Category: Regions

  • Dead and Company Mark Return to NY with Home Runs and a Trip to Yasgur’s Farm

    A New York Welcome at Citi Field Review/Photos by Steve Malinski

    It was otherwise just a typically warm summer NYC evening to usher in this past Friday night when Dead and Company took the stage at Citi Field. After some strange times in the two-year gap since their last stop in NYC (and some Covid-19 checks before entering), however, the music restored a sense of normalcy and familiarity with experiencing a large-scale concert.

    Dead and Company

    Just as if Dead & Co. hadn’t skipped a beat since their 2019 tour, they took the stage without an ounce of rust from their pandemic downtime. As they shuffled into the first set with “Good Times,” John Mayer commanded the mic, signaling the core role he has developed in this iteration of the Grateful Dead family. Bob Weir stepped up to the plate sharing the lead with Mayer on vocals throughout the night, rallying the Queens crowd for the New York City line in “Ramble on Rose.” The youngest surviving member of the original Grateful Dead lineup, Weir was nimble on his feet as he enjoyed crafting the rhythms just as much as the crowd relished the sound.

    Set two took a trip to the late 1970s-era Dead setlists, featuring the classic pairing of “China Cat Sunflower/I Know You Rider” and fluidity from the start to finish of the set. The night was capped off on a high note with an energetic “U.S. Blues” and an encore covering The Band’s “The Weight,” featuring a trade of choruses between Jeff Chimenti, Mayer, Weir, and Oteil Burbridge.

    Dead and Company Citi Field – Flushing, NY 8/20/21

    Set 1: Let the Good Times Roll, Bertha, Good Lovin’ -> Big Railroad Blues, Ramble On Rose, They Love Each Other, Cassidy -> Casey Jones

    Set 2: Eyes of the World -> Uncle John’s Band -> China Doll -> China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider -> Drums/Space -> Spanish Jam -> Althea, Stella Blue, U.S. Blues

    Encore: The Weight

    Visit NYS Music’s interactive Grateful Dead in New York series, So MaNY Roads

    Dead and Company Recreate 1969’s Woodstock Performance at Bethel WoodsReview by Matt Romano, Photos by Steve Malinski

    It’s true, The music never stopped for the Grateful Dead. It’s newest reincarnation as Dead and Company continued its trip through the Empire State at Bethel Woods Performing Arts Center on Monday, August 23. The band played on a stage set among the rolling hills of the original 1969 Woodstock festival. A sense of delight was in the air for all those on the adjacent path of the site towards the stage for this year’s festivities. 

    They opened with “Hell in a Bucket,” this time enjoying the ride. Jeff Chimenti immediately stepped out as he would the whole night on the keyboards. The band really seems to play off Jeff and the musical ideas he passes onstage. John Mayer especially picks up on the mixolydian blues concept Pigpen started in the ‘60s by taking lead on “Easy Wind.” This track is ideal for Mayer’s blues background and the words, “Easy wind going ‘cross the Bayou today. There’s a whole lotta women. Out on the streets in a red today.”

    Mayer also stepped out in front for “Brown Eyed Women,” singing as humbly as Jerry sang about Delilah Jones. The band then drifted off into the seas to end the first set. A “Row Jimmy” out in the mist led to a “Lost Sailor,” and they came back to shore with a “Saint Of Circumstance.”

    Tigers in trance deserve a second chance. That’s what the band was able to get on the other side of the hill from their Woodstock ‘69 performance. The Grateful Dead may have been one of the more famous performers at Woodstock, but their set didn’t exactly knock it out of the park. They played from 10:30 pm to midnight on the second day, but their entire performance was filled with technical difficulties. The band was even subject to electric shock on stage although that truly could have been them representing their infamous logo. 

    Dead and Company

    But on this night on the other side of the hill, Bob Weir said at the start of the second set, “Now 50-some years ago right here, we tried this next little sequence and it didn’t go so well. It didn’t work so we’re gonna try it again.” With that, Dead and Company, in all their glory, recreated the five song setlist from the 1969 festival that includes covers by Merle Haggard and Bobby Blue Bland: “St Stephen,” “Mama Tried,” “Dark Star,” “High Time,” “Turn on your Lovelight.”

