Author: Faith Logue

  • Grammy Award Winning Group Tedeschi Trucks Band Announce Summer Tour, Coming to CMAC and SPAC

    The Grammy Award-winning group Tedeschi Trucks Band announce a run of summer tour dates across the US, hitting twenty cities, including SPAC on July 1 and CMAC on July 11.

    Tedeschi Trucks Band

    Tedeschi Trucks Band, led by the husband/wife duo of guitarist Derek Trucks and singer/guitarist Susan Tedeschi, formed in 2011. The founders have been described by NPR as “two of the best roots rock musicians of their generation.” The twelve piece group is known globally for their unique sound and ability to blend distinctive genres of American music. Their shows are “nothing short of exhilarating” (Salon), with annual summer amphitheater tours and multi-night residencies across America to tours through Europe and Japan.

    The group continues to tour in support of I Am The Moon, their acclaimed fifth studio project, which finds them “at their finest and most adventurous” (NPR). New this year will be single support acts, leaving Tedeschi Trucks Band with longer set times. Country and blues singer/songwriter Vincent Neil Emerson will support the tour’s first few dates and return in late July for the final five stops — and legendary musician, producer and activist, Ziggy Marley will support all dates in between. The TTB Fan Club Presale will begin Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 10 a.m. local time with an Artist Presale beginning Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 10 a.m. local time. Tickets go on sale to the general public on Friday, Feb. 24 at 10 a.m. local time. For more information, visit here.

  • The Kinks Celebrate 60th Anniversary as a Group with ‘The Journey’ Anthology Release

    One of the greatest British rock bands, The Kinks, announced that in celebration of 60 years as a group, they will be releasing The Journey, a two-part special anniversary anthology.

    The Kinks

    The Kinks was formed in Muswell Hill, North London, by brothers Ray and Dave Davies, adding their friend Pete Quaife, and joined by Mick Avory in early 1964. They quickly established themselves as a dominant group in the 60s, selling over 50 million records worldwide and have been streamed over a billion times. They have achieved five US Top 10 singles, nine US Top 40 albums, seventeen UK Top 20 singles, and five UK Top 10 albums, with four albums certified Gold. On top of that, multi-award-winning, legendary frontman Sir Ray Davies is widely recognized as one of the greatest British songwriters of all time.

    A host of global events and activities will be launching throughout 2023 & 2024 to mark the band’s 60th anniversary. Included in these celebrations is the two-part career-defining anthology, The Journey. The part one release, coming out March 24, will feature songs handpicked by the brothers (1964-1975), including hits like “You Really Got Me,” “Waterloo Sunset,” “All Day And All Of The Night,” “Celluloid Heroes,” “Supersonic Rocket Ship,” “Dead End Street,” and “Death Of A Clown.” Ray Davies muses to “Ask yourself the question, is this journey really necessary?…….Yes!” Dave Davies continues “I’m delighted with what I think is an inspiring selection of timeless and magical Kinks music.”

    The Journey – Part 1 will be released on 2CD, 2LP, Digital and HD Digital albums. The physical formats contain a booklet with band photos and personal track-by-track notes. Details of the The Journey – Part 2 will follow later this year. To preorder The Journey – Part 1, visit here.

    RELEASE FORMATS:

    2LP

    Side 1

    Songs about becoming a man, the search for adventure, finding an identity and a girl:

    1.        You Really Got Me (UK#1, 1964)

    2.        All Day And All Of The Night (UK#2, 1964)

    3.        It’s All Right (1964)

    4.        Who’ll Be The Next In Line (1965)

    5.        Tired Of Waiting For You (UK#1, 1965)

    6.        She’s Got Everything (1968)

    7.        Just Can’t Go To Sleep (1964)

    8.        Stop Your Sobbing (1964)

    9.        Wait Till The Summer Comes Along (1965)

    10.      So Long (1965)

    Side 2

    Songs of ambition achieved, bitter taste of success, loss of friends, the past comes back and bites you in the backside:

