Author: sydney pollack

  • Janet Jackson MSG Concert Rescheduled

    Tickets to see the five-time Grammy award winner, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, author, dancer, philanthropist and much more, Janet Jackson at MSG were selling fast. Luckily, the global icon has added a second show in NYC for her North American Tour, “Together Again.” Jackson will be joined by Ludacris, who’s whitty lyrics and entertaining hits defined the 2000s music scene, and continues to stay relevant today.

    Janet Jackson msg

    Due to a potential New York Knicks Eastern Conference Semifinal Game 5 against the Miami Heat in the NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden, Janet Jackson’s concert scheduled for Wednesday, May 10, 2023, has been rescheduled to Monday, May 8, 2023. The concert originally scheduled for Tuesday, May 9 will proceed as usual. All tickets purchased for the Wednesday, May 10 concert will be honored on Monday, May 8. If you cannot commit to the rescheduled show date, you can request a refund anytime between now and Sunday, May 7 at 10:00 PM ET through your Ticketmaster account page.

    The tour celebrates Janet Jackson’s 50th anniversary in entertainment and spotlights two other milestones in her career — 25 years since her album, The Velvet Rope, and 30 since Janet. Find tickets here, and see the full list of tour dates below. Tickets for the MSG shows can be found here.

    Janet Jackson Together Again Tour Dates 

    April 14 2023 – Hollywood, FL – Hard Rock Live Arena

    April 16 2023 – Hollywood, FL – Hard Rock Live Arena

    April 19 2023 – Orlando, FL – Amway Center

    April 21 2023– Savannah, GA – Enmarket Arena

    April 22 2023 – Birmingham, AL – Legacy Arena

    April 25 2023 – Columbia, SC – Colonial Life Arena

    April 26 2023 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena

    April 27 2023 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena

    April 29 2023 – Memphis, TN – FedEx Forum

    April 30 2023 – St Louis, MO – Enterprise Center

    May 02 2023 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center

    May 04 2023 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena

    May 06 2023 – Bristow, VA – Jiffy Lube Live

    May 08 2023 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

    May 09 2023 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

    May 12 2023 – Charlotte, NC – PNC Music Pavilion

    May 13 2023 – Baltimore, MD – CFG Bank Arena

    May 14 2023 – Virginia Beach, VA – Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheater

    May 18 2023 – Allentown, PA – PPL Center

    May 19 2023 – Mansfield, MA – Xfinity Center

    May 20 2023 – Atlantic City, NJ – Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena

    May 23 2023 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage

    May 24 2023 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena

    May 26 2023 – Noblesville, IN – Ruoff Music Center

    May 27 2023 – Tinley Park, IL – Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre Chicago

    May 28 2023 – Milwaukee, WI – American Family Insurance Amphitheater

    May 30 2023 – St Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center

    June 02 2023 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion

    June 03 2023 – Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

    June 04 2023 – Austin, TX – Moody Center

    June 07 2023 – Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin Pavilion

    June 09 2023 – Irvine, CA – FivePoint Amphitheatre

    June 10 2023 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl

    June 11 2023 – San Diego, CA – North Island Credit Union Amphitheatre

    June 16 2023 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre

    June 20 2023 – Portland, OR – Moda Center

    June 21 2023 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena

  • Syracuse University, Lou Reed’s Lonely Woman

    While she was pregnant with me, my mom saw Lou Reed perform his Edgar Allan Poe concept album, The Raven. After the show, she bought a little red baby tee, with an outline of Reed’s face, his name printed below it. She got the smallest one they had — despite the fact that she was the biggest she’d ever been — because she planned to give the shirt to her future daughter, when I was old enough. 

    Lou Reed died nearly 10 years ago, in October 2013. I didn’t start listening to him until around two years later. My parents were the kind that didn’t let me watch the movie until I’d read the book, so before I could don my vintage tee I listened to a couple of records. I was instantly in love with the Velvet Underground and veritably obsessed with the casually confident Brooklyn drawl of their lead singer.

    That voice was ringing in my head as I browsed Syracuse University’s study abroad program listings last year. I’d been studying French, so that was the obvious choice, but my eyes lingered over Berlin as I hummed Lou Reed’s “Lady Day.”

    “I had never been to Berlin when I wrote Berlin. It was an imaginary journey,” said Reed, talking about the song, “The Kids.” “I couldn’t even go coach.” 

    So I made a decision worth thousands of dollars and five months of my life based on an album Lou Reed recorded without having been to the city for which it’s named. Germany was wunderbar!

    Lou Reed's Berlin Album Art

    Reed said he called the album Berlin because he liked the idea of a “divided city.” He said he could have called the album Brooklyn just as easily. But the music has the perverted cabaret, the purposefully out-of-tune instruments, the choppy underground scene that creeps up like a riptide in a capital city, a seat of government — much like my hometown of Washington, D.C. — after it’s been halved, quartered, chopped, and diced. So much drama and romance exists in that tension, the sneaking and smuggling, the people caught in the space between, the lovers trapped on either side. 

    Lou Reed lived in that in-between place. Born in Brooklyn, he moved to Long Island when he was nine. Reed was always separate from Manhattan, where the real action was, despite living only a subway ride away. In his numerous songs and albums that chronicle New York City, he sees the city from the inside and outside at once — terrible and glamorous and mysterious, his ultimate femme fatale. 

    His first shot at the city, in 1958 — a freshman year at New York University — flamed out. A mental breakdown sent him back home before his first year was over. His parents, unsure how to deal with their unresponsive 19 year old, turned to electroconvulsive therapy.

