Empire State Youth Orchestra (ESYO)’s CHIME musicians will present the program’s annual holiday concert on Tuesday, December 12, 5:30pm, at Schenectady High School. The performance is free and open to the public.
Launched in 2015 with 40 students, CHIME has grown steadily, weathering the pandemic and offering life-changing musical experiences to hundreds of Schenectady students. This year, with additional support from the Schenectady City School District (SCSD), and generous contributions from local foundations and individuals, elementary students from across the district are now eligible to join CHIME through a lottery system, doubling program membership to more than 140.
“CHIME simply would not be possible without our partnership with the Schenectady City School District. The school district’s advocacy for the arts and their unwavering commitment to equity and access is truly remarkable.”
Executive Director, Becky Calos
The SCSD/ESYO partnership allows CHIME to offer programming to enrolled SCSD students entirely tuition-free. The expanded program also includes transportation to and from CHIME sites, located at Yates Elementary School and Proctors Theatre. The entry to CHIME for the youngest students focuses on stringed instrument instruction, four days per week. As students advance in age and skill, they move to the Proctors site, where programming is offered for strings, wind and percussion players all the way through high school.
On Mondays, the full orchestra has an extended rehearsal until 6:45 pm, with dinner provided. “It’s so thrilling to see the increased amount of creativity and connection happening on our Mondays at CHIME. Sharing a meal together really deepens our sense of community and the extended time allows the students to explore new ways of expression through movement and spontaneous composition in addition to our full orchestra, chamber music and sectionals. We are already seeing really amazing results in just the past few months!” says Dr. David Bebe, ESYO’s Associate Music Director for CHIME and Chamber Music.
Many CHIME musicians participate in Empire State Youth Orchestra’s other performing groups and its leadership training program, Young Leaders. “We created CHIME to offer a pathway to musical exploration,” says Calos, “and we have built as much support as possible to allow youth to pursue their passions by removing as many barriers as possible.” For the youngest students this means providing dedicated teachers, quality instruments and daily practice. For the older students this means private lessons, college guidance and preparation, performance opportunities locally and across the US, and opportunities for leadership/mentorship experiences and training.
“At CHIME, we believe that immersive musical study centers the whole student. Together with our students, we strive to build an environment that nurtures musician-learners who are curious explorers and citizens, actively involved in their learning process, music-making and community. Our approach aims at far-reaching impacts both within and beyond the scope of music. The importance of breaking down barriers to this type of instructional space and experience — where students can explore how they learn, contribute and evolve as individuals and members of a community over time — cannot be overstated. Continuing to expand access to our programming is of critical and central importance to our program mission, and we’re incredibly fortunate to partner so closely with SCSD in our shared commitment to these goals.”
Zoë Auerbach, CHIME & Young Leaders Director
With CHIME’s expansion this year, dozens more young people will have access to music enrichment and perspective-shifting opportunities. This past summer, for example, CHIME cellist and Young Leader, Jazlyn Bronson, traveled to Chicago with three of her CHIME peers to participate in the National Seminario Ravina, playing side-by-side with Chicago Philharmonic musicians under the baton of famed conductors, Marin Alsop and Jonathan Rush.
This year, CHIME musicians will be working with artist Horacio Fernandez to create a series of collective compositions that will premier in May 2024. This project is part of CHIME’s annual Amplify Our Voice initiative, designed to offer youth a powerful vehicle to process deep emotion, explore shared life experiences and “amplify” their voices through music.
After months of rumors, Phish has announced four performances at Sphere in Las Vegas, NV, from April 18-21, 2024.
Considered the world’s most cutting-edge venue, Sphere will host the Vermont jam band as they perform four shows with completely unique setlists AND visuals, making each shows a truly once-in-a-lifetime audio-visual experience.
Sphere is powered by next-generation technologies, including a 160,000 sq. ft. LED display inside the main venue bowl that wraps up, over, and around the audience, creating a fully immersive visual environment. At 16K x 16K, it is the highest-resolution LED screen on earth. The venue also features Sphere Immersive Sound, powered by HOLOPLOT, the world’s most advanced concert-grade audio system, which delivers audio with unmatched clarity and precision to every guest.
