Category: Upcoming Shows

  • Maná Announes México Lindo Y Querido Tour to Continue in the U.S. With Stop at Belmont Park

    Following their record-breaking Los Angeles arena residency and their Latin America stadium run, Maná has announced the 2023 leg of their México Lindo Y Querido tour featuring 19 shows across the United States.

    The U.S. leg of the tour kicks off with two more dates of Mana’s current L.A. residency at the Kia Forum on February 10 and 11 and continues with stops in Phoenix, Houston, Miami, Chicago, including a stop at UBS Arena at Belmont Park, in Elmont, NY, on Saturday, April 22, before wrapping in Sacramento, CA, at Golden 1 Center on September 23. Tickets go on sale starting on Friday, November 18 at 10 a.m. on Ticketmaster.

    Maná’s Mexico Lindo Y Querido complete tour dates

    Mexico Lindo Y Querido

    México Lindo y Querido kicked-off on June 10 in Tijuana, México. With Maná performing multiple nights in Medellin, Bogota, Puerto Rico and México. The tour is a timeless celebration of their love and admiration for Mexico and the multigenerational Latino community. The five-city México run brought the band to sold-out stadiums with over 150,000 fans. Moreover, that total includes 60,000 ecstatic fans at the prestigious Foro Sol stadium in Mexico City. In order to kick-off the announcement of their U.S. leg, MANÁ will host a launch party at Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay Beach, featuring a special live performance from the band. Moreover, Mexico Lindo Y Querido is a part of a three-decade run that has seen Maná amass a diverse audience of fans of all ages that continue to celebrate their music around the globe.

    The México Lindo y Querido U.S. run comes on the heels of Maná’s record-breaking residency with 12 sold-out shows and 165,000 tickets sold to date.

    Get ready, we’re coming with a brand new production and all our hits. We’re excited to be back on the road and see all our fans in the US. This isn’t just a concert tour, it’s a celebration of life.

    – Maná

    Considered one of the most influential Latin rock band in the world, Maná has transcended generations with their music. Maná — meaning positive energy in Polynesian — began in 1986 when four friends from Guadalajara came together and fused rock sounds with Latin and Caribbean rhythms. The group includes Fher Olvera as vocalist, guitarist and main composer, Alex González on drums, Sergio Vallín on lead guitar, and Juan Diego Calleros on bass.

    Maná is one of the most decorated latin groups ever

    Furthermore, the group has amassed 133 Certified Gold Albums, 256 Certified Platinum albums, 4 Grammy Awards, 9 Latin Grammys, 26 Billboard Latin Music Awards, 15 Premio Lo Nuestro Awards, and honors such as the 2018 Latin Billboard Lifetime Achievement Award & 2018 Latin Grammy Person of the Year Award and more recently the 2021 ICONO LATIN BILLBOARD Award.

    Their current collaboration project, which began in 2019, revisits some of their greatest songs, accompanied by renowned and diverse artists.

  • The Gibson Brothers Announce New Album and North Country Christmas Performances

    The Gibson Brothers, hailing from Plattsburgh and calling Nashville home, will perform two North Country Christmas concerts in mid-December, one in Schenectady at Proctors, and another in Ellenburg Depot. The pair will release a new album on January 27th, 2023, Darkest Hour, produced by Jerry Douglas and includes guest musicians Justin Moses, Guthrie Trapp, and Alison Krauss.

    gibson brothers north country christmas

    Darkest Hour spans from trad-grass to country-soul and back again, utilizing classically bluegrass instruments as well as electric guitars and drums to craft a sound fit for the songs it surrounds. Kicking off with a flurry of traditional bluegrass excellence, The Gibson Brothers’ new single “Dust” is more than a just statement of musicianship, it’s the whole package, with world-class picking, clear and refined vocals, and rock-solid songwriting. An ode to leaning into down-and-out—“Left in the dust” by ex-lover—“Dust” puts a clever, positive spin on being left behind. “Me and dust, we do fine.” 

    Every song written feels like a little victory to its writer. Sure, some are better than others, and from time to time—if you’re lucky—you write something special. But every one counts. They all add up to something, whether they are keepers or not, and the writer is in constant pursuit of topping what he or she has done before. The fact that our longtime musical hero Jerry Douglas likes what we do and encouraged us to send him all originals is a real feather in our caps. Making this record of songs Jerry deemed as keepers with him is a dream come true. The songs reflect where we came from, where we are, and where we go from here.