    Weir, who was 22 during the original Woodstock, sang Merle’s “Mama Tried” with the same howl in 2021 that he had in 1969. “I turn 21 in prison doing life without parole. No one could steer me right but Mama tried.” Bobby Bland’s “Lovelight” percolated throughout the set with John Mayer, who is no gravity stranger, wanting to be where the light is. The old memory set faded into a “Drums/Space” jam that featured a new “bass” segment from Oteil Burbridge – who has joined the Rhythm Devils on Halloween at Madison Square Garden – took his own featured piece. He was left on stage solo with only pure bass notes to the crowd’s ears. The band joined Oteil on his sky journey for “Space” While up there, they decide to return to the Garcia classic “Standing on the Moon,” to remind of summer tours past. Bob Weir and John Mayer then brought out the acoustics to send everyone back on the tree lined paths with “Ripple.” 

    Dead and Company

    You certainly could feel Jerry’s spirit in the same rolling Catskill hills that his music happily haunts. His music helped Dead and Company continue to set the bar high for likely their only recreation of this old performance. “It’s not enough to be the best at what you do. You must be perceived as the ONLY one who does what you do”

    Dead and Company hit Darien lake Wednesday night, then head to Saratoga Springs on Friday.

    On your way to SPAC, don’t forget that Stewart’s Shops is your ice cream shop! With over 345 shops in 31 counties across New York and southern Vermont, the convenience store chain is known for their fresh & local dairy products. With dozens of choices at the cone counter, you’re bound to find something you love! Try a shake, sundae, or cone today,  What’s Your Flavor?  

    Dead and Company Bethel Woods Performing Arts Center – Bethel, NY 8/23/21

    Set 1: Hell in a Bucket, Easy Wind, Loser, Brown-Eyed Women, Throwing Stones, Row Jimmy, Lost Sailor -> Saint of Circumstance

    Set 2: St. Stephen -> Mama Tried -> Dark Star -> High Time -> Turn On Your Love Light, Drums/Space/Oteil Bass Solo -> Deal -> Standing on the Moon -> Turn On Your Love Light

    Encore: Ripple

  • 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.

  • Jackson Browne and James Taylor delight and Excite at SPAC

    Thousands of fans packed the beautiful grounds of the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) in Saratoga Springs on a spectacular August evening to listen to the familiar and steady voices of James Taylor and Jackson Browne.

    Jackson Browne got the evening started, singing a mix of his classic songs. If you closed your eyes during the performance, you’d be hard-pressed to know that it was not the Jackson of one of his early albums. Fans enthusiastically greeted each song, many singing along with the familiar lyrics. The audience erupted in cheers when Jackson brought out James Taylor to accompany him on a few songs. He mentioned that knowing this tour was on the horizon made the last year and a half more bearable. Both performers mentioned how much fun they’ve been having on this tour, so much so that they have added 18 new dates.

    Jackson Browne James Taylor
    Jackson Browne at SPAC

    After a short break, James Taylor‘s set began with images and videos playing on a gigantic fretboard above the stage. Pictures of James throughout his career, fans at different James Taylor shows, and videos of fans playing some of James’ songs warmed up the enthusiastic crowd. As the darkened stage lit up, James emerged in his trademark cap and jacket and performed songs from his massive songbook.

    Jackson Browne James Taylor
    James Taylor at SPAC

    The crowd didn’t hesitate to call out requests, and James interacted with the crowd to set up his next selection. “It’s funny you should mention North Carolina,” before segueing into “Copperline,” a song about the area he grew up in. As a James, I was happy to hear “Sweet Baby James” make the setlist. The songs served as a lullaby of sorts to me and transported me back to my youth. Jackson Browne joined Taylor for an encore of “Take it Easy,” and James ended the night with “You Can Close Your Eyes,” a duet with his son Henry

    The tour continues in the northeast with one more show in New York at the Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater, and two shows in New Jersey before heading south and west in the fall.

