Category: Regions

  • Bryant Park Free Picnic Performances Return This Summer

    Bryant Park Corporation has announced the 2023 lineup for its free summer performing arts series, Bryant Park Picnic Performances, presented by Bank of America, happening from June 1 to Sept. 14.

    Bryant Park
    Photo credit Chris Lee.

    Located in Midtown Manhattan, Bryant Park’s Picnic Performances has grown into one of the foremost outdoor performing arts festivals in New York City. Over 75,000 people attended last summer, and nearly half a million watched the live streaming of the free performances. The 2023 season features world-class local artists as well as performers from as far away as Italy, Colombia, Turkey, Finland, and South Africa. More than 20 shows from the 2023 season will be live-streamed for free on Bryant Park’s social media channels and website, reaching national and international audiences. Attendees may bring their own food or purchase from on-site food and beverage vendors near the Lawn.

    “Bryant Park Picnic Performances is an uncommonly collaborative project that is meant to showcase the best of the arts in New York City,” says Dan Fishman, Vice President of Public Events at Bryant Park Corporation. “I cannot imagine a better way to celebrate New York than to provide a platform in partnership with the many cultural institutions – large and small – that make this city great.”

    This summer, the New York City Opera will host a number of shows in Bryant Park, kicking off the picnic performances on June 1 at 7 p.m. with a one-night-only, staged, and costumed production of Puccini’s La Bohème with orchestral accompaniment, conducted by Maestro Joseph Rescigno. Later on Aug. 18 at 7 p.m., there will be a live music-supported production of Rossini’s The Barber of Seville featuring members of the New York City Opera Orchestra. Tenor Alessandro Lora performs a special concert of Italian favorites on Aug. 19. Closing out the New York City Opera series is Gounod’s Romeo and Juliet on Sept. 8, starring Ekaterina Siurina and tenor Won Whi Choi.

    Bryant Park
    New York City Opera, 2018, photo credit Angelito Jusay.

    Different contemporary dance performances curated by Tiffany Rea-Fisher will take place in June, starting with Robin Dunn, Buddha Stretch, and Mr. Wiggles with additional artists TBA, marking 50 years of hip-hop dance on June 8. The next day brings Dance Heginbotham, a New York-based contemporary dance company founded in 2011 committed to supporting, producing, and sustaining the work of choreographer John Heginbotham, enriching national and international communities with its unique blend of inventive, thoughtful, and rigorous dance theater works. Two rising stars in contemporary dance, Terk Lewis and Kayla Farrish perform on June 15. Lewis began his formal ballet training at the age of 17 with Tony Calucci at The Dance Extension in Columbus, earning his BFA in Dance from Western Michigan University. He has choreographed his own commissioned works for The National Dance Theatre Company of Jamaica, The Joffrey Ballet School, Black Boys Dance Too (Presented by Bryant Park NYC), and Western Michigan University.

    Farrish is a Black American Director merging dance-theater, filmmaking, narrative, and sound score, receiving the Sundance Uprise Grant for Emerging BIPOC Directors, Bessie Awards for NYLA’s Motherboard Suite, the Harkness Promise Award for 2022, and more. The last contemporary dance performances feature two of New York’s extraordinary percussive dance artists, Soles of Duende and Josh Johnson on June 16. Soles of Duende is on a lifelong mission to elevate the joy and music of true collaboration across disciplines and the celebration of the forms they practice, based on the sounds of Tap (Amanda Castro), Flamenco (Arielle Rosales), and Kathak (Brinda Guha). Johnson is a Harlem native, who tap-danced on the trains of New York City to pay for college at Penn State University, going on to perform at many jazz clubs in the city, ABC World News with Diane Sawyer, and has made multiple appearances on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.

    Kayla Farrish, photo by Sarah Annie Navarrete.

    The Emerging Music Festival presented by Bryant Park and curated by AdHoc returns this summer with some of the best up-and-coming artists today. Starting June 23, THUS LOVE, Psymon Spine, and Katy Kirby grace the stage. THUS LOVE was founded in 2018 by three trans-multi-instrumentalists in Brattleboro, Vermont, Echo Marshall (she/her), Lu Racine (he/they), and Nathaniel van Osdol (they/them). The mission statement of the group is to amplify the voices of those who struggle, tackling weighty themes with startling intimacy and vulnerability. Brooklyn-based dance group Psymon Spine is comprised of Noah Prebish, Peter Spears, Brother Michael Rudinski, and Sabine Holler, taking inspiration from Talking Heads and Os Mutantes along with the rush of the NYC dance scene, fuzing psych-pop and post-punk.

    Katy Kirby is an indie rock songwriter, with lyrics focusing on unspoken rules, misunderstandings of all kinds, and boredom, forming a band to work on recording a full-length record. The Emerging Music Festival’s final day on June 24 consists of Ky Vöss, Seramic, Miss Grit, Dead T00th, and More TBA. Vöss is an NYC-based American producer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, utilizing stark contrasting lyrics, striking visuals, and synthesized melodies to walk the line between otherworldly and deeply human. Seramic (Marcus Foster) showcases a powerfully unique and varied range of influences, releasing two critically acclaimed EPs, combining his love for Prince, gospel, & soul singers of the 70s and 80s mixed with 90’s hip hop and RnB. New York-based musician Margaret Sohn created Miss Grit to function as an outlet for their own analysis and expression of self, releasing their debut record Follow The Cyborg earlier this year.

