On Sunday, Oct. 27, at Broadway’s Shubert Theatre, the annual Arthur Miller Foundation Honors celebrated the tenth anniversary of the Theater Education Programs. Honorees included Alicia Keys, Kristoffer Diaz, and Linda Aziza Miller.
The Arthur Miller Foundation (AMF) is an independent, nonprofit organization, created to honor the legacy of Arthur Miller and his New York City public school education by increasing equitable access to quality theater education for public school students. The benefit paid tribute to the power of theater education by honoring artists, educators, and advocates who have made significant contributions to the arts and arts education.
This year’s honorees include 16-time Grammy Award winner, Alicia Keys, who received the AMF Arts & Culture Award. Keys, a former NYC public school student, has remained committed throughout her career to creating opportunities for young artists and putting access to education at the forefront of much of her philanthropic work. Tony nominated playwright and Pulitzer Prize finalist Kristoffer Diaz, also an alumnus of NYC Public Schools, was awarded the AMF Legacy Award, for carving a meaningful impact in the American theater. Former Professional Performing Arts High School educator, and Keys’ former educator, Linda Aziza Miller received the AMF Excellence in Arts Education Award for her dedication to public school students and access to quality, comprehensive arts instruction.
AMF’s Theater Education Programs provide theater teachers with certification, training, and critical resources to build and sustain quality in-school theater programs impacting over 60,000 public school students in all 5 boroughs of NYC and in Bridgeport and Norwalk Public Schools in Connecticut. The Arthur Miller Foundation Honors celebrates the power of public school theater education and is produced by AMF Executive Director Jaime Hastings.
Chris Dave and Marcus King, joined by MonoNeon and Isaiah Sharkey, have announced a weeklong residency at the legendary Blue Note Jazz Club from Jan. 14-19.
Drummer and composer Chris Dave and American singer/songwriter Marcus King are set for a special, one-of-a-kind six-night run at Blue Note Jazz Club. The pair will be joined by MonoNeon on bass January 14-16 and virtuoso guitarist Isaiah Sharkey making a rare appearance on bass January 17-19. Shows at 8:00 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. each night.
These special performances come on the heels of Marcus King’s new album Mood Swings, produced by Rick Rubin. In discussing the new record, GQ hails King as “a modern-day blues-rock god” while Rolling Stone notes that Rubin “helps him switch things up and bring out the soulful side of his sound.”
Houston native Chris Dave is a critically acclaimed drummer and veteran performer who has appeared with Robert Glasper, Adele, D’Angelo, The Winans, Kenny Garrett and many more. Dave most recently appeared on Keyond Harold’s Foreverland, out now via Concord Jazz.
Bassist MonoNeon has established a cult following, serving as Prince’s last bassist before his passing in 2016. MonoNeon’s new record Quilted Stereo is out now, with Bass Magazine noting that it “will captivate listeners with its dynamic blend of genres, ranging from jazz and funk to hip-hop and beyond.”
Virtuosic guitarist, singer/songwriter and producer Isaiah Sharkey started out as a child prodigy, playing local gigs in his hometown of Chicago at the age of 14. By age 16 he was touring with gospel singer Smokie Norful and soon after became one of D’Angelo’s core collaborators. Sharkey returns to the Blue Note taking a rare turn on the bass having performed alongside a long list of superstars including John Mayer, Paul Simon, Corrinne Bailey Rae and many more.
Learn more and purchase tickets to the Marcus King residency here.
Hank Azaria has announced an upcoming Bruce Springsteen tribute tour. Ahead of the upcoming national tour, Azaria will play the Brooklyn Bowl on Nov. 8, as well as Springsteen’s original stomping grounds, The Stone Pony Nov. 15 in Asbury Park.
As a lifelong Springsteen fan the project is a labor of love for Azaria. Perhaps best known for his decades of work on The Simpsons, Azaria has began a new and different undertaking as a voice actor. Azaria spent months creating an impression of Bruce’s distinctive speaking cadence and singing ‘voice’ to conceive the tribute show. As Azaria told Rolling Stone,“I think of it as a theatrical performance,” he says. “I’m staying in character as Bruce even though I’m telling stories about myself. It’s a performance piece, but I’m not a Bruce impersonator.”
At the debut public performance of Hank Azaria and the EZ Street Band, at Le Poisson Rouge, the sold out celebration of The Boss’ music was such a joyful experiance Azaria decided to take the show cross-country. Full details and routing for the tour will be announced soon. Azaria doesn’t simply sing Springsteen’s music, but also speaks on the impact it has had on Azaria’s personal life. “I’ve never worked harder preparing for any role than I did in perfecting a singing vocal impression of Bruce,” said Azaria.
