A national historic treasure nestled in the woods near Woodstock, Maverick Concerts returns this summer with a full schedule. Beginning in July and playing throughout September, the Maverick Concert Hall features world class music such as Classical, Jazz, and Contemporary concerts.
The Maverick 2022 season begins on Saturday evening July 2nd, with a special 50th Birthday bash in celebration of the acclaimed NEXUS Ensemble. The celebration will be led by Woodstock legend Garry Kvistad and features special guests Paul Winter and Brazilian pianist Henrique Eisenmann.
Opening festivities will continue on Sunday July 3rd with an 85th birthday nod to American music living legend Philip Glass. This concert features classics of Beethoven and Bach – by two of the most exciting stars in classical music today, pianist Simone Dinnerstein and violinist Tim Fain.
Jazz, contemporary, and world music hold a special place on Saturday nights at Maverick Concerts. Sunday afternoons of Classical music have been the foundation of the Maverick Concerts since the very first Festival in 1915, and that tradition continues. Likewise, Woodstock legends will continue to share the stage with talents from all over the musical world.
The Maverick Concert Hall is located at 120 Maverick Road, Woodstock. Reserved seating and general admission tickets for all concerts are available online here. Maverick Family Concerts (Saturday afternoons on August 6th, 13th and September 3rd) are free for ages 16 and under and $5 for adults.
The 2022 Party On The Patio lineup has been announced, hosted by the Waterhole Music Lounge in Saranac Lake. The 14 annual concert series will take place outdoors, every Thursday night 6-10 P.M. beginning April 28 through October 6.
The Waterhole Music Lounge is the premiere live music venue of the Adirondacks located on Main Street in downtown Saranac Lake. It is stocked with two bars and extensive outdoor patio space, and it occupies three stories. It is a spot where locals and tourists alike go to enjoy good company and great music.
This year’s lineup has 24 bands spanning multiple states including Georgia, Kentucky, and Missouri. The genres span from ragtime to indie folk-rock, and even some roots and blues.
The lineup kicks off with the James Daniel Band on April 28, then goes to Organ Fairchild on May 5, and NYS March Madness 2022 winners Hanzolo will also perform on September 22.
Another Michael returned to the Capital District for the first time in a long time to perform live with Bread Boy at No Fun! in Troy. The now Philly-based indie rock band was formed in Albany by lead singer and guitarist Michael Doherty, guitarist and vocalist Alenni Davis, and bassist Nick Sebastiano.
Another Michael has also featured Noah Dardaris on drums for close to two years. The group has also worked with Jacob Crofoot and Red Cumpston of Bread Boy. This connection and shared influences were evident on Monday night when the two bands took the stage. Bread Boy started the show with a 45 minute set that was well received by the No Fun! crowd, and which for many, was their introduction to Jacob’s music.
The band took the stage and started their set with a brand new single titled ‘Water Pressure‘ that was officially released just a few hours before the start of the show at No Fun! Another Michael performed another new song later in the night, ‘Seafood,’ and both new songs fit well into the group’s discography. As of late, and the band seems to have found a real groove in their songwriting, and are making consistently fun and upbeat indie rock tracks. For those unfamiliar, Another Michael’s music has a sound that is truly their own, and is best experienced by listening.
In the clip below, from Run For Cover Records YouTube Channel, you can watch and listen to Another Michael perform a number of songs from New Music and Big Pop which were played on Monday night.
Another Michael played a number of tracks from their first full-length album, which you can stream and purchase on Another Michael’s Bandcamp. Their set included ‘Row,’ ‘New Music,’ ‘I Know You’re Wrong,’ ‘What The Hell is Going On?’ and ‘Big Pop.’ These tracks all build upon Michael Doherty’s melodic and friendly falsetto at their core. Seemingly every Another Michael song has a fun and optimistic sound that fans gravitate toward. The full band behind Michael only added to these qualities, and the group bounced around and shared their enjoyment of the music with the Troy crowd.
Monday’s No Fun! show built up to a reunion on stage when Another Michael brought Jacob and Red of Bread Boy back on stage to play guitar. Both musicians have spent time playing with Another Michael in the past, and the Bread Boy duo looked right at home on stage with them. The energy from the packed stage spread throughout the room, and fans began to move around as the band rocked their way into the final songs. The night eventually came to an end with Another Michael playing two of their biggest crowd favorites: ‘Big Pop’ and ‘About.’
