Category: Regions

  • Judy Collins Releases ‘Spellbound’, First Album Of All Her Own Compositions

    Folk singer Judy Collins is releasing her 29th album titled Spellbound, filled with all her compositions, a first for Collins.

    On the 6th she released “When I Was A Girl In Colorado,” a nostalgic slow song about a young Collins living in Colorado. The song is haunting and beautiful, with soft yet vibrant vocals.

    judy collins spellbound
    Judy Collins photo by Shervin Lainez

    Collins began her musical career in the 60s playing folk music in Colorado and Connecticut. She made her break in Greenwich Village and released her first album A Maid of Constant Sorrow in 1961. Over her life, she has played with icons like Stephen Stills, Randy Newman, and Joni Mitchell.

    Collins spoke about making Spellbound and said that she created it because of this time of uncertainty.

    They say after the plague came the Renaissance. Now felt like the perfect time to make this record because, after all that’s happened in the world, we need something beautiful and inspirational to lift us up.

    The album’s name comes from her pure love of the outdoors, and how it lured her to consider being a park ranger. On the record, she also worked with different musicians. These included Alan Silverman and Ari Hest– Hest being nominated along with Collins for a duet record at the GRAMMYs.

    Collins has had a busy past couple of years, releasing five albums in five years and recently launching a podcast, Since You’ve Asked, where she talks about her prolific life with a number of her favorite musicians.

    judy collins spellbound

    Last month, she returned to live to perform at New York’s Town Hall, centered around her album Winter Stories.

    Judy Collins is also going on tour to accompany the release of Spellbound and will be stopping at two NY dates, and tickets to purchase can be found here.

    Judy Collins 2022 Tour Dates

    January 7, 2022 – Sharon L. Morse Performing Arts Center in The Villages, FL

    January 12, 2022 – Key West Theater in Key West, FL

    January 14, 2022 – Lillian S. Wells Hall at The Parker in Fort Lauderdale, FL

    January 16, 2022 -Bilheimer Capitol Theatre in Clearwater, FL

    January 26, 2022 – City Winery Atlanta in Atlanta, GA

    February 11, 2022 – Carriage House Theater, Montalvo Arts Center in Saratoga, CA

    February 12, 2022 – Carriage House Theater, Montalvo Arts Center in Saratoga, CA

    February 13, 2022 – SOKA PAC in Aliso Viejo, CA

    February 15, 2022 – Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara, CA

    February 18, 2022 – Blue Note Hawaii in Honolulu, HI

    February 19, 2022 – Blue Note Hawaii in Honolulu, HI

    February 23, 2022 – Edmonds Center for the Arts in Edmonds, WA

    February 25, 2022 – Washington Center for the Performing Arts in Olympia, WA

    February 26, 2022 – Admiral Theatre in Bremerton, WA

    February 28, 2022 – Alberta Rose Theatre in Portland, OR

    March 1, 2022 – Alberta Rose Theatre in Portland, OR

    March 2, 2022 – Tower Theatre in Bend, OR

    March 4, 2022 – One World Theater in Austin, TX

    March 7, 2022 – Lensic Performing Arts Center in Santa Fe, NM

    March 8, 2022 – Fox Tucson Theatre in Tucson, AZ

    March 10, 2022 – Celebrity Theatre in Phoenix, AZ

    March 11, 2022 – McCallum Theatre for the Performing Arts in Palm Desert, CA

    March 13, 2022 – College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, CA

    March 18, 2022 – Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood, NJ

    March 24, 2022 – Fox Theatre in Hutchinson, KS

    March 26, 2022 – The Stanley – Estes Park, CO

    March 29, 2022 – Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville, TN

    March 31, 2022 – Grand Theatre in Frankfort, KY

    April 22, 2022 – State Theatre in Portland, ME

    April 23, 2022 – 1932 Criterion Theatre in Bar Harbor, ME

    April 28, 2022 – Homer Center For The Arts in Homer, NY

    April 29, 2022 – Sugarloaf PAC in Chester, NY

    May 18, 2022 – St. Cecilia Music Center in Grand Rapids, MI

    May 22, 2022 – Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, KS

    July 22, 2022 – Cain Park in Cleveland Heights, OH

    July 24, 2022 – Botanical Gardens – Denver, CO

    Collins and Hest performing a song off of their album.
  • “We’re about to turn it all up”: Welcome To The Hippie Tribe

    To many, the term “hippie” is often associated with counterculture, drug-induced dreamers. Sure, they may have the right societal ideals, but they are often followed by eccentric and unconventional behavior with abstract resolutions instead of anything concrete. Others turn the hippie persona into an identity, becoming a caricature that further discredits a way of life that has many valid ideologies.