    1.        Dead End Street (UK#5, 1966)

    2.        Schooldays (1975)

    3.        The Hard Way (1975)

    4.        Mindless Child Of Motherhood (1969)

    5.        Supersonic Rocket Ship (UK#2, 1972)

    6.        I’m In Disgrace (1975)

    7.        Do You Remember Walter? (1968)

    Side 3

    Days and nights of a lost soul, songs of regret and reflection of happier times:

    1.        Too Much On My Mind (1966)

    2.        Nothin’ In The World Can Stop Me Worryin’ ‘Bout That Girl (1965)

    3.        Days (UK#2, 1968)

    4.        Where Have All The Good Times Gone (1965)

    5.        Strangers (1970)

    6.        It’s Too Late (1965)

    7.        Sitting In The Midday Sun (1973)

    Side 4

    A new start, a new love, but have you really changed? Still haunted by the quest and the girl:

    1.        Waterloo Sunset (UK#2, 1967)

    2.        No More Looking Back (1975)

    3.        Death Of A Clown (UK#3, 1967)

    4.        Celluloid Heroes (1972)

    5.        Act Nice And Gentle (1967)

    6.        This Is Where I Belong (1967)

    2CD

    CD1

    Songs about becoming a man, the search for adventure, finding an identity and a girl:

    

    1.        You Really Got Me (UK#1, 1964)

    2.        All Day And All Of The Night (UK#2, 1964)

    3.        It’s All Right (1964)

    4.        Who’ll Be The Next In Line (1965)

    5.        Tired Of Waiting For You (UK#1, 1965)

    6.        Dandy (Germany#1, 1966)

    7.        She’s Got Everything (1968)

    8.        Just Can’t Go To Sleep (1964)

    9.        Stop Your Sobbing (1964)

    10.      Wait Till The Summer Comes Along (1965)

    11.      So Long (1965)

    12.      I’m Not Like Everybody Else (1966)

    Songs of ambition achieved, bitter taste of success, loss of friends, the past comes back and bites you in the backside:

    13.      Dead End Street (UK#5, 1966)

    14.      Wonderboy (1968)

    15.      Schooldays (1975)

    16.      The Hard Way (1975)

    17.      Mindless Child Of Motherhood (1969)

    18.      Supersonic Rocket Ship (UK#2, 1972)

    19.      I’m In Disgrace (1975)

    20.      Do You Remember Walter? (1968)

    CD2

    Days and nights of a lost soul, songs of regret and reflection of happier times:

    1.        Too Much On My Mind (1966)

    2.        Nothin’ In The World Can Stop Me Worryin’ ‘Bout That Girl (1965)

    3.        Days (UK#2, 1968)

    4.        Last Of The Steam-Powered Trains (1968)

    5.        Where Have All The Good Times Gone (1965)

    6.        Strangers (1970)

    7.        It’s Too Late (1965)

    8.        Sitting In The Midday Sun (1973)

    A new start, a new love, but have you really changed? Still haunted by the quest and the girl:

    9.        Waterloo Sunset (UK#2, 1967)

    10.      Australia (1969)

    11.      No More Looking Back (1975)

    12.      Death Of A Clown (UK#3, 1967)

    13.      Celluloid Heroes (1972)

    14.      Act Nice And Gentle (1967)

    15.      This Is Where I Belong (1967)

    16.      Shangri-La (1969)

  • Cannastock 2023 Festival Comes to MJN Convention Center in Poughkeepsie this May

    Radio Woodstock 100.1 WDST has announced the return of Cannastock, the first-ever consumption-friendly cannabis festival in New York, on Saturday, May 13. This year, the event will be held at the newly renovated MJN Convention Center in Poughkeepsie.

    Cannastock is a ​21+ ​consumer-friendly festival and an immersive cannabis experience with local and national cannabis brands. At the festival, there will be like-minded consumers and large amounts of exhibitors, including licensed growers, manufacturers, and retailers, as well as games, contests, and free giveaways. There will also be educational panels on topics such as how legalization will change our society, and people can also learn about jobs within the cannabis industry.