    “I watched my brother as my parents assisted him coming back into our home afterwards, unable to walk, stupor-like. It damaged his short-term memory horribly and throughout his life he struggled with memory retention, probably directly as a result of those treatments,” his sister Merrill Reed Weiner wrote on Medium, in a self-published article detailing their childhood.

    He recovered — ostensibly — and he dipped, upstate. To Syracuse University.

    The Lonely Woman

    It wasn’t until 2021 that I discovered Lou Reed had also been a student at SU. I was working at The Daily Orange, the student newspaper, scrolling through its archives, when I came across the paper’s Reed obituary. That is when I first heard about The Lonely Woman Quarterly

    The Special Collections of SU’s Bird Library holds every copy of The Daily Orange, every student zine, thesis and dissertation. In this archive are two original issues of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    The cover of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, illustrated by Karl Stoecker.
    The cover of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, illustrated by Karl Stoecker.

    With contributions from “Luis” Reed — as he was then calling himself — “liberal arts student and sometime singer with a campus rock n’ roll band,” Joseph McDonald, James T. Tucker, Karl R. Stoeker and Lincoln Swados, The Lonely Woman Quarterly sold out in one day, according to a May 1962 Daily Orange article documenting the magazine’s premiere. 

    “The magazine doesn’t contain great literature, but it has material in it that couldn’t be printed elsewhere on campus,” Swados told The D.O.

    In the 19-page first edition and 23-page second edition, the five sophomores offer poetry and egotism, bleed superiority with a sort of forced nonchalance.. Themes emerged that would later become commonplace in his work: the “Femme Fatale,” “the Beast,” “the Underground.” Paralleling “Luis” Reed’s lyricism in The Lonely Woman, is the music he made during his college years —  heard in the resurfaced recordings released last year, Reed’s Gee Whiz, 1958-1964, and Words & Music, May 1965. Looking at The Lonely Woman, it’s easier to understand why this troubled college student, this bridge-and-tunnel-beatnik with a taste for drugs, chose to study “the liberal arts” at a fratty, private university in a small town, an awkward six hours away from home, where he would be reduced to a “sometimes singer” by the campus paper.

    https://youtu.be/JJ_EOzHzLjU

    Syracuse, the city, has its own draw. It’s here, in the pallid winter and gorgeous summer and frat houses and projects and farmland and undeveloped land. It’s a city built on industry: salt, concrete and ceramics; but the bottom fell out of it all. It’s a city with a highway running right down the middle. A divided city. Something about Syracuse makes you want to prove something to it. Makes you want to provoke. But it’s hard; Syracuse is used to being poked and prodded and it doesn’t scare easy. 

    The first story in The Lonely Woman Quarterly, written by Reed — of course — is horrifying: it details the abuse of a young boy by his mother. It’s three paragraphs with no title, just “Luis Reed” at the bottom. It starts with the image of a boy looking in the mirror:

    “His reflection, ah yes, that was what it was, and he’d remove it to a more shadowy place, where his illumination gained a new fierceness, his countenance new intensity, teeth glistening, hair gleaming. He stared back with love.”

    Eventually turning a corner:

    “‘Oh no mommy no.’ he found his body undulating, ‘oh no mommy.’ She pulled him closer, her hands pressing him tighter. ‘That’s a good little man, that’s a good little man.’ She was breathing harder now. ‘That’s a good little man,’ she said. ‘That’s a good little man.’”

    People still bought the magazine. It was still written about in the highly reputable, independent student paper. This story that shocked in Syracuse might have been overlooked in Manhattan, at NYU. Reed’s calculated tone delivers its sickening punch. Did the waves of electric shock therapy that Lou Reed endured before his arrival in Upstate New York — treatment enabled and encouraged by his mother — feel, to him, like abuse?

    Peacocks hide their feathers
in raisens near the sun,
while bushytailed scallawags
gain entrance to the moon
You, my friend
may dip your finger
in the purple ink
and carve rainbows on
my doorstep
But the threshold
holds the peanut moon
and the boundaries set
the standards for the night.
Hush.
The baby sleeps
and silhouettes can
only scare him.
    Poem credited to Lou “Luis” Reed in the first issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    900 Ackerman

    I live in Syracuse’s Eastside neighborhood. My living room window looks across the driveway into my neighbor’s kitchen, a kitchen that was once Lou Reed’s. He lived at 900 Ackerman, in the attic apartment. On the porch, hanging from the peeling wood, there’s a plaque. It reads “Here lived Legendary Musician, Lou Reed. Take a walk on the Wild Side.” 

    Now Linus and Thomas, two juniors who could also be referred to as sometime singers in campus bands, live in Reed’s house. I sit in their living room under a poster of Television’s Marquee Moon, with an espresso machine and amp sharing an outlet on the floor beside me. They relay Syracuse’s favorite Lou Reed urban legend; that he was in ROTC but got kicked out for pulling a gun on his commanding officer. Their attic apartment doesn’t look like it’s been updated much since Reed lived here. Thomas said he thought they were hearing Reed’s ghost at one point, but it was just squirrels that had burrowed through the walls.

    “I really want us to feel his ghost,” Thomas says. “I feel like I was expecting it during the winter.”

    I ask if they hear Syracuse in any Lou Reed songs like I do.

    “There’s one song from the banana album,” Linus says, referring to the Velvet Underground’s 1967 debut, The Velvet Underground & Nico. “’The Black Angel’s Death Song.’ That’s very much a song about a cold Syracuse day, walking Upstate.” 

