Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC) announced its 2023-24 Spa Little Theatre season. It will feature a robust slate of global, jazz, classical, and pop offerings. The announcement marks the continuation of SPAC’s year-round programming in the Spa Little Theatre.
Spa Little Theatre New Season
Highlighting the series are the SPAC debuts of Grammy-nominated mandolinist Avi Avital alongside accordionist Hanzhi Wang. Also featured is the all-female jazz ensemble säje. Moreover, other performances include contemporary world music virtuosos TISRA: Zakir Hussain With Debopriya Chatterjee and Sabir Kahn. Additionally, there will be appearances by the recently announced modern dance troupes Pilobolus and BalletX. The year-round residency by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center will also continue with three special performances.
The “Sounds of the Season” series will also return this December. It will feature a capella group Kings Return, trio Time for Three, and vocalist Kat Edmonson.
BalletX.
“While we have continued to expand our programming outside of the summer months in recent years, being able to inhabit the Spa Little Theatre year-round has opened up new possibilities for our year-round line-up of programming. Our 2023-24 season is a diverse and rich mix of incredible artistry offering everything from jazz to global to classical music along with full modern dance productions,” said SPAC President and CEO Elizabeth Sobol.
Tickets for the 2023-24 Spa Little Theatre season will be available to purchase on Aug. 7 at 10 a.m. for members and Aug. 10 at 10 a.m. for the general public. Multi-ticket packages will also be available in selections of three or five programs (excluding Sounds of the Season) for a discount of 15% or 20%, respectively. Visit spac.org for details.
2023 Fall Season
Pilobolus- Sunday, October 8, 2023, | 2 PM & 7 PM
Pilobolus’s show reminds us that play and creativity are fundamental to the human experience and that stories are alive and breathing. Stories can also teach, comfort, and connect us to ourselves and each other. Building on the success of their critically acclaimed Big Five-OH! Anniversary tour, Pilobolus moves confidently into the next half-century of creation and performance. Alongside groundbreaking new pieces, the company breathes new life into beloved works from the past to create an experience both timely and timeless.
Avi Avital & Hanzhi Wang– Thursday, October 19, 2023, | 7 PM
GRAMMY-nominated mandolinist Avi Avital will make his SPAC debut alongside star accordionist Hanzhi Wang, in a truly unique program that will showcase each artist’s incredible virtuosity. Avital is the first mandolin soloist ever nominated for a Grammy and has been heralded by The New York Times for his electrifying performances. Wang is a rising talent in the classical world, recently winning a roster spot with Young Concert Artists (YCA), the first accordionist ever to do so.
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center: American Panorama– Saturday, October 28 | 7 PM
Led by CMS Artistic Directors David Finckel and Wu Han, this program will feature a roster of 13 musicians in a special performance of Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring along with works by Dvořák and American Composers Arthur Foote and Harry Burleigh.
säje– Saturday, November 11 | 7 PM
The GRAMMY® nominated vocal supergroup, säje, is the brainchild of vocalist/composers Sara Gazarek, Amanda Taylor, Johnaye Kendrick, and Erin Bentlage. Traversing a vast array of compelling original material, beloved jazz standards, and contemporary re-imaginings of artists such as The Bad Plus, YEBBA, and Björk, the all-female collective has demonstrated their devotion to thoughtful, sophisticated original compositions and heartfelt covers. Their highly anticipated debut album is expected to be released in the summer of 2023. It will feature new original work and compelling covers, highlighting collaborations with artists Jacob Collier, Ambrose Akinmusire, and more.
2023 Sounds of the Season
Kings Return: We 4 Kings– Saturday, December 2 | 7 PM
The Grammy-nominated Kings Return is back by popular demand following their SPAC debut last spring. The unique, harmonizing group turned internet sensation captures the essence of an old-school a cappella quartet with sounds inspired by gospel and R&B. Kings Return features tenor Vaughn Faison, bass Gabe Kunda, tenor JE McKissic, and baritone Jamall Williams. Their We 4 Kings program features pop, classical, and religious holiday classics. It also reinterprets modern and classic pop, soul, R&B, gospel, jazz, and sacred music.
Time for Three: Home for the Holidays– Saturday, December 9 | 7 PM
Defying convention and boundaries, Time For Three stands at the busy intersection of Americana, modern pop, and classical music. The trio featuring Charles Yang, Nicolas Kendall, and Ranaan Meyer, will present arrangements of Joni Mitchell, Led Zeppelin, and more. Additionally, they will also present special arrangements of holiday favorites.
Kat Edmonson: Holiday Swingin’!– Sunday, December 17 | 4 PM
Kat Edmonson is an award-winning songwriter and singer “with an equal foothold in jazz, cabaret, and vintage cosmopolitanism pop” (The New York Times). The songwriter and her band will perform Yuletide favorites along with Kat’s originals for a magical holiday evening celebration.
