Category: Manhattan

  • Book Review: Memoir of “The Coolest Man on Earth” – John Lurie’s The History of Bones

    As anyone who has seen the TV series Painting with John can attest, John Lurie is a storyteller of the highest order.  In his new memoir, The History of Bones (Penguin Random House), Lurie weaves a gloriously gritty, informative and entertaining portrait of Downtown NYC in the 1980s. The universe below 14th Street was a creative cauldron where edgy musicians, filmmakers and fine artists – giants like Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Debbie Harry, Madonna, Bowie, Eno and Jim Jarmusch to name a few – co-existed and often collaborated to create art that still casts a profound influence on today’s culture. As for Lurie, he ultimately emerged as a player in all these spheres. He was a uniquely stylish lout with the driest of wit, someone dubbed “The Coolest Man of Earth” by a host of style arbiters for a multitude of very good reasons.

    john lurie

    John Lurie was a true “It Boy” of this mythic era when Downtown NYC was cheap, dangerous and full of creative action.  He was co-founder, chief composer and the angular “face” of The Lounge Lizards – the sharp-suited, globe-trotting punk jazzbos who helped define the “No Wave” genre.  As his musical light started to shine, Lurie added a high-profile acting career to his creative portfolio. This came via scene-stealing roles in Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise and Down by Law, Wim Wenders’ Paris, Texas, Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ and others. The relentlessly touring musician also somehow found time to score 20 films including 1995’s Get Shorty, which earned him an Oscar nomination.  And before he devoted his creative energies almost entirely to visual art in the early 2000s, Lurie garnered more limelight via romances with boldfaced names like model Veronica Webb and Uma Thurman, by cat walking for European fashion designers and in a vast number of interviews –  ones where he pulled no punches in his controversial assessments of his contemporaries and the entertainment business writ large.

    Like Bob Dylan’s Chronicles Volume OneThe History of Bones only tells part of this artist’s sprawling story. It concludes with a performance in Stuttgart on the New Year’s Eve 1989, as a new decade and artistic sensibility dawns in Downtown NYC. His subsequent years out of the spotlight due to chronic Lyme’s Disease, along with his development as a painter, his first TV series Fishing with John and musical ventures like his bluesman alter-ego, Marvin Pontiac, and his John Lurie National Orchestra, are only referenced in passing. But, oh what a story it is, even in part!  And unlike the mumble-prone Dylan, I cannot wait to get my hands, err ears, on the audiobook version of Lurie’s memoir. It is sure to be told in a comic deadpan that brings to mind the Godfather of Alt.Comedy, Steven Wright.

    Lurie’s book begins with his childhood, one spent mainly in Massachusetts. By 16, he had discovered the harmonica and jammed on stage with the likes of Canned Heat and Mississippi Fred McDowell. Lurie also graces readers with the oddball story of how he got his first sax. It came as a gift from a quasi-homeless man on a dark, empty street at 4 a.m., a man who claimed he was seeing statues turning into angels at the time. After his father’s death, teenage Lurie went a little off the rails. He became involved in petty theft and travelers’ check schemes before turning into a hardcore kundalini yogi and vegan. At this juncture, he would fast and practice sax for days on end, remain celibate (something that would quickly pass) and also ride his bike naked in the streets in the early morning. Lurie’s journey of lurid begins when he loses his virginity and gains a bout of gonorrhea from Crystal, a groupie who had reputedly slept with Jimi Hendrix the week before.

    Much of Lurie’s story involves his long affair with and dozens of attempts to kick heroin. His first taste comes courtesy of another famous 1980s icon, Debbie Harry. It’s one that will lead to a seven-year long habit that puts him in the company of junky jazz greats like bassist Sirone and drummer Bobo Shaw. It also leads him to the doorstep of the legendary Dr. Gong, the Chinatown acupuncturist who reportedly helped Keith Richards kick his habit.

    Even as his career as a critically-acclaimed musician takes flight, Lurie lives hand-to-mouth, due to the hunger of his habit and the petty wages paid to touring jazz musicians. His fortunes are buoyed by landing government support in the way of a monthly disability stipend and a $55 apartment on the Lower East Side, two things he wisely holds onto for years.  Unfortunately, his nicely priced abode is on a block he calls “Third Street Hell.” It was right across from a notorious men’s shelter. This leads to a few robberies, muggings and many a night spent sleepless due to the screams and fights unfolding on the street below.

    Lurie pulls no punches in his attempts to set a few records straight. Most notable is his beef with director Jim Jarmusch in whose debut film, Stranger Than Paradise, Lurie first gained acclaim for his acting. 