    The song’s psychedelic sound is augmented by John Cale on electric viola. The lyrics: “So you fly / To the cozy brown snow of the East / Gonna choose, choose again.” In the creaking strings of “Black Angel’s Death Song” lies a familiar Syracuse scene: the cold that blows in through the cracks in my apartment windows, the snow pushed up to the side of the street in a gray-brown mass; white snow meeting white sky at the horizon line looks like death, how some nights alone with my meager space heater feels like it. 

    Slouching Towards Syracuse

    David Yaffe, music writer and English professor at SU since 2005, interviewed — or attempted to interview, as Reed had a stockpile of choice words he reserved for journalists —  Reed for Rolling Stone in 2007. Yaffe had nominated Reed for an honorary doctorate. Instead, Reed was awarded SU’s most prestigious alumni recognition, the George Arentz Pioneer Medal. Yaffe was set to have a lunch interview with Reed in advance of the reception event in NYC, but the lunch was demoted to a phone call at the last minute. 

    “We must have talked for half an hour,” Yaffe said. “But it felt like a few months.”

    It’s harder to connect in phone interviews; Yaffe said Reed was completely dissociated and closed off for much of the call, until Yaffe mentioned Delmore Schwartz. 

    In the 1960s, Schwartz was teaching English at SU. The once sharp poetic wit and acclaimed writer was somewhat washed up, paranoid, bipolar. When their paths crossed, Schwartz and Reed formed a deep bond. Schwartz became Reed’s mentor and confidante. In Lou’s words: “Delmore Schwartz is Everything.” Capital E. You can hear it in Lou’s trembling and taxed, yet firm voice when he reads aloud Schwartz’s chef d’œvre, “In Dreams Begin Responsibilities.” 

    When Yaffe asked about Reed’s Syracuse graduation: “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” But when Yaffe asked about Schwartz, Lou opened up, memory jogged, light streaming through, conversations recalled: “We talked about Yeats.” And you can tell, from the first page of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, Issue I. The letter from the editor reads just like the second coming; an Upstate New York version.

    “As the sun sinks slowly in the west,” The Quarterly’s editors begin, “The air clears, the pungent odor of the Syracuse Arts Festival plops solemnly on its rump, and the militant, vociferous underground raises its shaggy head, gnashes its rabid molars in rhythm, and squats –– in one of its infrequent appearances –– in front of its collective mirror and bellows, a trifle off key perhaps as miller says, but raise its voice it does, cause boy its SPRING, and the world IS mudluscious, just as the various conglomerate herds echo in their certitude, the sundry members of Oz come forth bearing flutes and trumpets.” 

    The kids are pulling straight from their lit classes; “blood-dimmed tides,” “slow thighs,” and “rough beast.” Still, something about Syracuse weather provokes Yeats; it’s ominous, “mudlucious.” It’s in the spring that comes on so fast, while there’s still snow on the ground, so everything’s slippery and mud dries on the hems of your jeans. It’s a hesitant spring, the memory of freezing weather so fresh in your mind — a 19-degree day and white-gray sky hovering just over the horizon, threatening to fall over the sunny city at any moment. Spring in Syracuse is miraculous, ephemeral. 

    The letter continues, “The time has come the walrus said and assuming the price of paper doesn’t go up too strenuously, and the mad-man in the cellar can keep stamping out ink, this forlorn, dogearredperiodical will occasionally make its showing, nay take its place, out among the fields of its fellow man.”

    But the mad-man in the cellar, according to The D.O., is really the Savoy Restaurant’s owner Gus Joseph, doing the kids a favor and lending his printer. It’s a familiar sarcastic grandeur, misplaced apostrophes and made-up words, not exactly self-deprecating or self-aggrandizing — it’s just fun, you see them imagining themselves as that looming lion, the Underground, threatening the world as we know it, as the Velvets soon would.

    Letter from the editor in the first edition of The Lonely Woman Quarterly. lou reed syracuse
    Letter from the editor in the first edition of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    The Lonely Woman’s editors weren’t the only beasts on the horizon. It was the sixties. Joan Didion was reporting the essays that would become “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” The sky was on fire with napalm in Vietnam. In Syracuse, a beast by the name of Urban Renewal was tearing down homes and businesses, to be replaced by a bunch of empty lots and Interstate 81. Reed captures this beast in his stories, in his songs. It’s in the Lonely Woman herself. In the magazine’s credits: “The Lonely Woman has a big nose and satin sheets.” She’s horrible and ugly, yet soft, shiny and disguised. Like a halloween ghost, a mysterious shape floating under the sheet, a vampire’s cape, holes for eyes. Reed’s stories are peppered with these duplicitous monsters. His second story, for example: it has no title, is three pages long, including a prologue and epilogue. It starts:

    “Daylight and windy cities and Saturday morning is a beast of legendary tenure.” … “the sun came in through an unobserved crack and shone brightly on my angelic face as I twitched and scratched my early hunger, growling, rumbling down below (although actually not quite awake, just contemplating my inner-most thoughts that buss in a deep fog in waking hours). The beast moved beside me, rolled and signed and hissed through painted lips parted with a now decadent look of sensuousness, lips that had seen things, now parted and twitching, giving forth early morning breath. We had talked of the soul and its death, and my death, the last of my supplanting lives, spent and completely wasted, except for the constant hurt. And she asked me if I had captured my soul and I (having seen nothing but my visions, death I embrace you) had of course replied why no, it has escaped my every turn. “

    This is also Yeats, and “Sunday Morning,” and much more. “Sunday morning, brings the dawning / It’s just a restless feeling by my side.” The beast is him, it’s the day, it’s the girl, it’s everywhere. But the beast that moves beside him, that girl he wakes up with, is half beast, half something else. A femme fatale — at once a beast, an angel, your deliverance, your salvation, your dire infatuation. 