2024 Spring Season
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center: Instrumental Array– Saturday, March 9 | 7 PM
In a celebration of instrumental odd couples, three duo teams highlight the extremes of possibility for their ensembles. Maurice Duruflé’s post-Romantic trio augments the duo format. All join for the concluding Septet by virtuoso pianist Johann Hummel, who was a pupil of Mozart and Haydn and was admired by Beethoven.
BalletX– Saturday, March 16 | 7 PMand Sunday, March 17 | 2 PM
Led by Artistic and Executive Director Christine Cox, BalletX creates extraordinary dance experiences that inspire human connection through live performances, dance education in Philadelphia public schools, free community pop-ups, and more. The company also offers free community pop-ups, dance classes, artist Q&As, open rehearsals, and in-school dance education.
TISRA: Zakir HussainWith Debopriya Chatterjee and Sabir Kahn– Saturday, March 23 | 7 PM
The pre-eminent classical tabla virtuoso of our time, Zakir Hussain is appreciated both in the field of percussion and in the music world at large as an international phenomenon. Hussain will lead his ensemble TISRA (three) with two of India’s finest young musicians, Sabir Khan and Debopriya Chatterjee. Showcasing rich folk and classical traditions, this unique trio is comprised of tabla, sarangi, and bansuri (bamboo flute). This colorful mix, combined with Indian classical music and the rich rhythm repertoire of Punjab, makes for a compelling program.
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center: Wu Han, David Finckel, and Chad Hoopes– Saturday, May 11 | 7 PM
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Artistic Directors Wu Han and David Finckel return to end the season with guest violinist Chad Hoopes.
It was the best of times. The early 1990s was a great time to come of age. The Reagan era creaked to an un-auspicious end with the Iran Contra scandal leaving a permanent tinge of scandal to the end of the 1980s. Reagan’s Treasury Department left a gigantic economic mess for George H. Bush due to his de-regulation of the Savings and Loan Institutions which caused major speculation by these S&L which eventually led to numerous banks failing due to bad and often corrupt investments. This S&L scandal was a major contributor to the recession of 1990 that Bush Sr. had fall right into his lap. His “READ MY LIPS” speech and then his subsequent tax hike doomed him politically and would eventually devastate his chances at a second term. Lollapalooza
Lollapalooza 1992 ticket stub
Flash to the summer of 1992, the election of Bill Clinton as the 42nd President of the United States was still not a foregone conclusion. Generation X was mad as hell and motivated to make changes in the political and social landscape of the country that had been repressive for the previous decade. The old guard needed to be retired and exchanged for something new and exciting and generation X was ready for it.
Luckily for all of us we had Perry Farrell to be the ringmaster of that circus. After his first successful run at bringing the Lollapalooza music festival to the country the previous year, the Jane’s Addiction front man doubled down and created what would wind up being a lineup for the ages for the second tour in 1992. I was a 24-year old college graduate that was working two jobs as a waiter in order to make ends meet at that time. My friends and I had enough scratch to afford cheap lawn seat for the fifth stop of the Lollapalooza festival that was hosted at the Saratoga Performance Arts Center on August 4th 1992. It would be an experience that would impact my life forever.
Lollapalooza 1992 program
The festival included the main stage for the big headliners and a side stage dubbed “Stage 2000” which home to the now famous Jim Rose sideshow circus. The Alt carnival extravaganza featured artists like The Amazing Mr. Lifto, whose claim to fame was lifting 2 big clothes irons from his penis and another performer named Enigma whose carnival act included eating live worms and maggots. Some things in life folks you can never un-see.
Jim Rose Circus at Lollapalooza 1992
The second stage also hosted Perry Farrell’s post Jane’s Addiction breakup band Porno for Pyros during the festival’s tour. This was a genius move on Farrell’s part because it enticed so Jane’s Addiction fans away from the thrall of the main stage and gave a chance for them to experience some of the lesser known artists on the second stage. Porno featured also many of the Jim Rose Carnival Crew during their performance which was perfect visually for the music that the band was providing. Stage 2000 also featured numerous up and coming bands like Shark Bait and Sweaty Nipples which have faded into obscurity over time and others like Cypress Hill, and House of Pain that would go on to have very long and successful musical careers.
The Lollapalooza Festival was also revolutionary at the time because it featured something unique, the Concourse of Curious Oddities that was comprised of lots of crafts for sale, artist installations, exotic multicultural food stalls, and lastly the Cyberbar that would let patrons experience the benefits of an Oxygen bar which most of us at the time never heard of or even knew existed. These were things I had never seen before at any show I had ever attended up to that point.
Lollapalooza 1992 signage
Lollapalooza was innovative as a music festival because it provided space for over a dozen political action booths that featured non-profit causes like PETA, Green Peace, ACLU, Rock the Vote, Handgun Control Inc., and the Women’s Voter’s League just to name a few. This was a big departure from the norm of any other music festival and was a master stroke of genius by organizer Perry Farrell. It was truly an ingenious way to activate members of Generation X. It effectively exposed concert goers who were mostly comprised of teens and 20 somethings to a variety of political causes that they would have never otherwise been exposed to, effectively making it cool to be an activist which at the time was desperately needed. Farrell also helped a lot of young folks get registered to vote just prior to a very important Presidential election that would go on to shape the remaining years of the decade and usher in the dawn of 21st century.