From the moment we first heard about Sphere and its potential, we’ve been dreaming up ways to bring our show to this breathtaking canvas. We’re thrilled to present this completely unique experience to Phish fans.
Trey Anastasio
The ticket request period is now underway at tickets.phish.com and will continue through 9 AM PT/noon ET Monday, December 11. All remaining tickets go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, December 15 at 10AM PT/1PM ET. In addition, travel packages will go on sale Friday, December 1 at 10AM PT/1PM ET, exclusively via phishatsphere.100xhospitality.com.
These shows mark the beginning of a new relationship between Phish and Sphere, but they will be the only shows Phish will perform at the venue in Las Vegas in 2024.
Rochester jazz singer, songwriter, and performer Sage Bava’s five-song EP Falling In released on November 15, introducing audiences to a vibrant and interesting new talent.
Tracks like “Manchild,” “Deep Blue,” and “Imperfect Melody” showcase her sophisticated, soulful original sound and complement renditions of timeless classics “Misty” and “Someone To Watch Over Me.” These tracks and arrangements were crafted by Bava between Valencia, Spain, and her hometown of Rochester, featuring an ensemble of talented musicians.
Sage Bava photographed by Kristin Burns
Jazz has always held a special place in Sage’s heart. She hails from a unique background, having grown up on an animal rescue alongside her father, who had the privilege of playing piano for legendary figures like Buddy Rich and Paul Winter. Even as a young talent, Sage was already making her mark, starring in plays and collaborating with guitar icon Les Paul, all by the tender age of 13. While navigating a multifaceted childhood that included stints as a child actor and competitive tap dancer, she encountered her fair share of challenges. In her early teens, Sage grappled with depression and derealization, facing exploitative music producers more interested in her appearance than nurturing her undeniable talent. It was a dark chapter in her life, one that would ultimately set the stage for the profound highs and lows that have shaped her into the remarkable person and artist she is today.
Sage’s journey has taken her across the globe, from acting in London to solo adventures throughout Europe with just her backpack, guitar, and an unyielding spirit of adventure. Her return to the States brought her to the vibrant hub of New York City, but when the pandemic hit, she found herself back on her family’s farm. Soon after, she embarked on a transformative journey to Costa Rica to teach yoga. This time proved to be a deep awakening for her, a period of profound reconnection with nature and her own inner voice. Her spirituality flourished as she learned from wise teachers and shamans. Driven by her true passion, Sage decided to pursue her music once more. She applied for Berklee Valencia’s one-year master’s program in production, received a scholarship, and made the bold move to Spain. But Sage Bava isn’t just about the music. She’s a unique talent currently studying the psychology of spirituality at Columbia and occasionally working as a journalist.
Now, she is ready to share her captivating story, remarkable voice, and boundless talents with the world. Look for an album from Sage set to be distributed by AWAL in 2024 that promises to be a profound artistic statement. Multiple major U.S. festival appearances are already confirmed with much more to come.
Where do the songs on this EP come from?
Sage Bava: The songs on this amalgamation are all about love and the discovery of. These songs encompass everything, from the pure wonder to the pure past life kind of mystery that is love. It’s also about the heartbreak that comes with love, specifically when you lose yourself to the other in a way that takes your own voice away. Then there’s the breaking of love, which is the process of losing yourself in the other. The only way to regain yourself is to destroy that thing that you both created. So, the whole project takes you through these different iterations of love. At the end of the day, it’s really about knowing yourself. The songs include one called “Deep Blue,” which is about meeting someone that feels like they are you—a fragment of you from some other time and place and space that you’re now meeting. Within that meeting, there’s this wholeness that you experience. Then there are two of my favorite old songs that were written before 1930, which is wild. I added them because I wanted to give the project a very timeless feel.
What are the old songs?