    The festival is also featuring live music acts with DJ Max Glazer from Federation Sound and local visual performance artists. Cannastock will also feature the first Excelsior Cup, a cannabis competition to honor the best cannabis products in New York State. To be announced is entry portal information, the judging panelists, and the array of categories spanning flowers, concentrates, pre-rolls, cartridges, and edibles that will be part of the initial competition.

    The event is presented by Radio Woodstock 100.1 WDST, described as the New York Times “favorite thing about driving around the Hudson Valley,” producing curated music programming and virtual and live music events, along with advertising campaigns. The station has founded both the Mountain Jam Festival and Taste of Country Festival, both of which have grown to become the largest rock and camping music festivals in the Northeast.

    Radio Woodstock principal owner and Cannastock Founder Gary Chetkof, said “after our inaugural Cannastock sold out quickly last October, we realized that we needed to bring it back soon and in a much larger venue. With the first recreational retail dispensaries opening up to the public now, we thought the time was right to bring it to the MJN Center in May.” $30 General Admission and $65 VIP tickets are available for purchase on Friday, Feb. 17 at 10 a.m. here.

  • Alice Dunbar-Nelson: Groundbreaking Poet, Activist, and Journalist

    In honor of Black History Month, we look at those whose significant contributions in their life that have transformed the way gender and class are looked at today. One of these early pioneers of journalism, poetry, and activism was Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson, one of the prominent African Americans involved in the Harlem Renaissance.

    Alice Dunbar Nelson
    Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson as a young woman, circa 1895. Photo by R. P. Bellsmith from the University of Delaware Library.

    Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson was born in New Orleans on July 19, 1875, to mixed-race parents. Her parents, Patricia Wright, and Joseph Moore were middle-class and part of the city’s multiracial Creole community. Her African American, Anglo, Native American, and Creole heritage contributed to her understanding of gender, race, and ethnicity, something she often referenced in her work. Her education began at Straight University (later merged into Dillard University) in New Orleans, graduating in 1892. She was named Class Poet by her graduating class.

    After graduating, Dunbar-Nelson began teaching in the New Orleans public school system, taught second grade at Marigny School in the Seventh Ward, and became active in teacher organizations. While teaching, she began writing her first works, setting them in New Orleans, as well as poetry.

    She began writing for the first newspaper created by and for African American women, The Woman’s Era. Her first book, Violets and Other Tales (1895) was published when she was just 20 by the New Orleans magazine The Monthly Review. Her second collection, The Goodness of St. Rocque and Other Stories (1899) explored her Creole heritage, and the racial oppression she faced. She was highly criticized and rejected by publishers for speaking out about these things.

    Alice Dunbar-Nelson
    Courtesy Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, New York Public Library.

    Her writing and photography caught the eye of Paul Laurence Dunbar, who wrote to her, and the two began talking. Dunbar-Nelson left New Orleans with her mother and relocated to Boston with her sister and brother-in-law. She helped to co-found the White Rose Mission, NYC’s first settlement house for young black women. She met Dunbar one evening, and he proposed that night. They separated in 1902 after he nearly beat her to death and she moved to Wilmington, Delaware where she began teaching at Howard High School and then the State College for Colored Students (now Delaware State College). She continued to publish articles in newspapers, essays, and poetry and married Arthur Callis, founder of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity in 1910. They divorced but her career continued on without him.

    A Pioneer in Many Genres

    According to Gloria T. Hull, editor of the volume Give Us Each Day: The Diary of Alice Dunbar-Nelson (1984), “Dunbar-Nelson perforce wrote in the interstices of a busy existence unsupported (except for one brief period) by any of the money or leisure traditionally associated with people of letters. Doggedly determined to be an author, she plied her trade… carried forward on the flow of words that came quite easily for her.” She was comfortable in many genres but was best known for her prose. She was one of the few female African American diarists of the early twentieth century, portraying the reality of African American women and intellectuals, and addressing topics about sexuality, racism, oppression, work, and family.

    Dunbar-Nelson regularly published in Black newspapers such as the Opportunity, Ebony and Topaz, and Crisis magazines between 1917 and 1928. Her poems also appeared in James Weldon Johnson’s seminal anthology, The Book of American Negro Poetry (Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1931). In 1932 she moved to Philadelphia and published in the Journal of Negro History (JNH), also writing columns in the Washington Eagle and Pittsburgh Courier.  She was also co-editor and writer for the A.M.E. Review, a church publication, and edited The Dunbar Speaker and Entertainer (1920), as well as co-edited the Wilmington Advocate.