    Eric Gibson

    The songs recorded in the first recording period featured Mike Barber (bass), Justin Moses (mandolin), Eamon McGloughlin (fiddle), and of course, Jerry Douglas (dobro), adding in John Gardner (drums), Guthrie Trapp (electric guitar), Todd Parks (bass), and Alison Krauss (vocals) for the final tracks, Darkest Hour showcases just how easily Eric and Leigh move from what Dan Auerbach dubbed “country soul” (“I Go Driving”) to high octane bluegrass (“What a Difference A Day Makes” and “Dust”) with Douglas always keeping the spotlight on the songs themselves.

    Fans can purchase or stream “Dust” today at and pre-order or pre-save Darkest Hour ahead of its January release right here.

    The Gibson Brothers will close out 2022 with two shows in New York. Their annual Gibson Brothers North Country Christmas show will be held at Proctors Theatre in Schenectady on Friday, December 16 (ticket link) and Ellenburg Depot at the NACS High School Auditorium on December 17th (ticket link).

  • Bard Musicians to Perform at Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck on December 4

    The Church of the Messiah in Rhinebeck will host a performance by pianist Nielson Chen on December 4, as well as a quartet from the Bard Vocal Arts Program presenting vocal chamber music. Let it be Forgotten: Shades of American Identity, an anthology of works, will be presented at 4pm and touches on complicated identities and relationships in America.

    The series of tracks will explore the different backgrounds of people living in the U.S., highlighting equally the good and the bad, as well as the joy and pain experienced by citizens of different cultural backgrounds. Included in the Let it be Forgotten: Shades of American Identity program will be Bard musicians, Zihao Liu, Montana Smith, Jonathan Lawlor, Neilson Chen, and Katherine Lerner Lee.

    With this recital, we want to communicate how important it is for us to listen to one another. There is no amount of sharing one’s own experience that takes away space from someone else to do the same. On this program, everyone’s voices are given ample room to be heard, and my hope is that it encourages our audiences to be open and active listeners in their daily lives.

    Montana Smith, soprano and co-curator for December’s vocal chamber performance
    Bard rhinebeck
    Bard Vocal Arts Program members

    Zihao Liu is a Chinese tenor whose been featured in many solo appearances, including for several recitals, largely involving opera and orcherstrative concerts. His recent appearances include his tenor soloist performances in Beethoven 9th Symphony with the Bard Conservatory Orchestra and Handel’s Messiah with The Orchestra Now.

    Bard rhinebeck
    Tenor, Zihao Liu

    Montana Smith is an emerging soprano musician and is currently continuing her education in graduate studies at the Bard College Conservatory of Music in the Vocal Arts Program. She has participated in a plethora of opera productions, holding a vision which emphasizes the importance for young people to be represented in world opera art, while attempting to express more effective and open communication with her audiences. Smith’s performances vary across the range of the classical genre, and she holds a focus in representing the musical expression of Black and American artists.

    Bard rhinebeck
    Soprano, Montana Smith

    Baritone, Jonathan Lawlor, has built experience working with established Baroque musical groups, as well as being actively involved in the opera music scene, through collaboration with opera ensembles. Lawlor carries an interest in evolving the composition techniques utilized in classical music sound production, grounded in the intent of diversifying the musical background of the musician, hence also the performance.

    Baritone, Jonathan Lawlor

    Katherine Lerner Lee, a soprano living in Brooklyn, has a breadth of performing experience and a versatile repertoire. She received the 2021 Concerto Competition this past season while obtaining her Masters at Bard Conservatory, played the part of “Gold Spurs” in Janacek’s The Cunning Little Vixen, and debuted in concerts at the Fisher Center and with the Broad Street Orchestra in Kinderhook. She delivered a performance in December that included Luciano Berio’s Folk Songs and Pauline Oliveros’ Silences.

    Soprano, Katherine Lee Lerner

    Taiwanese-born Neilson Chen is a collaborative pianist assistant at the Bard College Conservatory of Music and a music PhD candidate at Arizona State University. He has given numerous performances not only in the United States but also in countries like Germany, Luxembourg, France, Ireland, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. The Saarburg International Music Festival in Germany, the Vianden Music Festival and School in Luxembourg, and the Rocky Ridge Music Center in Colorado are just a few of the music festivals that Neilson performs at it during the summer as a staff pianist.