    According to Lurie, the original story idea for the film was his – that of a low-level gambler who has to take care of his visiting Hungarian cousin. When the movie comes out, Lurie’s expected story credit is nowhere to be seen, but he continues to work with the director anyway.  After working with Italian actor Roberto Benigni in Jarmusch’s Down by Law, Lurie writes a script for the Italian to star in. It’s inspired by a true-life story Lurie is told about an Italian cowboy who challenges and beats the legendary Buffalo Bill Cody in a cowboy contest.  Lurie’s script has Benigni traveling across a surreal Western landscape with a Native American. When he finishes the script, he sends it to Jarmusch for his input … and hears nothing. Later, when he is just starting to raise funds for his film, Lurie hears that Jarmusch is making a surreal Western with Johnny Depp and a Native American sidekick called Dead Man, a virtual copy of his premise.  Jarmusch’s film goes ahead; Lurie’s never happens.

    Lurie’s long and competitive relationship with his “best friend,” the late painter Jean-Michel Basquiat, weaves throughout the memoir. In its early days, Basquiat is homeless and crashing at Lurie’s pad for almost two years.  They spend much of their time painting together, and the then-unknown Basquiat looks up to Lurie as his Lounge Lizards begin to take off. Even with notoriety, the musician Lurie is still living hand-to-mouth. Shortly thereafter, Basquiat’s career takes off like a rocket ship. With it, Basquiat flaunts his money, fame, belongings and even competes for women with Lurie. Lurie also expresses the deep hurt over Basquiat using his idea for a poster for group show of their own – of him and Basquiat facing off in boxing trunks – as the image Jean-Michel uses for his famous collaboration with Andy Warhol. In the end, he laments the loss of this close, competitive friendship that helped both excel.

    Lurie has both praise and criticism for some of his musical collaborators, as well as many funny meetings with other Downtown NYC boldfaced names.

    He calls quixotic guitarist Marc Ribot a genius for finding a place in his and many of the other obtuse musics he has collaborated on. His comments on later-day Lizards’ six-stringer Brandon Ross are less in-depth and kind, basically only saying that his dreadlocks smelled funny! He tells a funny story about twisting the arm of a man trying to intercept a joint being passed to him at a party by actor Willem Dafoe…  only to discover it is that of David Bowie! He passes judgement on Knitting Factory impresario Michael Dorf by claiming that “dorfed” became a popular verb used by musicians of the era to express when they had felt ripped off. A truly funny story involves him going to Chinatown to buy a dead eel to photograph for the cover of the album Voice of Chunk.  Strangled, bashed about, it’s an eel that refuses to die…until taking a four-floor drop off his windowsill and crawling a half-block in the gutter.

    John Lurie

    An overriding sentiment of Lurie’s is that the acting overshadowed, or at least got in the way of people fully appreciating, his music. Thought they toured extensively and most successfully in Europe and Asia, Lurie feels The Lounge Lizards never fully broke through or rose above the “fake jazz” label put on them in the early 1980s. Lurie took work scoring and acting in films to support his band and their original music. And at the end of his memoir, Lurie is using in excess of $100k of his own money to record the Lizards’ 1989 masterwork, Voice of Chunk, because no U.S. record company would sign them. In the end, it resulted in Lurie producing another memorable piece of art, a hilarious, 30-second, late-night TV spot to market the disc directly to consumers just like OxyClean, one that included four of his ex-girlfriends as models.

    The above just scratches the surface on the many colorful anecdotes and salient observations in Lurie’s book. You can almost picture him spinning these yarns around a cracker barrel fire in a metal trash can or dumpster on Avenue C. 

    This is certainly one of the best and least scrubbed clean memoirs coming from a Downtown hipster of the era, a place-in-time that is now birthing a motherlode of such books. I, for one, can’t wait for him to get us another installment, one charting his less profiled journey from edge-cutting musician through illness and solitude to the painter-raconteur-philosopher that he is today.

  • The Met Opera to Remember 9/11 with Verdi’s Requiem

    To commemorate the 20th anniversary of the events on September 11, the Metropolitan Opera will perform Verdi’s Requiem, presented in association with the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.

    Verdi’s Requiem

    Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin will conduct the Met Orchestra and Chorus as well as a quartet of star soloists, soprano Ailyn Pérez, mezzo-soprano Elīna Garanča, tenor Matthew Polenzani, and bass-baritone Eric Owens. The concert marks the first performance inside the Metropolitan Opera House since the March 2020 closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Audiences in New York City and beyond will also be able to see and hear live transmissions of Verdi’s Requiem: The Met Remembers 9/11. The performance will be transmitted live as part of Great Performances on PBS, with ballet star Misty Copeland hosting the program from nearby the site of the 9/11 Museum. Live audio from the performance will also be broadcast directly outside the Met in Lincoln Center Plaza. As part of a citywide remembrance, the Met will be participating in the 9/11 Tribute in Light, bathing its façade in sky-blue light. The English-language text of the Requiem will also be projected onto the façade of the opera house during the performance.

    Verdi’s Requiem

    The concert and broadcast are made possible by a generous gift from C. Graham Berwind, III, and the Metropolitan Opera Chorus costumes were underwritten by a generous gift from Douglas Dockery Thomas.