    Femme Fatale 

    Candy, Lisa, Sally, Jane, Matilda, Caroline, Stephanie, Bonnie Brown, … who’d I miss? Lou Reed’s femme fatale is the beast in disguise, the dark horse, the temptress, the siren, the Lonely Woman. 

    Syracuse isn’t a natural home to a femme fatale. The town lacks the fantasy and mystery and sense of darkness. Her cave, her cavern, her isolated rock on the shore, her long dark hair she peeks out from under. New York City, though, is brimming with the creatures: the tragic aspiring star, the smoking provocateur in Washington Square Park, the unreachable party girl walking barefoot down the subway steps as the sun rises. In The Lonely Woman Quarterly, the boys are just figuring out how to wrestle these complicated beings onto the page.

    Letter from the editors and table of contents in the second issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly. lou reed syracuse
    Letter from the editors and table of contents in the second issue of The Lonely Woman Quarterly.

    A femme fatale finds her power in anonymity, something easier to attain in NYC than in a town like Syracuse, a college campus like SU. The boys of The Lonely Woman find that like a Rumplestiltskin, they can find power in the naming of their girls. Throughout The Lonely Woman are poems by the magazine’s other editors that emulate the “___ Says” styles of later Lou Reed — “Christina’s World,” and “When Karen Walks.” But Reed has a special sense for femme fatale, and he fleshes her out in the second issue of The Lonely Woman, in a story he titled “Mr. Lockwood’s Pool.” 

    The narrator, walking through a wood — a place that sounds somewhat like Syrcuse’s Thornden Park — happens upon a clearing and finds a gorgeous pool filled with swans and ducks. A woman suddenly appears, like a nymph, and dives into the water.

    “I rubbed my eyes with astonishment. It was a girl, thoroughly nude, and in the form of a perfect C, her hands thrust rhythmically in and out of the water, cupped, her face receiving the splash ecstatically and her white teeth glistening…  She had long blond hair that now lay in collective sections on her back, the strands coming to spontaneous points” 

    He becomes infatuated with her, she brings him into the water, she whispers secrets in his ear, says things he’d never heard before. She’s unreal, her beauty celestial, her words magic. Her hair, with its points and sections, alludes to Medusa, suggesting a danger in that beauty, the beast that is just below.

    “As I watched it suddenly struck me that she had the long tail of a horse proceeding directly from the tip of her spine, arching and then the fine silky hairs losing themselves in the propitiously slight breeze which presented itself occasionally. She, herself seemed unaware of the appendage, and for all of that was an exquisite creature, with all the attributes that the male species dreamily bestows on members of the feminine gender.”

    Now, she walks the line between beauty and beast, joining the leagues of femme fatales Reed created throughout his discography. She’s more than a girl, she’s New York City, she’s an ocean, she’s light, she’s heat, when she talks it sounds like Sister Ray, when she cries it sounds like Venus in Furs. “Strike, dear mistress, and cure his heart.”

    At the end of “Mr. Lockwood’s Pool,” the girl with a horse tail tries to lead the narrator through vines and trees, into a clearing with a strange whirlpool black hole, in the sky and in the ground. He’s lost in it, he hears the girl’s voice, sees her face but can’t touch her. The femme fatale isn’t tangible. This girl isn’t within Reed’s reach while he’s in Syracuse, she’s not of this place, she’ll disappear any second, and she does, and the narrator is left alone, missing something he didn’t know he had.

    “Yes lochy, that’s it, she yelled, clasped my forehead in her hands, kissed it, and just as quickly she’d appeared, disappeared into the clear, clear water.”

    Like only a femme fatale can. 

    The Underground

    SU during the early-60s was a place of conflicting morals and ideals, converse scenes pushing up against each other like tectonic plates. Martin Luther King spoke on campus and Ernie Davis won the Heisman all while Urban Renewal and I-81 destroyed Syracuse’s Black neighborhoods on the Southside. Contradiction was on all sides, but suffocation squeezed out great art. 

    Contradiction is reflected all over the work Lou Reed recorded while at SU. In 2022, Laurie Anderson released Gee Whiz, an EP containing six songs Lou performed from 1958 to 1964. This small, choice selection, contains “Michael, Row The Boat Ashore,” dated 1963-1964. Originally sung by formerly enslaved African Americans living on South Carolina’s Sea Islands, it was later indoctrinated into American folk tradition, it was re-released in 1961 by The Highwaymen, a band built of white Harvard and Yale business majors, and became a No. 1 hit. At the same time, it was being recited by those protesting in favor of greater civil rights. There’s a contradiction there, of appropriation; of affinity? Lou’s version is quiet, delicate. He was listening to what was popular, then transforming it into the very antithesis of whatever it once was. Know thy enemy. Here emerges the underground.

    In Issue One of The Lonely Woman Quarterly, there’s another untitled story by Reed that seems to conflate New York City and Syracuse, like he spent the morning in the city then came home for supper. It opens: “Have you ever sat in the Square trying to look angry?” 

