
Pete Mason: Louie, thanks for speaking with NYS Music today. How have the past nine months been for you and Los Lobos?
Louie Pérez: We’re just kind of dealing, have had quite a break you know, I guess this break is kind we’ve all been needing for a while, but what a terrible way to get it.
I’m dying to get back on the road again, but it’s just kind of very surreal at this point. It seems like a life I had a long time ago. It’s only been seven or eight months now I guess. I don’t know what to expect, that’s another conversation we can have another time, but I don’t know what the future of live music is going to be. It can be different that’s for sure. I’m hoping that we can still get some solutions for next year so that we can get back to live music, especially because there’s only so much we can stream, I think, at the end of the day.
I don’t know what the future of love music is going to be really. Nobody’s got an answer yet and hope we have some in the spring because with a vaccine out there, there’s got to be some ways we can have shows. I don’t really know what the face of live music will look like in the future. I can’t see it being back to our old normal.
There’s love for the musicians out there, I think their careers evaporated overnight. For myself, I was leaving on a Friday morning for Colorado, we were gonna do a run of shows for a week there. And at 10 o’clock in the evening my wife walked in and says “I’ve been watching the news all night. You better check with your roadmaster but look what’s going on.” I was scheduled to leave at 6 in the morning so I called our booking agent and he called back and it all went away. It was all gone. That was the last thing I heard about that.
When something like this happens, it feels so cataclysmic, you can’t help the banality of the whole vibe as just so, so strange. It just feels like it’s the end of a time concert, especially for musicians. It’s been really hard time for a lot of musicians, we’re okay, we’re getting by, we’re all right, and I’m glad my wife and my kids are safe. And, and that’s all we can do at this point.
PM: Working with up and coming musicians from across New York State, we see it, we hear it and know the reality some bands are facing: looking into other alternatives, taking studio time, hoping to stay afloat, until we can have music back.
LP: Yeah, it’s good to know that the community, the sense of community is there for musicians. I think all of us in general, we just put our nose to the grindstone. We do what’s right in front of us, as musicians, we get a gig here, a musician gets a studio gig, or a guy gets a road gig for a couple of weeks. However it works, we do what’s in front of us, and there’s some crosstalk obviously, between us, but to know that when things get as bad as it has gotten, that there is a community that we can look to and there is support among all of us to try to help each other out. That’s the good thing, the only thing that I think that we can skim off the top of this pandemic, is that we realize that, that there is that sense of family and community. Especially at a time where we’re united, it’s just so at risk of disappearing lately. Let’s see what happens after, after February.
PM: I’m hopeful for what happens in January, because we’ll be able to get some relief. So we have that and a lot of local music venues are going to be able to breathe a little bit easier with the passage of the RESTART Act, but they’re not out of the water even then. Hopefully there’s more long term change. So all the local musicians can make it because big bands don’t become big bands overnight. They start out small.
LP: Yeah, that’s right. I was just reading a pretty interesting piece. Not a lot of revelations and things that we know as musicians. This is a piece in The New Yorker a couple months ago that is a pretty good piece to talk about, art in the digital age and really kind of the nuts and bolts of what really goes on in the gig economy as far as musicians go, and how really, a lot of us are very fortunate and a lot of us are just in there just trying to get by.
PM: So with your holiday stream on Friday, Los Lobos researched the songs to include on your holiday album Llegó Navidad. How did the Christmas album come together and what will we hear on the stream this week?
LP: Well, it’s the first time we’ve ever done a Christmas record. In all of the years that we’ve been together. We just celebrated this past Thanksgiving 47 years as a band. So the first time we ever can say, ‘Well, this is way overdue.’ And then in looking around for a studio to record it in, we discovered a studio in East Los Angeles where we grew up. So we’re really going home for the holidays on this record, which would throw a really interesting spin on this thing, and we spent a good part of a few months in the studio in East Los Angeles, literally around the corner from where my mom would pay our utility bills at the 1st Street grocery store. That’s how personal it was, and it was great.
We had a couple people, one on the East Coast and one on the West Coast, do a search and curate so we can get all the songs together. We spent a few days just going through material and ended up with the songs, it’s a Pan-Latin record. At first I gave this a lot of thought of all the Mexican Christmas songs but it just was stunning how many songs and Christmas music there is all over the place, all over Latin America so we have quite a few to choose from. and that’s how it went together and it was really well received and we toured behind it around the holidays last year.