    Additionally, The Met has given 500 tickets to families and stakeholders impacted by 9/11. Tickets are $25 and go on sale August 27 at 12PM ET. Due to limited seating capacity, tickets are limited to two per order.

    Face masks and proof of full vaccination against COVID-19 are required for all audience members. Learn more.

    Get tickets here on August 27 at 12noon

    On Tuesday, The Metropolitan Opera struck a labor deal with its orchestra, paving the way for its musicians to return to work and for the company, the largest performing arts organization in the nation. The Met Opera will resume performances in September after being shut down for more than a year by the pandemic. More on that from the New York Times.

  • Capital One City Parks Foundation SummerStage Presents: 28th anniversary celebration of Charlie Parker

    New York’s largest free outdoor performing arts festival is making a comeback to live performances after last year’s hiatus due to the pandemic. Since its inception 35 years ago, more than six million people from New York City and around the world have enjoyed SummerStage. In 2020, “Capital One City Parks Foundation SummerStage Anywhere” was launched in response to the global pandemic, presenting 80 free digital performances, spanning all genres, available to all around the world. 

    Now, back in full swing, Capital One City Parks Foundation Summerstage will be hosting the annual celebration for esteemed jazz saxophonist, Charlie Parker. Recognized as one of the vanguards of jazz music’s evolution into the modern era, Parker is acknowledged for his advancement of Bebop, a subsidiary of Jazz known for its fast tempos. A highly regarded soloist, the celebration of Parker’s life and accomplishments will be comprised of his contemporizes as well as young jazz musicians who continue to push the art form forward. This year’s festivals will be held from August 27-29 at Harlem’s historic Marcus Garvey Park in addition to other partnered jazz events around the city that will run from the August 23-27. 

    All free performances will be open to the public and will be first come, first served and in accordance with venue capacity limits. In response to the increasing spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant, all guests of the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival SummerStage events at Marcus Garvey Park will be required to show either proof of full COVID-19 vaccination or a negative PCR test within the last 72 hours in order to enter. Children under the age of 12 will be allowed to accompany their parent or guardian who provides proof of full vaccination or negative COVID test. 

    All information regarding vaccination/testing/mask guidelines as well as an itinerary of events for all Summerstage 2021 Season events can be found on the City Parks Foundation website

  • New York Youth Symphony Announces Return For 59th Season

    The New York Youth Symphony (NYYS) is thrilled to announce their 2021-2022 performances under music director Michael Repper. Performances will take place in Stern Auditorium and Perelman Stage at the world renowned Carnegie Hall. The full orchestra will return to the stage for three performances in November, March and May, performing repertoire by Valerie Coleman, William Grant Still, Mahler, Tchaikovsky, and more.

    New York Youth Symphony
    The New York Youth Symphony performs a concert at Carnegie Hall, on November 17, 2019. Credit: Stephanie Berger.

    Soloists joining the orchestra include baritone Paulo Szot on Mahler’s Songs of a Wayfarer and Rodgers & Hammerstein’s Some Enchanted Evening from South Pacific, and violinist Grace Park performing Barber’s Violin Concerto. The performances will also include the world premieres of new works by First Music commission prize winners Jonathan Cziner, Patrick O’Malley, and Liza Sobel.

    “We are thrilled to return to Carnegie Hall. We’re exceptionally proud of all we accomplished during this period of uncertainty, but performing live for our community is something we have all missed dearly. We are ecstatic to return to the stage and celebrate music and unity together with you through our performances.”

    Michael Repper

    The New York Youth Symphony is the most awarded youth program of its kind in the nation, recognized for its innovative educational programs for talented young musicians. It was founded in 1963 as an orchestra to showcase the metropolitan area’s most gifted musicians aged 12-22. Since its creation, its activities have grown to encompass programs in jazz, chamber music, conducting, composition, and musical theater songwriting. They have performed at world class venues such as Carnegie Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center, and the Public Theater.

    2021-2022 ORCHESTRA Season
    Michael Repper, Music Director

    Season Opening Concert
    Sunday, November 21, 2021 at 2:00 PM
    Stern Auditorium/Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall
    Valerie Coleman: Umoja: Anthem of Unity
    Patrick O’Malley: Obliviana (First Music commission and World Premiere)
    Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 5 in E minor, op. 64
     
    The McCrindle Concert
    Sunday, March 13, 2022 at 2:00 PM
    Stern Auditorium/Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall
    Barber: Violin Concerto, op. 14, featuring Grace Parkviolin
    Jonathan Cziner: Ruach (and Other Delights) (First Music commission and World Premiere)
    William Grant Still: Symphony No. 1, “Afro-American”
     
    The Spring Concert
    Sunday, May 22, 2022 at 2:00 PM
    Stern Auditorium/Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall
    Liza Sobel: First Music commission and World Premiere
    Mahler: Songs of a Wayfarer, featuring Paulo Szotbaritone
    Rogers/Hammerstein: Some Enchanted Evening, featuring Paulo Szotbaritone
    Brahms: Symphony No. 2 in D major, op. 73

  • Afro Latin Jazz Alliance Announces Construction Project, Timbale Terrace

    In East Harlem, the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance (ALJA) in partnership with Lantern Organization and Mega Development, announce today, along with the New York City Department of Housing Development and Preservation, plans to bring a new 16,000 square feet Afro Latin Music & Arts Center along with 330 affordable housing units to East Harlem.