    James Taylor Setlist: Country Road, Never Die Young, Copperline, That’s Why I’m Here, Mexico, You Make It Easy, Line ‘Em Up, Steamroller Blues, Easy as Rollin’ Off a Log (Johnnie ‘Scat’ Davis cover), Sweet Baby James, Fire and Rain, Carolina in My Mind, Shower the People, How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)

    Encore: Shed a Little Light, Take It Easy (with Jackson Browne), You’ve Got a Friend, You Can Close Your Eyes (with Henry Taylor)

  • Miles Francis Releases New Alt-Pop Single “Popular”

    Miles Francis, the multitalented NYC based musician has released a second single in 2021 titled “Popular.”

    miles francis

    Earlier this year, they released “Service,” a catchy alt-pop romp exploring the dark side of devotion, complete with boy band style choreography of Miles Francis clones in the video. This actually mirrored Miles’ recording process in quarantine of cloning one element into many, making a band out of a solo artist. 

    Previously they’ve collaborated with Will Butler (Arcade Fire), Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings, Antibalas, Amber Mark, Angelique Kidjo, and many more. A popular project of Miles’ on YouTube #MultiMiles was started in January of 2021 and so far includes 12 videos plus an NPR Tiny Desk submission version of Service. Their previous EPs Doves and Swimmers have earned them praise from the likes of NY Times, FADER, Stereogum, and KCRW.

    “Popular” comes out Aug 25 and is a continuation of the “Service” video, tackling the male need to take up space and power, from conversations to countries. The song features Lizzie Loveless and Lou Tides (aka Lizzie and Teeny Lieberson, formerly of TEEN) on background vocals. In the “Service” music video, Miles Francis and their two clones sing, play their instruments, and perform the synchronized choreography while constantly peeking over to the side of the camera. This small detail could be overlooked as a natural habit of the artist until about halfway through the video when all three clones get disturbed and paranoid before leading into a dance number. Then of course the ending features a downed Miles and an imposing silver mannequin. 

    This is where the “Popular” music video picks up. The video starts pretty intensely, a very different vibe than the previous video, where the now moving mannequin drags Miles to a different set. Fewer clones and more color and light distortions in this one. After a makeup application scene that felt like a hostage situation Miles goes back to the familiar two piece drum set up a changed person. Social commentary is littered throughout both videos and can be dissected with a few viewings.

    To celebrate, Francis will be taking to the streets of New York today for live performances on a pickup truck (“Popularalooza” schedule here + Instagram live here), ahead of their Sept 15 hometown show at Our Wicked Lady benefiting Trans Asylias.

    For more information visit their website.

    To stay up to date on Miles make sure to follow them on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, Twitter, and Facebook

    Their music can be listened to on Spotify, Bandcamp, Apple Music, and Soundcloud.

  • 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

  • Ramiro Marziani: Embracing All Things Music One String At a Time

    Guitarist/composer Ramiro Marziani is taking the NYC music scene by storm using his international style influenced by a love for culture. The Argentinian-born musician has recently released his newest EP, Sep ’20: From a Living Room in Brooklyn, on Friday, August 13.

    Marziani is a young, worldly guitarist based in Brooklyn, New York City. He has previously performed at venues across New York and Europe, from NYC’s Sony Hall, to Le Bal Blomet in Paris and Prague’s Jazz Dock. He has also made appearances at Austin, Texas’ SXSW festival, California WorldFest, and was even featured in a Polynesian string-inspired NPR Tiny Desk Concert with ukulele virtuoso Taimane.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Music played an important role in Marziani’s life since the beginning. Marziani notes that his family’s influence inspired him to take up guitar, due part from Argentinian musical culture. After gravitating towards the guitar from a young age, he began taking the instrument seriously at 11 years old.

    Old Spanish guitars were always sitting around my family home growing up, I had an intense curiosity to pick it up and start playing.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Marziani’s earliest inspiration was 80’s rock band Asia, after attending a concert of theirs with his father. The revolutionary rockers opened a new door for Marziani to explore endless genres of music, fueling his passion for all forms of musical expression. He enrolled in professional lessons, studying traditional Spanish guitar as well as rock and other genres as he got into his mid-teens.

    Ramiro Marziani
    1980’s supergroup Asia

    When you’re young, you have an aesthetic ferocity to try an instrument. How it sounds, how it looks, what it does. For me, it was the guitar, and the Asia concert made me think “yeah, I’m doing this.”

    Ramiro Marziani

    His musical training continued into attending Berklee College of Music which sealed his future as a professional guitarist. After graduating from Berklee, Marziani moved to Brooklyn in search of bigger and better things. He uses New York as a headquarters for music production and performance in-between travels while he continues on his journey as a blossoming international artist.