Another Michael have been writing new music lately, to keep up to date with their latest releases and to help support the band, visit their Bandcamp page. Another Michael’s music is also available to stream wherever you listen to music, and you can listen now on their Spotify artist page. You can also listen to and support Bread Boy on Bandcamp and Spotify. No Fun! has shows almost every night, every week, and admission is free for many of them. To see all of their upcoming events, be sure to check out No Fun!’s website.
Setlist(partial): Water Pressure, Row, New Music, I Know You’re Wrong, Seafood, What The Hell is Going On?, Big Pop, About
The 2022 Caroga Arts Summer Music Festival was announced, featuring over 35 concerts with 20 guest artists and nearly 100 CLMF Resident Artists.
Kyle Barrett Price, Founder and Artistic Director of the Caroga Arts Collective, said he was excited about the festival.
“We’re excited to present the most extravagant summer season we’ve had in our eleven year history. We’re immensely grateful to Zash for sponsoring many of our Saturday concerts at Sherman’s, which feature national touring artists coming to the region for the first time. We have something for everyone – classical, blues, jazz, bluegrass, heavy metal, rock, funk, world music – you name it!
Back by popular demand include saxophonist Eddie Barbash with the KASA Quartet and the Mike Block Trio. Also performing is the fast-rising American Modern Opera Company (AMOC). The AMOC’s co-artistic director and composer Matthew Aucoin will lead the Caroga Arts Ensemble in playing Mozart operas to modern operas.
During the 2022 Caroga Arts Music Festival, the festival will visit neighboring venues around the area. Also, new this summer is the CLMF Lesson & Ensembles Program, which invites community members of all ages to come to participate in general music workshops and individual or small group lessons for an instrument led by Caroga Arts artists.
Tickets for the 2022 Caroga Arts Music Festival will be available on May 20 here.
Caroga Arts 2022 Season Schedule
SHERMAN’S CONCERTS Free carousel rides will be offered to start 2 hours before each show. Tickets will be available starting May 20th at carogaarts.org
Sat, May 28 – Memorial Day Weekend Concert, Jocelyn & Chris, Insolent Willies Fri, Jul 1 – American Modern Opera Company, Utica Dance with Keir GoGwilt Sat, Jul 2 – Red, White, BLUES & BLUEGRASS, North & South Dakotas, FLAME! The Band, Erin Harkes Sat, Jul 16 – 80’s Metal Night: The Ultimate 80’s Rock Show with Tommy V Live Wed, Jul 20 – Sam Reider & The Human Hands Fri, Jul 22 – Caroga Arts Gala with Eddie Barbash & KASA Quartet Sat, Jul 23 – Cory Wong with Caroga Arts Ensemble, Mike Block Trio Wed, Jul 27 – Rushad Eggleston Fri, Jul 29 – Caroga Arts Ensemble Reimagining Beethoven and Shostakovich Sat, Jul 30 – The Bacon Brothers Out of Memory Tour with Caroga Arts Ensemble Wed, Aug 3 – Robyn Adele Anderson Sat, Aug 6 – Kids Carousel Concert: Bill & Finnegan Ackerbauer Sat, Aug 6 – Sherman’s JazzFest (Artists to be announced) Wed, Aug 10 – Afro-Caribbean Jazz Collective Fri, Aug 12 – Caroga Arts Ensemble plays Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 Sat, Aug 13 – SAUNDERSFEST (Artists to be announced) Fri, Aug 19 – Scenes & Stories from the Opera, Caroga Arts Ensemble conducted by Matthew Aucoin Sat, Aug 20 – Kids Carousel Concert: Cara’s Caterpillars Sat, Aug 20 – Marvin and his Music: A Celebration of America’s Composer featuring guest vocalists and the Caroga Arts Ensemble led by J. Ernest Green Sun, Aug 21 – Brandon “Taz” Niederauer Sat, Sep 3 – Labor Day weekend concert, The Ultimates! with fireworks following the show Fri, Sep 30 – Celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month with Alex Torres & His Latin Orchestra with salsa dancing lessons prior to the show and more
CAROGA LAKE MUSIC FESTIVAL ON TOUR Thu, Jul 21 – Caroga Arts Ensemble featuring Eddie Barbash at Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts Sun, Jul 24 – Caroga Arts Ensemble featuring Eddie Barbash at Peck’s Lake Marina Thu, Jul 28 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at The Glove Theater Thu, Aug 4 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at The Arkell Museum Fri, Aug 5 – CLMF Returns to its Roots: Caroga Chapel 100th Anniversary Sun, Aug 7 – Caroga Chapel 100th Anniversary Service Sun, Aug 7 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at Mayfield Presbyterian Church, presented by SVAN Thu, Aug 11 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at Johnstown Midsummer Concert Series Sun, Aug 14 – The Barge at Canada Lake Store & Marine Tue, Aug 16 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at The Otesaga Resort Hotel, presented by Cooperstown Summer Music Festival Thu, Aug 18 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at Caroga Museum Sat, Aug 27 – Caroga Arts Ensemble at Maverick Concerts Sun, Aug 28 – KASA Quartet, Postlude at Maverick Concerts
The Motet came into Brooklyn Bowl like a funk train on Friday, April 15, inviting everyone aboard to boogie. With Eggy as a perfect opener for the dance formula that is Motet, the two bands blended perfectly together for a show the fans would never forget.