Bava: “Someone to Watch Over Me,” which was so cool to dive into recently because I’ve always loved that song. I’ve been singing it since I was 13 or 14 years old. I always took the song at face value. I looked at Gershwin’s gorgeous, perfect lyrics, but I took it to be about this girl praying to whoever about having some man show up to take care of me. As of late, the song has transformed before my very eyes and means calling upon your guides, calling upon your protectors, calling upon this higher source of creativity and power that watches over you. I did a little video on the land that I grew up on in upstate New York, and it was a beautiful moment. There’s this bench on the top of this hill that has become this beautiful space of meditation and seeing for me. And so shooting this video there and saying someone to watch over me was a really full circle moment in my own becoming that was really beautiful. The other song that’s old is “Misty” by Erroll Garner. I’ve always just loved that song. I hear that opening and know that your soul is about to be filled and nourished. I just think it’s such a beautiful song, and it’s a feeling that I know deeply well, and Erroll encapsulates it wonderfully in its harmony.
What is the feeling?
Bava: It’s misty, love, lust—the meeting of two souls that creates chemical friction, leaving one in a space of clouds, sometimes in a space of mist. I love the fact that Erroll wrote that song when he was literally on a plane in the clouds. To me, it’s one of the most perfect songs ever written. So I hope I do it justice.
Let’s go back to the “Someone to Watch Over Me” video for a second. Why is there a scene in there where you’re naked?
Bava: [Laughter] Well, I think it’s interesting, the idea and the art behind feeling and being naked. Something that I’m really trying to tap into and allow myself to really surrender to is being my authentic naked self, letting that very vulnerable light shine.
So, is it something you’ve always been comfortable with, or are you getting more so?
Bava: I wouldn’t say I’m comfortable with it. It’s a challenge that I think is deeply important for anyone who is really interested and invested in their own becoming, which I think everyone should be. Because I think at the core of everyone, there’s a really beautiful source light that is deeply calm, is deeply peaceful, and is healing and cleansing to all. Nature cleanses itself. Nature grows, nature heals itself. And we are nature. We have the capability to do that. And the more connected to our source light we are, the faster we can do that for ourselves and then for others. So to me, this nakedness is just stripping away all of the constructs around that source light shine.
Would you ever do a show naked?
Bava: Sure, just for fun, and I think for art.
What’s the craziest show you ever did?
Bava: When “craziest” is mentioned, it brings me back to when I was 17, backpacking all over Europe by myself with just my guitar. I did a lot of crazy shows in spaces like churches, in the backs of bars, on big stages randomly. The wedding that I was asked to play at. I have a lot of crazy stories of playing in front of people. I didn’t speak one word of their language, and it all just kind of happened very spontaneously. And I definitely have a protector over me because some of these situations were very bizarre, and I should not have been so lucky to be as unscarred as I am. If only I had listened to that protector a bit more, I think I would’ve helped myself out.
So who do you think your protector is?
Bava: I don’t know. I think that’s the beauty of it. I think there are many; it’s just the awareness of there are many. I think it’s just the awareness of seeing them everywhere. I think everyone and everything are your greatest teacher because it’s merely reflecting back to you what you need to see, what you need to integrate, and what you need to change and rid yourself of to get closer and closer to that source of truth. So I think everyone is your protector, everyone is your teacher if you see that fast in them. Sometimes teachers can do the most harm, and they’re gonna show you parts of yourself and parts of the world that are really messed up. But there’s a great lesson in that.
Give me an example of one of those lessons and how that manifests in your music.
Bava: I think something really beautiful that I’ve been experiencing right now and really stepping into is this trusting of my own voice. I was raised on an animal rescue farm and was taught as a number one priority to be empathetic and to be kind and generous with my love and with my energy. It was a beautiful way to grow up. But I had to learn that empathy does not mean being a house for other people’s demons. You’re actually hurting them, and you’re hurting yourself if you allow yourself to be that person. I’ve had so many experiences of losing my voice to people, becoming for them, and not staying true to my own inner voice and therefore foregoing myself. Something that is deeply important to me and I want to do in the world is helping people, especially young women, in their process of learning their voice and staying true to their voice. There are so many stories I can tell you about that, but I think the lesson is much more important than the details.
What’s the lesson you want to give to young women, having gone through the industry yourself?