We just got this idea that everybody’s been doing these festivals online and we’ve thought ‘Well, let’s do one ourselves.’ We got all our friends together and we’ll put something together and we’ll have a bunch of bands contribute songs and it’ll lead to us headlining the live stream. We’ll do a lot of the Christmas songs so we can pepper in a lot of popular songs as well from throughout the catalog.
It’s quite a lineup. We’ve got Southern Avenue, John McCauley of Deer Tick, Greyhounds, and Los Cenzontles, which is a great group from the Bay Area. They have a cultural center where a lot of young kids come to learn about music with their culture, which is Mexican culture so they’re going to do some traditional songs. So we got all this rock music, we get some traditional music thrown in there, and we have a group that is going to be doing some traditional music but more electrified, so it’s a great mix. A friend of ours, Gilbert Guerrero, he’s going to be our emcee. They’re really looking forward to it. It’s been fun putting it together, and of course I have to mention that it had some hair pulling, and here we are down to the wire. It’s gonna be fun.
PM: For Eastcoasters, where is Solana Beach in relation to Los Angeles?
LP: South L.A., on the way to San Diego, it’s a great vibe. It’s kind of a roadhouse venue. And it’s where people just kind of show up. The Rolling Stones actually did an unannounced show there a few tours back. It’s a really great room that people love and it sounds great. We did one there and they have a good crew and facility that worked with our people to get this livestream happening and try to make it as seamless as possible, because it is not easy doing these live streams. And if they’re live, if you get some kind of dropout somewhere, there’s nothing you can do about it live, like live television used to be in the ‘50s
PM: There’s a raw aspect to it that I enjoy because we see a lot of local bands that are attempting it, and I think they were the first to jump in because they were more needed, and the bands that are up a level and more established, they have their cache of videos they can they can air and plan something more professional and take care of more folks because they can bring in lighting and sound.
LP: These gigs that we’ve been doing virtual, we’ve been doing some since July. We did Philadelphia Folk Festival, Hardly Strictly Bluegrass, and it’s a weird thing. We show up at the studio, we do a 45-minute set for this gig, and then we do 30 minutes separate for some other gig, and then we do four songs for this; we pretty much work from two o’clock in the afternoon to eight or nine o’clock in the evening. And by that time we’ve already done half a dozen gigs. Then we just set them all up. We used to joke about phoning it in and that’s exactly what we’re doing now. That’s what everybody’s doing.
PM: You’ve been writing with David Hidalgo since high school. How has your writing evolved, particularly in the last year, given that you may not see him as often. Has there been any alteration to your writing method?
LP: As far as the pandemic is concerned, in COVID times, it just doesn’t exist, we haven’t really worked on anything. To begin with because we work and tour so much, we work on so many other different projects that we can write on demand when we have a new record, then at that point, we go into writing mode. I’d like to say we’re writing all the time, but the fact that we work so much, the notion of going back to the hotel room to write a song, it’s just nuts. You can’t do it. And then to get home for such a short amount of time, we just completely immerse ourselves in family and things that we need to do. So we rarely get a chance to write songs when we’re not making a new record.
But in the years sinceHow Will the Wolf Survive?, the idea of sitting together in a room and writing together, it just doesn’t happen that way, we do it by correspondence now. It’s just unnecessary because of the fact that our time is at such a premium. I am the lyricist and he’s the musical component; yes, we split up the chores that way, but there’s more dialogue than that. To call him just the musical side and my separate lyrical side, that would be discounting ourselves, because we are songwriters any way you look at it, and ultimately we do go through everything, before we present it to the band. That’s the only thing I think that’s changed over the years, it’s just a logistical thing because we just don’t have the freedom of time. I can’t think of anything that I enjoy more than sitting down and working on a song and writing, but you just can’t get to them.
PM: I did want to ask about La Bamba, because I, like many others, discovered you because of the movie. I think what caught me off guard more was not only that Ritchie Valens was so young, but he was very influential and you guys really kept his voice alive. I don’t know if we’d be listening to his music as much if the movie hadn’t been made, since for a generation, that was the first introduction to his brief but important career. Los Lobos continue to celebrate his music and Chicano music. How do you look at Valens after all this time?