    Dead T00th is a Brooklyn-based indie rock band that has released several EPs, winning OWL Winter Madness (a 16-band, 5-week-long “battle of the bands” at Brooklyn’s legendary rooftop venue Our Wicked Lady). Other concerts include Shaina Taub and Friends on Aug. 11. Taub is an Obie Award-winning, Emmy Award-nominated songwriter and performer. She is an artist-in-residence at Joe’s Pub and at the Public Theater, where she wrote and starred in Suffs, garnering Drama League, Drama Desk, and Lortel Award nominations. She has three solo records released, created, and starred in critically acclaimed musical adaptations of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night and As You Like It at Free Shakespeare in the Park, as part of their community-based program, Public Works, among many other accomplishments.

    Psymon Spine.

    On June 2, Jazzmobile brings trumpeter, Steve Oquendo, to lead a 19-musician Latin jazz orchestra. Other events include the Jalopy Theatre curating a three-part folk festival with bluegrass headliners Michael Daves Quartet Ft. Tony Trischka, Malian kora virtuoso Yacouba Sissoko, and lap steel guitarist Terrell King on June 30, the Classical Theatre of Harlem performing an abridged version of Langston in Harlem, five nights of music presented by Carnegie Hall Citywide, and more. For more information about the Bryant Park Picnic Performances, go here.

    Schedule of Events

    June 01 – New York City Opera: La Bohème – 7pm

    June 02 – Jazzmobile: Steve Oquendo Latin Jazz Orchestra- 7pm

    June 08 – Contemporary Dance: Robin Dunn and more TBA – 7pm

    June 09 – Contemporary Dance: Artists TBA- 7pm

    June 15 – Contemporary Dance: Terk Lewis + Kayla Farrish- 7pm

    June 16 – Contemporary Dance: Soles of Duende + Josh Johnson – 7pm

    June 23 – Emerging Music Festival: THUS LOVE, Psymon Spine, Katy Kirby – 7pm

    June 24 – Emerging Music Festival: Ky Vöss, Seramic, Miss Grit, Dead T00th – 5pm

    June 30 – Jalopy Theatre: Michael Daves Quartet ft. Tony Trischka, Yacouba Sissoko, Terrell King – 7pm

    July 07 – Carnegie Hall Citywide: Arturo O’Farrill and the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra – 7pm

    July 14 – Carnegie Hall Citywide: Tessa Lark + Michael Thurber – 7pm

    July 21 – Carnegie Hall Citywide: Magos Herrera featuring The Knights – 7pm

    July 28 – Carnegie Hall Citywide: Champe-Soukous Collective – 7pm

    August 03 – Ailey Moves NYC: Ailey II – 7pm

    August 04 – Carnegie Hall Citywide: Ndlovu Youth Choir – 7pm

    August 18 – New York City Opera: The Barber of Seville – 7pm

    August 19 – New York City Opera: Alessandro Lora in Concert – 7pm

    August 25 – Accordions Around the World: Diana Burco, Suistamon Sähkö, Ragini Ensemble – 7pm

    August 26 – Roulette Intermedium: 75 Dollar Bill, Ka Baird, Additional Artist TBA – 7pm

    September 01 – Classical Theatre of Harlem: Langston in Harlem – 7pm

    September 07 – American Symphony Orchestra: American Expressions – 7pm

    September 08 – New York City Opera: Romeo and Juliet – 7pm

    September 09 – Drom: Gaye Su Akyol (U.S. Debut) – 7pm

    September 14 – Harlem Stage: 40th Anniversary Celebration – 7pm

  • UB40 Anniversary Tour “UB45” Stops at The Space at Westbury

    Reggae-pop band UB40 is celebrating its 45th anniversary with its “UB45” summer tour throughout July, which will stop at The Space at Westbury on July 6.

    The Cover of UB40’s debut studio album, 1980’s Signing Off.

    The band will perform their hits “Red Red Wine,” “Food For Thought,” and “(I Can’t Help) Falling In Love With You,” among others, on their anniversary tour, in addition to being joined by special guests such as Maxi Priest, Inner Circle, Third World, and Big Mountain. Concurrently, UB40 will release a new album this summer, titled UB45, with new songs and reworked classics, and a yet-to-be-announced release date.

    Guitarist/vocalist Robin Campbell said of UB40’s US tour, “We love playing the U.S., and celebrating our 45th year and having a new album makes our return even more exciting.”

    UB40 was originally formed in 1978 in Birmingham, England, and its current members consist of Jimmy Brown (drums), Robin Campbell (guitar/vocals), Earl Falconer (bass/vocals), Norman Lamont Hassan (percussion/vocals), Martin Meredith (keyboards/WX7/saxophone), Tony Mullings (keyboards), Laurence Parry (trumpet/flugelhorn/trombone), Ian Thompson (saxophone) – and Matt Doyle (lead vocals.) Doyle only joined the band recently, taking over for a retired Duncan Campbell after Doyle’s group, KIOKO, opened for UB40 at The Royal Albert Hall in 2018, and later supported them on UB40’s subsequent UK tour and European tours. UB40 released their debut studio album, Signing Off, in 1980, and since then have released a total of 20 studio albums, most recently 2021’s Bigga Baggariddim.