Bava: Listen to your voice. It’s very easy to think people know better. It’s very easy to think that you are young and naive and you don’t know the world, or you should listen to all of these people telling you what to do and who to be and how to act. Even if they’re not telling you in words, they’re making you feel a certain way. But I urge you to really stay true to your gut. Don’t numb that. Let it be powerful and let it be potent. Some people don’t know what to do with young women who will stand up for themself. And when you speak your truth, sometimes people are going to throw a tantrum. Sometimes people are going to try and control you and your mind, but the sooner that you can realize that that’s just them and their own work that they need to do on themselves, and you stay true to you, you’re going to have a much easier and quicker road. It isn’t easy but I believe it’s the only way, l’m still leaning this. There are many paths to get anywhere. My path was kind of here, there, and everywhere because I had to learn these lessons, and I had many different instances of having to learn them. So if you just stay on that path and not have to learn the lesson a million times over, it’ll be a much smoother and faster ride.
Do you feel like you’re ready for success now?
Bava: I think I’m ready for success. I think I’m ready for me to be living in my most vibrant and potent self. I’ve always loved music so much. I want it to be my life. I want always to be able to create and create with incredible people and have that be in my life, and be able to make things that serve this mission of bringing this feeling of connection to nature, which to me is just a connection to truth and self. It’s so deeply healing and that’s what I want to do with the music I make. I think it’s very important and very needed, so yes.
Who, for you, are those artists that best express longing and loneliness?
Bava: Melody Gardot is one of my favorite artists. She, to me, is only part human [laughter] and is part of something much more powerful. Her story is fascinating, and her surrender into her power without the need to reach for it. She just purely sits in it more so than anyone that I can think of. Perhaps also Norah Jones and Adele.
What’s your version of heaven right now?
Bava: Heaven is simple. Heaven is nature. We are nature. When we separate ourselves from it, we are harming ourselves. I believe spirit is an animal. I believe spirit is the tree. When we allow ourselves to become one with it, that’s heaven. I’ve just been reveling in my gratitude for my family and the space they live in, which is a beautiful farm where we get fresh vegetables that I can cook into nourishing vegan meals and just be so peaceful and accept myself and accept my journey. Because we must accept to be able to be truly present. I am in a very good space. I don’t think it’s going away because it’s a choice that you mentally make. No matter what externally, you can be there internally.
And now you’re going to Columbia?
Bava: Yes, I have been very called to do a deeper dive on psychology and spirituality. This has led me to want to study it, write about it, sing about it and just be in an era of growth with it. I’m writing a book called Universal Language, co-writing with Steve Baltin, an author and journalist. For the past several months, we’ve been doing interviews together with incredible artists. It just naturally happened that we both love to talk about consciousness, music, and spirit, asking artists about their connection to their creative process within connecting to that. Many incredible stories were told, and the idea of curating it all into something that people can read and be inspired by, and therefore connect more deeply to the music and more deeply to themselves, was just so obvious. So we’re working on writing this book.
What was your favorite interview during that process so far?
Bava: Definitely impossible to pick a favorite. Having Herbie Hancock call me on the phone was pretty amazing. Getting to ask him what jazz was, and him saying, “it’s spirit, baby,” was a moment that will ring in my ears for many years. Asking Mr. Hancock about his creative process and learning how important spirituality and Buddhism and ritual are was just affirmative to knowing that creation and spirit go in tandem. 99.9% of the artists that we talked to resonated deeply with that. The ones that didn’t, to me, just re-said it but in a different way. So I loved hearing from Baby Rose how important service is in her creation. Rick Rubin’s “The Creative Act” where he talks about how art is all a service to God. This thought of trying to create from a place of product and a place of Frankenstein-ing these ideas together, to me, was super soul-crushing and was the reason for many years why I had a hard time creating because I had lost my own spirit. So within knowing it’s vital to be connected to spirit in order to create, it makes it so much more important to protect your spirit. It makes it so much more important to be present with it because if that is a source of creation, you better have that be your priority.
How did you end up doing journalism? How has it influenced your music, getting to talk to all these musicians?