Eggy has grown tremendously taking the jam scene by storm with their crisp vocals, fun lyrics and type two jam capability. It has been my distinct pleasure to watch this band grow and I am so excited for what their future music will bring.
Motet welcomed Mike Dillon aboard the funk train as the conductor of percussion and boy did he get that engine grooving! Without lead singer Lyle Divinsky, Motet steered closer to their original jam roots and took the fans on an excursion of funk.
The Motet at Brooklyn Bowl Setlists
April 15
Set: Evil Twin, Cloak and Dagger, Can’t Fool Me, Kneebone, Rippin’ Herb, All Day, ‘79, Draccus, Contraband, Sunshine, Fountain, Dance Floor#, Wearing it Out%, Nemesis Encore: Drumz > Cheap Shit #Zappa cover %Ramsey Lewis cover, whole show with Mike Dillon on percussion
April 16
Set: Cretan, Sunshine, Nemesis, Speed of Light, Evil Twin, Back Seat, Fearless, Take Control#, Shade, Drumz, All Day, Funky Weekend%, Keep On Don’t Stoppin’ Encore: Evil Wicked Bad & Nasty^ #Juno What cover %Mint Condition cover ^Manzel cover
In the introduction to her masterpiece on 1980s New York bohemia, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, the photographer Nan Goldin writes, “I want to show my life as it is. Without glamorization and without glorification.” This commitment to neither life’s imperfections nor its grandiosity is the driving force behind the upcoming debut album from Richie Quake.
Credit: Jesse De Florio
With the working title “Glam” and a tentative summer release date, Richie’s work is a treatise not on life’s extremes but on its regularity and consistency. Goldin’s work documented the simple act of being. To her what people did was less important than the fact that they simply were. Richie Quake, in his 21st century version of Goldin’s downtown New York lifestyle hopes to replicate the results.
I want to show what my world looks like, Richie says. Without glamorization or glorification, just kind of exactly as it is.
Who is Richie Quake?
Quake is a musician from Brooklyn teetering on the edge of industry success, having recently signed to Nas’ Mass Appeal Records. He has an effortless cool that either comes from, or led to, his musical upbringing as a New York nightlife DJ. Wearing a white hoodie and black bucket hat, from which peeked his dark brown curls, he has an unaffected nonchalance that oscillates between the warmth of a best friend and the aspirational distance of an older cousin you idolize.
His indie pop music features down tempo synths, a penchant for lyrical simplicity and a prevalence of rock instrumentation, all of which forge a unique sound. A promising start for an artist heading into their debut label release. More than his music what Richie possesses is a direction, a certitude in his artistic vision. He knows what stories he wants to tell. They’re about him, his life, his acts of being—just like Goldin.
Crawl is the latest single from Richie Quake’s upcoming debut album “Glam”.
There’s no songs about having a million dollars and being at the club and there’s no songs about something that’s like extremely dramatic, or extremely high, or extremely low, Quake relays.
Richie Quake’s Debut Album “Glam”
When I asked him about the new album, he was unusually hesitant to share. His answers suddenly interrupted by long pauses mid-sentence, a wandering gaze away from the Zoom camera, and a –for once — slightly awkward, but still endearing, nervous tilt of the head. He finally cut himself off to say “he had a whole thing” for the album but was unsure how much he wanted to share.
The “whole thing” was Goldin, the Ballad of Sexual Dependency, and New York art scene’s past and present. As soon as Goldin came up, Richie’s mannerisms reverted back to his usual quiet confidence, his knowing eyes and light smile perennial etched on his lips. It was clear he was sharing a long thought about ideas and that these ideas were the organizing principle of his work.