    Alice Dunbar-Nelson
    Photo by Interim Archives/Getty Images

    Political Activist

    On April 20, 1916, Dunbar-Nelson married journalist, poet, and civil rights activist Robert J. Nelson. Besides being a journalist, poet, and writer, she was heavily involved in politics during her life. In 1914, Dunbar co-founded the Equal Suffrage Study Club, and the following year she was a field organizer for the woman’s suffrage movement in the mid-Atlantic states. 

    She supported the NAACP and served with the Women’s Commission on the Council of National Defense and the Circle of Negro War Relief during World War I. In 1922, she advocated for the passage of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill, created to “protect citizens of the United States against lynching in default of protection by the States,” and helped establish the Industrial School for Colored Girls in Delaware. She served as executive secretary of the American Friends Inter-Racial Peace Committee (1928-1931) and gave many speeches during this time. One of her speeches was published and included in Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence (The Bookery Publishing Company, 1914).

    Although she herself isn’t considered a huge part of the Harlem Renaissance, she inspired the work of many famous names of that era and was friends with many including W.E.B. Du Bois and poet Georgia Douglas Johnson. She was a fierce and in-demand speaker, as well as one of the leading poets and journalists of that era. Alice Dunbar-Nelson celebrated freedom and beauty until the end of her life when she died on September 18, 1935, in Philadelphia of heart disease at the age of 60. Her work was so often uncredited, unpaid, or both and she was overshadowed by white men, but she worked hard and deserves to be recognized not only for her pen but also for her fight for women’s and African American rights at a time when it was dangerous to do so.

  • New York State Blues Festival Announces Headliners, Including Blues Legend Buddy Guy

    The New York State Blues Festival has announced the headlining acts for the 2023 edition of the event, happening June 15-17 at Chevy Court at the NYS Fairgrounds.

    New York State Blues Festival
    Buddy Guy is headlining the New York State Blues Festival.

    The New York State Blues Festival, one of the largest free blues events in the Northeast, has announced the headlining acts for the 2023 year. The festival is an annual three-day event that showcases a collection of regional and national artists from multiple genres, with roots saturated in tradition and vision. Their mission statement is to preserve, protect and promote blues music and culture, educating on the role of the blues in the development of popular music in the US and around the world.

    Healing night one of the festival is the blues rock guitar duo Blood Brothers featuring Mike Zito & Albert Castiglia. The second night features the Memphis-based group, Southern Avenue, bringing bring their deeply soulful funky grooves. The last night always features the biggest names, with blues legend Buddy Guy, who has influenced generations of guitarists including Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, and more. Samantha Fish plays the support spot just prior to him.

    A variety of food vendors will be onsite and wine & beer will be sold. The New York State Blues Festival is free to attend, with all ages welcome. Parking in the Fairground’s Brown Lot is available for $10 per car and $5 per motorcycle. If you would like to enhance your experience, ProAct Blues Club VIP passes are currently available, and early bird pricing is in effect until 11 a.m. Friday, April 7.