Bava: As much as I don’t believe everything happens for a reason, I do believe that things show up when the student is ready. For me, the process of this past year has been connecting and learning my voice, becoming, and trusting it. My favorite thing to do is talk about spirit and music, asking artists about the process and their artistry is the most fun thing ever. When I started being a fly on the wall and getting to ask questions with some of my favorite artists, I realized how much I love it because it’s truly my favorite thing, just to have deep conversations about life, love, and the abyss. It’s been really beautiful to talk to artists about the importance of learning and knowing their voice while I’m affirming this in myself. It’s just been this really bizarre reflection onto all of these things that are happening for me internally.
Has there been one or two interviews where you feel like it’s reflected most in you?
Bava: Moby was fascinating and really hit me hard because he’s a fellow vegan, but more so a fellow nature animal lover and activist. He said something that really shook me: we are nature, and when we sever ourselves from it, we harm ourselves. I realized how much I did that, not even when we’re talking about nature, meaning animals and nature, meaning environment, but nature meaning our truths about ourselves. When we sever that, sometimes we think we’re doing it for someone’s benefit, sometimes we think we are helping them. But I believe at the end of the day, anything that harms you is in the karmic forces that happen after. It’s not what you’re supposed to do. Everyone is supposed to stay with their truth. And severing yourself in that will come and bite you in the ass. Hearing Moby talk about that just brought me closer to my sense of self and also brought me closer to things that I love. Like I’ve always loved animals, but it just deepened it more.
Why do you think you did sever yourself from that?
Bava: Because people asked me to, and I didn’t know better. When I was young, 13, 14, 15, there were several producers that I worked with musically who asked me to be for them. By that, I mean they had an idea of what they wanted in their life, space, and creative process. They saw me as a malleable being that they could mold into being that for them. Raised with empathy, I thought I was supposed to do that as an act of kindness and caring, forsaking my own voice and sense of self to become, musically and otherwise, what they desired. It was deeply damaging and confusing. When that period ended, I was in a state of deep confusion. Until I learned these things and eradicated that from my soul, I finally regained clarity and my voice. There were times—three, four months—where it was painful to speak. It felt like something was clenching my throat, and I couldn’t speak because my spirit was so suppressed that the mere act of speaking my truth, which is my voice, was a painful experience. I now see it as a gift, as my favorite author mentioned before, the gift of suffering. How can you know something if you don’t experience it deeply? How can you have a mission in the world if you don’t know it deeply? So, within knowing something deeply, you must experience it deeply, and then you can bring it forward. If everyone looked at their life that way, we’d be more at peace and joyful. Spiritual leaders are usually blissed out, and I don’t trust a spiritual leader that’s not, because that is the truth they’re living in.
What do you want people to take from your EP when they hear it?
Bava: I want it to wash over you and make you feel. Through that feeling, you’ll connect more with yourself and your sense of self, and everything is love. Most of these songs could represent different forms of love—romantic love, man’s construct love, self-love. I hope it provides people with a peaceful and beautiful space to feel love and have some peace.
The historic Crandell Theatre on Main Street in Chatham will celebrate the holiday season with screenings of classic holiday films for just $5 a ticket.
Beginning Friday, November 24, after Thanksgiving, the lineup includes The Polar Express, Gremlins, The Nutcracker: The Motion Picture, Elf, The Grinch (2018), An American Tail and It’s a Wonderful Life.
The Crandell Theatre in Chatham, NY, is one of a few community-based, nonprofit theaters in the United States devoted to film and one of fewer than one hundred single-screen movie theaters nationally. Since 2010, Crandell Theatre, Inc., has raised more than $1 million to purchase the historic theater and make needed repairs. The current Crandell board is engaged in a multi-million-dollar campaign to renovate and restore the area’s oldest, largest, single-screen theater and enhance the moviegoing experience for generations to come.
In this beloved animated family classic, an 8-year-old boy, doubting whether Santa Claus exists, is swept up on a magical nighttime journey to the North Pole on Christmas Eve. Tom Hanks, in multiple roles, stars. Children are encouraged to wear their pajamas to this special morning screening.
Called a “wacky, satirical spectacle of chaos” (Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian), this sci-fi-comedy-horror-fantasy was written by a young Chris Columbus (Home Alone, Mrs. Doubtfire, the first two Harry Potter films) and produced by Steven Spielberg. Spielberg polished Columbus’s script, after successive drafts, into the classic tale of a cuddly, seemingly innocuous gift named Gizmo and the multiplying pack of destructive loonies he unleashes. Even if you are familiar with Mogwai ways, you haven’t truly experienced these magical creatures until you’ve seen them on the Crandell’s 26-foot screen.