This is my life, Richie says with a deliberate sincerity. This is my friends. This is my relationships. Really what I’m trying to show is really raw humanity in a way that’s not trying to posture as anything else.
Or as Goldin would say, “This is not a bleak world but one in which there is an awareness of pain, a quality of introspection.”
If the vision for Glam is an introspective, yet expository, examination of Richie’s own life then it must also include the people he shares it with; the friends with whom he shares his own self, which ultimately comprises the album’s creative spine.
These pictures may be an invitation to my world, writes Goldin, but they were taken so that I could see the people in them.
Again, Goldin’s work reverberating throughout Richie’s. “How I relate to my feelings, you know, is by characterizing them in in a relationship,” Quake analyzes.
The new New York Music Scene
The self-described “emotional guy” needs the other people in his life to tell the story of himself. It’s a beautiful sentiment, that were it not said with self-effacing honesty, earnestness — and frankly, charm — it might indicate a lack of self-actualization or even co-dependency. Instead, it showcases an artist who is deeply in touch with the core themes of his inspirations. Goldin once said her photography “[came] out of relationships, not observation.” Her talents and creativity extended beyond her work, much like Richie’s. Both contributed to the artistic milieu of New York. Goldin through her almost radical openness and Richie through his own natural gregariousness. In other words, he’s such a cool dude that he’s building a whole scene around him.
“Richie really started to cultivate the scene,” explains Morning Silk, one of Richie’s producers and friends.
Morning Silk is a slightly spacey, experimental musician whose talent as a producer is only exceeded by his admiration for Richie. The two connected through digital happenstance after Morning Silk commented on a Tik Tok Richie made. Richie then took the initiative to scroll through Morning Silk’s profile, get a feel for his music and invited him to a studio session. The two met for the first time at Morning Silk’s makeshift recording studio in Ridgewood, Queens, where they recorded “Never See You”. The song would make its way onto Richie’s latest EP, Voyager. Within two months of meeting one another they would record the entire EP.
Richie Quake released the EP “Voyager” in 2021.
As Richie’s stature in the New York music scene grew it brought a newfound drawing power, allowing him to handpick his creative partners. He never cared about their industry status, or even if they were talented—that was table stakes—he cared about their commitment. That is the true entry price to the nascent “alternative rock, indie pop scene.” And it is a price that must be paid daily.
“I float around with a scene of New York creative people who are just all artists,” Richie explains.
I don’t really know anybody who has a job, a nine to five, like a career. Everyone I know is kind of just always in the pursuit of making art and in the pursuit of being creative.
Another of Richie’s frequent collaborators and recent friends is Middle Part. A long haired, slightly schlubby artist whose “super fresh friendship” with Richie regularly consists of “three-day sleepovers.” If Richie is the scene’s guide, then Middle Part is its compass, pointing towards artistic integrity. His disheveled bedroom has the words “Middle Part” spray painted in giant black letters above his bed as if the constant presence of his stage name were a daily reminder of the of the artistic commitment his adopted identity entailed. His gruff attitude belies his deeply emotional music (his superbly crafted single “&Cry” surpassed one million Spotify streams in March) and infectious dedication to an artist’s life. “[Posers] don’t live their art,” Middle Part inveighs.
They don’t actually work hard enough to be considered an artist. You can make music, you can be a painter, you can be a photographer, whatever the fuck but, if you’re not living and dying by it, then what’s the point?
The intensity and matter-of-factness with which he issued his proclamation felt like this was a shared sentiment among the members of New York’s newest music scene, even if the words may have been his alone. It was hard not to feel inspired by his assuredness.
Morning Silk learned to adopt that same dedication from Richie; who was, yet again, guiding his peers, shaping the burgeoning scene in the image of his own values. “Don’t ever do something musically that you don’t want to do,” said Morning Silk, recounting Richie’s advice. “Don’t work with artists you don’t want to work with. It’s a waste of time. Even if you get paid it doesn’t matter. [Richie] was on the brink of being super broke because he did that.”
It’s a classic mark of the creative lifestyle, to believe in an artistic vision even when tangible, everyday realties such as money risk compromising it. If that’s the norm for passionate artists, then being enough of a visionary or talent to spearhead a movement is not. Especially in New York where, since before even the days of Goldin, creatives aspire to participate in an arts scene much less establish one.