    As the Hippie persona loses credibility within contemporary culture, up-and-coming duo, dp.thuH and blond.bomber, are looking to revive what it means to be against the grain. Collectively, the Pittsburgh (blond) and Toledo (dp) bred artists are recognized as Hippie Tribe. A fitting name as their blend of rock & roll, hip hop, alternative music along with their live instrumentation and overall mix of musical elements create a magnetic sound that sways further away from popular contemporaries with each listen. 

    Now, different does not always mean better. Yet, their organic approach to their sound is a direct result of the duo’s realization that some spaces aren’t meant for them and that their niche isn’t any particular sound, but rather an encapsulation of their influences. They don’t occupy a sub-genre of hip hop, or Rock or R&B, they are those genres and whatever else they choose to become.

    Operating out of Brooklyn, the duo feel as though they have the world at their fingertips, Assured about what they bring to the table. The duo answered some questions for NYS Music.

    NYS Music: What part of Brooklyn are you guys from?

    dp.thuH: We stay out in Bedstuy. We aren’t originally from BK. I’m from Toledo, Ohio and Niko’s [blond.bomber] from Pittsburgh.

    NYS Music: How did you guys come together?

    blond.bomber: We’ve been making music together for about five years now. We met playing ball in college. We spent a lot of time before we decided to make music just talking about it. Freestyling at parties, chatting on why certain albums were better than others. It all happened real organic like.

    NYS Music: Your music is very diverse and does not confine itself to any genre. How much do you feel if (any) did your environment play a part in that?

    dp.thuH: It played a huge role. And it still does. Growing up in gospel choirs naturally shaped our eclectic ears. You can hear hella genres in gospel music – blues, jazz, funk, rock. Once I got my own headphones and smart phones came around, it was over. So our music is a reflection of the sounds we’ve been hearing our whole lives.

    blond.bomber: And playing instruments and producing all of our music gives us an advantage too, we can really manipulate and shape our music so that it’s super palatable to the average listener. But still unique too.

    NYS Music: Your LP on Apple Music is labeled as “Alternative Rap” but what would you guys label your style as? 

    dp.thuH: Honestly, I don’t really know. It fluctuates so much. Hip-Pop&B? Alternative Punk Rap? It’s just different for real. In the best ways, like it’s uniquely refreshing.

    NYS Music: You call yourselves “Hippie Tribe,” is that because you guys see yourselves as musical outcasts? Or different from the norm? Even your individual names (dp.thuH & blond.bomber) 

    dp.thuH: I guess so, we definitely go against the grain with our shit. But I think I felt like an outcast my whole life. And it took me some time to accept it too but I realized I was moving further from my purpose the more I tried to integrate myself into places that were never meant for me. Truthfully, it’s not on purpose. I think we’re different because unfortunately, a lot of this world is made up of bullshitters and people looking for photo ops. People who like to hear themselves talk and say things just to say they said them later. We’re not just being different because it’s the cool thing to do. We got chosen for this shit – that’s why we’re different. And that’s why we take it dead ass serious. It’s our job to push the art further, really push boundaries.

    blond.bomber: This is just how our brains work. And it’s beyond the music like Dee said, we’re mad unorthodox without trying. We speak in cursive and dream abstract. I don’t claim to be cool or none of that shit and I don’t try to be. I just know God loves me and my shorties love me and I try to treat every breath like it’s my last. We’re here to leave a legacy and you can’t do that tryna fit in. our homies say it all the time, we’ve just always been different.

    blond.bomber

    NYS Music: Describe your songwriting process.

    dp.thuH: I think I’m like 70/30 when it comes to freestyling versus writing so it doesn’t take us long to make records once we have production, or vice-versa. It isn’t hard to produce once we have lyrics or a melody. We feel like we’re vessels so producing records top to bottom comes naturally. And there’s no ego in this so if one of us is like, ‘yo, I feel like you should change the flow here’ or ‘I think we should find a stronger way to say this bar,’ the other is all ears. It’s all about putting the best product together possible.