The tribute performance itself is a joyful, full-tilt rock ’n roll event, and Azaria’s physicality and flair are a true homage to Bruce. Azaria channels many familiar components of Bruce Springsteen’s iconography: intimate, irreverent storytelling, connection to family, preternatural stamina, camaraderie with the band, and a palpable love for performing. Azaria has delivered a show we want to root for – invigorating, upbeat and ambitious.
Born and raised in the Capital Region, Mona Golub has been bringing live music to that very same community for 35 years, but her love of music started far before that.
Photo Credit: Capital Region Chamber
An affable, kind, and a candid speaker who gave thoughtful responses in this interview with NYS Music, Golub produces two concert series each year, one at Music Haven in the heart of Central Park for free each summer and another at two of Proctors Collaborative venues, the GE Theater in Schenectady and Universal Preservation Hall in Saratoga Springs. Those two at Proctors are held in between summers during the year.
Each series presents national and international acts that bring music and culture from all over the world to the Capital Region. But she does a lot more than just choose the acts to perform. “I do everything from program the series to raise whatever funding is needed to produce it, to handling all of the artist-related elements, the contracting, the hotels, the hospitality, all of the audience facing comforts,” Golub says. “Creating the programs with biographical information, to food and beverages, hiring whatever crew staff are needed, recruiting volunteers if that’s in order as it is during the summer series. I figure out ways to develop the series further with additional elements of production or nuances that round out the experiences.” But, she says, choosing the people who perform is really at the heart of it all. “That’s the impetus for everything.”
To do this, she stays on top of which artists are touring where at all times. “I keep up on who’s doing what and when, through magazines like Songlines International, listening to various groups that are emerging from all over the world. The internet’s been wonderful because it’s given me access to be able to see them perform live and not just hear their music, so I know how they move. How they connect with a live audience. But I basically try and stay on top of tours that are being planned. Artists who are beginning to blossom who may not ever have played this region. I love introducing new artists that people haven’t heard 20 times. So I rely on my contacts in that respect. And the conversation is ongoing.
People say, ‘When do you start booking for next summer?’ I’m booking for ‘25, ‘26, and ‘27 now. Many international artists don’t tour every year. You kinda need to know if they’re planning a tour for 2026. What does that mean? When will that be? How does that fit into your schedule?” She adds, “I’ve been in the business for 35 years now, so I’m fairly well connected to the international music community, through agents, managers, and artists themselves.”
Photo Credit: Ann Hauprich
But it’s not easy to curate interesting selections of talented musicians when they’re constantly moving around from town to town and sometimes even country to country. “It’s almost like chasing folks down a rabbit hole on occasion,” Golub says, “Sometimes they’re well represented by an agent or manager who’s working on a tour. Sometimes you need to express interest for 5 years before somebody makes that tour and is able to come to your market. So again, it’s a lot of relationship building and conversations about who’s doing what and when. For a given season, I’m always looking to ensure that my series has a certain flow and a certain cadence from concert to concert. That there’s variety and uniqueness. An artist may fit into one season better than another. I’m not just gonna bring them in and program them into the series because the dates jive.”
Mona Golub has loved music since she was a child and she even performed through high school and college. “I enjoyed that. But I certainly realized even at that time, there were people in the world who were much more talented than me,” she explains. Even though performing wasn’t for her, she was still eager to find her place in the world of music. “[In college] I directed the swing band. I started directing theater, and musical productions with a full orchestra pit underneath the stage and the vocalist on the stage just to get some understanding of other perspectives.
“I wanted to keep music in my life, and I needed to figure out how I might do that. It was at that point I connected with a local band whose music I loved. I started producing shows with them and for them, then blossomed into some other things; a Friday after-work happy hour kind of concert series in a courtyard downtown, then a coffee house, and then a jazz club. And I loved producing the shows. I loved working with the artist. The band was called Begonia. They had just won the band of the year or favorite band of the region through Metroland Magazine, which was our music and arts weekly at the time. I was working at a grocery store with the drummer of the band and I said, ‘Where are you playing? I wanna come hear you live,’ and she said, ‘Oh, we don’t have a gig set up.’ And I thought you’ve got to be kidding. You just got this recognition. You should have a gig set up so everybody can come celebrate. So I planned that gig. And I loved the band until they retired. They were great.”