The colorful holiday classic comes to the big screen in a close adaptation of the original story by E.T.A. Hoffmann. Designed by famed children’s author and artist Maurice Sendak and based on the Pacific Northwest Ballet’s original production, it is a magical and heart-warming celebration of dance, music, art and fantasy.
Raised as an elf but clearly cut from a different cloth, Buddy travels from the North Pole to New York City to meet his biological father, Walter Hobbs, who doesn’t know he exists and is in desperate need of some Christmas spirit. Bring the whole family to re-experience the hilarious delights of New York City during the holidays as only Will Ferrell’s relentlessly optimistic oversized elf can.
The Grinch (the animated version by Illumination Entertainment) is part of the theater’s popular series Crandell Kid Flicks. Everyone is encouraged to wear their favorite, silliest or ugliest holiday sweater to the show. This special free screening, happening during Chatham’s all-day, village-wide WinterFest, is sponsored by Chatham Area Businesses and Arts (CABA). Several very special guests will also stop by and join the fun!
1986. Rated G. 80 min. December screening times TBA.
Animator Don Bluth directed this animated tale of Fievel Mousekewitz and his family, who emigrate from Russia to the United States to escape the cats in their homeland. When Fievel gets lost, he must find a way to reunite with his family. Steven Spielberg produced this charming animated parable about immigration, new beginnings, family and home.
Saturday, December 23 and Sunday, December 24 at 1 pm.
Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed star in Frank Capra’s penultimate family classic about a small-town man, ready to throw in the towel, who meets an angel named Clarence summoned to give him another chance. Clarence treats George Bailey to a masterclass in perspective, showing him what life would have been like had he never existed. Many critics say this is among a handful of classics that deserves annual viewing, especially if you’re lucky enough to see it on the big screen.
All tickets are available on the Crandell Theatre website, crandelltheatre.org.
The improvisational groove trio who formed in 2018 have ramped up their touring schedule this year, as well as, re-releasing their 2020 debut self-titled album. Guitarist Scott Metzger, described by The Village Voice as “an ace guitarist of a thousand styles,” also performs as a member of the beloved Joe Russo’s Almost Dead (JRAD), while drummer Russ Lawton and organist Ray Paczkowski forged their decades-strong synergy playing together as part of the Trey Anastasio Band (TAB) and their duo project Soule Monde. As the three members busy schedules have allowed, LaMP has been prioritized, performing shows up and down the East Coast with plans already in the works for venturing further next year.
In addition to their New Year’s Eve performance, LaMP has four remaining shows this December on their previously scheduled Fall tour, including stops at The Atlantis in Washington, DC, The Jefferson in Charlottesville, The Wonder Bar in Asbury Park, NJ and The Drake in Amherst, MA.
Tickets for LaMP at The Warehouse are on-sale now HERE.
LaMP 2023 Tour Dates
12/6 – Washington DC – The Atlantis 12/7 – Charlottesville, VA – Jefferson Theatre 12/8 – Asbury Park, NJ – The Wonder Bar 12/9 – Amherst, MA – The Drake 12/31 – Fairfield, CT – The Warehouse
On Saturday, November 18, the Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra continued its 2023-2024 Symphonic Series with “Faces of Joy,” an exhilarating program of music spanning two centuries. The evening began with a short piece for strings and celesta, “Five Faces of Joy,” by the living Chinese-American composer Wang Jie.
The composer calls her work a portrait of “five comic ways of smiling,” including “the smile of a dancing Godzilla,” and Maestro Daniel Hege and the ensemble brought out the wit and whimsy of Wang’s music, providing a fitting introduction to a concert whose theme was joy.
Pianist Andrew Russo performing at Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra’s “Faces of Joy”
Also on the program was Sergei Prokofiev’s delightful Symphony No. 1, known as the “Classical” Symphony. Writing in 1917, the young Prokofiev sought to imitate the musical style of Mozart and Haydn, and this piece is full of delicacy, dynamic contrasts, and devilish speed. The principal woodwinds of the Philharmonic gave a collective star turn in the dizzying fourth movement.