The heavy music action of course took place on the Main Stage, with English band Lush starting off the festival at 2:00PM. We were all getting ready for the big names on the bill that were slated to perform later on that night. My friends and I were at the point in the day where we were getting into the right “head space” for the festivities. Multitudes of concert goers milled about the grounds locating friends and joyfully explored the trappings that the carnival that had come to Saratoga had to offer.
Of course right at the point when it was time to start getting comfortable on the lawn to take the show in, the sky opened with rain, just like it always seems to in Upstate NY when there is a great show. By the time Lush finished their set and Pearl Jam came on SPAC’s main stage, the amphitheater’s lawn had been converted into a mud pit complete with crazy mud people that would, ironically for me, foreshadow my experience years later at the Woodstock 1994 festival in Saugerties NY.
The mud at Lollapalooza 1992 at SPAC
These maniacal misanthropes went sliding headfirst down the hill of the lawn crashing into whoever was not paying attention or just too fucked up to care. When Eddie Vedder and the rest of the band came on and they commenced belting out a blistering rendition of “Once” that was a deep cut off of their first album Ten it seemed like the 25,000 plus festival attendees went into a full on frenzy. Without a moment’s notice the crowd on the lawn made a mad rush through the rope barrier that separated them from the stage like a wave of humanity driving towards the stage. The muddy mosh pit that had developed on the lawn grew massively and those poor souls uninitiated to the art started fleeing from the flailing arms and body parts that were spastically thrown about. It was truly a sight I will truly never forget. At that moment and at that place there were no rules, no barriers that we could not push through. We reveled in the freedom and the audacity that the music we all loved brought us to in that time and place.
The rain had finally quit and Pearl Jam went on to finish an epic set of eight songs, leaving the crowd ready for a time out. By that time I too was ready for a break and milled about the festival grabbing some much needed food and alcohol before my next must-see band, Chris Cornell and Soundgarden, was to go on stage. I don’t really recall, but I may have checked out the last couple of tunes that Jesus and Mary Chain played, but to be honest after the energy that Pearl Jam threw to the crowd, I was unimpressed with the performance that they were giving.
Eddie Vedder at Lollapalooza 1992
It was then time for one of the bands that started the Seattle scene in 1990s Soundgarden. Of course those of us in the know at the time were secretly hoping that Eddie Vedder and the boys from Pearl Jam were going to join Chris Cornell on stage during their set. We were hoping that they would bust out a number off of the Temple of the Dog album that Cornell and PJ collaborated on. That effort was put together in order to commemorate the loss of good friend and former band mate Andrew Wood who was the lead singer of Seattle’s famed Mother Love Bone. Alas it was not meant to be, but Chris and the band put on a powerhouse of a set that night with renditions of classics like‘”Jesus Christ Pose,” “Outshined“, and“Rusty Cage.” Soundgarden even slipped in a kick ass rendition of “Cop Killer,” a controversial hit made infamous by previous Lollapalooza alum rapper turned Body Count’s hard-core front man Ice-T.
Soundgarden, backstage at Lollapalooza 1992
I took another stroll around the grounds, I was out of beer at that point and made it back to the lawn for Ministry’s set. I was sort of familiar with the band as they were gaining a lot of popularity at the time and their track “The Missing” was frequently played at QE2, the only punk club in Albany which I regularly hung out at on Friday nights. The Industrial mayhem that Ministry provided whipped up the crowd and the SPAC seats were being unceremoniously ripped loose and thrown about the front of the stage. It was getting real at that point and my concern for those up front started to outweigh what was going on the stage. The mayhem was like nothing I had ever experienced at any show, with the possible exception of the Faith No More concert I attended the year before at the now defunct Saratoga Winners. That one was truly beyond nuts!
By the time the Red Hot Chili Peppers took the stage, things at the festival had calmed down drastically. There was still plenty of crowd surfing and stage diving. The Pit was still very active, but the sense of unhinged craziness seemed to have really subsided and I was able to relax again. I believe the energy that was expended for Ministry’s performance as well as the other previous acts seemed to level out the crowd. RHCP took the stage and delivered a more tempered set with hard driving numbers like “Give it Away” and “Suck My Kiss” that transitioned into to more restrained songs like “Under the Bridge” and “Breaking the Girl.” RHCP bassist Flea was of course on stage in his “Whitey Tighties” for most of the set, beating on his bass like the beautiful maniac that he is. Front man Anthony Kiedis consistently connected with the crowd and performed the best set I ever saw the band crank out to this very date. Lots of energy and funkiness were provided that night with one of my RHCP all time favorites included their cover of Stevie Wonder’s classic “Higher Ground.”
The whole band at the end of the show donned these crazy hard hats that had fire coming out of the top of them while performing the Jimi Hendrix classic “Crosstown Traffic” which was the final number for the festival.