    The story chronicles a day in the life, like a diary, through Lou’s eyes, as our knowingly pretentious, rambling narrator. Lou ends up with a group of friends at an apartment, where the phone rings, voices half-heartedly debate Dostoevsky, incense burns and his head aches. Then a paragraph breaks free from all of these characters and dialogues and setting. Reed speaks for a second, just long enough to define the Underground of the Velvet Underground like it’s a dissertation:

    “Things assumed their normal order, the syntax obscuring the atypical, the falsified dichotomy leaving no room for the incoherent melancholy which is present even in the Hebrais Vision where it was not covered up, parabolic myths in conjecture without relatedness to order. But we had order, and this was purposeful, functional, for what else do we crave if not rules and regulations. How can you deviate if there’s no norm and that’s half the fun so be victorian dear friend and attack the boxlike structure, metamorphisize in extenuating circumstances and feel the joy of guilt, which you actually feel anyway but not correctly, break with the tintinnabulary logic of your mind and enter the chaos, but be strong and truthful without pretensions, and THEN disbelieve, but not before, or alas, alack you are but one of us and worse yet, me, for I’m the worst of the worst, the phoniest of the phony, the weakest of the weak, the strongest of the strong, setting up new settings for the old, new mores for the sacrosanct, typification of any for non-existent disillusionment in endless streams of group discussion, exchangement of neurosis, boastful, dearheart, and a more stringent benefactor you’ve never seen.”

    With the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed social climbs from behind the ladder, he’s real and fake, he’s playing truth and he’s a terrible liar. The game’s not to make sense, it’s to keep up. Manifesto-like, Reed defends his four-year sentence in Upstate New York: “to be strong and truthful without pretensions, and THEN disbelieve.” Underground, inside of contradiction, is where Lou felt most at home — a beatnik that joined ROTC, a rock star playing for the fraternities, a gay city kid at a preppy, private university. He wants to play football for the coach.

  • New NYC Law makes Buying Concert Tickets a more Transparent Experience

    A new NYC bill, titled the “Disclosure of service fee charges associated with tickets to entertainment events in NYC” was proposed by NYC lawmakers, forces ticket selling retailers to fully disclose the price of each ticket, including added service and convenience fees, up front. 

    concert tickets live nation ticketmaster

    Recently, concert tickets for Taylor Swift’s “Eras” Tour cost, at face-value, from $49 to $499. When they were sold on Ticketmaster, though, some Swifties ended up paying far more for each stadium seat, after days of waiting in line. And that’s just for the ticket alone.

    What buyers don’t always know is that when they select their seat number and squint at their credit cards, is that the ticket cost is about to be augmented by service and convenience fees, added at the last minute from Ticketmaster.

    It isn’t just Taylor Swift, Zach Bryan spoke out against Ticketmaster, arguing that his music speaks to working class people and working class people should be able to attend his concerts, without having to take out a second mortgage. Since merging with Live Nation, Ticketmaster has all but monopolized the live music consumer scene, to the point that the government has had to get involved. Live Nation was brought into a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last January where they were accused of stifling competition by antitrust experts and lawmakers — all while Swifties gathered and sang just outside the building’s doors.

    Councilmember Justin Brannan
    Councilmember Justin Brannan.

    The new bill, sponsored by New York City Councilmember, Justin Brannan, states that the early disclosure of the full price ensures customers can make a truly informed decision. Not only should the full price of the ticket, including added fees, be disclosed to the customer, but the bill specifies that added fees should be included in all advertisements as well. 

    “As a whole, the concert industry is shifting to all in pricing,” said Jennifer Sellers-Dimitrov, who has been managing and coordinating concerts and events in the NYC area for over a decade. “In fact many ticketing companies have adopted this practice already. A fan should see the cost of a ticket before purchase. However what’s important here is the ticket price for the concert or event clearly spells out the base ticket and the fees. To place them together without the breakdown affects the artist’s value in the market.  When you see a ticket price as $30 plus $15 in fees versus $45 flat, it shows which portion you’re spending on the act, $30, which is their ticket value in the market.”

    “It’s important that ticket inventory is sold to the customer and fan, and that allotment and data is controlled by the entity taking the risk on the event whether it be the venue, promoter or the artist,” Sellers-Dimitrov continued. “This allows for the buyer to be notified about changes, cancelations, and other events from the artist, venue or promoter. When tickets are sold on the secondary market, that can’t happen. Along with price gouging and fake tickets, but that’s a whole other topic. “

    The new law requires the operator of a place of entertainment to disclose the full price of a ticket whenever they display a ticket price on advertisements. The advertised price would be required to include fees such as taxes and service fees to increase transparency. Violators of the law would be subject to civil penalties from zero dollars for the first violation up to $500.

    The bill passed the city council and committee, and is set to take effect toward the end of 2023.

  • Cayuga Chamber Orchestra Announces Spring Performance “Eastern Bloc”

    The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra, based in Ithaca, will welcome spring with their bright “Eastern Bloc” program on April 23. The orchestra promises a “musical potpourri” of strings, piano and wind instruments, played by members and friends of the Cayuga Chamber Orchestra

    Cayuga Chamber Orchestra

    “Eastern Bloc” will kick off with the Arensky Piano Trio No.1 performed by Christina Bouey, Rosemary Elliott and Charis Dimaras. The Ligeti Six Bagatelles for Wind Quintet will follow, played by Wendy Mehne, Paige Morgan, Sarah Chandler, Cathryn Gaylord and Madison Warren. Finally, instrumentalists from both previous performances will join with Diego Vásquez, Michael Sinicropi and Vadim Serebryany for Martinů’s La revue de cuisine. 

    Also known as “Ithaca’s Orchestra,” the CCO has been running since 1976. The orchestra runs multiple programs for students, including their Youth Orchestra and Diversity Career Fellowship program which provides opportunities in classical music for historically underrepresented students. 

    Tickets for the show on April 23 are $38.50 for adults and $12 for students with college ID. They can be purchased here, or at the door.