The highlight of the concert, though, was the second half of the program, with guest soloist Andrew Russo playing Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 5, the “Emperor.” Russo, Maestro Hege, and the orchestra seemed to become an organic whole, breathing together as Russo pushed the piano to the utmost extremes of emotional expression. Russo’s virtuosic playing and Hege’s sensitive conducting created a spellbinding atmosphere of joy, which the audience acknowledged by leaping to its feet with loud cheers at the conclusion.
As always, it was uplifting to see many children and teens in the concert hall. One young boy told this reviewer that he particularly loved Andrew Russo’s performance, saying, “He reminds me of Beethoven!” It was pure joy to hear Beethoven and his colleagues brought to life so skillfully by the Binghamton Philharmonic.
Don’t miss the next event from the Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra, Soprano Robin Johannsen & Pianist Tomoko Kanamaru on December 3. Both internationally acclaimed artists, the duo will perform a program of art songs by women composers from the nineteenth through the twenty-first centuries, including works by Clara Schumann, Florence Price, and Yui Kitamura.
Tickets are $25. For more information, contact the Binghamton Philharmonic Box Office at 607-723-3931 or visit www.binghamtonphilharmonic.org.
Jimkata, the three-piece anthemic, synth-washed, electro-rock band based out of both Ithaca and Los Angeles have announced Winter Tour dates for 2024, with six Northeast performances planned.
photo by Allison Marie
Jimkata has built a large grassroots following over the last two decades, including two and a half years on hiatus, which was recently ended. The group have released six studio albums all with their signature swirling synths, infectious pop hooks and candid lyrics.
Jimkata’s Winter Tour for 2024 will include stops in NYC at Nublu, Buffalo Iron Works, and The Waterhole in Saranac Lake. These dates are in addition to the upcoming show at Photo City Music Hall on Saturday, December 2.
Tickets here for all upcoming shows can be found at jimkata.com/tour
Jimkata 2023-2024 Tour Dates
December 2 – Photo City Music Hall w/ Edalo & CAT_A_TAC, Rochester
A fine Brooklyn Bowl tradition, The Hold Steadywill be returning with a four night residency at the famed venue from November 29 to December 2.
The Hold Steady is a Brooklyn-based band that has performed in all 50 states and throughout Canada, Europe and Australia. A band upholding the values and integrity of indie and punk rock, The Hold Steady embrace rock classicism, fusing the bar band vigor of the Replacements with the epic-scale musical backdrops of Bruce Springsteen, while vocalist Craig Finn spilled out stories that were as impassioned as they were unpretentiously literate.
The Hold Steady have attracted a fervently dedicated following who embraced the beery, anthemic style of their debut album, 2004’s Almost Killed Me. They refined their music and lyrical stance while increasing their guitar on 2014’s ambitious Teeth Dreams, and they explored an alienated culture with near-operatic sweep on 2021’s Open Door Policy and 2023’s The Price of Progress.
Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Sammy Hagar today announced the long-awaited “The Best of All Worlds” 2024 tour, where Hagar will be joined by rock heavyweights and longtime bandmates Michael Anthony (bass, backing vocals), Jason Bonham (drums) and Joe Satriani (guitar). In addition to Sammy Hagar, the tour will also feature special guests Loverboy, the 28-date tour will feature a stop at Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) on July 22, performing on the Broadview Stage.
Hagar has some history near Saratoga Springs, one that is captured in “I Can’t Drive 55.” The former Van Halen front man shared in 2019 how a drive on I-87 North was the inspiration behind the song after he was pulled over for speeding on a drive from Albany to Lake Placid.
The tour follows on the heels of the chart-topping success of THE COLLECTION II, the box set released October 6 featuring newly remastered versions of the four consecutive #1 albums released during the Hagar era of Van Halen: 5150 (1986), OU812 (1988), FOR UNLAWFUL CARNAL KNOWLEDGE (1991), and BALANCE (1995). A reminder to fans of the arsenal of hits, many which haven’t been played live since the band’s 2004 reunion tour.