LP: Rolling way back to when we were kids, we were into music. We would buy 45s and I just remember that “La Bamba” was always part of that stack of 45s that showed up at like a backyard party or something. I didn’t really understand as a young kid or an early teen the importance of who this was, until probably about the time the band formed in 1973. He went hand in hand with this Mexican-American renaissance, a Chicano movement of us Mexican-American kids who grew up here, were born here and pretty much homogenized to American culture, that we had this renaissance, where we all kind of discovered our culture.
Ritchie Valens was the musical thing that just goes along with the traditional Mexican music and floated to the top, so everybody discovered a lot of things about musical heritage. He was an important figure then, and after about 10 years of being a band that played traditional Mexican music, we found ourselves playing electric music again in the punk rock clubs in Hollywood, and “Come on, Let’s go” and “La Bamba” were no brainers, they just became part of the set. Of course, when we would play it back then, in punk rock clubs in basements of Hollywood neighborhoods, we’d crank it up and we played it way too fast.
What finally happened was, we got offered by Ritchie Valens’ family, they presented the idea of making a biopic movie on his life. They asked for us and we said OK, we went into the studio and the rest is history – a traditional Mexican song became the number one hit around the world. It’s quite a statement, and at the same time, that your band became a household word. Now Ritchie is where he deserves to be and what we all continue to do is try to keep that legacy alive. He’s as important a figure as Elvis, Chuck Berry, Buddy Holly, all of those; he just fits right into the short 17 years that he lived.
Connecticut-based Goose have announced plans for their seventh annual Goosemas holiday celebration, this time with a live stream concert from Rockefeller Center in New York City. On Friday December 11 at 7pm ET, Goose will offer an exclusive Twitch stream on the new Relix Channel, with proceeds benefiting Save Our Stages and Conscious Alliance.
A first of its kind livestream, Goose will perform more than seven stories high in the Manhattan skyline. Goosemas is an annual year end celebration, having grown from small clubs to the Wall Street Theater in Norwalk, CT over the past six years. Peter Anspatch recalls his first show with the band:
Goosemas 4 was my first gig playing with Goose so the annual show has a big place in my heart. I’m bummed we can’t be with our family and friends in person for this one, but the location is going to make it that much more exciting to stream. I’m beyond stoked we were able to pull that together in such a chaotic year. Big shout out to our whole team for always crushing it, Peter Shapiro, and thanks to Rockefeller Center for hosting what will be a very special night.
As with annual tradition, Goosemas will also include a charitable aspect during 2020’s most important giving month. Proceeds from the benefit will go to two separate organizations; NIVA’s Save our Stages — a national charity that provides support to independent live event venues and promoters throughout the United States in these trying times; and Conscious Alliance — a nonprofit that connects a network of creatives to collect large-scale donations in order to combat hunger in historically underserved communities.
photo by Scott Harris
Donations from Goosemas at Rockefeller Center will help keep Conscious Alliance on the road this winter delivering 200,000 meals to kids and families in need. Every $1 donation = 2 meals to someone going without food this holiday season.
Goose has amazing momentum right now and we are so excited to be working with them on this incredibly special performance at Rockefeller Center– one of the most iconic locations in the world. There isn’t a more epic way to ring in the holidays than with a rock show in the sky.
Peter Shapiro, Publisher of Relix Magazine and Twitch Relix Channel.
Donations are now being accepted at GOOSEMAS.com. Those who make donations through the Goosemas website will receive early access to the Goosemas Merch Store on Wednesday, December 9th at 10 am ET, and opening to the general public at 1pm ET. For more information, visit GOOSEMAS.com.
Darlene Love is set to live stream a holiday concert on Saturday, December 5. The Christmas icon’s holiday set starts at 8 p.m. ET, including her hit “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).”
Tickets are available for $35, and once purchased the performance is available to access until Christmas Day. A portion of the proceeds supports the Empire State Plaza Perfoming Arts Center.
Love is a Grammy Award Winner and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, recognized as “one of the greatest singers of all-time” by Rolling Stone Magazine. Through the years, Darlene has continued to captivate audiences worldwide with her warm, gracious stage presence and sensational performances. Dozens of hits including “He’s a Rebel,” “(Today I Met) The Boy I’m Gonna Marry,” “Marshmallow World” and her signature song, “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” are featured (along with many others) in this one-night-only holiday performance.
From 1986 to 2014, Love performed “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” on almost every single pre-Christmas episode of David Letterman’s talk shows, Late Night and eventually The Late Show. The sole exception was in 2007, due to the writer’s strike.