  • Jerry Seinfeld to Celebrate 100th Performance at The Beacon Theatre

    What’s the deal with Jerry Seinfeld’s 7 p.m. stand-up comedy show on April 8? Well, this evening will be Seinfeld’s 100th show at The Beacon Theatre in Manhattan. The comic already holds the record for most comedy shows at the theater, thanks to the residency he began in 2016. 

    Though he is most known for the success of his show “Seinfeld,” Jerry Seinfeld recently released his third book, “Is This Anything?” His new book is a compilation of every bit he wrote and performed since 1975, interspersed by scenes, memories and analysis of each era of his comedy career. Seinfeld’s comedy draws from common mundane activities and finds the absurdity in each, making it widely relatable and light-hearted. 

    The Beacon feels like home at this point. This is the place for comedy in NYC, and to do 100 shows here as part of this residency is an honor and a testament to the incredible fans who have been selling this place out since we started in 2016.

    Jerry Seinfeld

    As is clearly seen in “Seinfeld,” Jerry Seinfeld is a native New Yorker and the city has often acted as his muse — prompting jokes and entire plot lines inspired by events he witnessed participating in daily life in NYC. Seinfeld has become an institution in New York, making this historical achievement at an even older and more established New York institution, The Beacon Theatre, fitting.

    Since the final episode of Seinfeld aired in 1998, Seinfeld himself has continued to have a successful and prolific career in comedy. In addition to his many solo comedy specials and stand-up shows on both national and international stages,  Seinfeld started his web series “Comedians in Cars getting Coffee” in 2012. The show went on to host such high profile guests as President Barack Obama, and it was nominated for numerous Emmy awards and was picked up by Netflix in 2017. 

    Limited tickets remain for Seinfeld’s 100th show and tickets start at $115. Fans of Seinfeld or Seinfeld can buy them here.

  • Jazz Foundation of America to Host Annual Benefit Gala and Concert

    The Jazz Foundation of America will host their annual “A Great Night in Harlem” benefit gala and concert at 8 p.m. on Thursday, March 30 to raise funds for the JFA’s Musicians’ Emergency Fund.

    Danny Glover, Ann Curry, Jeffrey Wright and Mario Cantone will emcee the event, held at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. “A Great Night in Harlem” will honor musicians considered to have helped define jazz and who have left a meaningful cultural impact through their work in jazz, blues, R&B and soul. In addition to the honorees, musical director Steve Jordan will lead a concert featuring artists such as John Batiste and Betty LaVette. 

    The event hosts eight honorees this year. The JFA wants to honor Benny Golson to recognize his solo career that followed his rise to prominence touring with Dizzy Gillepsie and Lionel Hampton’s big bands. The founding director and vice chairman of the JFA, Wendy Oxenhorn, will also be honored for her life’s work in offering humanitarian support to jazz musicians. Native New Yorker and 90-year-old Mike Stoller, will also be recognized for his invaluable contribution to mainstream rock and roll and R&B music through his songwriting prowess. And finally, The Titans of Jazz Bass, a group of jazz basists made up of Cecil McBee, Rufus Reid, Larry Ridley, Paul West, Buster Williams and Reggie Workman will be honored as iconic members of the jazz bass tradition. 

    Steve Jordan is to direct musical performances Jon Batiste, Bettye LaVette, Monty Alexander, Ray Parker Jr., Kenny Barron, Robert Cray and more.

    The evening will also include a special tribute to the great composer and pianist Ramsey Lewis, who died in September of last year. Lewis founded the Ramsey Lewis Foundation and Ravinia’s Jazz Mentor Program, and he was on the board of trustees for various music and arts schools, leaving a legacy that will last into the next generation of jazz musicians. 

    Funds raised through the annual gala will support the Jazz Foundation of America’s Musicians’ Emergency Fund, which provides housing assistance, pro bono medical care, disaster relief and emergency financial support to musicians in need. Tickets for the gala range from $75 to $250, and tickets that include access to the JFA’s exclusive after party start at $500. Doors open at 7 p.m., and the show is set to start at 8 p.m. Tickets can be found here.

  • Female Voices Rock Film Festival Returns in May

    Move over Oscars, the Female Voices Rock Film Festival will return to Brooklyn May 5-7, to showcase this year’s most visionary independent films from women creators. Priority for this year’s festival is to shed light on films created by storytellers long marginalized in Hollywood, especially women of color and LGBTQ+ voices. The festival maintains that these stories make for some of the most important and enlightening films, and strives to use the Female Voices Rock festival’s platform to uplift these filmmakers.

    Female Voices Rock

    The Female Voices Rock festival was launched in 2019. In 2018, the festival’s data showed women comprised only 20% of all directors, writers, producers, editors and cinematographers working on the top 250 US domestic grossing films. While the representation of women in film has grown and adapted exponentially in the past couple of years, the Female Voices Rock film festival strives to have those same standards reflected behind the scenes as well. 

    Creating a safe and inspiring space for women to express themselves, share visionary stories and meet future collaborators is what Female Voices Rock is all about. Each year we thrive to do better and to increase diversity and inclusion by making sure women’s voices continue to be championed

    Catherine Delaloye, founder and executive director

    Premiering at the festival this year are Erica Eng’s “Americanized,” a story of Eng struggling with finding her place in Oakland’s hip-hop culture as a Chinese American; Abbey George’s “Jesus Would Have Loved Punk Rock,” about two girls taking on their corrupt Catholic high school’s administration; Kayla Arend’s “Leaving YellowStone,” a horror about a woman who finds herself amidst a crumbling relationship in the isolated wood; and many more, see the full list below.