    NYS Music: Why only 2 songs for Gullah Punk: mod 1?

    blond.bomber: Gullah Punk: mod 1, is the first of several capsules we’ll be dropping. We’ve always been pretty eclectic with our sound but over the past couple of years, we’ve been really focused on creating dynamics within minimalistic production. We love to rap and we love to rage so rock and hip-hop tethered naturally. This two-pack is littered with those little moments of perfectly balanced raw emotion, vulnerability and disorderliness. These capsules will be both auditory and visual too, we’re releasing a series of film shorts leading up to a short film. We pitched our film to a few directors and now we’re blessed to have a whole ass incredible production company behind us believing in our vision and mission. Along with the drops, we also put together a few community events in Bed-stuy. So this music project has sort of turned into a living, breathing movement.

    dp.thuH: The goal for this particular project rollout and accompanying events is two-fold; We love music and the arts so if our presence and efforts allow kids to discover a new passion or encourage others in the community to pursue theirs, perfect. The second piece is probably most important for us… we want to ignite a new mindset in our people that together, we have the tools necessary to rewrite our fate. The philosophy is simple – “Kill your demons”. But in order for us to get that done, we got to shine a light into the dark. 

    dp.thuH

    NYS Music: Do you guys consider yourselves abstract artists? 

    dp.thuH: To us, we’re just doing our thing. I kinda feel like we’re Queen when they first wanted to drop “Bohemian Rhapsody.” They’re banging coffee mugs against chandeliers and shit, singing until their voices can’t crack any more. And all that “abstract” stuff was just their process. It’s exactly the only way they knew how to get out whatever it was they were hearing in their heads. So I don’t know if we’re abstract artists. I don’t know if that’s something we can even say because it looks like 1+1 to us.

    NYS Music: Is there any particular artist that influenced you guys’ sound?

    blond.bomber: Particularly, no. And that’s not to say that we don’t have influences – it’s actually the opposite. We get influenced everyday by everything. You could be sitting at the park and words come to you or, with your homies or, having sex or, dreaming. We just let things flow as organically as possible. So, sometimes Dee will have a beat that inspires me or someone will come in with some bars they came up with on the random. We really just let the universe decide.

    dp.thuH: Yea it’s hard to name particular artists because it’s such a fusion of hella sounds. But lately we’ve been listening to a lot of N.E.R.D, Nirvana, Yves Tumor, and Willow…

    blond.bomber: Haley Williams. 

    dp.thuH: Yup. We’ve been getting some gnarly sounds out of it.

    NYS Music: What are your goals in the music industry?

    dp.thuH: Because we’re super-producers, we’ll be a powerhouse label soon, with some of the dopest artists under our wing, all while producing and writing songs for the biggest acts in the world. We’re going to have a full-blown production and multimedia company soon too. We’re already writing, directing and scoring our own visual projects so, we feel confident that with the right infrastructure, we’re going to make some serious noise before people can even blink. And we’re going to debunk the whole notion of celebrity. Because, we’re giving it all back to the streets. We’re about to revamp Bedstuy to be the hub for the best art, regardless of medium, in New York. Studios on every block, random installations on the sidewalks and in parks, immersive programs. We’re about to turn it all up.