    UB40’s 45th-anniversary summer tour is in support of their upcoming studio album, UB45. One of the most successful British groups of all time, UB40 is represented in the USA and South America by Jeff Epstein and Paul Gaudio of Universal Attractions Agency (UAA.). For more information visit UB40’s website.

    The Space at Westbury originally opened as Westbury Movie Theater in 1927, with a screening of Hula, starring Clara Bow, while The University of Maryland Collegian’s Band thrilled the audience with a spectacular performance. One of the six theaters built by Salvatore Calderone in Nassau County, the Westbury Theatre eventually closed due to a decline in patronage in the late 70s. Eight years ago, Cyrus Hakakian and his partners saved the Westbury Theater from demolition, and the venue now enters a new chapter of its illustrious history as The Space at Westbury.

    For tickets to see UB40 on their 45th-anniversary tour, which includes a stop at The Space at Westbury, click here.

    UB45 Tour Dates Are as Follows:

    7/4/23 Wiggins Waterfront Park Camden, NJ
    7/6/23 The Space Westbury, NY
    7/7/23 Chevalier Theatre Medford, MA
    7/9/23 Wolftrap Foundation for the Performing Arts Vienna, VA
    7/11/23 Schermerhorn Nashville Nashville, TN
    7/13/23 The Amphitheater at Phillip S. Miller Park Castle Rock, CO
    7/15/23 Marymoor Park Seattle, WA
    7/16/23 Bossanova Ballroom Portland, OR
    7/17/23 Brittfest Jacksonville, OR
    7/20/23 Mountain Winery Saratoga, CA
    7/21/23 The Microsoft Theater Los Angeles, CA
    7/22/23 Palm Pool Las Vegas, NV
    7/23/23 Saroyan Theatre Fresno, CA

  • Sean Rowe On Combining Nature And Music

    When someone refers to a musician as multi-faceted, they often mean one who would best be described as a singer/songwriter or a multi-instrumentalist. But what about musicians who bring their outside interests into their music? Musicians like Sean Rowe, whose music and interest in the natural world combine to create something truly unique.

    Sean Rowe is an American singer-songwriter, musician, recording artist, and forager. A writer of heartfelt songs strongly rooted in singer-songwriter tradition, Rowe is an avid naturalist and renowned forager, and often speaks of his fascination with the woods and his connection to the land. You might recognize him from appearances on “Jimmy Kimmel Live” or heard his song, “To Leave Something Behind” featured in the 2016 film, “The Accountant”.

    This Adirondack raised baritone would not be out of place at a rock show, or your local farmers market. I spent some time with Sean talking about his music, his successful Youtube series, and most interestingly, his love of foraging, and how all those topics intertwine to create his unique approach to Americana.

    Montana Munoz : Hey Sean! Glad we could chat for a bit, just wanted to say i’m quite excited to be talking with you today. I just wanted to start off by saying I really like your song “Squid Tattoo”. I played it the other day at home and my Dad has put it on in the car at least 10 times now.

    Sean Rowe : Oh thanks so much!

    MM: How would you describe yourself or really, describe your music for someone who may not know who you are?

    SR: In terms of conveniently looking me up in a genre it would probably be Americana or Folk, although ‘Folk’ is such a loose word. It encompasses a lot of music and has certain connotations that I would say is not so fitting to my music but I guess if you look up Alternative Folk or Americana I would probably be lumped into that category.

    MM: As for musical influences what music did you grow up listening to that you feel has kind of influenced you as a musician yourself?

    SR: Certainly older country music in terms of Johnny Cash and that whole “outlaw” vibe like Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings.  Also some 50s and 60s music my dad was listening to a lot when I was a kid cause that’s the era he grew up in. It is a weird thing though because that was from very early on when I was about 7 or 8, those were my musical memories but my teen years it was more like hard rock, metal kind of of a thing because that is what I was exposed to. But then I came back around to the earlier stuff as I got into my younger 20s so I’d say definitely early 60s music, the whole Folk movement in the 60s, Leonard Coen for sure,  Bob Dylan, etc. It is a really a blend of American music, like Rhythm and Blue’s, that was my foundation.

    MM: Oh I definitely get that vibe from you! Very Jim Morrison songwriting meets Johnny Cash sounds! So, tell me a little bit about your songwriting process.  Do you usually start with an idea and then build from there, do you start from some chords and do you build the lyrics around it, or does it change with every song?

    SR: It can change, 9 times out of 10 I’m writing the music before I write the lyrics, not always the case but for the most part thats the way it is for me.  Honestly the best stuff seems to come when I’m not looking for it.  I might be practicing some other song and for whatever reason I’ll start playing this chord progression that I’ve never played before in that order or sequence and then something jumps out about that, being like a separate entity in itself and it makes me want to record that and just try to find out what its saying. Songwriting for me is almost what I would imagine what its like for someone who scupts, and someone who has this raw medium and inside the medium they see something thats alive and they just have to get down to it. They just have to chip away for this thing they see in their mind.  Thats the way it is for me.  I’ll listen to a piece of music that I’ve written that doesn’t have words and I’ll listen back to it and to get an idea of what its trying to say.

    MM: Awesome! I always love to ask songwriters about their process because it really is so different for everyone. So next i was wondering, what do you think music, especially as like a vehicle, mean to you.  Is it a way that you can express yourself creatively, is it storytelling, is it just something that is fun and you’re good at? 