Ahead of us Gen Xers was a brand-new decade and the last one before the illustrious end of the 20th century. The future was thrusted upon us. Although we as generation were less filled with naïve idealism that our baby boomer parents had, we were a hopeful lot. Yes we were cynical to a fault and ready to call bullshit to anything or anyone that got in our way, but we still wanted what every generation us wanted, a part of the American dream we just weren’t certain what that was. One thing was for certain, we weren’t going to get fooled again by anyone. We were finally on top and were steering the ship and man we were ready to celebrate.
On the 33rd anniversary of this legendary musical moment in upstate NY, things are tougher than we Gen Xers ever expected them to be back at that time. Current challenges such as the COVID Pandemic, Climate Change, Political Unrest, and even the Internet have been inflicted on all of us.
That day back in 1992 in Saratoga there were over 40 arrests made at the show. Property damage was done. The passive rope line at SPAC that separated, what we perceived as, the haves and the have nots was changed to a permanent fence line not so easily disregarded by an energized crowd. SPAC has, since that fateful day in August 4th 1992, permanently banned the Lollapalooza festival from ever gracing their stage again. Here is what the Albany Times Union had to say looking back at the festival.
“SPAC legend and lore through the years:
One of the worst juxtapositions between consecutive-night crowds at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center came in 1992, when the Lollalapooza tour, headlined by Pearl Jam and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, performed a 10-hour show on a Tuesday before a horde of at least 25,000, followed the next night by a crowd 90 percent smaller for the Philadelphia Orchestra. Although comparatively few in number, some fans of the Philadelphians were still displaced, because Lollapalooza’s hordes had broken more than 70 seats inside the amphitheater. According to a Times Union account from the show, “Teenagers and young adults ran into the amphitheater by the hundreds, overwhelming the security staff, snapping ropes and pulling up the posts holding the ropes.” Authorities reported more than 40 arrests, and the tour was not welcome at SPAC the following summer; it stopped at the then-Saratoga Raceway in 1993.”
The memories of that day though, albeit a little foggier than they once were, but are still mostly intact. The sense of freedom of that day. Being able on that day to embrace music, art, and get a healthy dose of political activism as a group will never truly be lost on any of us that were lucky enough to be witness to it. It was most definitely not one I wanted to miss and I am so glad I didn’t.
Check out below we have some social media posts of other gen xers who shared some of their remembrances of Lollapalooza Festival 1992 at SPAC :
Kimberly:“My husband was one of the people who stormed down to the front. But then he started pulling people up out of the crowd and “saving” them from being swallowed up by the crowd or trampled. I stayed in the back 1/3 of the amphitheater. Too scary for a short person up front.”
Tim:“Random memory: waiting in line for food and the Enigma from Jim Rose walked up to my buddy, who got through the line ahead of me and was already eating a falafel pita, and he asked if it was any good. “Dude, you were just on stage eating live worms and maggots and you’re asking if THIS is any good?” “Well, you gotta watch what you eat!””
Peter:“I was there. Right before I went into the Navy. It was fucking awesome.”
Michael: “We had snuck inside using somebody else’s amphitheater tickets…. about 10 min before the gates fell! It was packed and totally insane! Top 5 show all- time easily.”
Peter: “All I know is I ate a 10 strip and woke up (after what seemed like 4 years) with cornrows. That’s a show.”
Roger:“We brought a football. We were throwing it around to people in the crowd who made eye contact with us. It ended up on stage and Ice Cube was holding it up during his set. Then he tossed it back out. Never did get that ball back.”
Toby:“I worked that concert it was a shit show cleaning up after it.The place was destroyed”
Bobby: “I thought I was going to be crushed to death during the Ministry set. Still woulda been worth it.”
Peter:“I dodged a few broken chairs during Ministry’s set.”
Michael: “I was there. Helping with Rock The Vote. It was a huge mess!”
Joseph:“I had lawn seats…. but, a group of us decided to make a break for it early. We ran across the tops of the seats till we reached the mosh pit in front. Fantastic concert. I still have my unworn t-shirt.”
Timothy: “Chris Cornell dove from the stage and landed on me and my friend Scott. I literally had a mouthful of his hair.”
Sarah:“I remember this event, too. My friend and I had seats in the Pit, and I nearly was killed when the crowd stormed the amphitheater. Gratefully, my friend was a lot bigger and taller than me and was able to lift me off the floor when I got knocked down. Saved my life. . .”
Evelyn :‘I got a Pit seat, 2nd row! BUT on the day there was so much chaos I never made it anywhere near that or even inside until RHCP. Incredible rain! Incredible mud!Good acid didn’t hurt.”
Cannastock, the largest consumption-friendly cannabis festival in New York, will be returning to the Capital Region at Milton near Poughkeepsie on Oct. 7 from 1:00 to 7:00 p.m. Live music will be headlined by Andy Frasco & the U.N., with additional performances by the reggae group SunDub. Over 100 exhibitors will be present on the fields outside the Hudson Valley Sportsdome.