  • Michael Lang, Woodstock Co-Founder, Dead at Age 77

    Michael Lang, Woodstock Music and Arts Festival co-founder, and promoter of the 1994 and 1999 editions, has died at age 77, at Sloan Kettering in New York City. The cause of death was a rare form of Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, according to family spokesperson Michael Pagnotta.

    michael lang
    Michael Lang at Woodstock 1969. Photo by Henry Diltz

    Michael Lang was raised in Brooklyn and attended college at New York University and University of Tampa before eventually moved to Coconut Grove, Florida where he opened a head shop, which was, as Lang noted in his autobiography, “the hub of the Miami underground.” Lang would shift into concert promotion in the late 1960s, producing the Miami Pop Festival in 1968, which featured a lineup that included Chuck Berry, The Mothers of Invention, and Jimi Hendrix, among others.

    Speaking of Miami Pop Festival, Lang told Ellen Sanders’ for the 1973 book Trips: Rock Life in the Sixties, “The climate is perfect, people are into a stimulating variety of artistic things and there was no place for them to get together.” The seeds of next year’s Woodstock Festival in Bethel, NY can be found in Lang’s mindset.

    Miami Pop Festival 1968 Poster

    Lang partnered up with Artie Kornfeld, a Bensonhurst, Queens native, who was then East Coast Director of Contemporary Entertainment at Capitol Records. The two hit if off after their initial meeting, one that was set up by Lang playing to Kornfeld’s roots, saying he was ‘from the neighborhood’. Lang would move in with Kornfeld and his wife Linda in New York City, and their all-night conversations would be the genesis of the Woodstock Festival, both the event and the cultural impact still felt today.

    Lang and Kornfeld would connect with business partners Joel Rosenman and John Roberts while working with the band Train, and ultimately form Woodstock Ventures Incorporated in March 1969, named for the town Bob Dylan was living in at the time. Lang wrote in The Road to Woodstock “I thought it was time to head to back to New York. Ninety miles north of the city, Woodstock had become a magnet for musicians. I remembered its small-town, artsy vibe from when we used to visit there in the fifties. The town had a history of attracting artists and bohemians. My girlfriend Sonya and I decided to check it out for ourselves.”

    Roberts and Rosenman brought the money and financial experience, while Lang and Kornfeld brought their own knowledge of rock music culture and production skills to pull off the event. Lang and Kornfeld had proposed building a recording studio in Woodstock, as a means to encourage local residents Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix and The Band to record at, but the idea was scrapped in favor of an outdoor music festival.

    Meeting in February 1969, Lang recalled an early interactions with Roberts and Rosenman:

    We met with them in their apartment on 83rd Street in a high-rise. They were kind of preppy. Today, I guess they’d be yuppies. They were wearing suits. Artie did most of the talking, because I think they seemed puzzled by me. They were curious about the counterculture, and they were somewhat interested in the project. They wanted a written proposal, which we had but we didn’t bring with us. We told them that we would meet again with a budget for the festival.

    Michael Lang

    By the second time they met, a budget of $500,000 was discussed, with a potential attendance of 100,000. Ultimately, Woodstock would have a pricetag of more than $2.4 million (nearly $18 million in 2022 dollars), and would be billed as “Three Days of Peace and Music.” But the location for the festival would prove to be a challenge for Lang and company.

    When he was younger, Lang spent summers attending camps in Sullivan County, home to Bethel, where he would later produce Woodstock and cement his name in music history. Initially looking into the town of Woodstock, the partners would settle on Wallkill in Orange County, While at first, the town and location were hospitable to the event, soon the residents turned on Woodstock Ventures, essentially pulling the plug for the festival on July 2, 1969.

    The news caught the attention of a young Elliot Tiber, who was working at his family’s El Monaco Hotel in White Lake, and he alerted Lang to the location, just outside of Bethel. Lang later told the New York Times, “Elliot was part of the magic of Woodstock. Without his phone call bringing me to Bethel, Woodstock might never have happened, and for that I am eternally grateful.”

    While the El Monaco Hotel would not be able to host the event as Tiber envisioned (it did serve as Woodstock Ventures headquarters over the next month), he did offer a suggestion to check out his friend Max Yasgur’s farm, located on Happy Ave in Bethel. Upon meeting Yasgur and securing the property, as well as agreeing to return the farm to its original condition post-festival, Lang made the move with a month to go before Woodstock was set to kick off. Lang was later portrayed by Jonathan Groff in Ang Lee’s 2009 film Taking Woodstock, based on Tiber’s memoir.