    NYC as a culture capital is very romantic to me, it’s filled with amazing musical talent and has provided me with inspiration that I had not found anywhere else.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Travel is apart of the magic for Marziani, allowing him to indulge in his love for discovering new forms of music. His style is self-described as “putting together techniques from everywhere” to create something truly unique; the exchange of knowledge and culture seems to make music so enticing for Marziani.

    It’s the fact that I’m not a tourist, and I have immediate access to meeting and learning from the people of any place I visit, the people that come to your shows. This is the biggest prize for a musician like myself.

    Ramiro Marziani
    Marziani in the studio

    Marziani’s professional studies have guided him to an intuitive way of music-making, comparable to an orchestral composer. His process of creating is much less focused on just throwing things out and seeing what sticks. Instead, he takes an intentional approach, focusing in on the conditions behind the creation of an album. This unique approach to musical artistry allows for a freeform fluidity between genres to properly fit the music’s intended role.

    I strive to create an environment of composition with my music that leads into intentional improvisation and collaboration. I want to make things feel purposeful, no matter the genre.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Marziani released another EP, a meditation music guitar album titled Cielito Blue, in July 2020. Cielito Blue is a short 20-minute album of eight solo guitar songs, written with a service mindset rather than a purely artistic goal. Produced in the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, its purpose is to allow oneself to re-connect with the present, by quieting the mind through meditation, stretching, yoga or daily tasks.

    Marziani’s newest EP, Sep ’20: From A Living Room in Brooklyn marks his return to the sound of high energy rock n’ roll guitar and extended jazz improvisation. The meditative period of Cielito Blue, is greatly juxtaposed by this new project, as Sep ’20 marks a return to normalcy.

    Sep ’20: From a Living Room in Brooklyn, was recorded shortly after Cielito Blue, but was kept on the back burner while Marziani worked on other projects. It represents a fusion of cultures through collaborations with musicians from Brazil, Indonesia and Argentina. Best described as “jazz and American folk with a little rock n’ roll sugar,” be sure to expect some unique yet enchanting guitar rhythms.

    Now is the right time to release Sep ’20, as it marks the moment in time when it was recorded, but allows us to celebrate that things are beginning to open up again.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Marziani looks to recreate a banjo-like sound through the electric guitar with first track, “Celtic Dreams.” “El Rio,” the second track, is a slower ballad where Argentine folk and country influence become present. The third and final song on the EP is titled “Oliver Oil”, which floats across dreamy Brazilian rhythms.

    Ramiro Marziani

    Other than creating and traveling, Marziani can be found teaching aspiring musicians of all ages as well as sharing various jam sessions and musical covers on Youtube. From just scrolling down his posts, ranging from Clapton to AC/DC and everything in-between, his musical ambiguity is clear.

    Sep ’20: From A Living Room in Brooklyn is available now on all major streaming platforms. Stay up to date with all things Ramiro Marziani through his Instagram and website.

    Marziani performing with Taimane Gardner for NPR
  • 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

  • New York Series: Onyx Struts their New York Walk

    There was a time in history where hip hop gave insight into the issues facing the Black race. But as the infantile genre continued its ascendency into the mainstream during the mid-to-late 1990’s, popular acts and record labels began shifting away from the raw, gutter and street sound of rap. Rather than focus on tales of the inner-city, lyrics began to reflect a more glamorous lifestyle, that was backed by a wardrobe to match

    Onyx never suffered from that conundrum. The Southside, Jamaica outfit always seemed to know where their niche lied. They excelled in their raw, energetic, raucous, and lyrically inclined style of rap. Coming off a platinum-selling album and high-charting single, it would’ve been easy for them to continuously chase commercial success. Rather, the “Slam” emcees stuck with what originally garnered them critical acclaim.

    Their sophomore effort, All We Got Iz Us, has been certified gold with over half-a-million sales yet, never reached the success of its predecessor. Nonetheless, the Jam Master Jay signees delivered several more classic hip hop records. The singles, “Live Niguz” and “Last Dayz,” have gotten their just due, but the anthemic “Walk in New York” best resonates with the parts of New York City many can’t fathom. 

    onyx

    According to New York City’s crime database, in 1993 (the year Onyx’s debut album dropped) the city faced nearly 2000 murders, and over 85 thousand robberies. For better context, New York City is estimated to face only 468 murders in 2021, a substantial difference. In light, it is easy to see why Onyx’s style, sound and lyrics reflected such lawlessness and aggression, those were the times! 