“When he’s in a space, you feel comfortable, cool,” confessed an adoring Morning Silk.
Whenever he’s around you it feels right. It feels like you’re doing the right thing, like you’re in the right place. I feel like that’s the best way to describe it.
Richie did so because, aside from his obvious talent, he’s charismatic to the point of inspiring devotion.
It’s a testament to Richie’s qualities as an artist that his collaborators have so fully invested themselves in his own creative vision. But equally an endorsement of the person and his ability to inspire their personal lives as well as their musical lives. The unglamorized “self” that Richie is so fixated on transfusing into his music is of an individual so brimming with confidence that it permeates those in his orbit. Through sheer surety he’s able to alter the self of others. Were Goldin able to photograph Richie and Morning Silk in the recording studio her camera might also capture the invisible shedding of one man’s insecurities through camaraderie alone.
Richie’s Distinct Sound
This indescribable quality he possesses saturates his music, with a distinctiveness as palpable as the one that characterizes the musician. Simply put, it is a vibe.
Not in the contemporary sense, co-opted to describe life’s mundanities “that latte gave me bad vibes” or “this outfit has good vibes.” But in the genuine literary sense: it’s an emotional state felt by, and shared with, others.
The melancholy infused pop listenability of Richie’s music is the observable, corporeal manifestation of this vibe. But it comes from his talent for identifying the best qualities from different musical genres—R&B’s crooning, pop’s capacity for earworms, rock’s dramatic guitar riffs—and combining them into a cohesive sound. This genuine genre-blending makes his music not a hodge-podge of influences but a distillation of inspirations. He highlights the strengths of his source material without ever weakening his own originality, making his music more Six Million Dollar Man than Frankenstein’s monster. As a result, Richie’s music contains not just uniqueness but a novel uniqueness. Something so new that as of now, it cannot be accurately described. In fact, it will likely be used to describe other music in the future.
Chedda, Richie’s energetic sound engineer on Glam and Voyager once described Glam’s first single, “That’s Not Love”, with an oddly specific but apt comparison—a love story gone wrong but that he, nonetheless, longs for.
I feel like it’s one of those movies that the whole plotline is based on this dysfunctional love between two people in New York City smoking cigarettes and staying up way too late and doing-some-reckless-ass-shit type relationship. But it works. And it’s beautiful in its own way. And in the end, it just, somehow works out. And [you say] ‘damn, I want that type of love.
Chedda, Producer
The familiarity Richie has with New York isn’t just lip service from his affable producer. For Chedda the source of the signature Richie Quake sound is precisely his ability to meld the culture of New York scene with his own music. Richie is a part of the vast talent and creativity that characterize the city’s melting pot—hip hop, Village bohemia, Brooklyn hipsters, and LES skaters—all of which are perfectly understood and delicately balanced by Richie in a two minute and forty-one second song.
Richie is so in tune with and indebted to, New York itself that for the release of Glam he’s considering issuing a magazine — also titled Glam — dedicated to New York life. The idea isn’t just to honor the scene but to pay homage to it as the source of his own work. In essence, “Glam” the magazine, would serve as an abstract for Glam, the album.
Glam is a love letter to creative collaboration and artistic liberation because it was birthed from it. Richie says he “feels like an executive producer” on the album, bringing artists together and guiding them towards a shared objective. By loosening the previously controlling and virtually secretive nature of his recording process he’s shed the insecurities that often plague young artists.
“That’s Not Love” is the first single from Richie Quake’s debut album “Glam”.
“The bouncing of ideas is what provides a lot of clarity,” Richie said stolidly. “I would say the best part is there’s not a lot of dwelling. You’re not like, ‘Is this good? Is this bad? What do I do here?’ You always have somebody to ask.”
The Triangle
Towards the end of our interview Richie explained, with great sincerity and a few laughs, what he called the triangle analogy. He said that often in an artist’s life the people they work with can either be their friends, be successful, or make great music. The conventional thinking is that it’s only possible to obtain two of the triangle’s three sides, a compromise always looming. For once though, Richie feels he has all three and when something so rare and potentially fleeting crosses an artist’s path — especially right before their debut album — it’s worth safeguarding. Like Goldin with her camera in her bohemian enclave, it’s a lifestyle that demands art be lived and shared not simply created.
“It’s a cool way to be,” Richie mused, with a distinct air of gratitude. “I hang out with artists every day. The only people that I see and hang out with are other artists that I like and that I’m inspired by.”