    The Upstate New York festival would draw more than 400,000 people to Yasgur’s farm, becoming a signature moment for the counterculture movement, at the end of one of the most tumultuous decades in American history. Musicians including The Who, Jimi Hendrix, Carlos Santana, the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, John Sebastian, Richie Havens, Sly and the Family Stone, Joe Cocker, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young all performed, among many other music legends.

    Lang would later have a hand in the 25th anniversary Woodstock Festival, held in 1994 at Winston Farm in Saugerties, which would bring the Woodstock spirit and history to a new generation, catering to Generation X with artists including Nine Inch Nails, Green Day, Blues Traveler, Sheryl Crow, The Roots, Salt-n-Pepa, as well as bringing back artists from the original Woodstock, among them Country Joe McDonald, Crosby Stills and Nash, Joe Cocker and Santana.

    michael lang
    photo by Steve Malinski

    The ill-fated Woodstock 99 festival also saw Lang at the helm, this edition being held in Rome, NY on Griffiss Air Force and featuring a lineup that melded genres in a way that was both similar and dissimilar to previous Woodstock festivals. While the lineup provided a little something for everyone, subsequent price gouging, lack of basic infrastructure (water, bathrooms and shade among them) and intense heat culminated in an angst-filled riot that saw fires set as the Red Hot Chili Peppers closed out the festival. Lang would tell Syracuse.com in a 2019 interview:

    In the end, it was partially my fault, partially the fault of the fans of Insane Clown Posse who were running amok all weekend. But at the end of the show, the Chili Peppers were on stage closing the festival. They had been given permission to hand out candles, and that was a mistake. [People] started to set things on fire, and it started to grow. It was a very different show, and a very different time musically. But overall, people had an amazing weekend.

    Michael Lang on Woodstock 99

    Lang made efforts to throw Woodstock 50 in 2019, but could not pull the event off due to local opposition as well as limited ticket sales, despite star-studded lineups and locations that included Watkins Glen International and Vernon Downs in Vernon, NY. The year-long effort to pull off a 50th anniversary event on par with the original was not in the cards, although there was a celebration at Bethel Woods Center for the Arts over the weekend of August 15-16, 2019.

    When something pushes back as hard as this did, you have to get the sense that maybe there is a reason behind it.

    Life is full of experiences, and not everything works out. But you keep trying or nothing works out… That’s always been my attitude.

    Lang, speaking to Pollstar, reflecting on Woodstock 50
    michael lang
    Michael Lang at the Long Island Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony 11/7/2018

    In addition to managing Billy Joel and Joe Cocker at various points of their career, in 2019 Lang received the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award for Lifetime Achievement, noting his commitment to peace. Lang said in his speech accepting the award:

    I think if Mr. Ali were here with us today, he might rhyme that only together and with love, can   we change this world for the better. But we have to earn it, we have to show up and fight for the issues we believe in, the way Ali would. 

    The fight against global warming as we near that point of no return… Sensible gun control, Immigration reform, Whatever your opinions, I know Muhammad Ali would tell you to make your voices heard and encourage everyone to get out and vote this year AND in 2020.

    Michael Lang

    Michael Lang is survived by his wife Tamara, their sons Harry and Laszlo, and daughters LariAnn, Shala and Molly.

  • Palace Theatre Announces Black History Month Step Show, Rescheduled Dark Star Orchestra Dates

    The Palace Theatre in Albany has announced a Black History Step Show featuring HYP3st Dance Competition, for Sunday, February 20 at 5pm. Dates for the recently postponed Dark Star Orchestra shows have also been announced for April.

    Palace Theatre Black History

    The Price Chopper Black History Month Step Show features some of the best step teams from the Capital Region and beyond, for an afternoon of high energy dance performances. The Step Show is one of the most anticipated annual events in the area.

    Stepping is truly something that needs to be seen to be fully appreciated, the quick moves and split-second changes showcase just how much time and energy is put into the choreography. Beyond entertainment value, the event is also highly educational as it relates to the concepts and themes of identity, culture, environment and society and their role in why these organizations came about and why they still exist today. The entertainment grabs your attention and draws you into wanting to learn more about these organizations and their history. This program and others like it offer participants not only a creative outlet, but also a chance to be a part of something bigger than themselves.