    Main Stage

    Thursday, June 15

    4 pm – GATE OPENS

    5:30 pm – 6:45 – Fillmore Blues Band

    7:15 pm – 8:30 pm – Brandon Santini

    9:00 pm – 11 pm – Blood Brothers ft. Mike Zito & Albert Castiglia

    Friday, June 16

    3 pm – GATE OPENS***

    4 pm – 4:45 pm – Neil Minet Band

    5 pm – 5:45 pm – Terry Mulhauser & Friends

    6:15pm – 7:15pm – Los Blancos

    7:45pm – 9pm – Annika Chambers & Paul DesLauriers

    9:30 pm – Southern Avenue

    Saturday, June 17

    12 pm – GATE OPENS

    1 pm – 1:40 – Blues Ignition

    2:10 pm – 3:05 pm – Nate Gross Band

    3:30 pm – 4:25 pm – Brownskin Band

    4:50 pm – 5:45 pm – Earl Slick & the Ripcords

    6:10 pm – 7:15 pm – Jason Ricci & the Bad Kind

    7:45 pm – 9 pm – Samantha Fish ft. Jesse Dayton

    9:30 pm – 11 pm – Buddy Guy

    Side Stage

    Thursday, June 15

    6:45 pm & 8:30 pm – DAMDOG Duo

    Friday, June 16

    5:50 pm & 7:20 pm – Midnite Mike

    Saturday, June 17

    1:45 pm & 3:05 pm – Paul LeClair

    4:25 pm, 5:45 pm, & 7:20 pm – Raedwald Howland-Bolton

  • Tune Into EQXposure Sunday to Hear Music From Indie Bands LAVEDA and Modern Fools

    Each Sunday evening from 7-9 p.m. you’ll find EQXposure on WEQX, featuring two hours of local music from up-and-coming artists. Tune into WEQX.com this Sunday night to hear new music from Laveda and Modern Fools.

    Laveda

    WEQX has long been the preeminent independent station in the Capital Region of New York, broadcasting from Southern VT to an ever-expanding listening audience. NYS Music brings you a preview of artists to discover each week, just a taste of the talent waiting to be discovered by fans like you.

    Laveda – “Clean”

    Laveda is an American indie dream rock band from Albany. Toronto-based blog Ohestee says that founding members “Jacob Brooks and Ali Genevich explore the great yawning unknown. From the freedom and uncertainty that rests at your fingertips or the distant and possibly desolate future, they capture adolescent restlessness with big walls of sound and a dreamy melodious warble.” Their debut album What Happens After is out now, and they will be going on tour, coming to New York City on March 8.

    Modern Fools – “Gone”

    Modern Fools don’t fall into just one genre, creating music that can be classified as country, folk, alternative, or even indie. “Gone” is the first single from their new album Strange Offering coming on May 5. The music video for the song was shot on a cold day in downtown Peterborough, NH and they aren’t done releasing new music, saying on their Facebook to “Stay tuned for part two of what we are calling “The Ballad of Sad-Sack” in the coming weeks.”

  • Burt Bacharach, Famed Pop Composer, Dies at 94

    Burt Bacharach, one of the most accomplished pop composers of the 20th century, having created 52 top 40 hits, passed away at his home in Los Angeles at the age of 94.

    Burt Bacharach
    Burt Bacharach, photo courtesy of CNN.

    Burt Bacharach was a Grammy, Oscar, and Tony-winning composer who grew up in Queens‘ Kew Gardens neighborhood and graduated from Forest Hills High School in 1946. In his early years, he showed a keen interest in jazz and often used his fake ID to get into 52nd Street nightclubs where he would see bebop musicians like Dizzy Gillespie and Count Basie, whose styles influenced his songwriting.

    He was a major figure in 20th-century pop music, but also scored major hits in a variety of genres like Top 40, country, rhythm and blues, and even film scores, writing the theme song for the movie Arthur and “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head,” for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Later in his career, he even appeared as himself in all three Austin Powers movies.

    History was made in 1957 when Bacharach and lyricist Hal David met at the Brill Building in New York City. The pair wrote dozens of popular songs, folding everything from pop to jazz to Brazilian grooves and rock, writing in non-standard time signatures; instead of the typical 4/4, they often bounded in 5/4 or 7/8. Dionne Warwick popularized many of these songs, with her recordings selling over 12 million copies, and 38 singles making the charts. Among the hits were “Walk On By,” “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” “Alfie,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” “I’ll Never Fall in Love Again,” and “Do You Know the Way to San Jose?”

    Burt Bacharach and Dionne Warwick
    Burt Bacharach and Dionne Warwick in 1971. Photo by Gilles Petard/Redferns/Getty Images.