    This year, producer Kira Leinonen is recruiting industry professionals for the festival’s industry panels to bring invaluable information to participants in developing short films into features, steps in producing your first film, budgeting, editing and more. Past festivals have procured panelists from films so varied as The 1619 Project, Everything Everywhere All At Once, The Manchurian Candidate and The Woman King, to name a few. This year’s panelists and film line-up are to be announced. 

    Americanized – directed by Erica Eng                                                                  

    Anniversary – directed by Lain Kienzle

    Bienvenidos a Los Angeles – directed by Lisa Cole

    Birth Rights – directed by Maria Rosales

    Call Button – directed by Rhona Rees

    Choices – directed by Kameishia D Wooten

    Counting – directed by Sarah Young

    Daddy – directed by Jo Steinhart

    Firecracker – directed by Caroline Guo

    Five Star Review – directed by Vivien Vitolo

    Girls Night In – directed Alison Roberto

    Her and I – directed by Stephanie Marin

    Hummingbird – directed by Lindsey E. Gary

    I’m Sorry, I Tried, I Love You – directed by Goldie Jones

    In Sickness & In Health – directed by Sarah Smick

    Incurable – directed by Bahare Nikjoo

    Jesus Would Have Loved Punk Rock – directed by Abbey George

    Leaving Yellowstone – directed by Kayla Arend

    Mama Retreat – directed by Eileen Álarez

    Mary Meet Grace – directed by Faryl Amadeus

    Matka/Polka (Mother/Pole) – directed by Joanna Suchomska

    No Man’s Land – directed by Kristen Buckels

    Punch Line – directed by Becky Cheatle

    Rearranging Skin: A Love Letter to the World 

    Resurrection – directed by Luiza Budejko

    Ro & the Stardust – directed by Eunice Levis

    SAM – directed by Ryan Thielen, Jen Stafford

    The Blue Dream – directed by Angelita Mendoza

    Tooth – directed by Jillian Corsie

    Unattached – directed by Fanny Texier

    Wannabe – directed by Josie AndrewsWho? How? and Where? – directed by Victoria Garza

    Festival attendees can expect, in addition to screenings, workshops, parties, talks with industry professionals, networking opportunities, with more to be announced. The festival, held at the Wythe Hotel in Brooklyn, will begin on Friday, May 5 with an opening night party from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. A single day pass for Saturday is $40 and $50 for Sunday. The all access pass, $125, ensures access to the Opening Night Party, awards ceremony and closing party, filmmaker brunch, all screening blocks and industry panels, red carpet access and one drink ticket for the opening and closing parties. Tickets and more information can be found here.

  • Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band to play JMA Dome this September

    Though The Boss is on tour right now hitting venues in the south, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band have promised a return up North. The band announced additional shows in 18 cities to round out their International tour, including at the JMA Dome in Syracuse and MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford. 

    When their 2023 tour opened in Tampa this February, it had been seven years since Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band last toured in North America. The band has returned with a bang, playing 28-song sets to stadiums across the country. This extended tour means Springsteen will be on the road all year, but as fans know, he was “Born to Run.” 

    Bruce Springsteen

    Springsteen’s newest album, Only the Strong Survive, was released last year. This latest record maintains Springsteen’s storytelling prowess with that twinge of soul that denotes his classic sound. That twinge is amplified with two features from R&B artist Sam Moore. Reports on his tour so far from Rolling Stone and SPIN promise emotional and energetic stage presence.

    Fans can look forward to hearing Springsteen favorites, most known for “I’m on Fire,” “The River,” “Born in the U.S.A,” and dozens of other songs that have since entered the canon of all-American rock n’ roll. Register here before February 19 to buy tickets starting Friday, February 24 at 10 a.m.

    August 9 — Chicago, IL — Wrigley Field

    August 16 — Philadelphia, PA — Citizens Bank park

    August 18 — Philadelphia, PA — Citizens Bank park

    August 24 — Foxborough, MA — Gillette Stadium

    August 28 — Washington, DC — Nationals Park

    August 30 — East Rutherford, NJ — MetLife Stadium

    September 1 — East Rutherford, NJ — MetLife Stadium

    September 7 — Syracuse, NY — JMA Dome

    September 9 — Baltimore, MD — Oriole Park at Camden Yards

    September 12 — Pittsburgh, PA — PPG Paints Arena

    November 3 — Vancouver, BC — Rogers Arena

    November 6 — Edmonton, AB — Rogers Place

    November 8 — Calgary, AB — Scotiabank Saddledome

    November 10 — Winnipeg, MB — Canada Life Centre

    November 14 — Toronto, ON — Scotiabank Arena

    November 16 — Toronto, ON — Scotiabank Arena

    November 18 — Ottawa, ON — Canadian Tire Centre

    November 20 — Montreal, QC — Centre Bell

    November 30 — Phoenix, AZ — Footprint Center

    December 4 — Inglewood, CA — Kia Forum

    December 6 — Inglewood, CA — Kia Forum

    December 8 — San Francisco, CA — Chase Center

  • Judy Collins to Perform Acclaimed Album ‘Wildflowers’ at The Town Hall in NYC

    On Saturday, February 25, pop icon Judy Collins is heading to the Town Hall to bring her signature blend of folk and pop to NYC as she performs her 1967 album, Wildflowers — to this day, her highest-charting album —  front to back with the Harlem Chamber Players. 

    Judy Collins Wildflowers
    Judy Collins, performing Wildflowers on February 25 at The Town Hall

    Judy Collins came to NYC from the west coast at the start of the sixties. She landed in Greenwich Village, singing songs written by contemporaries such as Tom Paxton, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. With Cohen, Collins was a veritable salonnière of the Greenwich Village scene; she brought together Joni Mitchell, Randy Newman and many more, so the artists could share inspirations and audiences. Her background working with protest singers has stayed with Collins, she works with multiple social justice organizations and represents UNICEF.