    Their description of their hometown is more resemblant of a violence laden wasteland where ruthless aggression rules above all. Yet it’s clear as day the pride each emcee exudes when characterizing their beloved New York City, for better or worse.

    The title “Walk in New York” refers to the strut and swagger one from New York maintains as they walk, particularly when part of a larger ensemble. And as the proprietors of hip hop, New Yorkers held a certain panache when it came to the culture, taking pride in setting all the latest trends. 

    Fredro Starr begins the record, emphasizing that New York was not a part of the gang culture that had become so prominent in hip hop as a result of the West Coast influence (possibly a jab, as this was during the height of the east coast-west coast hip hop beef), before reminding listeners of the intense animosity between NYPD and young minorities. 

    We don’t throw gang signs in New York
    We just be on some shit in New York
    New York City, shiftee low down gritty
    You punk niggas yell pity and smell shitty
    NYPD can suck my dick

    One of Hip Hop’s greatest attributes is that it allowed inhabitants of inner cities to express their first-hand experiences. Unpolished thoughts that are not ready-made for the mainstream were encouraged during the 1990’s. On the song’s second verse, Sonsee furthers fortifies the real New York experience.

    Them damn streets are eager to claim all lives
    But fuck it, it’s my home hate it or appreciate it
    It’s the torrid 8 million story orientated
    Designated and made for the real renegades
    So I never been afraid to stomp, comp, then get paid

    As the song continues, Sonsee’s temperament changes, he goes from accepting the cards he was dealt, to taking pride in the lawless nature in which many from the inner-city were conducting themselves. Which I maintain should go in the case study for nature vs nurture. 

    New York hold shit down on keep locked we rock all night
    And if Zoo York niggas wasn’t part of your shit, your shit wasn’t right
    We known to start shit up from trends, to riots, to fracas
    And big enough to fuck up anybody that wanna attack us
    And that’s cause the five boroughs are deep
    Most of us are peeps, true Zoo York niggas we play for keep

    The unmistakable Sticky Fingaz concludes the record with a fitting encapsulation of mid-1990’s New York City. From the violence, the distinctive swagger that New Yorkers carry themselves with, the “by any means” mentality of its hustlers, and the tourists who visit the outskirts and the city’s landmarks, but would never step foot in the jungle.

    Representin’ New York City and for what it’s worth
    Yo we the triflest mother fuckers on the face of this Earth
    So if you don’t like your life fuck with a nigga from New York
    The instincts we got is to shoot first then talk
    But what seems to always gives us away is our “niggery” walk
    And I speak from experience, so pleader take heed to advice
    We sellin guns and drugs and sex or anything for the right price
    The crime rate’s so goddamn high, we had to name the shit twice
    Cause tourists be scared to death to visit the criminal’s paradise
    Home of bloodshed and tears and for souvenirs there’s fears
    It appears nobody cares so say your prayers

    While not a major hit record, the song resonates mainly with New Yorkers, specifically those who lived through those dangerous times as well as those who feel Onyx represent the values hip hop were founded on. Real street tales from people who actually experienced them. 

    So fuck the mayor, fuck Rudy, Ray, and the governor
    Ya’ll niggas couldn’t walk my walk, my talk’s ruggeder

    Fredro Starr
  • 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

  • Before There Was Old School There was PreSkool

    Self-described manipulator of light. DJ by night and day. Keyholder to the power of music and unknown grassroot secrets of our music and political history. A description of him will often times be brought up amongst select youth who attend his nights at clubs before they can think of his name. “ Who was that old guy DJing when we went to Union Pool?” “ He had played the techno music and was playing until we left at 3 am” “ Ah… Yes, DJ… DJ Preskool.” 

    Found halfway down on his website at the beginning of a paragraph, it transcribes the origin of his name is that “Before there was Old Skool or Nu Skool, there was PreSkool.” So, who is this DJ?