Guests will interact with the industry pioneers bringing recreational cannabis to the Hudson Valley, including cannabis brands, growers, and manufacturers. In addition to cannabis products available at the new Green Market, festival-goers will be able to enjoy games, gourmet food trucks, and a craft beer and wine garden.
This year will also feature the announcement of the winners for the Excelsior Cup, a competition for the best cannabis products in NYS.
After two sold out Cannastock festivals, we are excited to produce the biggest and best one ever; this time in a spacious grassland with the Catskill Mountains as our backdrop. There will be more exhibitors, games, and chill out areas, along with a larger variety of food trucks and craft beers and wine. Attendees are encouraged to bring blankets and enjoy live reggae music all day followed by a performance by our favorite party band, Andy Frasco & The U.N.
Cannastock Co-Founder Gary Chetkof
Andy Frasco & The U.N., a blues and rock band, are loved for their kaleidoscopic musical fusion and one-of-a-kind onstage audacity. They will soon release their new album, L’Optimist, their sixth studio album. The new album charts a path of self-exploration and personal discovery through introspective lyrics and music.
SunDub released their debut album, Burden of Love in 2019 to millions of views. The reggae group rallies around the idea that people are the strongest when they work together with those from different backgrounds to create positive change. The core quintet of the group includes guitarist Finn Singer; bassist Josh T Carter; vocalist and keyboardist Eric “The General” Toussaint; and the brother-sister team of Joanna Teters as lead vocalist and Ben Teters as a vocalist and drummer.
An after-show party will be held at the Falcon in Marlboro, NY, featuring Cool Cool Cool.
Tickets will increase in price as it grows closer to the Cannastock Festival. For more information and for tickets, visit here.
No Fun, a Capital Region music venue on River Street in Troy, hosted five live electronic acts this past Saturday, July 29. The night included an hour-long set from Albany-native Atlas.B, alongside performances from fellow DJs Spike Right, SM Ink, Dito, and Waybach.
The self-proclaimed “hub for experimental music in the Capital Region” is a smaller-sized bar and music performance space owned by Downtown Albany bar Pint-Sized. No Fun has created a comfortable community vibe using multicolored string lights, wall murals, a low stage, and a spacious dance floor for crowd engagement.
Lighting Designer Riley Irving from Colonie’s Technical Video Inc. programmed a dual-screen stage set-up featuring LED wall tiles that cycled through kaleidoscopic color patterns as a live visual accompaniment to the music. Spike Right accompanied by Sherwood traded on-and-off the DJ setup for an hour of live D.I.Y. beats mixed with samples from popular rappers like Ice Spice.
By 9 p.m., No Fun was packed from stage-front to the side of the bar with concertgoers. The crowd was made up of Capital Region locals out for an evening of casual nightlife, alongside electronic dance music (EDM) fans who brought the party with rave glow wands and brightly colored outfits. Shuffling and freestyle moves took over the dance floor as other crowd members encouraged more people to join in and clap to the beat.
Dito and SM Ink continued the night with similar vibes of fresh beats intertwined with well-known hits. In contrast to the other performances, Waybach and Atlas.B have a deep bass and funk vibe. The pair have previously collaborated with singles “Life is So Hard” and “All Out of Time.” Altas.B not only performed previously released songs but also experimented with new mixes and techniques using Ableton Live.
The variety and creativity of each DJ set refreshed the crowd and kept the good energy flowing throughout the evening, with dancing only increasing with every passing hour. Listen to Altas.B’s newest single, “Don’t Look Back,” released on July 20, 2023, on all major platforms.
For information on future shows at No Fun, visit their website at NoFunTroy.com.
Seven great bands will perform for free from Aug. 3-5 at Shepard Park in Lake George for the Rockin For Ronald Benefit Concert supporting Ronald McDonald House Charities.
The benefit shows will help Krantz Cottage, the Ronald McDonald Family Retreat location. It is for families whose children are experiencing serious illnesses and can house up to two families at a time for stays as long as five days.
Two bands will perform on Thursday and Friday and three on Saturday. Admission to all shows is free, and vendors will be on hand with beverages and food for sale. Kicking off the event on Aug. 3 from 6-7:10 p.m. is Across the Pond, who has been performing the music of The Beatles in the Northeast since 2008. Also performing from 7:30-9:30 are The Accents, a high-energy dance band that has been a staple in the Capital Region for many years. Featuring three powerhouse vocalists, a dynamic rhythm section, and powerful horns, they cover all your favorite Motown, dance, pop, and classic rock songs. They are also one of the first groups to be inducted into the Capital Region Thomas Edison Music Hall of Fame and to be nominated for top dance band. Following the music is a spectacular fireworks show.
The next day, Aug. 4, starts from 6-7:10 p.m. with The Newells, a family band that includes well-known keyboard/guitar player and vocalist Jonathan Newell, his wife Jennifer, their teenage sons Brandon and Evan, and a great rhythm section. They cover music from the 60s-80s, including music by Led Zeppelin, Fleetwood Mac, Bruce Hornsby, and 10,000 Maniacs. Ending the night from 7:30-9:30 p.m. is Skeeter Creek, a five-piece Americana band blending their variants of country, folk, bluegrass, and rock, ranked among the best of the new and upcoming alternative artists. They have each toured with some of the biggest names in the industry and won several awards.