    SR: Well for me, its all of the things you mentioned.  A lot of it is a kind of a transference of energy.  This feeling of release. People have different things they release with, some of them are healthy and some are unhealthy but music is a very healthy release.  And it might not be so specific, like I am writing about a specific topic or anything to just get it out there; it might be just a general feeling that I need to pick up the guitar and just transform that energy in my spirt into this instrument that has its own language.  I think at its core it is just a release and its a beautiful release.

    MM: Something I noticed when I was doing some research on you, is you’re really into foraging which i think is awesome. You even offer foraging classes!  So how did you get into that?  Did somebody introduce it to you?

    SR: So I grew up in the Appalachian Mountains, that part of the country and as a kid I was just always kind of intrigued by nature. I always wanted to be inside of it in other words. It was never enough for me to just go to a museum and look at nature as kind of an abstract thing; I always wanted to be inside of it. So I ended up learning with other people who would be considered “experts “in the field of like you know Wilderness Living and and survival skills and especially foraging. I’ve taken a lot of courses and I’ve done all that but I’ve also done some experimenting on my own. Foraging is so universal. Almost everybody was a forager at one point in history and it’s almost like fire. Foraging is almost like as the feeling of fire in terms of like the way people can gaze into fire and and tap into something otherworldly almost. And it really taps me into what it means to be human, as well as being something I can do everyday which is good because it can be very addictive!

    MM: So you have a very entertaining YouTube Series called “Can I Eat This?”, in which you and guest musician go out foraging, with your instruction of course, and create a pretty interesting meal, topped off by a musical performance together. What inspired that series?

    SR: I think of a couple of things, and this is changing, but I don’t think wild food sas always been represented well on the screen.  You know at its core, foraging is just so fun, you’re just going out, and finding food to eat, but the way its been portrayed is bland. So I wanted to create something that one, was entertaining and captured peoples eyes and attention. But I also wanted it to be informative and have some substance in the material. So the music came into play because  I wanted to sort of tie these two things that are universal experience: Music and Eating.

    MM: Oh I completely understand. I definitely had some misconceptions about foraging and more “traditional” food tasks like canning and such until I met my Mother-in-law, and she quickly educated me right! So I could have used your series a few years ago!

    MM: Do you think having this special interest in foraging and more, I don’t want to say naturalist, but enjoying a more natural feel for things, do you think that in that influences your music in any way?

    SR:  Yeah I would say so, I mean certainly conceptually you know in terms of like writing music and lyrics  there’s a lot of like naturalistic elements in my songs. There’s also a lot of like metaphors that I use that you would consider taking a sort of naturalistic approach.

    MM: Alrighty so just a few more questions for you, being in a time where many would consider a lot of music mechanical, do you feel that it is important to keep your music almost as organic as possible?

    SR: Yes I do. I try to keep my music almost as untouched as I can and how I wrote it, and its why I often record more acoustic performances of my music to share.

    MM: Awesome! So I noticed that you do a lot of “House concerts” where your fans can book you directly to come to their house or event and you perform these intimate shows. Why do you focus on these instead of traditional touring?

    SR: Well you hit it right on the head, it’s more intimate this way. It allows me to connect with people who listen to my music in a much more organic way and I’m able to almost feel the essence of the music flow through people, and receive that flow of energy back.

    MM: Do you think these house shows help you as a musician?

    SR: Oh, absolutely. Like I said the energy I get from these performances really drives me and makes me want to write and perform more.

    MM: Sounds great! Ok so to wrap us up, what can we expect from you in the future to look forward too?

    SR: Well really, I just want to continue writing and performing. Obviously I’d love to make more episodes of “Can I Eat This” and keep recording my performances. I think in the long run, I’d like to make more music for movies and such, but right now that’s for later.

    MM: Alright Sean any last parting words for us?

    SR: It’s all about the music, just living life and enjoying what comes along.

    For more information on Sean, please visit his website.

  • Peter Frampton Summer Tour Stops At Turning Stone, Paramount and Capitol Theatres

    Famed guitarist Peter Frampton has announced his summer tour, the Never Say Never Tour. The tour will kick off in June and see Frampton making stops nationwide through August, including stops at The Capitol Theatre, The Paramount, and Turning Stone Casino.

    Peter Frampton is one of the most celebrated artists and guitarists in rock history. In 2007, Frampton won a Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Album for Fingerprints and in 2014 was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame. He received the prestigious Les Paul Innovation Award from NAMM’s TEC Awards in 2019 and his album All Blues was #1 for fifteen weeks on Billboard’s Blues Chart.

    In 2020 Frampton was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, his autobiography Do You Feel Like I Do?: A Memoir debuted on The New York Times Bestsellers list, and his 2021 album Frampton Forgets The Words was released to widespread critical acclaim. In November of last year, Frampton performed a sold-out show at London’s Royal Albert Hall which was filmed and is currently airing on PBS as part of their Pledge Drive. Most recently, Frampton announced that on July 28 Intervention Records will release Frampton@50, a numbered limited-edition vinyl box set featuring Frampton’s essential 1972-1975 studio releases Wind of ChangeFrampton’s Camel and Frampton.

    “At the end of every Finale Tour show I did say, ‘Never Say Never’ and I am always full of hope for the impossible. I’m very pleased to let you know that I am feeling strong and my fingers are still roaming the fretboard. Every note I play now has more meaning and soul. I love playing live and this fighter wants to stay in the ring for as long as he can. I’m so happy to be able to see you all one more time this summer”.