Collectively, Anthony, Satriani and Bonham have played together in nearly every phase of Hagar’s career including Van Halen, Chickenfoot and The Circle, so fans can expect a setlist which draws from some of the biggest rock anthems of the last 4-decades, including, Finish What Ya Started, 5150, Your Love is Driving Me Crazy, Best of Both Worlds, Poundcake, Sexy Little Thing, One Way To Rock, Right Now, Good Enough, Eagles Fly and more. They’ve also enlisted legendary Australian musician, Rai Thistlethwayte on keyboard and backing vocals. The tour represents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see this band of brothers deliver one of the most legendary hits-packed live shows of their career.
It’s crazy to think that it’ll be 20 years since Mikey and I played these songs with Van Halen on the 04’ Best of Both Worlds Tour. With Joe on board, we can take a deeper dive into those years. We’re going to touch on some hits from my entire career but seeing fans old and new really embrace the new collection set off something in Mikey and I. We were at my Birthday Bash in Cabo for my 76th and looked at each other and high fived, like ‘let’s do it.’ We pulled out a couple of them and it was an instant lovefest with the fans from our first riffs. The music we created is going to outlive us all. They deserve to be heard so it’s time we go out and serve the fans that music, while we still can.
Sammy Hagar
Pre-sales begin Wednesday, November 15 at 10 am. General on-sale begins on Friday, November 17 at 10 am. For tickets and more details, go to RedRocker.com.
Sammy Hagar The Best of All Worlds 2024 Tour Dates
July 13 West Palm Beach, FL iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre
July 14 Tampa, FL MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre
July 16 Alpharetta, GA Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
July 19 Charlotte, NC PNC Music Pavilion
July 20 Bristow, VA Jiffy Lube Live
July 22 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center
July 24 Bridgeport, CT Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater
July 26, Mansfield, MA Xfinity Center
July 27 Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center
July 29 Cuyahoga Falls, OH Blossom Music Center
July 31 Toronto, ON Budweiser Stage
August 2 Clarkston, MI Pine Knob Music Theatre
August 3 Tinley Park, IL Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre
August 9 Las Vegas, NV MGM Grand Garden Arena
August 11 Morrison, CO Red Rocks Amphitheatre
August 13 Spokane, WA Airway Heights, WA BECU Live at Northern Quest
August 14 Ridgefield, WA RV Inn Style Resort Amphitheater
August 16 Wheatland, CA Toyota Amphitheatre
August 17 Concord, CA Toyota Pavilion at Concord
August 19 Los Angeles, CA Kia Forum
August 20 Phoenix, AZ Talking Stick Resorts Amphitheatre
August 22 Dallas, TX Dos Equis Pavilion
August 23 Houston, TX Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
August 25 Rogers, AR Walmart AMP
August 27 Cincinnati, OH Riverbend Music Center
August 28 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena
August 30 Noblesville, IN Ruoff Music Center
August 31 St. Louis, MO Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre
“Bad behavior has brought us some very good folk songs,” states Tom Lindsay, vocalist/guitarist for Acoustic Americana trio Lost Radio Rounders. Lindsay, along with bandmates Michael Eck and Paul Jossman head to the Voorheesville Public Library on Thursday, November 16th for a program featuring songs about liars, cheats, thieves, and murderers.
Since their founding in 2009, Lost Radio Rounders have specialized in themed programs such as Cowboy Songs & Frontier Ballads, Lincoln & Liberty, and Songs America Voted By. Lindsay remarked that “These programs are especially well received at libraries and historical societies where audiences are keenly interested in what the songs may tell us about the place and time in which they were created.” Back in October the group performed Blue Collar Blues: Songs of American Workers at the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3XVR20Ij-Y
While Lindsay and Lost Radio Rounders co-founder Michael Eck have both amassed an almost encyclopedic knowledge of American folk music over the years, they never forget that they are entertainers first. “Even with a program like Scoundrels!” said Lindsay, “there will be humor, albeit somewhat dark- and plenty of chances to sing along!”
Lost Radio Rounders present “Scoundrels! is free and begins at 6:30 p.m.