    While she came on the scene as an interpretive cover artist — she won the Grammy for Best Folk Recording in 1969 for her cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now — Collins soon established herself as an adept songwriter as well, starting with “Since You Asked” in 1967. This year, Collins has been nominated for a Grammy again, this time for her folk album Spellbound, her first complete album of all original, self-penned songs in her career. 

    At the Town Hall on February 25, fans will hear Collins’ famous rendition of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” live, as well as other hits from that album: “Albatross,” “Since You Asked,” and “Hey, That’s No Way to Say Goodbye.” Joining Collins is the Harlem Chamber Players, an acclaimed chamber band that works to increase access to high-caliber classical music in Harlem and the greater city. Doors will open at 7 p.m. and the show will begin at 8 p.m. Tickets can be purchased here

  • New Musical Produced by Dionne Warwick to Stop in Albany, Rochester and Manhattan

    Dionne Warwick is taking her show “HITS! The Musical” on tour, with three stops in NY. Warwick and her son, Damon Elliot, have joined the production team as co-producers to bring the show to over 50 cities across North America, starting in February. The show will be stopping at The Egg in Albany, Kodak Theater in Rochester and Town Hall in Manhattan.

    Dionne Warwick Hits


    As an institution in pop music, Dionne Warwick’s  partnership with this musical is a made match. Warwick’s collection of iconic songs — “Walk on By,” “Alfie” — are matched in legend by the hits in “HITS!” which include “Hero,” “Signed, Sealed, Delivered,” “I Will Always Love You,” and “Singing in the Rain.” 

    Warwick is still touring herself; she will perform this February 3 at the MusiCares Dinner to honor Berry Gordy and Smokey Robinson. CNN is releasing a documentary feature on Warwick’s life called “Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over” —airing on February 4 on CNN and streaming on HBO thereafter. 

    Today, Warwick is still going strong. She will be performing at select locations in North America during 2023, including the star-studded MusiCares dinner on February 3 honoring Berry Gordy and Smokey Robinson. She will also attend the 65th GRAMMY Awards which will be held February 5. Fans can expect a new recording from Dionne Warwick later in February: “Peace Like A River,” a duet with Dolly Parton. 

    Warwick said she was drawn to produce “HITS!” because of the exciting cast of young creatives. Her son Damon Elliot agreed, saying that the musical’s well known score will bring together families. Elliot,  manager and music producer in his own right, most recently he produced the title track for “80 For Brady,” an upcoming sports comedy film.  

    The tour will stop in Albany, Rochester and NYC. Tickets can be purchased here. See the full list of tour dates below.

    HITS! The Musical 2023 SCHEDULE

    February 25 Asheville, NC The Wortham Center for the Performing Arts

    March 1 Concord, NH Chubb Theater at Capital Center for The Arts

    March 2 Albany, NY The Egg

    March 3 Rochester, NY Kodak Theater

    March 4 Boston, MA Emerson Cutler Majestic Theatre

    March 7 New Haven, CT Shubert Theater

    March 8 Englewood, NJ Bergen Performing Arts Center

    March 9 New York City, NY Town Hall

    March 10 Glenside, PA Keswick Theatre

    March 11 Harrisburg, PA The Whitaker Center

    March 12 Pittsburgh, PA Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall

    March 15 Cleveland, OH Mimi Ohio Theater

    March 16 Columbus, OH Southern Theater

    March 17 Dayton, OH Victoria Theater

    March 18 Easton, PA State Theater

    March 19 Baltimore, MD Lyric Theater

    March 22 Washington, DC Warner Theater

    March 23 Durham, NC Carolina Theater

    March 24 Charlotte, NC Knight Theater

    March 25 Norfolk, VA Harrison Opera House

    March 26 Charleston, SC Charleston Music Hall

    March 28 Atlanta, GA Cobb Energy Performing Arts Centre

    March 29 Orlando, FL Dr. Philips Center for Performing Arts

    March 30 Jacksonville, FL Times Union Performing Arts Center

    April 1 Ft. Lauderdale, FL Parker Playhouse

    April 2 Tampa, FL Straz Center for Performing Arts

    April 5 Birmingham, AL Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex

    April 6 Huntsville, AL Von Braun Center

    April 7 Nashville, TN Tennessee Performing Arts Center

    April 8 Louisville, KY Brown Theater

    April 12 Lexington, KY Lexington Opera House

    April 13 St. Louis, MO Touhill Performing Arts Center

    April 14 Chicago, IL Harris Theater for Music and Dance

    April 15 Detroit, MI Royal Oak Music Theatre

    April 16 South Bend, IN Morris Center

    April 19 Appleton, WI Fox Cities Performing Arts Center

    April 20 Milwaukee, WI Pabst Theater

    April 21 Minneapolis, MN Pantages Theatre

    April 22 Des Moines, IA Hoyt Sherman Place

    April 23 Cedar Rapids, IA Paramount Theater

    April 25 Kansas City, MO Folly Theater

    April 27 San Antonio, TX Tobin Center

    April 28 Dallas, TX Strauss Square

    April 30 Houston, TX Cullen Theater

    May 3 Phoenix, AZ Herberger Theater Center

    May 4 Tucson, AZ Fox Tucson Theater

    May 6 Los Angeles, CA Theater at the Ace Hotel

    May 8 San Francisco, CA Palace of Fine Arts