    Over his career, he also wrote other massive hits including “That’s What Friends Are For,” the charity collaboration between Dionne Warwick, Elton John, Gladys Knight, and Stevie Wonder in 1986, raising millions for AIDs research. He wrote the Shirelles’ “Baby It’s You,” and Tom Jones’ “What’s New Pussycat?” Perry Como’s “Magic Moments,” the Patti Labelle-Michael McDonald duet “On My Own,” and the Grammy award-winning Elvis Costello record Painted from Memory. Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and Frank Sinatra were among the countless artists who covered his songs, and more recently White Stripes, Twista, and Ashanti.

    Later in his career, in 2012, he was presented the Gershwin Prize by Barack Obama, performed at the 2015 Glastonbury Festival in the UK, played with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra in March 2016, and other high-profile performances. His final released composition was a joint 2020 EP with songwriter and performer Daniel Tashian, Blue Umbrella, which earned them a Grammy nomination for the best traditional pop vocal album.

    Bacharach had high-profile marriages to actress Angie Dickinson and later to lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, with whom he wrote “Arthur’s Theme (Best That You Can Do).” He was married to his first wife, Paula Stewart, from 1953-58, and he married a fourth time to Jane Hansen in 1993.

    Dionne Warwick spoke about his passing in a statement to CNN saying, “Burt’s transition is like losing a family member. These words I’ve been asked to write are being written with sadness over the loss of my Dear Friend and my Musical Partner. On the lighter side, we laughed a lot and had our run-ins but always found a way to let each other know our family-like roots were the most important part of our relationship.”

    Burt Bacharach is survived by his adopted son, Christopher, as well as two children with his fourth wife, Jane Hansen, Oliver, and daughter Raleigh.

  • Stand Together Music and Other Music Industry Officials Come Together to Support Addiction Recovery

    A staggering 56% of music industry professionals have some type of substance abuse, with the industry now beginning to take the lead in supporting those with addiction Companies like Stand Together Strong are joining forces with 1 Million Strong to provide services to those struggling.

    Stand Together Music
    Colette Weintraub and Kevin Lyman.

    Colette Weintraub is the head of Stand Together Music, one of the partners in the 1 Million Strong initiative, seeking to support one million people in addiction recovery through the strength of community. Kevin Lyman is best known as the creator of the beloved Vans Warped Tour, shaping youth culture for over forty years with his award-winning expertise in the music industry and other ventures.

    Last month was Dry January, where participants stay sober throughout the entire month. An average of 35% of Americans participated in 2022, an increase from 21% in 2019. When the month is over, people tend to turn to alcohol to celebrate, but the problem of addiction runs deeper. Each year over 100,000 people are dying to alcohol-related causes. The music industry is among the hardest hit due to being known for things like sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. Many artists have been in the news after dying from their addictions, or losing their will to live while battling it.

    In an open letter to the music industry, 1 Million Strong wrote “We’re taking action to transform the way people think about addiction by supporting new ways for sober fans to enjoy shows, ensuring touring musicians and crews have access to resources on the road, and engaging in conversations about sobriety that are free from shame and stigma and full of possibilities.” The letter has been signed by Aloe Blacc, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, RIAA Chairman & CEO Mitch Glazier, Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino, and more. If you would like to sign the letter, visit here.

    Things like Warped Tour helped provide mental health and sobriety support on the road throughout, with sober coaches for artists and crew in recovery, and provided services to fans. Stand Together Music/1 Million Strong has been working hard over the past year to provide sober-supportive spaces at concerts and music festivals, like at Bourbon & Beyond to Park City Song Summit and The Chainsmokers show at The Greek Theatre in Berkeley.

    This isn’t about turning the industry sober, but more about giving those struggling a better path to recovery and bring their best selves to music, allowing fans and everyone else to benefit from their art.

  • Seventh Annual Love Rocks Benefit Show Announced at Beacon Theatre

    The seventh annual Love Rocks benefit show for God’s Love We Deliver will be live and streamed online from the Beacon Theatre on March 9, featuring artists like James Taylor, John Mayer Trio, Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo, and many more.

    Love Rocks NYC launched in 2017, and has since raised more than $25 million to date and helped fund more than 2.5 million meals for New Yorkers in need. The benefit concert highlights God’s Love We Deliver’s mission of providing meals and nutrition counseling for people in the New York Metropolitan area living with severe illness. The not-for-profit was founded in 1985 as a response to the AIDS pandemic, now serving people living with more than 200 different diagnoses, home-delivering more than 3.3 million medically tailored meals to more than 10,500 individuals last year.