    The project, Timbale Terrace, will construct a new mixed-use development on the east side of Park Avenue between East 118th Street and East 119th Street (formerly a NYPD 25th Precinct Parking Site) with a performing arts center operated by the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance.

    Timbale Terrace

    Timbale Terrace will offer housing to low-income families while the Afro Latin Music & Arts Center will provide community programs, music and technical production training, after-school programs, free arts education classes, community event spaces, world-class live performances, and more.

    “East Harlem is the community that best represents the mission of the Afro Latin Jazz Alliance, to use music as an entry point for service to the community and to reflect back to that community the beauty and ingenuity of its citizens”

    Arturo O’Farrill, Founder and Artistic Director of ALJA

    For the last two decades, ALJA has served as a well-renowned cultural institution in NYC preserving the music and heritage of Afro Latin jazz. The Timbale Terrace will allow the organization to expand their performance and educational programming. They currently are enriching over 1,000 elementary, middle, and high school students in underprivileged NYC schools. 50% of the affordable units will be given a community preference status for residents who live in East Harlem (or served by the Community Board district of the project, Manhattan CB #11).

    Along with Lantern Organization and Mega Development, ALJA is eager to work with essential local arts and cultural groups such as Art For Change, the Association of Hispanic Arts, El Museo del Barrio, La Casa de la Herencia Cultural Puertorriqueña, Speaking In Rhythms, Taller Boricua PR Workshop, and many others.

    Timbale Terrace

    For more information regarding ALJA, please visit: afrolatinjazz.org

  • Armand Hammer And The Alchemist Bring Underground Rap To SummerStage

    Armand Hammer and The Alchemist headlined Capital One City Parks Foundation SummerStage on Sunday, August 15, showcasing underground rap from their latest record Haram. The lineup for the day was rounded out by an opening DJ set from GENG PTP, followed by short sets from Moor Mother and Fielded.

    Armand Hammer Alchemist Rap SummerStage
    Armand Hammer and The Alchemist at SummerStage, 8/15/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    As with most SummerStage shows, the evening started off with a series of short films, including a two minute short Pumbucha in which a low-level influencer tries to push a disgusting beverage that only causes them physical and emotional pain. After the film, DJ and producer GENG PTP took to the stage to spin original songs and classic hits, including “All Caps” in tribute to the late MF DOOM (remember, all caps when you spell the man’s name). During the set, underground rapper AKAI SOLO joined in and performed “Nebula” and “True Truths” off of his records Eleventh Wind and Mad Space respectively.

    Next up was genre-defying poet and multi instrumentalist Moor Mother. Blending spoken word poetry with avant-garde and jazz influenced beats and soundscapes, Moor Mother delivers a powerful and thought provoking performance. Standing at the front of the stage, she fervently echoed the mantra “WE ARE STANDING ON GRAVES,” echoing a similar plea from the SummerStage public announcer before the show to honor the native lands and burial grounds our cities are built upon. Moor Mother is currently putting out and featured on some of the most cutting edge music, much of which is available on her BandCamp page.

    Fielded took the stage next and delivered a short set of lighter pop tunes. The three-piece band provided a bit of change of pace for the night, but sandwiched between the high energy and cerebral performances of Moor Mother and Armand Hammer, Fielded soothed the crowd and allowed the evening to take on a different atmosphere as the sun was setting. The singer from Fielded would also later make an appearance to provide vocals on a song for Armand Hammer.

    Armand Hammer is the collaborative project of underground rappers Billy Woods and Elucid. The duo occupy a really specific sub-genre within the rap umbrella. Cerebral and relenting lyrical flow is delivered over more minimal but psychedelic beat patterns laced with horns and ambient loops. The instrumentals here serve more of a mood-setting purpose while the lyricists engage in a “stream of consciousness” rap style.

    Armand Hammer Alchemist Rap SummerStage
    Elucid of Armand Hammer at SummerStage 8/15/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Making their LP debut in 2013 with Race Music, the group hit a major stride with 2018’s Paraffin. Hailed as an underground rap opus, this LP brought the duo’s unique style to the forefront and began inspiring a wave of new rappers in the genre. With their latest release Haram, Armand Hammer is joined by heavyweight producer The Alchemist. His inclusion is apparent right at the start of the record, delivering a dark and hypnotic beat on “Sir Benni Miles” to set the mood of the record straight away. Haram explores, in startling detail, the wounds and fear still experienced by African Americans today as a result of colonial slavery and oppression in America. This fear is embedded in the lyrics and instrumentals across the 40-minute runtime of the record.