    Larry Weissman, 71, who used to only be  DJ PreSkool on weekends, quit the ill-fitting suit of corporate America in 2014 leaving his position as Vice President of IT at Wells Fargo. He then put himself through Dubspot (A DJ school in New York City) to do something that he seemed to have been manifested to do, DJ.

    PreSkool
    Larry Weissman outside his home. photograph by T. Sesselman, 2020 during quarantine in Heights, Jersey City, NJ

    His “71 years around the sun” has been one that some envy and others look down upon. But frankly, he is just here to live the life that he wants to live. 

    The son of a third-generation baker, Larry Weissman’s story starts in Springfield, Massachusetts. Having been born in the ’50s there was “a lot of tension between, you know, people that were on the left and the right. Plus Springfield is a very old city and very segregated. So you know like many people of my age, I mean we experienced somewhat of a negative situation,” Weissman had said recalling his time growing up. 

    My dad as a person had pretty much always treated people right but was also very much a classic second-generation immigrant who had fought bravely in World War II, although he definitely mellowed out later. But me and him butted heads a lot in my teenage years with the pressure of the Vietnam War, which I was against. That kind of all made me wanna leave, and basically, I ended up running away going to Boston, living in Boston for a summer, then figuring out how to stay in Boston.

    I was listening to The Beatles and the Stones and Jimi Hendrix, smoking pot and doing everything…I was a rock N’ roller.

    Larry Weissman

    Once in Boston, he did a year and a half of the College of Basic Studies program at Boston University before dropping out. Weissman explained, “the theory was that they were looking for people who were highly intelligent, but were not good academically, right up my alley, right? It was a good idea, except what they didn’t realize was that they were describing all these hippies.”

    Weissman described Boston back then as to how “it was like San Francisco. It was like a very hip place to be. There was tons of great music, J. Geils. All sorts of really good stuff going on.” After dropping out, it wasn’t long until he left Boston and hitchhiked across the country a few times “ It’s hard to explain to people now but it was just kind of a thing where you’d meet certain people. Maybe you hang out with them for a couple of months.”

    Before settling down in San Francisco in 1971, Weissman had lived on commune in Oregon. “We anticipated that there was going to be some sort of actual  political civil war,  it was even more against each other than it is even now, although it’s getting pretty bad now too.”

    Left: Debbie Olcese, lead guitarist for the Lisa Kindrid band Right: Larry Weissman

    But after a few years, Weissman realized that, “I was more interested in continuing to do community organizing and living in the city, so I moved down into the largest commune in San Francisco, which is called the Good Earth Commune” and living in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, known for its counterculture movements in the ’60s and 70’s. 

    While being a part of the White Panther Party A white people organization formed in support of the Black Panther Party) in San Francisco, Weissman had joined The Peoples Ballroom. He gives most of his credit to the Peoples Ballroom for starting his interest in producing music.

    To me, part of being a hippie was all this new music going on.

    The Peoples Ballroom was a coalition of community organizers and community people and bands and sound guys and all the different kind of stuff and the idea was to put on shows for the community that also combine music with, you know, information about different topics that were going on and to provide a certain amount of financial support for everybody by all of us, like passing the hat and sharing it.

    We did it outdoors, that would range from block parties and small events in the Panhandle all the way up to very large events in Golden Gate Park, including many, many shows with thousands of people. I think the biggest show we did was the Grateful Dead and the Jefferson Starship in 1975, was 50,000 people in Lindley Meadow.

    One of the jobs that I had was to come up with tapes to play in between the bands though I didn’t think of it at the time as DJing, but in fact, at night we would go to my friends recording studio and we were making these tapes to play about. Ironically even some of the music I played last night (referring to his DJing at Union Pool the night before the interview) is music that I played back then. Like. It’s funny how it all comes around in circles.

    Larry Weissman

    The organization had also sought out to make political changes as well. In 1969 when the city government put out a bunch of anti-music laws they grew a backing and were able to get laws changed. Weissman said that they had thought “capitalists [had] taken over the music industry and what we were looking for is to create something outside of that.” 

    PreSkool
    An anti-nuke rally, in San Francisco in 1978. People’s Ballroom built stage did sound, and security Larry Weissman was event manager and Jackson Brown played

    During this time Weissman and the organizations he was a part of “were constantly butting heads with the police.” He talked about his daily run-ins with the police and the general harassment from them. 