    Peter Frampton

    Tickets will be available Friday, April 14 at peterframpton.com.

    PETER FRAMPTON LIVE

    June 21—Rose Music Center at The Heights—Huber Heights, OH

    June 22—PNC Pavilion at Riverbend—Cincinnati, OH  

    June 24—Red Hat Amphitheater—Raleigh, NC

    June 25—Skyla Credit Union Amphitheatre—Charlotte, NC

    June 27—Ameris Bank Amphitheatre—Alpharetta, GA 

    June 28—The Saint Augustine Amphitheatre—St. Augustine, FL 

    June 30—Hard Rock Live Orlando—Orlando, FL 

    July 2—The Sound at Coachman Park—Clearwater, FL 

    July 3—Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Hard Rock Live—Hollywood, FL 

    July 13—Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion—Gilford, NH 

    July 15—Wind Creek Event Center—Bethlehem, PA 

    July 16—Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City, Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena—Atlantic City, NJ

    July 18—MGM Music Hall at Fenway—Boston, MA

    July 20—The Theater at MGM National Harbor—Oxon Hill, MD 

    July 22—Foxwoods Resort Casino, Premier Theater—Mashantucket, CT

    July 23—The Capitol Theatre—Port Chester, NY

    July 25—The Capitol Theatre—Port Chester, NY

    July 26—The Paramount—Huntington, NY 

    July 28—Turning Stone Resort Casino, Event Center—Verona, NY 

    July 29—Fallsview Casino Resort—Niagara Falls, ON 

    August 10—Edgefield Concerts on the Lawn—Troutdale, OR 

    August 12—Thunder Valley Casino—Lincoln, CA 

    August 13—Yaamava’ Theater—Highland, CA 

    August 15—The Masonic—San Francisco, CA 

    August 18—The Pearl—Las Vegas, NV 

    August 19—Sandy Amphitheater—Sandy, UT

  • MSG Entertainment Announces ‘Sphere Experiences’ Debuting This Fall

    Madison Square Garden Entertainment announced the debut of “Sphere Experiences,” one of its core content categories to be featured at Sphere, the company’s next-generation entertainment medium opening this fall in Las Vegas.

    Sphere Experiences
    Sphere at The Venetian (courtesy MSGE).

    “Sphere Experiences” will launch this fall with a first-of-its-kind immersive production – Postcard from Earth. “We are redefining the future of entertainment through Sphere,” said James L. Dolan, Executive Chairman and CEO, MSG Entertainment. “Sphere provides a new medium for directors, artists, and brands to create experiences that cannot be seen or told anywhere else, and Sphere Experiences are just one of the ways we will use the venue’s technologies to engage the senses and transport audiences to places both real and imagined. Postcard from Earth will set a new bar for multi-sensory storytelling possibilities, and we look forward to having audiences experience it at Sphere this fall.”

    Sphere is a next-generation entertainment medium, bringing wonder to the world and redefining the future of live entertainment, where artists, creators, and technologies will create extraordinary experiences, taking storytelling to a new level. The venue will host “Sphere Experiences” from leading Hollywood directors, concerts and residencies from the world’s biggest artists, including U2 who hinted there will be a residency coming soon, and premier marquee events. The first Sphere venue is currently under construction in Las Vegas, expected to open in fall 2023.

    The Postcard from Earth event will feature the new technology Sphere has been putting together for eventgoers. Audience members will be transported to a new world for approximately 60 minutes, with the world’s most advanced concert audio system, featuring crystal-clear audio that is the same for every guest, however, some people may hear different things, like different languages or instruments, truly customizing the listening experience. There are 4D technologies enhancing the experience, with 10,000 immersive seats including a system that utilizes deep vibrations so guests can feel the rumble of thunder or a roaring motorcycle as well as environmental effects like changing temperatures or familiar scents. The “Sphere Experiences” also feature the highest resolution LED screen on earth at 16K x 16K, making guests feel like they have traveled to a new world.

    Production of Postcard from Earth is currently underway and will offer a unique perspective on the beauty of life on earth, debuting to the public at Sphere at The Venetian in October. Tickets will be available for purchase starting April 12 at 3 p.m. EST. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit here.

  • Music and Art Collide in ECHO, a new book from Higher Ground and Solidarity of Unbridled Labour

    Higher Ground has served, for more than a quarter centry, as Burlington’s premiere indoor music venue, a checkmark for bands looking to make their park in the Green Mountain State. Fans who have been able enough to catch a Higher Ground show know to stay until the show is over, where concert posters are sometimes handed out to lucky fans.

    ECHO: A Survey at 25 Years of Sound, Art, and Ink on Paper, a unique art book featuring a collection of concert posters spanning the history of Higher Ground, the legendary music venue located just outside Burlington, VT, was released on April 1st. ECHO is a site to behold for concert poster collectors across the country.

    echo book higher ground

    This meticulously designed coffee table book, appearing like a stack of bound silkscreened posters, features the concert posters that have been a staple of Higher Ground and their partnership with acclaimed design firm and nonprofit, Solidarity of Unbridled Labour and Iskra Print Collective.

    The book’s intro, written by Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy, taps into the project quickly.

    What coheres in these images is the work of the music and art communities intertwined and invested in each other…Concert posters are as close as one can get to the solid evidence that we all crave—proof that what happens when we create is beyond the scope of the individual work.