It was at this point that Golub finally found her niche. From that first gig, the ball began to roll. “I loved orchestrating all of the details that it took to set the stage for really wonderful talent to shine. And I realized that’s what appealed to me most, and that’s what drove me to notice that the old music cabin, which was a trailer stage in the park was most often empty, with nothing happening on it. This was back in the late eighties. And I went to the mayor and I said, ‘are you okay if I put together a series for the stage?’ and she said, ‘have at it.’ And that’s where it started.”
Since then, Golub has been producing concerts for 35 years.
“Most of what I do is because I’m driven to bring different kinds of music to the market, and to elevate regional artists in special guest slots so they can feed off of some of that wonderful energy that is exchanged. Whether in the park, or in the venues that I work in most regularly that draw a really appreciative and energetic crowd that loves to hear something really wonderful that may not be mainstream, but reflects artists who are at the top of their game.”
When asked if she had encountered any barriers because of gender, she answered “ For sure.” When she started, she says, there weren’t many women involved in the arts. “There was one club owner, who was like the queen bee of the downtown Albany scene. But other than that, I don’t remember seeing other women as there are today.”
But Golub kept her head down in those early days and stayed focused on learning the ropes. “I think at the time, I was more focused on what I needed to do to learn, to learn how to do it as I went along, learn by experience.” She tells of a prominent promoter who promised he would give her advice to help her when she was just starting out, but never did.”While I was waiting for him, I lived it. And so I harbor no resentment. I just kept moving forward, and lo and behold, I figured some things out.”
When asked if she thinks things have gotten better for women in music, she reflects on how much things have changed since she started in the late 1980s. “I’m speaking about a time that was nearly 40 years ago. So the world has changed, and women in many different professions have proven themselves ultra competent. I think promoters and managers of old were mostly men. Club owners were mostly men. Now at this point in time, I see art centers where I would say 80% of the art centers in the capital region are run by women. So a lot’s changed and I think it has everything to do with drive and interest and ability. Once given the chance whether male or female, people who are driven to do something get the opportunity to prove themselves. And I think that’s what’s happened here. There are ways to do things today that didn’t necessarily exist when I started in 1988. So I am excited to see those opportunities and excited to see women reaching for them and attaining them.”
When asked if she sees herself retiring anytime soon, Golub is reflective.
“You know, I’ve thought about it from a couple miles away. And I would love to find a protege with whom I could work for a handful of years, just to convey what I’ve learned from experience, the good, the bad, and the ugly. Because I’ve experienced all three. And be able to watch someone else work this magic and figure out how they wanna fill these spaces going forward. Because everybody’s got their own creative bent. I would love to work with someone who could be committed, in maybe the same long term way that I have been to run with it and do their thing.”
When asked about her choice to keep the concerts free, her response shows the value she places on community. “I think [charging an entrance fee] would really destroy the feel of it. I’ve always believed that music and food are some of the best ways to celebrate, share culture with others. Being able to do that without any barriers to entry, being able to welcome in everyone who wants to be there, adds to the magic.”
”People are not standing around wondering ‘where did that person come from? What corner? What religion do they practice? How much money do they have in their pocket?’ They’re there because they’re interested in what’s on the stage, and that’s what it’s about.”
And for 35 years, that’s what it’s always been about. “I can’t imagine not doing it. It’s really become a very important part of my life. It fulfills me in a way that nothing else does. I think the opportunity to gather community to experience different cultures through music is magical.”
For now, Mona Golub’s not going anywhere. “I have a wish list of artists that never gets shorter. It gets longer.”
Acclaimed U.K. band, Stereophonics, will embark on their first tour in three years in Spring, 2025. They will hit the Brooklyn Paramount on Mar. 25 and have announced a new studio album planned for next year.
Stereophonic’s North American tour will kick off Mar. 21 at Théâtre Beanfield in Montreal and will conclude Apr. 11 in Mexico City. The tour will reach major cities across the continent such as, New York, Chicago, Seattle, Los Angeles, and more.
The tour will see the band perform hits from their expansive catalogue including “Dakota,” “Have A Nice Day,” “Maybe Tomorrow,” “C’est La Vie,” “A Thousand Trees,” and more, along with songs from a new studio album coming in 2025.
In addition to the North American dates, Stereophonics will play some of the U.K. and Ireland’s biggest venues including Dublin’s St. Anne’s Park, Cork’s Virgin Media Park, London’s Finsbury Park, Huddersfield’s The John Smith’s Stadium, and Glasgow’s Bellahouston Park as part of Summer Sessions.