After Letterman’s 2015 retirement from late night, Love moved her annual performance to The View and has continued the tradition there. On The View she’s often sung the song as a duet: partners have included Patti Labelle, Fantasia, Bryan Adams and Jason Derulo. Other artists to cover the song are U2, Joey Ramone, Cher, and fellow Christmas royalty Michael Bublé and Mariah Carey.
Love’s discography also extends beyond Christmas. With her 1960s girl group The Blossoms, she sang The Crystals’ “He’s a Rebel.” The group was touring and unable to make it to the studio, so producer Phil Spector had The Blossoms perform it under The Crystals’ name. Love’s other high-charting songs include “He’s Sure the Boy I Love,” also credited to The Crystals, and “Wait ‘Til My Bobby Gets Home.” In 2013, Love appeared in 20 Feet From Stardom, an Oscar-winning documentary about the lives and careers of backup singers. Along with her co-stars and crew, Love took home the 2015 Grammy for Best Music Film.
In 2011, Love was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She performed “Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah” with Bruce Springsteen, and Bette Midler, who also appeared in 20 Feet From Stardom, honored her with a speech. Love has also acted, playing the wife of Danny Glover’s character in all four Lethal Weapon films.
For more information on Darlene Love and her live stream of “Love for the Holidays,” see The Egg’s website.
Los Lobos will perform “Still Home for the Holidays,” a live stream from the legendary Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach, CA on Friday, December 11, starting at 7pm PST (10pm EST).
A themed stream to celebrate the holidays, Los Lobos fans can purchase a virtually interactive experience with the band before they hit the stage. Tickets and more information are available here.
A Chicano rock n roll band whose members hail from East Los Angeles, the group’s longevity over the last five decades is remarkable, having formed in 1973 and amassed a strong following and reputation for stand out live performances.
Rhino Records approached Los Lobos in spring 2019 to record a Latin Christmas album, leading saxophonist Steve Berlin to resesarch Spanish-language holiday songs for the album.
Llegó Navidad, which translates to “Christmas in here,” is the first holiday release from Los Lobos in their career of mixing rock n roll with blues, folk, soul and traditional Mexican music. The bilingual collection of songs from across Latin America and the U.S begins with an obscure novelty hit that was once popular in Latino households in the Southwest, “¿Dónde Está Santa Claus?”
According to NPR, title track “Llegó Navidad,” is a classic from the Fania Records catalog originally performed by the Puerto Rican composer and singer Ismael Rivera. The David Hidalgo and Louie Perez original “Christmas and You” is a ballad of loss, and closes with a scorcher in “It’s Christmas Time In Texas,” a song by Tex- Mex troubadour Freddy Fender.
In 2019, the band was able to tour later in the year in support of the release, so this year they’ll remain in Southern California to stream the event live to a wider audience than ever before. They’ve performed across New York State regularly when they are on the road, with performances at The Egg, The Capitol Theatre, and recently, the Performing Arts Center in Homer.
We set up in the lobby of one of our favorite venues, the Palace Theatre in Albany, NY, during rehearsals for our Fall Drive-in Tour and recorded the whole thing. Along with our playthrough of Not Normal, we recorded a full 2 set show that will premiere on December 11.
With venues across New York State being severely impacted by closures related to COVID-19, the need for assistance for these businesses to continue to remain open is greater than ever.
Join moe. on Friday, December 11 at 8:30PM for a special performance to benefit the Palace Theatre. Pick up Broadcast tickets and poster bundles here – a portion of every ticket and ticket bundle sold will be donated to the Palace Theatre.
photo by Frankie Cavone
The Palace has been Albany’s iconic downtown landmark for more than 80 years, bringing the biggest names in entertainment to the Capital Region. The history and programming of the Palace is a unique and often untold story with roots dating back to the period of the Great Depression.
The Palace Theatre was built in 1931 and originally presented vaudeville acts, feature films and later became a civic auditorium before closing its doors in 1969. The theatre maintains its original beauty and design and is a historical landmark in the City of Albany.
The Palace Performing Arts Center was established in 1984 and incorporated as a nonprofit organization in 1989, created to operate the Palace Theatre. The Palace brings world-class arts and entertainment to New York’s Capital Region, greatly enhancing the area’s cultural and economic development.
Read more of NYS Music’s past coverage of shows at The Palace Theatre, and tune in for moe. on December 11.