    Jeff Tweedy

    With more than 350 original concert posters, all taking place in Vermont – mostly at Higher Ground – the book is snapshot of music history in the Northeast, tracking bands as they progressed around the country, growing in size in many cases, with some moving from the smaller Showcase Lounge to the larger Ballroom space.

    The artwork is inviting for any music lover, those who appreciate the art of concert posters, and others who appreciate variety in graphic design.

    echo book higher ground concert posters
    Ween / 07.23.99 / Edition of 350 / 22 x 26 / Design • Todd Wender

    There are dozens of artists you’ll find inside the pages of ECHO, among them Neil Young, Ice Cube, Norah Jones, My Morning Jacket, Wu Tang Clan, Ween, Sturgill Simpson, Phish, Willie Nelson, Anderson .Paak, and many more. There are also the obscure artists you’ll come across in the pages of the book, those who fit a niche, faded out or otherwise never crossed your radar; the artwork in Echo will have you discovering new music.

    echo book higher ground concert posters

    Iskra Print Collective, a community space in Burlington that is dedicated to the practice, understanding, and appreciation of the printmaking arts, has held the task of creating silkscreen posters for certain shows at Higher Ground, which are uniquely not available for purchase. These prints evoke the spirit of each artist and band are embodied with bold creativity, and the deep dive into screenprinting found in ECHO is remarkable.

    Michael Jager, co-Founder and Creative Director of Solidarity of Unbridled Labour and Co-Founder of Iskra Print Collective, works to conceptualize and realize ideas that help guide and create culture and positive change from within. Working with Ezra Pound’s principle, “Make it new,” through his multi-disciplinary collaboration, Jager has created work for brands including Burton Snowboards, Microsoft’s Xbox, Nike, Levi’s,  Phish, MTV, Virgin, Lululemon, Yara, Tomra, Seventh Generation, MasterClass, and Patagonia.

    Making the project even more special is all proceeds going directly to Iskra Print Collective.

    concert posters
    Sturgill Simpson / 02.18.15 / Edition of 345 / 15 x 15 / Design • Andrew Lakata

    Nestled inside the pages and pages of artwork inside ECHO are interviews with Alex Crothers, founder  and co-owner of Higher Ground.

    Crothers shares his unique insight from the past 25 years in his interview, which is echoed in his initial correspondence with Jager, outlining his vision for a partnership between the two.

    Crothers opened the venue in 1998 and has produced more than 10,000 events in that span of time. By attracting rising stars as well as legendary musicians, Crothers pushes Higher Ground with core values to create bigger and better things while embracing community, storytelling, and the creative process. Through working with Iskra Print Collective, Higher Ground meets this mission.

    Wu-Tang Clan / 12.21.10 / Edition of 275 / 15 x 15 / Design • Chris Partelow

    ECHO is a must own book for any music-lover or Vermonter, and a must for any concert poster collector. The incredible design of the coffee table book is also the perfect addition to your library. Purchase ECHO here.

  • The Glove Theatre April Shows include Rock Band Flame, “Nobody’s Fool” Screening

    The Glove Theatre, over a century old and a hidden treasure in downtown Gloversville, has recently reopened for performances, bringing music and movies together in the coming weeks.

    the glove theatre flame nobody's fool

    Designed in 1913 by Linn Kinne of Utica for Cady & Dartch, wtih a marquee added in 1939, the 800-seat Glove Theatre has historically shows an array of performances, including vaudeville, concerts, and movies, and was, during the 1950s, one of the largest theater venues in Fulton and Montgomery Counties. Since 1995, the theater has been maintained by a local group of volunteers and most recently, The Glove has hosted performances from artists such as Sawyer Fredricks and Beatle Mania.

    After a 10-year absence, rock band Flame will perform at The Glove in celebration of Autism Awareness Month and the band’s 20th anniversary, on Saturday, April 15.

    Flame will take The Glove Theatre Mainstage for a special one-night-only performance, but the rest of April will be a busy month for the band. Throughout the rest of April, after The Glove Theatre show, Flame will perform at Schenectady High School, West Sand Lake Elementary, and SUNY Cobleskill.

    the glove theatre flame nobody's fool
    The members of Flame, from left to right: Debbie Woodruff (Dancer,) Karl Blanchard (Conguero,) Adrienne Phllips (Vocals,) Andrew Carpenter (vocals,) Michelle King (Lead Vocals and Guitar,) David LaGrange (Drums and Vocals,) Shawn Lehr (Conguero,) and Nick Robinson (Bass Guitar and Musical Advisor.) Credit: The Arc/Lexington.

    Formed in 2003, Flame consists of Nick Robinson, Andrew Carpenter, Adrienne Phillips, David LaGrange, Joseph Magliocca, Karl Blanchard, Shawn Lehr, Michelle King, and Debbie Woodruff. The global cover band performs the hit favorites of today plus the classics and initially gained notoriety after appearances on Good Morning America in 2009, and in People Magazine in 2013.

    Made up entirely of disabled musicians, Flame has played to sold-out shows across the world, at venues such as the Rock-N-Roll Hall of Fame, the House of Blues, to Athens, Greece, and Carpi, Italy, and they are billed as “Your Hometown World-Famous Band.”

    Flame is a part of the Arc/Lexington outreach program, which has said of the band: “These musicians connect with people of all ages and backgrounds like no other, from singing children to dancing executives. They give parents of children with disabilities hope that it is possible to have their own child achieve great things, and even more importantly, have a fun and fulfilling life like those in the band. Their success has helped change perceptions of those with disabilities as well as increased awareness and acceptance of people of all kinds “putting the ability into disability”.  