    Pianist, Neilson Chen

    Featured in the afternoon’s performers are composers William Grant Still, Juhi Bansal, Chihchun Chi Sun Lee, Charles Ives, and Alex Weiser, delivering songs with texts included in English, Mandarin, and Yiddish. The church has provided service to the community area, being a host for an Afghan immigrant family in Spring of 2022. All proceeds from the recital event at the church will go into supporting the family.

    The Church of the Messiah is located at: 6436 Montgomery St, Rhinebeck. RSVP for the event here.

  • Family of Woodstock to Present “A Soul Train Christmas” Featuring Eric Redd

    On Saturday, December 10, Family of Woodstock (FOW), an upstate community service non-profit, will showcase “A Soul Train Christmas” at the Colony in Woodstock.

    With doors opening at 7 and music beginning at 8, the event includes a holiday dance party and a winter clothing drive. It’s the non-profit’s third annual holiday collaboration with Eric Redd, a musical performer with over 40 years of international experience and a longtime Woodstock resident.

    Eric Redd

    Also on the bill are Hudson Valley rockabilly and roots band Lara Hope and the Ark-Tones and the gospel-influenced dance artist and DJ Disciple collaborator Dawn Tallman.

    This is far from the first community concert for FOW, with other annual events including the Bob Dylan Birthday Bash and  the John Herald Fund concerts, both of which have featured Redd in the past.

    Eric Redd has enjoyed an enduring and diverse career. The Inglewood, CA native got his start at 16 years old as a dancer on “Soul Train,” a TV musical variety program curated by host Don Cornelius, which ran from 1971 to 2006.

    His ensuing career has included appearances as a dancer in musical productions such as “Starlight Express” and “Cats,” a stint as lead vocalist for California Transit Authority, a band stemming from Danny Seraphine, the drummer of Chicago, and his 2014 full-length solo album, Give It Away.

    Information regarding tickets for “A Soul Train Christmas” can be found here.

  • The Idan Raichel Project to Perform November Shows with full 15-Piece Lineup for First Time Ever

    Producer, keyboardist, lyricist, composer and performer Idan Raichel is a global music icon who has brought his inspiring example and soul-stirring music to some of the planet’s biggest stages. As the leader of The Idan Raichel Project, Idan acts as a musical ambassador representing a hopeful world where artistic collaboration breaks down barriers between people of different backgrounds and beliefs.

    The global music superstar appears with his full Idan Raichel Project band in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, NYC and Boston this November. For the very first time, audiences in the US will get to experience the full 15-piece Idan Raichel Project band, which has never performed in the US in this complete configuration before.

    idan raichel project

    The Idan Raichel Project’s spectacular live show has enchanted audiences worldwide. They have headlined in some of the world’s most prestigious venues, including New York’s Central Park Summer Stage, Apollo Theater, Town Hall and Radio City Music Hall, Los Angeles’ Kodak Theater, the Sydney Opera House, Zenith in Paris, London’s Royal Albert Hall and many international festivals. They have also performed across Europe, South & Central America, Hong Kong, Singapore, India, Ethiopia, South Africa, Ghana, Japan and dozens of other countries for enraptured audiences of all backgrounds. 

    Over the past 19 years, Idan has collaborated with American pop stars India.Arie, Dave Matthews and Alicia Keys, not to mention a wide range of artists who are household names in their native countries: Portugal’s Ana Moura, France’s Patrick Bruel, Italy’s Ornella Vanoni, Germany’s Andreas Scholl, and Mali’s Vieux Farka Touré to name but a few. The Tour presented by Teev Events

    The Idan Raichel Project Tour Dates

    November 12     VIVE                                      Palo Alto, CA

    November 13     Royce Hall                              Los Angeles, CA

    November 17     Kings Theater                         Brooklyn, NY

    November 19     Berklee Performance Center     Boston, MA

    Buy tickets at www.teev.com/upcoming-shows

  • Soweto Gospel Choir to Perform “Hope – It’s Been a Long Time Coming” at Binghamton University on November 20

    Binghamton University’s Anderson Center for the Performing Arts will host “HOPE – It’s Been a Long Time Coming,” an all new concert by three-time Grammy-winners Soweto Gospel Choir, commemorating South Africa’s Freedom Movement and the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. The performance will be held on November 20 at 3 p.m. at the Osterhout Concert Theater.