    Executive produced by iconic international fashion designer John Varvatos, NYC Douglas Elliman real estate broker and prominent concert producer Greg Williamson and esteemed concert/events producer Nicole Rechter, and featuring appearances by Stephen Colbert, Andy Cohen, Chevy Chase, Phoebe Robinson, and newly added special guests Gina Gershon, David Burtka and Neil Patrick Harris, the concert will support and honor the work of the cherished New York-based not-for-profit

    The past six benefit concerts have featured a wide array of music including Cyndi Lauper, Keith Richards, Jon Bon Jovi, Dave Matthews, Robert Plant, Joe Walsh, Sara Bareilles, Hozier, and more. This year’s all-star lineup, led by Music Director and Band Leader Will Lee will feature James Taylor, John Mayer Trio, Sheryl Crow, Mavis Staples, Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo, St. Vincent, Rufus Wainwright, Jim James, Stephen Marley, Gary Clark Jr., Allison Russell, The War and Treaty, Bernie Williams and more to be announced.

    The outstanding house band will include Steve Gadd (James Taylor, Eric Clapton), Shawn Pelton (Saturday Night Live), Larry Campbell (Levon Helm, Bob Dylan), Eric Krasno (Soulive, Phil Lesh & Friends), Pedrito Martinez (Bruce Springsteen, Sting, Camila Cabello), Michael Bearden (Lady Gaga) and a six-piece horn section.

    Fans in NYC and elsewhere can experience this memorable night of music by signing up here, and for a $20 fee will be able to access a live stream link to the concert via Fans.Live while also helping support the organization as $20 = 2 Meals for New Yorkers living with severe and chronic illness.

  • Gustavo Dudamel to Leave L.A. Philharmonic and be New York Philharmonic’s Artistic Director

    Conductor Gustavo Dudamel is leaving the L.A. Philharmonic to become the Music and Artistic Director for the New York Philharmonic.

    Gustavo Dudamel
    Joel Saget/AFP via Getty Images

    Dudamel will step into the role of leading the New York Philharmonic at the beginning of the 2026-27 season. For the 2025-26 season, he will serve as the orchestra’s Music Director, and his full contract will last for five years. He has been with the Los Angeles Philharmonic since 2009.

    In addition to the L.A. Philharmonic, Dudamel has been the Music Director of the Opéra National de Paris since 2021, and Music Director of the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela since 1999. His mission statement is wanting to bring music to people across the globe, which he has accomplished through YOLA (Youth Orchestra Los Angeles), developed in 2007, which provides 1,500 young people with free instruments, intensive music instruction, academic support, and leadership training.

    Some of the honors Dudamel has achieved during his career include the Americas Society Cultural Achievement Award in 2016, the 2014 Leonard Bernstein Lifetime Achievement Award for the Elevation of Music in Society from the Longy School of Music, Spain’s 2020 Gold Medal for Merit in Fine Arts, the 2019 Konex Foundation Classical Music Award, Distinguished Artist Award from the International Society for the Performing Arts (ISPA), and many more.

    In a statement, he said he was “grateful” for the new title, and “grateful to the musicians and leaders of the New York Philharmonic as we embark upon this new and beautiful journey together [and] to my beloved family at the Los Angeles Philharmonic and YOLA [the Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles].” NY Phil Board Co-Chairmen Peter May and Oscar Tang said they are excited to welcome him to the Philharmonic. “Building on this orchestra’s great legacy, he joins a historic list of distinguished Music Directors.”

    Gustavo Dudamel
    Gustavo Dudamel conducts the Los Angeles Philharmonic, 2022, photo by Getty Images.

    Dudamel’s hire to the New York Philharmonic means the L.A. Philharmonic will be looking for a music director of its own. Said best by Gary Ginstling, Executive Director and incoming President & CEO, “With Gustavo Dudamel, the Philharmonic is poised for what I believe will be one of the most exciting chapters in its storied history.”