Skeeter Creek.
The final day, Aug. 5, has three acts, starting from 4-5:40 p.m. with The Schmooze. The band has been one of the region’s premier party bands for the past two decades, getting the party rocking with their versions of rock, pop, dance, and country hits that will have the crowd dancing and singing along. The Ultimates, a fairly new band from Saratoga, plays from 6-7:10 p.m., featuring members from Bad Cheaperones and Dealt the Blues.
Ending the Rockin For Ronald benefit concert is Classic Rock Legends Live in Concert from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Formed by Albany native Gary Weinlein, the performance includes him as the Doors’ Jim Morrison, as well as recreates the music, the look, and the energy of the British Invasion (Eric Clapton) and American rock legends (Linda Ronstadt, Stevie Nicks and Ann Wilson of Heart).
Drew Jacobs, a Comedy Musician from Latham released his fifth CD, Get Your Ha-Ha’s Out! Recorded live at The Linda, WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio in Albany, the album is a brilliant mix of witty stand-up and original songs.
Drew Jacobs first saw commercial success in 2001 when “Santa Claus is Coming To Rock You” aired on the nationally syndicated Dr. Demento Radio Show. Since then, Jacobs released more albums, including Easy Listening For The Hard of Hearing, I’m Allergic To My Job, and more. His latest release, Get Your Ha-Ha’s Out!, seamlessly blends stand-up comedy and original songs.
“I write what makes me laugh: relationships, modern society and life as a babyboomer,” Jacobs wrote on his website. He also listed his musical influences, such as The Beatles, Arlo Guthrie, Weird Al Yankovic, and more.
Get Your Ha-Ha’s Out! is an excellent showcase of Drew Jacob’s talent for both comedy and music. Jacobs managed to produce an album that is both funny and insightful. Moreover, there is something on the album for all listeners to enjoy.
Funk and soul group The Motet announce their 2023 Fall tour, a 28-city journey, with three stops in New York, introducing the band’s new lead singer Sarah Clarke to fans and audiences nationwide.
With the tour spanning from Sept. 9 through Dec. 3, the Denver-based ensemble is excited to bring Clarke along with the rest of the crew: Dave Watts, Joey Porter, Garrett Sayers, Ryan Jalbert, and Drew Sayers.
Clarke is a vocalist and songwriter from Portland, Oregon, known for her powerful voice and widespread range of recognition through her talent and performances. Having toured in the past with bands such as Dirty Revival and San Francisco-based soul psych-rock band Con Brio, Clarke brings immense experience and ability to the veteran group.
As for The Motet, the band formed over two decades ago, blending funk, rock, soul, and jazz into their extensive discography.
Coming off the release of their tenth studio album All Day in January, the band continues to find new, innovative ways to expand their music horizon. Additionally, The Motet believes the upcoming tour and the incorporation of Clarke into the group will make for more excitement.
Musically, we [The Motet] are a great fit, I feel pushed to perform at the top of my game because I know they are going to bring it every night. Interpersonally, we gel wonderfully and it’s been a true pleasure to get to know them.”
– Sarah Clarke
Performing six headlining slots at Red Rocks, sets at festivals such as Bonnaroo, Bottlerock, Electric Forest, and countless sell-out shows, the group ensures that their upcoming Fall tour will be yet another amazing experience for fans and the ensemble.
Concert Schedule & Ticket Information
Shows in New York will be bold, as The Motet will perform at the Fire Lights Festival in Sherman, NY Sept. 8-10, Oct. 8 in Albany, and Oct. 12 in Pawling.
The Sept. 9 and Sept. 16 shows will be a part of the Fall tour while also being included in their respective festival schedules.
For tickets, visit the band’s website themotet.com.
9/8-10 – Sherman, NY | Fire Lights Festival 9/15-17 – Greenfield, MA | Wormtown Festival 9/20 – Virginia Beach, VA | Elevation 27 9/21 – Roanoke, VA | 5 Points Music Sanctuary 9/22 – High Point, NC | Cohab Space 9/23 – Pelham, TN | Subterranea Fest @ The Caverns 9/28-10/1 – Lake Perris, CA | Same Same But Different Fest 10/5 – Leesburg, VA | Tally Ho Theater 10/6 – Darlington, MD | Ramble Festival 10/7 – Asbury Park, NJ | The Stone Pony 10/8 – Albany, NY | Lark Hall 10/11 – Rutherford, NJ | The Williams Center 10/12 – Pawling, NY | Daryl’s House 10/13 – Hampton Beach, NH | Wally’s 10/14 – Portland, ME | Aura 10/27 – Fort Collins, CO | Washington’s 10/28 – Boulder, CO | Boulder Theater 10/31 – Frisco, CO | 10 Mile Music Hall 11/8 – Kansas City, MO | recordBar 11/9 – Peoria, IL | Kenny’s Westside 11/10 – Chicago, IL | Park West 11/11 – Minneapolis, MN | Amsterdam Bar and Hall 11/12 – Omaha, NE | Slowdown 11/29 – Fayetteville, AR | George’s Majestic Lounge 11/30 – Oklahoma City, OK | Tower Theatre 12/1 – Dallas, TX | Deep Ellum Art Co 12/2 – Austin, TX | The Mohawk 12/3 – Houston, TX | Last Concert Cafe
The Coby Foundation, one of the leading supporters of the textile art field, has awarded The Sembrich in Bolton Landing a $30,000 grant to aid in the restoration of Marcella Sembrich’s iconic Queen of the Night couture opera costume.