    Soweto Gospel Choir

    Bringing joy to all, “HOPE” opens with a rousing program of South African freedom songs that inspired the Rainbow Nation. The choir’s uplifting performance then moves to the United States, with beautiful renditions of the music of the Civil Rights Movement, including works by legendary artists Billie Holiday, James Brown, Otis Redding, Curtis Mayfield and the one and only Aretha Franklin.

    Hailing from Soweto (South West Township), a township outside of Johannesburg and home of Nelson Mandela and South Africa’s democratic movement, Soweto Gospel Choir continues to inspire audiences around the world with their powerful blend of African gospel, freedom songs and international classics.

    Comprising a line-up of some of South Africa’s best vocalists, these uplifting performers have shared the stage and collaborated with the biggest names in contemporary music including Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, Beyonce, U2, Diana Ross, Peter Gabriel, Chris Martin, John Legend, Pharrell Williams, Jimmy Cliff, Ben Harper, Angelique Kidjo, Robert Plant, Celine Dion, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Hugh Masekela and Josh Groban.

    Soweto Gospel Choir was formed in 2003 at the end of the apartheid era and during South Africa’s inspiring return to Democracy. Taking part in some of the major historical events in the new democratic South Africa, Soweto Gospel Choir are proud to have performed on many occasions for the Father of their Nation, former President Nelson Mandela, as well as at his State Funeral in South Africa and at the subsequent commemorative service at Westminster Abbey in London. They were similarly invited to perform at the funeral service for the late President’s first wife, Winnie Mandela. The Choir act as Ambassadors for the Nelson Mandela Foundation. 

    Tickets are available here.

  • Cayuga Chamber Orchestra to perform “Carnival of the Animals” on November 19

    The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra will hold its second Orchestral Series Concert of the 2022-23 season on November 19 at Ford Hall at Ithaca College, under the direction of Interim Music Director, Grant Cooper. The program will open with Rameau’s Overture from Zaïs and will feature the world premiere of local composer Sally Lamb McCune’s Spiral, a piece commissioned by the Cayuga Chamber Orchestra to honor the resilience of the orchestra, its patrons and wider community  for continuing to come together in celebration of live music.  

    Carnival of the Animals Cayuga Chamber Orchestra
    Cayuga Chamber Orchestra Special Guest Artists: Harris Andersen and Muse Ye, Piano

    The second half of the program will showcase two works of Camille Saint-Saëns: the whimsical  Carnival of the Animals and the powerful Symphony No. 2. Carnival of the Animals will include newly composed verses by Interim Music Director Grant Cooper and an appearance by the delightful piano duo, Muse Ye and Harris Anderson. 

    The CCO was founded in 1976 and is officially designated “Ithaca’s Orchestra.” Each season includes an Orchestral  Series, Chamber Music Series, a Holiday concert, free Family Concerts, and the long-standing Willard Daetsch  Youth Outreach Program, which earned the 2015 Yale Distinguished Music Educator award. In 2017, the CCO  added a Youth Orchestra program for advanced students. In 2019, a new Diversity Career Fellowship program was  established to provide opportunities for college students from communities that have been historically 

    Interim Music Director Grant Cooper and composer Sally Lamb McCune

    The CCO will hold its Holiday Celebration concert on Saturday, December 17 at 7:30 pm, also in Ford Hall at Ithaca College. 

    For more information and subscriptions / single tickets visit CCOithaca.org

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2h5IQphTjI
  • Blue Note Joins With WBGO for “Brunch” Concert Series

    Manhattan’s Blue Note Jazz Club is partnering with Newark jazz radio station WBGO 88.3 FM for “WBGO Presents Brunch at The Blue Note,” a Sunday concert series running from November to March.

    The World Famous Harlem Gospel Choir will open the series with performances on November 13 & 20 and wrap it up with shows on February 12 & March 19.

    The partnership, which will run 13 concerts total, also has features performances from Svetlana & The New York Collective, as well as Terry Waldo’s Gotham City Band, the NYU Wayne Shorter Ensemble, JJ Sansaverino, the Aubrey Johnson Group, the Anderson Brothers with Vince Giordano, and Jason Prover & The Sneak Thievery Orchestra.

    Information regarding reservations and more can be found here.