    The group love sharing the stage with their peers, allowing fellow rap duo Shrapknel on stage to perform a couple of their songs. The whole night was a showcase of the exciting artists on Backwoodz Studios, all the artists who performed tonight have releases on the label.

    Armand Hammer Alchemist Rap SummerStage
    Billy Woods of Armand Hammer at SummerStage, 8/15/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Concerts right now are nothing short of a spiritual experience. After 18 months of isolation and fear due to the pandemic, being at a concert today is both daring but rewarding. Getting back to the enjoyment of a concert while being safe and cognizant of what is still going on is incredibly important at this time. Artists on stage are acutely aware of this, and seeing these artists take the stage again after all this time you can’t help but feel the energy emanating from them. After a couple of songs, Elucid was so caught up in the performance he desperately pleaded to the sound engineers, “I need more volume up here man, this is a physical experience right now,” a sentiment that was on clear display amongst the audience.

    Armand Hammer Alchemist Rap SummerStage
    The Alchemist at SummerStage, 8/15/21. Photo by Buscar Photo

    Next up for Capital One City Parks Foundation SummerStage is a very special benefit show with Common this coming Sunday, August 22nd. The show is supported by exciting hip hop artist Rapsody. We will be there – make sure to check back for a photo gallery and review of that show. All upcoming SummerStage shows will require proof of vaccination along with a government issued ID to gain entry. Make sure to check the individual requirements of any show you plan on attending as vaccine and testing requirements begin to take shape.

  • SummerStage at Central Park Presents Common, Lake Street Dive and more

    Update: August 20, 2021 – Due to the likelihood of severe weather expected from Tropical Storm Henri, Capital One City Parks Foundation SummerStage will postpone the Common / Rapsody / Pete Rock show scheduled for Sunday, August 22 at 7 PM in Central Park.

    Sunday, August 22, Capital One City Parks Foundation will be presenting SummerStage with two upcoming ticketed benefit performances in Central Park. The performance on the 22nd will feature academy award, Emmy, and Grammy-winning artist, Common with support from grammy-nominated rappers Rapsody and Pete Rock. Then two days later Lake Street Dive will be performing to a sold-out crowd with Allision Russell and Zia Victoria. 

    Common lake street dive

    With dozens of roles over the past two decades (American Gangster, John Wick 2 just to name a few.), Common is as much of a movie star as he is a rapper. The Chicago-bred MC secured his legacy as a pillar of hip-hop with classic LPs like Resurrection, Be, One Day It’ll All Make Sense and Like Water for Chocolate—few performers have balanced both worlds with such aplomb. He’s joined by Rapsody, the MC from North Carolina who’s widely acknowledged as one of the rap game’s preeminent wordsmiths who signed to Jay-Z’s Roc Nation. The show will be opened with a DJ set by Pete Rock, one half of the critically acclaimed group Pete Rock & CL Smooth, who helped pioneer the fusion of jazz, funk, and soul with rap, and is responsible for some of the most iconic productions in New York hip-hop.

     Brooklyn’s Lake Street Dive have spent the last 16 years wielding classical chops to craft a sound that’s equal parts pop, rock, jazz, folk, and funk. The group formed in 2004 at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston, but each of its members—lead vocalist Rachael Price, guitarist/trumpeter Mike “McDuck” Olson, bassist Bridget Kearney, and drummer Mike Calabrese, and their newest member, keyboard and vocalist Akie Bermiss—have been singing and/or playing instruments since the third grade. Now seven albums deep into their recording career, they were recently featured on NPR’s Tiny Desk (Home) Concert series, performing tracks from their latest, Obviously.

    Both shows will begin at 7 pm with doors opening at 6 pm, and unlike most shows during the concert series tickets will be needed. A full list of the concert series will be listed below. Tickets can be bought at cityparksfoundation.org for any ticketed shows.