Marcella Sembrich’s Queen of the Night Gown (Front) – Photograph by Bill Hubert (2015).
Experience music, history, and nature at The Sembrich in Bolton Landing, featuring museum exhibitions and an annual summer festival with an exciting mix of world-class musicians, noted musical scholars, and a free film series. Listed on the National Historic Register, The Sembrich was once the teaching studio of Polish soprano Marcella Sembrich, one of the most famous musicians at the turn of the 20th century. Visitors can discover her storied legacy, which includes over 400 performances at the Metropolitan Opera and faculty positions at both the Juilliard Graduate School and the Curtis Institute of Music.
The gown was first seen at the Metropolitan Opera in 1900 when Sembrich performed in the company’s debut production of Mozart’s operatic masterpiece Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute). The costume, now over 120 years old, is slated as the centerpiece for The Sembrich’s 2024 Centennial Exhibition.
Sembrich’s Queen of the Night was created by Berlin designer Bertha Pechstein. According to Metropolitan Opera Costume Designer Judy Levin, the embroidered metallic stars on the gown allude to an 1816 Berlin production of The Magic Flute, the designs for which were inspired by images from Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign. The spangled gown was mentioned in several newspaper articles as one of the most ornate and expensive costumes of the time, with suggestions that it cost upwards of $1,000 to design and create, equal to approximately $35,800 in today’s dollars. The Colby Foundation will give The Sembrich $30,000 to restore the costume.
The Sembrich’s costume collection contains several complete opera costumes worn by Sembrich during her 40-year operatic career. Robert Tuggle, the former Director of Archives at the Metropolitan Opera, considered The Sembrich’s costume collection as “perhaps the finest surviving example of the grandeur of opera in the late-19th and early-20th centuries.”
We are so grateful to the Coby Foundation for their generosity and support of this important project. The Queen of the Night gown is arguably one of the most notable and most recognizable textile works in The Sembrich Collection. The Coby Foundation’s generous gift is instrumental in moving this project forward and preserving this unique piece of fashion and theatrical history for future generations.
Lisa H. Hall, President of The Sembrich’s Board of Directors
The Coby Foundation, located in New York City, funds projects in the textile and needle arts field. Established in 1994 by Irene Zambelli Silverman in honor of her mother, Irene Meladakis Zambelli, it began its grantmaking in 2002, awarding more than $5 million to over 170 projects.
The restoration will cost approximately $75,000 and will be completed by Spicer Art Conservation, an upstate New York-based art conservation firm. The project will be overseen by the firm’s full-time principal conservator Gwen Spicer, who has over 25 years of experience in conserving historically significant textile works. Spicer has assisted many museums, institutions, and private collectors with the treatment of artifacts and antiquities for both display and storage.
Marcella Sembrich as Queen of the Night (ca. 1899) – From The Sembrich Collection.
For more information or to get involved in the effort to restore this unique work, visit here.
The 13th annual Lake George Music Festival will be held August 6th to the 17th. The festival will take place at the historic and lakeside Carriage House on the grounds of the Fort William Henry Hotel.
Lake George has often received wide-spread admiration and reverence as a cultural destination, yet that public sentiment seems to have lost its relish in recent years. This culturally vibrant location was once heavily influenced and supported by the presence of 20th century artists such as composer Samuel Barber and visual artist Georgia O’Keeffe. Though lacking these spirited artists and musicians today, The Lake George Music Festival hopes to shift the open opinion of the location back in this direction.
The festival aims to make that change with the assistance of classical music. Individuals from the classical music world remain adamant in the town’s position as a cultural and musical staple, as it is known as one of the most loved classical artist retreat locations in the nation.
This year’s musicians represent numerous professional orchestras including The Cleveland Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, and the Czech Philharmonic. Students in the festival’s fellowship program represent nearly every music school in the nation including The Juilliard School, the Yale School of Music, and the Curtis Institute of Music. Musicians from as far away as New Zealand, China and the Czech Republic will be in attendance this season.
This year, the festival will bring together over 100 classical artists, composers, podcasters, radio hosts, and pedagogues for public concerts and other events. The venue will offer festivalgoers an intimate experience bringing them up close to some of the nation’s best and brightest artists.