Glam is an endeavor that stretches beyond Spotify streams, venue bookings, or merch sales. It will leave behind something more eternal that will get stitched into the fabric of the city. Ultimately, Richie tried and succeeded at making New York a little more creative. “It’s kind of what I always wanted my life to be when I idealized the life of an artist,” Richie ends.
And if you have a life committed to, and supported by, art, then, at the end, does the industry success matter? Even if, judging by the music, it’s likely coming.
The City Parks Foundation announced the SummerStage 2022 lineup on Tuesday. This year’s performing arts festival will feature 90 free and benefit concerts in 12 different parks across New York City’s five boroughs.
Fans attend a George Clinton concert at SummerStage 2021.
Shows will be held at the SummerStage flagship venue at Rumsey Playfield in Central Park; Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem; Von King Park and The Coney Island Amphitheater in Brooklyn; Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens; Crotona Park in the Bronx; and Corporal Thompson Park in Staten Island.
The first shows in the lineup are two benefit concerts (which are not free to the public) in Central Park. Aurora presents the Gods We Can Trust tour/ Sub Urban will open the concert series on June 4. Followed by Modest Mouse and The Cribs on June 8.
Yo La Tengo performing at last year’s SummerStage.
Summerstage 2022 will kick off its free shows, also in Central Park, with an opening night concert on June 11 with jazz legend Herbie Hancock.
This year SummerStage plans to return for a six-show series at The Coney Island Amphitheater. The most notable of which is the Spread Love Hip-Hop Jam Hosted by Ralph McDaniels and DJ Scratch on August 11.
Another highlight will be the 30th Annual Charlie Parker Jazz Festival on Aug. 26-27 in Marcus Garvey Park and Tompkins Square Park. Headliners for this year’s rendition are composer Terence Blanchard, jazz singer Jazzmeia Horn, and avant-garde saxophonist Archie Shepp.
Outside of its numerous musical offerings SummerStage 2022 will also screen the Oscar award-winning documentary Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) for free on June 17 in Marcus Garvey Park. The documentary, produced by The Roots’ Questlove, tells the story of the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, which was held 50 years ago in the same park.
SummerStage returns with a full slate of shows this year after reducing their number of performances last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, it was cancelled altogether.
“We are so happy to be back in local neighborhood parks after a two-year hiatus” said Heather Lubov, City Parks Foundation’s Executive Director. “Parks have always been neighborhood gathering spaces, but the pandemic brought to light just how absolutely critical parks are to our city’s health.”
Photo by: Buscar Photo (www.buscarphoto.com)
This year’s lineups reflect the diversity that New York is known for. Artists performing this year will be 52% woman or non-binary and 95% of performers are BIPOC.
“Each season, SummerStage has always presented a festival full of talent as diverse and broad as the communities that host these performances in parks across all five boroughs,” said Erika Elliott, Executive Artistic Director of SummerStage. “The artists we are presenting this season not only represent their own distinct cultures but reflect the global diversity that truly matches the spirit of New York City.”
The full lineup can be found on the SummerStage 2022 website.
Update 4/28: Due to illness, Sonia Manzano will not be appearing at UAlbany on Saturday, April 30, 2022 as previously planned. The 4pm Creative Life Conversation at the UAlbany Performing Arts Center for which Manzano was to be the guest is canceled.The 7:30pm performance of Selected Shorts will take place as planned at the UAlbany Performing Arts Center. Actors Patricia Kalember (The Tick) and Bhavesh Patel (The Good Wife) will be joined by a third actor to be named shortly who will replace Manzano.
Sonia Manzano who, for almost five decades played Maria on Sesame Street, will make two appearances at the UAlbany Performing Arts Center this week, both on Saturday, April 30th.
Manzano’s first appearance will be at 4 PM, where she will be the final guest of The Creative Life: A Conversation Series at UAlbany. Here, Manzano will discuss her creativity, craft, and career with host Joe Donahue from WAMC. This event will be free and open to the public. No tickets or reservations will be required.
Her second appearance will then be at 7:30 PM. Here, Manzano will be participating in a series called Selected Shorts. Selected Shorts is a series in which prominent creatives read classic and new works of fiction. Manzano will be reading alongside Patricia Kalember, famous for her role in Sisters, and Bhavesh Patel.