    DateDayDoorsShowArtistLocation
    Aug-22Sunday5:00PM7:00PMCommon / Rapsody / Pete RockCentral Park
    Aug-24Tuesday6:00PM7:00PMLake Street Dive / Allison Russell / Zia VictoriaCentral Park
    Aug-25Wednesday6:00PM8:00PM30 for 30: Once Upon a Time in Queens World Premiere, presented by ESPN Films & Rooftop FilmsCentral Park
    Aug-27Friday5:00PM7:00PMJazzmobile and the City Parks Foundation Present: Bird at 100: Featuring Gary Bartz, Vincent Herring & Bobby Watson, with Dave Kikokski, Yasushi Nakamura and Carl Allen / Special Performance by Antonio Hart (quartet) with Miki Yamanaka, Alex Ayala, and Vince EctorMarcus Garvey Park
    Aug-28Saturday5:00PM7:00PMGo Brooklyn! Stetsasonic & Friends – 40th Anniversary ShowConey Island
    Aug-28Saturday4:00PM6:00PMCPJF – Charlie Parker with Strings: The Donald Harrison Quartet and The Harlem Symphony OrchestraMarcus Garvey Park
    Aug-29Sunday4:00PM6:00PMCPJF – Willie Jones III – A Charlie Parker Centennial Celebration featuring Sarah Hanahan, Godwin Louis, Justin Robinson, Erena Terakubo with Donald Vega and Endea Owens in association with Jazz at Lincoln CenterMarcus Garvey Park
    Aug-29Sunday5:00PM7:00PM INVINCIBLE: A Glorious tribute to Michael Jackson / DJ KS 360Coney Island
    Sep-1Wednesday5:00PM7:00PMYo La Tengo / Mountain Movers   Rooftop Films Presents: “Date. Interrupted” & “Sousaphone”Central Park
    Sep-4Saturday5:00PM7:00PMDom Salvador Samba Jazz Sextet / Screening: “Dom Salvador & Abolition” / DJ Nyack & Eduardo Brechó in association with 25th Inffinito Brazilian Film Festival   Rooftop Films Presents: “The Orphan (O Órfão)”Central Park
    Sep-11Saturday5:00PM7:00PMErica Campbell / The Walls Group / Lena Byrd Miles / Jason McGee and Choir   Rooftop Films Presents: “A Ship from Guantanamo,” “Miss Panama,” & “Spiritual First Aid”Central Park
    Sep-12Sunday5:00PM7:00PMValerie June / Hollywood Anderson   Rooftop Films Presents: “More Happiness,” “The Criminals (Les Criminels),” & “To Know Her (母 • 緣)”Central Park
    Sep-13Monday6:00PM7:00PMMachine Gun Kelly “Tickets to My Downfall” Tour with jxdn and KennyHooplaCentral Park
    Sep-15WednesdayTBDTBDReggae Gold meets Soca Gold in association with VP RecordsConey Island
    Sep-17Friday6:00PM7:00PM Dawes with special guests Bonny Light Horseman & Erin RaeCentral Park
    Sep-18*   *NEW DATESaturday5:00PM7:00PMAntibalas   Rooftop Films Presents: “Excuse Me, Miss, Miss, Miss” & “Red Taxi”Central Park
    Sep-19Sunday5:00PM7:00PMPatti Smith and Her BandCentral Park
    Sep-21Tuesday6:00PM7:00PMIndigo Girls / Ani DiFrancoCentral Park
  • Moldovan metalcore Band Infected Rain To Begin U.S. Tour, Multiple NY Stops

    Here’s some news sure to excite New York metalheads! Infected Rain are just three weeks away from kicking off their extensive fall tour around the country. The tour features over 30 dates, including stops across the Empire State in Buffalo, NYC, and Poughkeepsie. Infected Rain will be performing alongside headliners Butcher Babies on their “Butcher Babies vs. Goliath” tour. Other supporting bands include Stitched Up Heart and Kaleido.

    infected rain

    Infected Rain’s newest album is expected soon. The five piece band from Moldova most recently dropped their full length album Endorphins in 2019. Endorphins brought fans favorite tracks like “The Earth Mantra”, “Passerby”, “Lure”, “Storm”, and “Black Gold” and definitely brought a head banging energy with booming instrumentation, heavy riffs and intense vocals.

    Formed back in 2008, Infected Rain have established themselves as one of modern metal’s most iconic acts. Over the years, they’ve toured extensively around Europe and signed a deal with Napalm Records. The band is thrilled to be back on the road, especially with some of their contemporaries. Their three New York stops include Buffalo Iron Works in Buffalo, the Gramercy Theatre in NYC, and the Chance Theatre in Poughkeepsie.

    infected rain

    Here we come America – to all of you that have been patiently waiting, we are coming for you with the amazing Butcher Babies, Stitched Up Heart and Kaleido.

    Lena Scissorhands, vocalist, Infected Rain

    All tour dates are listed below. Connect with Infected Rain on their website, Instagram, and Facebook for updates.

    INFECTED RAIN U.S. Tour Dateswith Butcher Babies, Stitched Up Heart and Kaleido:

    Aug 29 – Jacksonville, FL @ Hooligans Music Hall

    Aug 30 – Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre

    Aug 31 – Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade

    Sept 1 – New Orleans, LA @ Southport Hall

    Sept 3 – Sauget, IL @ Pop’s

    Sept 5 – Lincoln, NE @ Bourbon Theatre

    Sept 6 – Colorado Springs, CO @ The Black Sheep

    Sept 7 – Denver, CO @ The Oriental Theater

    Sept 9 – Chippewa Falls, WI @ Every Buddy’s Bar^+

    Sept 10 – Ashwaubenon, WI @ Epic Event Center^+

    Sept 11 – Chicago, IL @ Reggie’s Rock Club

    Sept 12 – Flint, MI @ The Machine Shop^+

    Sept 14 – Lakewood, OH @ Winchester Music Tavern

    Sept 15 – Warrendale, PA @ Jergels

    Sept 17 – Buffalo, NY @ Buffalo Iron Works

    Sept 18 – Cambridge, MA @ Middle East (Downstairs)