    Then on April 19, The Glove Theatre will present a film screening of Nobody’s Fool, an adaption of the book of the same name by Fulton County Native and Pulitzer Award Winning Author Richard Russo, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. as part of an ongoing Love The Glove Film Series, sponsored by the Perrott, Peck, and Blackmon Families.

    Paul Newman on the cover of Nobody’s Fool. Credit: Paramount Pictures.

    Nobody’s Foul was written in 1993 and became the first of Russo’s novels to be made into a film adaption in 1994, with a sequel, Everybody’s Fool, following in 2016. Similarly, the April 19 event at The Glove Theatre will be the first film screening for Nobody’s Fool. The film adaption stars Paul Newman as Donald “Sully” Sullivan, Jessica Tandy as Beryl Peoples in her final role before her death, Bruce Willis as Carl Roebuck, Melanie Griffith as Toby Roebuck, and an up-and-coming Upstate New York Native Phillip Seymour Hoffman as Officer Raymer. It was Paramount’s last production before being sold to Viacom the same year. Newman received considerable praise for his role, winning Best Actor at the 45th Berlin International Film Festival, the 29th National Society of Film Critics Awards, and the 60th New York Film Critics Circle Awards.

    Nobody’s Fool is set in the fictional community of North Bath, based on the Saratoga County city of Ballston Spa, just east of Gloversville, where Russo grew up. In the book and movie’s narrative, North Bath is overshadowed by the neighboring Schuyler Springs, based on Saratoga Springs, which has historically overshadowed Ballston Spa. Fulton County was considered for filming locations, but the film ended up being shot in the Hudson Valley, near Beacon, Poughkeepsie, Kingston, and Hudson.

    Upon hearing about the screening, Russo said, “I am very excited for my film to be screened at the Glove Theatre, having watched so many movies there in my youth.” Russo Russo used his notoriety previously to help the Gloversville Public Library (a Carnegie Library) with their 2015 Capital Campaign. To honor his literary legacy to the community, Trustees, and staff of the library will be available to sign members up for a library card at both free screenings of this beloved film.

    Tickets for The Glove Theatre celebration of Flame are available at Flame’s and The Glove Theatre’s websites, or by calling the theatre at 518.752.4611, and the film screening of Nobody’s Fool is free.

  • Lucinda Williams Announces New Single “New York Comeback” Featuring Bruce Springsteen And Patti Scialfa

    Singer-Songwriter Lucinda Williams has announced her newest single “New York Comeback” off her upcoming album Stories From A Rock N’ Roll Heart.

    The last couple years have been challenging for Williams to say the least. In 2020, a tornado damaged her new home in Nashville, followed two weeks later by the beginning of the COVID lockdown. Later that November, Williams suffered a stroke that partially impaired some of her motor skills on the left side of her body, forcing her to learn to walk again and taking away her ability to play the guitar.

    This new single however marks a triumphant return from Lucinda. “New York Comeback,” written by Williams, Tom Overby and Jesse Malin, also includes guest vocalists – Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa. A Lucinda Williams fan, Springsteen joined her onstage in London a few years back, and he and Scialfa had wanted to contribute to a Williams album for some time.

    With Wynans on B3 and the Pettibone-Mathis guitar attack, the musical setting perfectly matches the theme of “Comeback”. Says Williams, “Having Bruce and Patti on these songs feels really great. It’s just so cool!”

    Lucinda’s newest album Stories From A Rock N’ Roll Heart will be released June 30th.

    For more information, please visit Lucinda Williams website.

  • Forest Hills Stadium Announces Summer Events Celebrating Centennial

    Forest Hills Stadium in Queens is celebrating its centennial this summer with a stacked lineup of events showcasing the stadium’s rich past and celebrating its future.

    Forest Hills Stadium centennial

    Forest Hills Stadium was built in 1923, and ten years ago went under renovation to make it more modern and renewable, making shows as environmentally friendly as they can be. The venue is climate-positive and carbon negative, meaning the venue offsets more than what’s created, tracking recycling efforts from concession areas, backstage, and beyond all season long. The stadium also supports local community-driven initiatives in an effort to give back to Queens, including QueensWay (a project proposing to convert the former LIRR Rockaway Beach Branch (RBB) into a new, public park) and Queens Community House (a multi-site, multi-service settlement house that serves the diverse neighborhoods of Queens).

    This summer hosts the most diverse and exciting list of performances yet, celebrating the venue’s centennial. The new season will feature approximately 30 music and comedy performances from an exciting and eclectic mix of some of the biggest names in music and entertainment today. Some artists include one of the best-selling rock bands, the Dave Matthews Band, on June 6, the brand new Re:SET concert series featuring headliners like boygenius, Steve Lacy, and LCD Soundsystem, and up-and-coming indie artist Maggie Rogers in late July. Other artists include platinum-selling indie rock band The Strokes on Aug. 19, a former member of One Direction, the boy band that rocked the 2010s, Louis Tomlinson on July 29, indie rock group the Arctic Monkeys on Sept. 8 and 9, rock group in August Fall Out Boy and in July Weezer, and many more.

    Indie group Cigarettes After Sex perform at Forest Hills Stadium Sept. 15.