    Upcoming WBGO Presents Brunch at The Blue Note shows

    The World Famous Harlem Gospel Choir – Sunday, November 13, 1:30 PM (Doors 12:00 PM)

    The World Famous Harlem Gospel Choir – Sunday, November 20, 1:30 PM (Doors 12:00 PM)

    Terry Waldo’s Gotham City Band – Sunday, November 27, 12:30 PM (Doors 12:00 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    NYU Wayne Shorter Ensemble – Sunday, December 4, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    JJ Sansaverino – Sunday, Sunday, December 11, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM)  & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    Aubrey Johnson Group – Sunday, December 18, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    Classic Soul & Motown Brunch: A Decade of Soul – Saturday, December 24, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    New York Holidays with Svetlana & The New York Collective! – Sunday, December 25, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    Classic Soul & Motown Brunch: A Decade of Soul – Sunday, January 1, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM)

    Anderson Brothers play Louis Armstrong featuring Vince Giordano – Sunday, January 8, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30 PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    Jason Prover & The Sneak Thievery Orchestra – Sunday, February 5, 12:30 PM (Doors 11:30PM) & 2:30 PM (Doors 2 PM)

    The World Famous Harlem Gospel Choir – Sunday, February 12, 1:30 PM (Doors 12:00 PM)

    The World Famous Harlem Gospel Choir – Sunday, March 19, 1:30 PM (Doors 12:00 PM)

  • Black Star Announces Last Minute NYC Show After SNL Debut

    Hip-hop duo Black Star (Talib Kweli and Yasiin Bey) announced a last-minute show at Sony Hall on Nov. 15, coming off the heels of their SNL debut on Nov. 12.

    Black Star is a rap group from NYC, that changed music forever in 1998 with their album Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star. yasiin bey and Talib Kweli first united to form what they penned “the best alliance in hip-hop,” and continue to make history with their highly-anticipated album No Fear of Time – their first in nearly 24 years.

    Madlib produced all of the beats for the album’s nine songs and according to Pitchfork “the people need Black Star now more than ever,” saying the songs “So be it,” “Sweetheart. Sweethard. Sweetodd.,” and “Supreme alchemy” are the “best performances across the album.” 

    Earlier this year, they performed alongside Robert Glasper, Dave Chapelle, Thundercat, Flying, and Lotus, at the debut Blue Note Napa Festival.

    The group will be going to Sony Hall, an NYC venue that opened its doors in 2018. It presents world-renowned performing artists across all music genres at capacities of 1,000 standing and 500 seated, with a full-service restaurant and bar. Sony Hall is equipped with Sony’s technologies which provide enhanced experiences for the audience.

    Tickets to see their performance at Sony Hall on Nov. 15 are on sale here. Black Star will also be performing on SNL on Nov. 12, with host Dave Chapelle.

    https://youtu.be/PMKxRn0Xgj4
  • Western Wind Ensemble Announces Five-Part Concert Series in NYC

    The Grammy-nominated Western Wind Ensemble is celebrating nearly 54 years of music with a five-part concert series called Grief: a Necessary Journey in NYC on Nov. 19.

    western wind ensemble

    The Western Wind Ensemble is a New York-based, internationally acclaimed a cappella sextet with a rich history in the music industry. The New York Times has called them “A kaleidoscopic tapestry of vocal hues.” They perform a variety of music, including Renaissance motets to Fifties rock’n’roll, medieval carols to Duke Ellington, and more.

    Band members include William Zukof, the founding member, Eric S. Brenner (countertenor), Paul Greene-Dennis (bass), Linda Lee Jones (soprano), Christina Kay (soprano), Bradley King (tenor), David Vanderwal (tenor).

    Notable performances in the United States include Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, Kennedy Center, ArtPark, Ordway Theater, the Metropolitan Museum, and more. Internationally, they have appeared at the Geneva Opera, and have toured Italy, East Asia, Australia, and more. In addition to their many live performances, The Western Wind Ensemble frequently appears on radio, television, film, and CD.

    On Nov. 19 they will be performing at the Church of St. John’s in the Village in Grief: a Necessary Journey, a program featuring music by Dowland, Purcell, McFerrin, Rorem, Howells, Sondheim, Rodgers & Hammerstein, spirituals, and more. The concert program guides listeners along a journey through the five stages of grief, ultimately resulting in a place of acceptance and healing.

    Tickets are on sale now.