    Sept 19 – New York, NY @ Gramercy Theatre

    Sept 20 – Poughkeepsie, NY @ The Chance Theatre

    Sept 21 – Harrisburg, PA @ HMAC

    Sept 23 – Virginia Beach, VA @ Scandals Live

    Sept 28 – Dallas, TX @ Trees

    Sept 29 – Houston, TX @ Scout Bar

    Sept 30 – San Antonio, TX @ Paper Tiger

    Oct 1 – Austin, TX @ Empire Control Room

    Oct 2 – Lubbock, TX @ Jake’s Backroom

    Oct 4 – El Paso, TX @ Rockhouse Bar & Grill

    Oct 5 – Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole

    Oct 6 – Phoenix, AZ @ Rebel Lounge

    Oct 7 – Los Angeles @ 1720


    ^No Stitched Up Heart

    +Kaleido playing 

  • Concerts Announced in all Five Boroughs for NYC Homecoming Week

    Concerts have been announced in all five boroughs of New York City taking place August 14-22, 2021. The stacked lineups will help create New York City’s “Homecoming Week” to celebrate the return of NYC over one year into the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. 

    homecoming week

    Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the lines earlier this week including the mega show being held on Central Park’s Great Lawn which is the centerpiece of the celebration. Outside of the centerpiece event, the theme for the shows will be “It’s Time for Hip Hop in NYC,” with hip-hop, Latin freestyle, dance, freestyle, techno, and funk artists dominating the lineups. 

    homecoming week

    The concerts will take place at Orchard Beach in The Bronx on, August 16 from 3 to 9:30 PM, Midland Beach on Staten Island on August 17 from 4 to 9:30 PM , Brooklyn Army Terminal in Brooklyn August 19 from 4 to 9:30 PM, Forest Hills Stadium in Queens on 20 from 4 to 9:30 PM, and wrapping up at the Central Park’s Great Lawn in Manhattan on August 21, 5 PM. 

    For more information on New York City’s “Homecoming Week” visit their website and check out the full lineup below: 

    Orchard Beach in The Bronx – Monday, August 16th from 3 to 9:30 p.m.

    • KRS One (Headliner)
    • Slick Rick (Headliner)
    • Remy Ma (Headliner)
    • Busy Bee
    • CL Smooth
    • DJ Hollywood
    • DJ Jazzy Joyce
    • DJ Kevie Kev
    • Fantastic Five
    • Furious 5 featuring Grandmaster Melle Mel and Scorpio
    • Grand Wizard Theodore
    • Joeski Love
    • Kid Capri
    • Nice & Smooth
    • PopMaster Fabel
    • Soul Sonic Force
    • T La Rock
    • Ultra Magnetic MC’s

    Midland Beach on Staten Island – Tuesday, August 17th from 4 to 9:30 p.m.

    • Raekwon (Headliner)
    • Ghostface Killah (Headliner)
    • Crystal Waters
    • DJ Chuck Chillout
    • EMPD
    • Force MDs
    • Hakim Green
    • HeeSun Lee
    • Kool Keith
    • Lizzy Ashliegh
    • Pharoahe Monch
    • Rikki
    • Rob Base
    homecoming week

    Brooklyn Army Terminal in Brooklyn – Thursday, August 19th from 4 to 9:30 p.m.

    • Big Daddy Kane (Headliner)
    • Desiigner (Headliner)
    • C&C Music Factory
    • DJ Mr. Cee
    • Elle Varner
    • Judy Torres
    • Lizzy Ashliegh
    • Maino
    • Obasi Jackson
    • Papoose
    • PopMaster Fabel
    • Special Ed
    • Stetsasonic
    • Sweet Sensation
    • Young Devyn

    Forest Hills Stadium in Queens – Friday, August 20th from 4 to 9:30 p.m.

    • George Clinton + The P-Funk All Stars with Special Guests (Headliner)
    • Too $hort (Headliner)
    • DJ Hurricane
    • DJ Wiz
    • EPMD
    • Mobb Deep
    • Yo-Yo

    HOW TO GET IN: All attendees must present proof of COVID-19 vaccination to enter the “It’s Time for Hip Hop in NYC” concerts. Reasonable accommodation will be provided for persons unable to get vaccinated because of a disability. Free tickets for all four concerts will be released to the public in batches at nyc.gov/HomecomingWeek starting on Monday, August 2 at 10 a.m. EDT. Additional free ticket release dates and times are as follows:

    • Tuesday, August 3 at 7 a.m. EDT
    • Wednesday, August 4 at 9 p.m. EDT
    • Thursday, August 5 at 7 a.m. EDT
    • Friday, August 6 at 10 a.m. EDT
    • Saturday, August 7 at 9 p.m. EDT

    And once again, here’s the lineup so far for the Homecoming Concert in Central Park, produced in part by Clive Davis and will air on CNN. You can get more details on this show here.