Photo by Neilson Barnard/Getty Images
Sonia Manzano will read a special selection of brand-new work by authors Carmen Maria Machado, Jess Walter, Jenny Allen, Etgar Keret, and Lauren Groff commissioned for the 35th anniversary of Selected Shorts.
Tickets are still available and are $10-$15 in advance and $15-$20 on the day of the show through the UAlbany Performing Art Center’s box office at (518) 442-3997 or tickets@albany.edu.
moe. has announced they will play a handful of tour dates for this summer, joined by Suke Cerulo on guitar and Nate Wilson on keys for a majority of the shows.
The shows were announced as “for the remainder of the year” meaning moe.rons will only have 8 chances to catch moe., following shows at Summer Camp Music Festival in May, and Norfolk Harborfest and City Bisco in June.
A free show on July 6 in Albany will take place at the Empire State Plaza, with a performance at Levitate in Marshfield, MA the next day, followed by Great South Bay Music Festival in Patchogue. They’ll then return to New York for two shows over Labor Day weekend in Lake George.
Sitting out the run is moe. guitarist Chuck Garvey as he continues to recover from a stroke. Chuck is making progress but will need some more time to get back to the stage with his bandmates. moe. hopes you’ll join them for a celebration of life, music and the fa.moe.ly they have built over the past 30 years. An artist pre-sale begins on Wednesday, April 27 at noon at moe.org
We want to thank our famoe.ly once again for the love and support you’ve shown Chuck over these past five months. He’s continuing to get better day by day, and your thoughts and energy have kept our spirits up. It’s become clear over the past number of years that you can never know what tomorrow will bring, which makes the chance to come together as a community that much more meaningful.
7/6 – Albany, NY * 7/7 – Buffalo, NY 7/9 – Patchogue, NY (Great South Bay Music Festival) 7/10 – Seaside Heights, NJ 9/2 – Jay, VT + 9/3-9/4 – Lake George, NY ^ 9/23-24 – St. Helena, CA
* Free Show + Tickets and lodging packages on-sale the week of 5/2 ^ Official announcement and on-sale date TBD
Saturday, April 23rd marked the fourth and final night of the rescheduled New Year’s Eve run for Phish at their unofficial East Coast headquarters, Madison Square Garden. The band left nothing to chance and delighted fans with one last show before Summer Tour commences in a few months.
The first set had a decidedly old school flavor to it, with a dash of music from the future thanks to a new Sci-Fi Soldier wrinkle that was brought into play. A classic “Fluffhead” opener went off without a hitch and was greeted loudly by the Garden crowd. Next, Phish brought out another signature tune in “Mike’s Song” and delivered a proper “Mike’s Groove” with the mesmerizing “I Am Hydrogen” placed in the middle.
In keeping with the old school flavor, “Simple” came out next, no doubt spurred on by the new mayor of New York CIty’s Twitter usage. As the “Simple” jam stretched out and started to become anything but that, vocals emerged from the band and a distinct “Egg In A Hole” jam developed, the first time it’s been played since the Vegas Halloween run of last year where it was first spawned. A late set “Divided Sky” was perfectly placed before the set closed out in raucous fashion with the arena rocker that is “First Tube.”
Phish’s last set of the run began with a scintillating “No Men’s In No Man’s Land” that spawned a sprawling jam. The set also featured a memorable “Piper” that once again seemed perfectly dropped into place and contained a discernable “Dave’s Energy Guide” jam or tease, depending on who you talk to. Page McConnell and Trey Anastasio each also got to feature some of their personal material as well thanks to the pulsating “I Always Wanted It This Way” and the introspective “Lonely Trip.” An unexpected encore pairing of “Wilson” > “David Bowie” brought one last taste of magic to the Garden before a euphoric “More” officially closed out the run.
Setlist via Phish.net
Set 1: Fluffhead, Mike’s Song > I Am Hydrogen > Weekapaug Groove, Simple -> Egg in a Hole Jam -> Simple, Divided Sky, First Tube
Set 2: No Men In No Man’s Land -> Prince Caspian > Piper > Gotta Jibboo, I Always Wanted It This Way > Lonely Trip, Walls of the Cave
Encore: Wilson > David Bowie, More
This was the the rescheduled date for the show that had been postponed due to the Omicron variant of COVID-19 surge in New York City in December of 2021. Trey teased San-Ho-Zay in No Men in No Man’s Land, Dave’s Energy Guide in Piper, and In Memory of Elizabeth Reed in David Bowie.