Frontman Kelly Jones notes, “Being on the road again with my best friends, playing all the hits of this band’s catalog, for people in 2025 makes me so excited, we should make a new album…oh wait…we already did that! See ya there for more good times….TUNE!!! TUNE!!! TUNE!!”
Stereophonics achievements include eight U.K. #1 albums, 12 U.K. Top 10 albums and 11 U.K. Top 10 singles, including the U.K. #1 single “Dakota.” The group have sold over 10 million albums, 1.5 billion global streams and five BRIT award nominations, with one BRIT award win. Their hits collection, Decade In The Sun, sold over 1.7 million copies in the U.K. alone and is certified Quintuple Platinum, while in 2022, on their last U.K. arena tour and Cardiff Stadium headline shows, they sold over 250,000 tickets.
Special guests for the tour will be announced soon. Tickets are available now. Learn more and purchase tickets here.
Stereophonics 2025 Tour Dates:
Mar. 21—Montreal, QC—Théâtre Beanfield Mar. 22—Toronto, ON—Massey Hall Mar. 23—Philadelphia, PA—Union Transfer Mar. 25—New York, NY—Brooklyn Paramount Mar. 26—Boston, MA—House of Blues Mar. 28—Washington, DC—Lincoln Theatre Mar. 29—Cleveland, OH—VENUE TBA Mar. 30—Chicago, IL—The Vic Theatre Apr. 2—Vancouver, BC—Vogue Theatre Apr. 3—Seattle, WA—Neptune Theatre Apr. 4—Portland, OR—McMenamins Crystal Ballroom Apr. 6—San Francisco, CA—The Regency Ballroom Apr. 8—Los Angeles, CA—The Wiltern Apr. 9—San Diego, CA—Humphrey’s Concerts By The Bay Apr. 11—Mexico City, MX—Teatro Metropólitan
Wire Festival has announced the fourth installment of the world-class techno festival to take place at Knockdown Center from May 16-18, 2025.
In addition to its core programming, Wire also hosts community engagement events such as a series of Talks programmed in partnership with RA. Before the show, an industry meetup event will allow artists, organizers, booking agents, and label owners to connect with each other. Finally, the festival transforms the already-iconic venue with stunning, unique, and commissioned light installations. 2024’s collaboration with France’s Collectif Scale was the most ambitious work yet featured. Additional installations included pieces from NY’s Inner Light and Studio Gum Gum. The festival has grown steadily and organically, moving from strength to strength, creating a space for world-class techno and more amidst a thriving NY ecosystem.
The beloved, Ambient Stage will make a return in 2025. Introduced in 2023, the Ambient Stqage encourages artists to stretch into the unfamiliar. This year, Wire expanded from its initial two-night template to include a third-day program. Beginning right after the Saturday night rave, the Sunday program will run all the way from early morning through the evening.
Since 2022, Wire has platformed the most vital underground dance music, highlighting some of the genre’s most esteemed artists, freshest voices, and essential collectives. Previous standout acts include Jeff Mills, Surgeon (live), DJ Stingray 313, and showcases from Mala Junta, Bassiani, Herrensauna, and more. Wire Festival aims to highlight some of the city’s most adventurous artists while finding and sharing new talent.
Weekend passes are on sale now. Single day passes and lineup will be released in 2025. Learn more and purchase tickets here.
Dave Chappelle + Killer Mike will join together for ‘Still Talkin That SH*T!’ their 2024 national tour. The duo will hit The Theater at Madison Square Garden on Thursday, Nov. 21.
Comedic legend Dave Chappelle, the 2019 recipient of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, a five-time Emmy winner, and three-time Grammy winner for Best Comedy Album, is generally considered one of the greatest comedians of all time. For the first time, he will be joined by rapper, entrepreneur, and activist, Killer Mike. His most recent album MICHAEL, earned him three Grammy Awards, and BET’s Album of the Year award for its complex portrait of Black southern masculinity. Together with the Mighty Midnight Revival, they have announced their co-headlining 2024 tour. The seven-city cross-country tour will feature a fusion of music and comedy across a joint set that will stop at Madison Square Garden a week before Thanksgiving.
This event will be a phone-free experience. Upon arrival at the venue, all phones, smartwatches, and accessories will be secured in individual Yondr pouches, which will be unlocked at the end of the event. Guests will maintain possession of their devices at all times and can access them throughout the event only in designated Phone Use Areas within the venue.
Ben Folds has been announced as the headlining act of the Saratoga New Year’s Eve celebration. The two-day event will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 31, and Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025, at different venues around the city’s center.