    Central Park’s Great Lawn in Manhattan – Saturday, August 21st, 5 p.m.

    • Jon Batiste
    • Andrea Bocelli
    • Kane Brown
    • LL COOL J
    • Elvis Costello
    • Lucky Daye
    • Earth, Wind & Fire
    • Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds
    • Cynthia Erivo
    • Jimmy Fallon
    • Jennifer Hudson
    • Wyclef Jean
    • Journey
    • The Killers
    • Gayle King
    • Don Lemon
    • Barry Manilow
    • The New York Philharmonic
    • Polo G
    • Carlos Santana
    • Paul Simon
    • Patti Smith
    • Bruce Springsteen
    • Rob Thomas  

    HOW TO GET IN: Citi cardmembers will have access to purchase presale VIP tickets beginning Thursday, July 29th at 10 a.m. EDT until Sunday, August 1st at 10 p.m. EDT. For all presale details, visit citientertainment.com. Additionally, Citi will be giving away 1,000 general admission tickets to Citi cardmembers on a first-come, first-served basis beginning on Monday, August 2nd at 10 a.m. EDT. Free tickets, as well as VIP tickets for purchase, will be released to the public in batches at nyc.gov/HomecomingWeek starting on Monday, August 2nd at 10 a.m. EDT. Additional free and VIP ticket release dates and times are as follows:

    • Tuesday, August 3 at 7 a.m. EDT
    • Wednesday, August 4 at 9 p.m. EDT
    • Thursday, August 5 at 7 a.m. EDT
    • Friday, August 6 at 10 a.m. EDT
    • Saturday, August 7 at 9 p.m. EDT
  • Jake Huffman to Debut solo Project at Mercury Lounge on August 10

    Two years after finding his new sound, producer and multi-instrumentalist Jake Huffman will debut his solo project at Lower East Side venue Mercury Lounge on Tuesday, August 10th. The performance follows the release of his new single “Just a Little More,” due out on August 6th. The performance will not only be Huffman’s solo debut, but also his first post-pandemic show, following a period of songwriting and refocusing over 2020-21.

    Jake Huffman is best known as the drummer and lead singer for McLovins, a role he started at the age of 14, when a video of he and his bandmates performing Phish’s You Enjoy Myself” went viral. The group would continue to play for nearly 10 years, garnering a strong fan base and leading Huffman to work as a composer and lyricist for Sesame Street, as well as performances with Blink-182, Jack White and Post Malone, and written dozens of songs for artist likes Ed Sheeran and Leon Bridges.

    When COVID-19 hit and the music industry shut down, Huffman hunkered down in his studio and went back to college, getting a Certificate in Music Producation from Berkelee School of Music in Boston. Taking time to dive into his studio work, Huffman wrote about 50 tunes over 2020-21 because he was locked in, both physically (not being able to go outside) and mentally (focused on writing 6-7 hours a day), in addition to teaching music lessons remotely four days a week.

    jake huffman

    Huffman’s writing flows into an Indie rock/Indie pop mindset, with influence from early 2000’s alt-rock, combined with deeply personal lyrics reflecting on specific moments, with some left open to interpretation. The needs of a band can change from month to month, making it a journey for individual and group personalities. That’s where his head has been since McLovins called it a day.

    It’s hard to be in a band for a long time, especially for Jason (Ott, bassist) and me, who were playing together in bands for 10 years. Then a lot of shit hit at the right time, and broke everything. All of us are probably better people because of it. I loved all the time and music and the people I met through McLovins. That’s what I’ve been writing about. At times I wasn’t sure what to write about, so some is ambiguous and some relates to that. The new music relates to the journey with McLovins.

    Jake Huffman

    When Jake got the call for the Mercury Lounge show on August 10, he was overcome with joy. Planning for an Indie rock vibe, he’ll bring a new set up – Huffman cites the influence of Milky Chance in the stage set up – so as to avoid feeling too stiff for the performance. Jake will be behind the kit, playing guitar, and singing throughout, offering a fresh look at a musician who had been cast into the spotlight since his sophomore year of high school. With his single releasing on August 6, expect to hear “Just a Little More” as well as more debuts of future singles that tell a story for an eventual EP.

    Currently working as a producer and living in central Connecticut, Huffman will aim for more shows this fall, and notes how much he loved playing with McLovins, with reflections on how to move forward having learned lessons.

    We were so young and booked these long runs of shows, promoted the tour and not the individual shows. I wish we did one show at a time and just blown out that one show. I don’t want to take for granted any of the shows played, just take it one show at a time until I can get to see who’s listening.

    Jake Huffman

    Get tickets for the Mercury Lounge show on August 10 here. Show time is 6pm.