    Weissman then recalled to what he said was one of the worst arrests for him was:

     The Gay Liberation Front and the gay community in the Castro had just started the Gay Freedom Day things and we had a stage and security for them. Sylvester played. It was super great.

     But the city didn’t like the fact that the hippies and gay people were working together. So at the end of the show, 6 cops broke into the backstage and beat the shit out of me, and took me to jail. I was charged with four counts of assaulting a police officer.I had a jury trial. Mom was there, she came out for it and I represented myself and got acquitted on all charges because they were phony.

    Larry Weissman

    Sometime after being acquitted, Weissman had served a year in jail after representing himself to the Supreme Court of California and it was even noted how well and organized he had represented himself. Once out of jail “people had scattered everywhere. I personally had a son who was like, you know five or six years old,” and a lot of the groups faded out as well. 

    Lucky enough, however, Weissman said he got “on the ground floor [of] computing in ’78, ’79 and ’80 in the Bay Area. Which was in fact the ground floor, I mean we got an Apple from Steve Wozniak personally.”

    For a while, he would go between Queens and San Francisco, computerizing companies until he decided to make the transition fully to New York City in ’98 now that his son was older. In order to stay in New York he “ended up taking the job at Wells Fargo Bank. I was a senior VP, I kept all their inner wholesale banking systems running. I had 160 people. I worked with a big budget, I was doing good but at the same time where I was spending all my time outside of work was always going to plays and dance recitals and seeing music and hanging with all these kids that were in their 20’s.”

    I started meeting a lot of younger kids that would eventually become the Williamsburg music scene and the first people were mostly over in the Lower East Side and then gradually moved to Williamsburg and I moved to Williamsburg probably 2004.

    In many ways [it was] very similar to Haight Ashbury, it was a ghetto. There was a lot of empty buildings and stuff and while there was never the political intensity that they had in Ashbury they had in terms of the culture and the quality of the music of the area were equally there. I was very fortunate to meet a lot of those people and obviously since you know it was the best place I’ve found since the Haight  Asbury.

    Larry Weissman

    After getting involved in the community friends had started to suggest that he should start to DJ since he had such an intense music depth and with that, a much more interesting perspective. With the encouragement from friends, he started to “DJ in underground loft-type stuff and then very slowly a couple of different clubs started happening,” Weissman said for how he started his DJ career.

    Then finally in 2014 ,“I finally said you know what? This is what I want to just do, so that’s when I retired from the bank and became a full-time DJ.”

    PreSkool
    Photo By Syra Sparkle Left Photo: Crowd at Union Pool Right: Larry Weissman Performing

    The main reason that I DJ is that  I’m trying to show kids that there’s no one way to be like, not everybody who’s 71 years old does what I do, but what I do is equally as valid as some 71-year-old grandfather. Most of the songs I play have very specific messages about fighting against oppression and being free and opening your mind and that’s where me and these kids communicate. 

    In the ’60s we were trying to figure out how to have a better community and a better life without any guidelines or rulebooks. Rather than make speeches, I just try to be as authentic as I can in what I’m doing and I get a lot of love from people for that. 

    If they (referring to kids in their 20’s) saw me on the street they wouldn’t look at me twice, but we’re there in the backroom together and we’re sharing this music, and I’m not sharing my music. I’m not playing old 60’s songs, I’m trying to show them that there’s something about their music that’s the same as mine.

    Larry Weissman

    Starting to become a DJ at 50, Larry Weissman now splits his time between DJing clubs and working with the owner of 20 Sided Games in Brooklyn, doing live DJing for Dungeons & Dragons games. Weissman is “not looking to become famous. I just like doing what I’m doing with it where I’m at and I don’t let anyone tell me that I shouldn’t do it. ’cause I’m too old or you know this or that. So yeah,  I urge people, particularly people in their 60s. Out in the 70s is don’t limit yourself at all.”

    preskool
    A younger Larry Weissman

    When asked if he would change anything in the past, Weissman said, “I wish I wouldn’t have made my mom so unhappy when I was a kid. But ultimately at every point in my life, I did what I thought was the right thing to do. I’m not saying it was all the right thing to do, but I can tell you that I did what I thought was the right thing. So no, I don’t regret those decisions.”