    Tickets are $25 for adults and $20 for students and are now on sale via Ticketmaster. Tickets are also available for purchase at the Palace Theatre Box Office located at 19 Clinton Ave in Albany.

    Dark Star Orchestra

    Grateful Dead tribute band Dark Star Orchestra have reschedule their postponed December 31, 2021 and January 1, 2022 shows at the Palace Theatre for April 1 and 2, 2022. Tickets for the original dates WILL be valid for the new April dates. Tickets for December 31 are valid for April 1 and tickets for January 1 are valid for April 2.

    If you are unable to attend the new dates, refunds will be available by request until January 27, 2022. To obtain a refund: If you purchased your tickets through Ticketmaster, contact Ticketmaster through your account to request a refund. If you purchased your tickets at the Palace Theatre Box Office, call the Box Office during regular business hours at 518-465-4663 to request a refund. If you have any questions, feel free to reply directly to this email.

    Tickets for Dark Star Orchestra at the Palace Theatre are available here.

  • Hearing Aide: Baked Shrimp ‘Pork Etiquette’

    Long Island funk band, Baked Shrimp, makes an intriguing return with their third studio album, Pork Etiquette. The January 7 release coincides with the band’s fifth anniversary and it’s obvious just how much experience they’ve gained. 

    baked shrimp pork etiquette
    Album Cover

    They recorded the album during the same sessions as their second studio album, Conscious, and it serves as an elevated part two. The Brothers Nylon assisted in the process from their studio in Patchogue, NY and Anthony Cimino at Mojo Music Studios mixed and mastered the final product.

    The group utilizes a variety of sounds as they take listeners through the tales of each song, with jazz, alternative rock and early 2000’s pop rock being heard throughout. However, funk remains a mainstay.

    Baked Shrimp performing at LonCon 2021

    “Cannabis Bob” showcases just how well two different sonic themes can be meshed together. Fittingly named, the rhythm on this track makes you bob your head before it brings you up high. The song then crescendos in a mash of guitar, drums and bong rips before it brings you back down to the ground.

    “The Gopher”’s introduction is one that you won’t forget as the horns come in to prove just why they’re included. The slick instrumental keeps your ears locked as smokey vocals feed you the tale of one bad gopher, ending with a snappy flourish. The drums never let up as they bind everything together.  Don’t mess with the gopher.

    “Tulu” does not waste its’ track length on fluff as Jared Cowen shows his composition prowess. The tropical beat brings you away from NY’s frigid winter and into an island paradise. The guitar and drums keep things cohesive as the band does their integral sound switching. The track provides a fitting end to the album.

    As promotions for Pork Etiquette commence, it’s safe to say that Baked Shrimp has earned their spot in the East Coast music scene. Although the pandemic rages on, fans will have the chance to see their 2022 Winter Tour. They will perform in Ithaca on January 28.

    Key Tracks: Cannabis Bob, The Gopher, Tulu

  • Jason Flashner Wants You To Dance Like Nobody’s Watching

    Long Island singer-songwriter Jason Flashner is gearing up to release his third studio album, Rocks and Roots, on March 11, 2022. The new LP ends an almost eight-year gap between his last effort, 2014’s Indie Tale, and falls on the tenth anniversary of his first album, Acoustics and Stones.

    Jason Flashner

    Rocks and Roots comprises two parts: one with a full band (although Flashner plays every instrument), and the other with acoustic versions of the same songs. Flashner debuted the first song, “Alive, Awake!” at the tail end of November, and has more waiting in the wings. The album’s second single, “Like Nobody’s Watching,” premieres today.

    “Like Nobody’s Watching” is an upbeat, breezy guitar tune perfect for warming our hearts in the dead of winter. The lyrics are about taking a bad day and turning it around, using dance and music as a remedy. Accompanying the song is a homemade music video, with clips of children dancing happily. Before the release of Rocks and Roots in March, Flashner plans to release one more single, “This Wave,” in February. 