The Festival is committed to commissioning and premiering new works. This year’s commissions include a new solo violin work by Juilliard School Dean, David Serkin Ludwig, a full Symphony Orchestra piece by Curtis alumni Sheridan Seyfried, and a chamber work by Curtis and Princeton graduate Alyssa Weinberg.
Building off last year’s successful opening night where they presented Grammy award-winning trio Time for Three, the first public performance will be held on Aug. 9 in Shepard Park. Famed electroacoustic violin/cello duo ARKAI is set to perform with the Lake George Music Festival Symphony.
The festival along with Lake George’s other music staple, the Lake George Jazz Weekend hosted by the Lake George Arts Project have both brought musical enrichment to the town. Still, the aura of summer tourism and people’s avoidance because of that make their enrichment difficult to solidify and bring to light.
Founder and CEO of the festival, Alexander Lombard, claims, “Great arts and culture is happening in Lake George and now is your chance to be there for it vs. lamenting about missing what happened. The Curtis Institute of Music, where one of the Music Festival’s founders studied, as well as many of our alumni, uses the phrase “tomorrow’s artists today.” This, I feel, is especially relevant to what’s happening now in Lake George.”
Festival passes are available for sale now for $149/$49, or, single tickets will be available at the door for $25. Parking is affordable and convenient only steps from the venue.
The incredible saxophonist and woodwind specialist Matthew Steckler is set to perform at the infamous Caffè Lena this upcoming September 9th from 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM. The artist will be joined by two fellow jazz enthusiasts at the venue, presenting to the audience an evening of original compositions reflecting the intimacy and introspection in jazz titled ‘Old Friends Beckoned, New Sounds Reckoned.’
Steckler, also known as Matty Stecks, has long been recognized for his seminal work with the projects Dead Cat Bounce, Persiflage & Musical Tramps, and has further been featured at festivals and major concert series in North America and Europe. Although he is mainly recognized for his skills on the saxophone, Stecks’ diverse interests in vocal performance, keyboards, percussion, and electronic media brings a holistic approach to live musical experience.
Stecks will be joined by pianist and composer Yayoi Ikawa who has also been featured in festivals and concerts in select locations around the world. She sees her interaction with jazz as a social activity and strives to collaborate with peers and pass it on to future generations. Lonnie Plaxico, a musician best known for his masterful integration of different forms – combining the rigorous technique of classical, the improvisation of jazz, and the rawness of funk into one exhilarating musical experience – will also be joining the performance. This trio is not a new team-up, however, as the artists have traveled to venues for over a year sharing ‘Old Friends Beckoned, New Sounds Reckoned’ with fellow jazz lovers.
This live performance will be one in a long series of dates that Stecks plans to perform stretching all the way into December. The artist will stop at multiple places throughout New York in addition to Caffè Lena including Woodstock, Scotia, and Saratoga.
Upcoming Live Shows
Sat. July 22 2023: w/ Vermont Jazz Center Big Band, Retreat Farm Brattleboro VT 6:30p
Th. July 27 2023: w/ The Prescription, Merchants Park Bennington VT Thursday Night Live! 5p
Fri. July 28 2023: w/ Bombajazzeando at Music by the River, Woodstock NY 6p
Sun. July 30 2023: w/ Heard, Freedom Park Scotia NY 7p
Sat. Aug. 5 2023: w/ Noah Baerman & Friends, Buttonwood Tree Middletown CT 8p
Sat. Aug. 12 2023: w/ Heard, Sankofa Black Arts Festival, Hudson NY 7:15p
Sun. Aug. 13 2023: w/ Satyrdagg, Nanola, Malta NY 3p
Th. Aug. 17 2023: w/ Satyrdagg, Providence RI 5:30p
Sat. Aug. 19 2023: private wedding w/ Silver Arrow Band
Fri. Aug. 25 2023: w/ Rick Rosoff group at 9 Maple Saratoga NY
Sat. Aug. 26 2023: w/ Freddi Shehadi & Friends, Little City Cider Co. (Vermont Arts Exchange Music Series) Bennington VT 7p
Fri. Sept. 1 2023: Music of the Knights, Southern VT Arts Center 8p
Sat. Sept. 2 2023: Planet Kniffen at Keene NH Music Festival, time TBA
Sat. Sept. 9 2023: Old Friends Beckoned/New Sounds Reckoned (Lonnie Plaxico, Yayoi Ikawa, Matt Steckler) at Caffe Lena, Saratoga NY, 8p
Fri. Sept. 15 2023: w/ Bombajazzeando, Nova Arts Keene NH 7p
Sun. Sept. 17 2023: Old Friends Beckoned/New Sounds Reckoned (Lonnie Plaxico, Yayoi Ikawa, Matt Steckler) at Jazz Vespers, St. Peter’s Church NYC 5p
Sat. Sept. 30 2023: w/ Bombajazzeando at Garlic & Arts Fest, N. Quabbin MA 3:30p
Sat. Oct. 7 2023: w/ Dave Cuite at Salem Art Works, Salem NY, TBA