Ben Folds is a singer-songwriter-composer who has created an enormous body of genre-bending music including pop albums with Ben Folds Five, multiple solo albums, and numerous collaborative records. He will cap off the evening at Saratoga Springs City Center.
The celebration will kick off with a free outdoor concert by local funk band Tops of Trees on Ellsworth Jones Place, located just outside of the Saratoga Springs City Center. Fireworks, launched from the top level of the City Center’s parking garage, will accompany this performance from 5 to 6:30 p.m.
Mystic Bowie’s Talking Dreads will perform at the historic Universal Preservation Hall. Jamaican-born frontman Mystic Bowie reimagines and infuses fresh life into the Talking Heads’ classic catalog with his mix of roots reggae and ska. Since 2015, the charismatic singer and performer has electrified audiences at hundreds of shows across North America – spinning the heads of initially skeptical Talking Heads fans, and getting everyone else grooving along to the infectious, joyous rhythms and jubilant spirit of his native island. This and other performances by Los Sugar Kings, Dogs in a Pile, and Lindsey Kraft will be held throughout the day.
The festivities will conclude on New Year’s Day with the Saratoga First Day 5K, a fun and healthy tradition for runners and anyone looking to start 2025 off right.
Tickets and limited VIP packages are on sale now. Purchase and learn more about Ben Folds in Saratoga Springs here.
New Orleans R&B band Tank and Bangas have announced their full 2024-25 tour schedule. The band will plays two nights in Port Chester as well as a four-night residence at the legendary Blue Note Jazz Club from November 7-10.
After releasing the deluxe version of The Heart, The Mind, The Soul (a three-part spoken word project) in late August, the collection is getting a physical release which will feature the new bonus track, “Is It Me You’re Calling.” In support of the album, Tank and the Bangas will embark on a solo cross country tour begining November 7 at the Blue Note Jazz Club. The band is also set to support TromboneShorty for a twelve-show run starting March 6 in Burlington, VT, through March 22 in Houston. See below for a complete list of dates.
Tank and the Bangas are Tarriona “Tank” Ball (lead), Norman Spencer II (Multi-Instrumentalist) with new accompanying members, CJ Knowles Jr (Drummer), Matthew MSkillz (Bass), Rob Kellner(Keys) and Etienne Stoufflet (Saxophone). The band rose to prominence in 2017 following their NPR Music Tiny Desk Contest victory.
By blending poetry, R&B, gospel, and pop and bringing it to a worldwide stage, Tank and the Bangas have been praised as one of the “best live bands in America” by NPR Music. In 2019, the band released their major label debut, Green Balloon, on Verve Forecast to widespread critical praise earning the band a Best New Artist nomination at that years Grammy’s. Their latest third studio album, Red Balloon received a nomination for “Best Progressive R&B Album” at the 2023 Grammy Awards.
Reasons to be Cheerful, David Byrne’s solutions-based non-profit magazine, turned five with Amazing Humans Doing Amazing Things, a variety show in NYC at Town Hall on Oct 9.
Photo Credit: Emilio Herce
In celebration of the fifth anniversary of David Byrne’s Reasons to be Cheerful, the multi-disciplinary artist hosted “Amazing Humans Doing Amazing Things,” a variety show at The Town Hall. The night focused on the amazingness of humans and the beautiful ways humans connect with each other.
Emceed by David Byrne, “Amazing Humans Doing Amazing Things” debuted a new song by Byrne and featured a diverse lineup of performances that stayed true to what a variety show in essence is. The event staged acts such as, singer-songwriter Thao (Nguyen), comedian Fred Armisen, NYC’s non-male Brazilian-American style drumline Fogo Azul, comedian and ventriloquist Nina Conti, the spicy puppet cabaret of Epidermis Circus, Belgian-Egyptian musician Tamino, performance artist Ellie Steingraeber, and female-led band Brass Queens. DJenny Koons (Oedipus Deaf West, Blue Man Group National Tour) directed, Stephanie Johnson produced and Emily Simoness (Founding Executive Director SPACE on Ryder Farm) executive produced.
“Variety shows were a big deal when I was young,” says Byrne. “It’s a format you don’t see as much of these days. So we thought, why not bring it back? We looked for acts that could capture that sense of zany, anything-could-happen artistry. Reasons to be Cheerful inspires people by unearthing unexpected gems, and this show will embody that same spirit of gleeful surprise.”
Reasons to Be Cheerful is an online magazine that inspires curiosity about how the world can be better and asks how we can be part of that change. Launched in 2019, Reasons to be Cheerful publishes award-winning journalism about solutions and progress for over one million readers. They have hosted sold-out live events across the country.