    Jason Flashner, who also goes by Jay, is an independent artist through and through. He’s learned the business side of music by himself, watching tutorials to learn how to promote and pitch his work. He recalls an incident earlier in his career when his hard drive stopped working and he lost an album’s worth of music, and didn’t have it backed up. Going forward, Flashner used the experience as a learning opportunity:

    If we learn from our mistakes, we minimize that from happening, so whenever something like this does occur, I try to remain as patient as possible and know that there will be something to learn from it. It is all a marathon rather than a sprint, and we can all get there with patience.

    Jason Flashner

    While he never lost an album again, Flashner re-recorded Rocks and Roots multiple times until he felt confident in his work. Given his patience and perfectionism this time around, it might be his best yet. Listen to it on March 11, 2022, on all major streaming platforms.

  • Alien Opera House Hosts ‘It’s a Party Fest’ on January 15 in Syracuse

    Mad Dabber710, an American musician, hip hop artist, funk producer. and cannabis activist born in Bandera, Texas, will be the host with the most at Alien Opera House for “Its A Party Festival” on January 15 from 3 PM till 2 AM in Syracuse. 2 stages. Green Skylines stage upstairs and Exotic Pop/ Slapwoods stage downstairs.

    This past December the Alien Opera House hosted a performance of the Frank White Experience with Lil Cease of Brooklyn artist Notorious BIG. Expect the same variety at the Opera house on January 15 with all day performances by funk, NEO soul, hip hop, reggae, delta blues and indie jazz lounge artists of New York State.

    Alien Opera House
    1/15/21

    The all day indoor music and arts festival will be hosted by JT Campos Campos portrays Boaz Jimenez on the NETFLIX series Queen of The South. He has been a guest on host BREAL TV’s show Smokebox. DJ Jam Master J’son of Run DMC and DJ Dice Brooklyn of Redman are on the bill. Yo $#! (YOSHI) & the Cat in Da Hat rap and SMX Shawn Seals have slots . Richie Banks and Mike Taylor are playing. Frank Stepanek of Black Uhuru. Moe Betta Tha Goddess and Martin Paul. Colin Aberdeen. Justin James Bridges and Friends. John McConnell & Matt Romano and more! Special ticket packages are available now here!

    Alien Opera House

    The Alien Opera House is located on 211 Catawaba Street in Syracuse’s historic Little Italy district. Legendary Italian Conductor Vincent Falcone of Frank Sinatra’s band first cousin Frank Romano’s home is located around the corner in Washington Square Park. The neighborhood is still a sweet melting pot of fine art and rich culture. PhokOuttaHere offers the best blend of Vietnamese cuisine in New York State. Fresh Kola Nuts from the rain forest are available on Salina St at the African & Caribbean Central Market.

    Sponsors for ” Its a Party” fest are Exotic Pop, Green Skylines, Slapwoods, Party105, 3D Grow, The Wallflower Hour. The Higher Calling THC and production provided by PVM Entertainment. The Green Skylines stage will be upstairs and the Exotic Pop/Slapwoods Stage will be downstairs at the Alien Opera House.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ_iIpBQZrk
  • Long Island Music Hall of Fame announces 2021 Music Education of Note Award Honoree

    The Long Island Music Hall of Fame announced the 2021 Music Educator of Note Award recipient, Kim Löwenborg-Coyne. The LIMHOF gives the award to those who do outstanding work in Long Island music education.

    Long Island music award
    The Long Island Music Hall Music Educator of Note Award recipient- Kim Löwenborg-Coyne.

    Dr. Löwenborg-Coyne was born in Lynbrook, NY. She earned a B.A. in Music Performance and also a B.A. in Philosophy from Molloy College. She also has a M.A. in Musicology and a Ph.D. in Higher Level Music Education from NYU.

    In 1996, she started teaching in Rockville Centre Schools and became the Director of Art and Music Programs for North Babylon. She has also performed at Carnegie Hall as an accompanist for the NBHS Choir.