    Mike Luba, the executive responsible for the stadium’s rehabilitation produces concerts at the venue in coordination with The Bowery Presents, spoke about how exciting this summer will be, and the venue’s anniversary. “It’s hard to believe that it’s coming up on a full decade since we began the renovation of the stadium. We’ve come a long way since that first show with our brothers in arms Mumford and Sons, who bravely stepped up to play the opening night back in 2013. It’s been incredibly rewarding to ride along with the stadium crew, the hundreds of artists, our invaluable community neighbors and partners as well as the over 1 million folks who have found their way out to the magical oasis of a stadium smack in the middle of Queens.”

    Tickets for the summer events at Forest Hills Stadium are on sale now here, with more to be announced at a later date.

    2023 Forest Hills Stadium Centennial Season Calendar

    Saturday, May 20th & Sunday, May 21st – Head In The Clouds Music & Arts Festival Promiseland
    Saturday, June 3rd – Lane 8, Sultan + Shepard, Jerro, Massane (LIVE), Ocula
    Sunday, June 4th – Kevin Hart
    Friday, June 9th – Dave Matthews Band
    Wednesday, June 14th – BERT KREISCHER’S FULLY LOADED COMEDY FESTIVAL: Shane Gillis, Tiffany
    Haddish, Dave Attell, Big Jay Oakerson, Dan Soder, Rosebud Baker
    Friday, June 16th – Re:SET (LCD Soundsystem, Jamie xx, IDLES, L’RAIN & More)
    Saturday, June 17th – Re:SET (boygenius, Clairo, Dijon, Bartees Strange)
    Sunday, June 18th – Re:SET (Steve Lacy, James Blake, Toro y Moi, Fousheé)
    Friday, June 23rd & Saturday, June 24th – Zach Bryan, Charles Wesley Godwin
    Friday, July 7th – The Smile, Robert Stillman
    Saturday, July 8th – Two Friends, Matoma, NOTD, Deerock
    Thursday, July 13th – Weezer, Future Islands, Joyce Manor
    Thursday, July 27th – Maggie Rogers, Soccer Mommy
    Saturday, July 29th – Louis Tomlinson
    Tuesday, August 1st – Fall Out Boy, Bring Me The Horizon, Royal & The Serpent, Games We Play
    Saturday, August 5th – Rock The Bells Festival
    Saturday, August 12th – Queens of the Stone Age, Phantogram
    Thursday, August 17th – Jason Mraz & His Superband w/ The New York Pops
    Saturday, August 19th –  The Strokes, Angel Olsen, Seaton Smith, Promiseland
    Friday, September 8th & Saturday, September 9th – Arctic Monkeys, Fontaines D.C.
    Friday, September 15th – Cigarettes After Sex
    Sunday, September 17th – Willie Nelson’s Outlaw Festival
    Friday, September 22nd – Duran Duran, Grace Jones, Nile Rodgers & CHIC, Bastille
    Friday, September 29th – Sylvan Esso, Goth Babe, Charlotte Adigéry & Bolis Pupul
    Saturday, September 30th – Jungle

  • World Music Institute to Celebrate New York Arab Festival in April

    The World Music Institute (WMI) announced its partnership with the New York Arab Festival (NYAF) in celebration of Arab-American Heritage Month.

    new york arab festival

    New York City’s first Arab and Arab-American art and culture festival, celebrating the song, dance, fashion, performance, ideas, and cuisine that have made Arab heritage part of American heritage.

    The festival can be enjoyed at Nublu (151 Avenue C) from 8pm-10pm and encompasses an evening of music by Arab artists, Felukah, DJ Nadia, and DJ meëraj. 

    The World Music Institute was founded in 1985 and is recognized as one of the most remarkable presenters of world music and dance within the United States. WMI strives to educate communities on traditional and contemporary music and dance from around the world. They hope to promote awareness, appreciation and encouragement for cross-cultural dialog and exchange. The institute performs at venues throughout the city and depends on both public and private funding to accomplish its mission. 

    With DJs and live bands playing music from countries including Ghana, Dominican Republic, Brazil, Morocco, Colombia, Botswana and more, we celebrate the diversity of locally based international artists, and welcome everyone to energize the dance floor. In any language, we say ‘let’s dance!’

    Brice Rosenbloom, WMI Artistic Director

    The Egyptian Neo-soul singer Felukah is known for “bringing the Nile to New York.” Felukah’s voice is distinct and versatile in her contemporary genre-bending rap. The singer moved to New York City in 2017 to study creative writing and later dropped her first bilingual independent project, Citadel in 2019. Felukah also signed to the indie label, Abu Recordings and together they produced and distributed her debut album Dream 23 in 2020. Lastly, the Neo-soul singer released the Kawkab EP on 2021. The EP featured her indie rock debut Love on the Comedown.

    DJ Nadia is an Egyptian-American DJ with sets showcasing percussive and experimental music across various genres such as techno, rap, downtempo, and more. She currently plays at The Bar at Cafe Kitsuné and has performed at The Lot Radio, Eavesdrop, Mood Ring, etc. 

    DJ meëraj is acclaimed for honoring his heritage by combining music from North Africa and the Middle East with international instruments in sets.  He has played SXM, Burning Man, Soho House, and other clubs across New York City, gathering an eclectic crowd of serious partygoers. 

    More information about The World Music Institute can be found here and more info on the New York Arab Festival can be found here.