    Long Island music award

    In 2008, Dr. Löwenborg-Coyne raised grant funds to bring Pierre Dulaine’s Ballroom Dance program to Long Island. She has been trying to bring culturally diverse residency programs to North Babylon as well. She has made sure the all kids get quality instruments, amazing technology, and world music education.

    Dr. Kim never takes no for an answer when it comes to the children of North Babylon!

    Superintendent of Schools Kim Skillen

    Dr. Löwenborg-Coyne deeply honored to receive the award, alongside her husband and two children.

  • Albany Symphony Welcomes Guest Conductor Erina Yashima for Performance at Proctors

    Special guest conductor Erina Yashima is leading the Albany Symphony Orchestra on January 8 at Proctors Theater in Schenectady. Yashima will lead Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade, as well as Vivian Fung’s A Child’s Dream of Toys and Alexander Glazunov’s Violin Concerto.

    Yashima is a German conductor and a rising star in the industry. She has played worldwide with acclaimed ensembles and orchestras.

    The Albany Symphony Orchestra is two-time GRAMMY award-winning, and their performance is described as “virtuosic” and features classical work that is lesser-heard. The symphony also has more ASCAP awards than any other orchestra.

    erina yashima albany symphony
    The Albany Symphony, conducted by Maestro Miller.

    Founded in 1930, the symphony serves an audience of more than seven counties and parts of three states. The symphony is the only organization to have made multiple appearances at Carnegie Hall’s Spring for Music festival.

    The symphony is led by music director David Alan Miller who is beginning his 30th year of service. The symphony also provides award-winning education in their program Symphony in Our Schools.

    erina yashima albany symphony

    Tickets for the Albany Symphony with Erina Yashima at Proctors Theater on January 8 can be found here. The event will also be streamed online, tickets for which can be found here.

  • Jim Gaudet and the Railroad Boys Prepare for “Hillbilly Rock n’ Roll” Album Release

    Albany’s Jim Gaudet is a folksinger, but mostly he’s a straight forward story teller, whether singing about a baseball hero, a favorite soup or a childhood love. With the Railroad Boys, Gaudet will release Hillbilly Rock n’ Roll on Saturday, January 15 with a performance at the Madison Theater in Albany.

    The first single from the album, “New Girl Now,” tells a story that brings hope, for regardless of how dark and hopeless things may seem, things can change just as quickly for the better.

    The journey for Gaudet began around 1988 when he went to open mics at Caffe Lena and Albany’s Eight Step Coffeehouse. Soon, covers made way for originals, among them, “The Basement of Willett Street” paying tribute to the latter’s stage crew. In time, Gaudet has become a regional favorite with a refreshing sound that resonates with listeners the first time they hear them.

    jim gaudet

    Jim Gaudet and the Railroad Boys combine together for a superb harmony in their vocals and pure musicianship throughout, leading to an up-tempo experience. The band features Jim Gaudet (guitar), Bobby Ristau (bass), Sten Isachsen (mandolin), Sara Milonovich (fiddle) and Tucker Callander (fiddle). 

    jim gaudet

    Their unique brand of “Hillbilly Rock and Roll” has a way that makes you feel as though you’ve stepped back in time into a Texas roadhouse.

    I feel that I have not succeeded if I walk off the stage and we haven’t connected. I love playing the songs and I love that it is my music that we are playing.

    Jim Gaudet

    The band has performed at the bluegrass festivals across the country, including Wintergrass (Seattle), High Mountain Bluegrass Festival (Colorado) and Music City Roots (Nashville) as well as 6 appearances at Grey Fox.  

    jim gaudet

    Stay up to date with Jim Gaudet and the Railroad Boys via their Website and Facebook.

    Jim Gaudet and The Railroad Boys Winter 2022 Dates

    1/09/2022 Pawling, NY – Daryl’s House Club (FREE)
    1/15/2022 Albany, NY – Madison Theater (Album release show)
    2/07/2022 Albany, NY – McGeary’s Irish Pub (FREE)

    2/20/2022 Pawling, NY – Daryl’s House Club (FREE)
    3/05/2022 Saratoga Springs, NY – Caffe Lena
    3/07/2022 Albany, NY – McGeary’s Irish Pub (FREE)