Category: Profiles

  • Music in the North Country: Navigating Northern New York’s Vibrant Music Venues

    From the soothing melodies of outdoor concerts along the St. Lawrence River to the vibrant tunes resonating in cozy venues offering craft beers and fine wines in the Adirondacks, the North Country of New York has a music scene that caters to a diverse audience. Here’s where you can immerse yourself in live music, ranging from concerts and karaoke to performances by touring artists.

    Be sure to check out our look at the venues of New York City, the Hudson Valley, Central New York, Southern Tier, Western New York. Rochester and the Finger Lakes, the Berkshires, Long Island, and Capital Region as well.

    Photo by Eyes On The Skies

    Clayton Opera House

    Address: 405 Riverside Drive, Clayton

    Website

    Discover the historical charm of this theater, welcoming audiences since 1903. Following a $3.2 million renovation in 2007, Clayton Opera House offers a year-round calendar featuring nationally and internationally recognized artists, spanning genres from bluegrass to classical concerts.

    Clayton Opera House

    Paddock Club

    Address: 1 Public Square, Watertown

    Website

    Step into the Paddock Club’s inviting ambiance, adorned with Tiffany lamps, leather sofas, and tin ceilings. Situated in the country’s oldest indoor mall, the Paddock Club offers a diverse entertainment calendar featuring karaoke, jam sessions, DJs, and live performances.

    Kallet Theater

    Address: 4842 N. Jefferson Street, Pulaski

    Website

    Originally built in 1939, the Kallet Theater has transformed into a venue hosting concerts and community events. Catch upcoming performances featuring national recording artists like Marc Cohn, Selwyn Birchwood, The Grascals, and Enter the Haggis.

    The Java Barn

    Address: St. Lawrence University, Canton

    Website

    Run by students on the St. Lawrence University campus, The Java Barn hosts free weekly concerts, open mic nights, and larger events. Past performances include renowned artists like Dave Matthews, Grace Potter, Guster, and more.

    SUNY Potsdam Performing Arts Center

    Address: 44 Pierrepont Avenue, Potsdam

    Website

    Boasting a 97,000-square-foot facility, this venue is a hub for performances from the acclaimed Crane School of Music, the Department of Theater and Dance, and the Orchestra of Northern New York. The annual Community Performing Arts series brings touring artists to Potsdam.

    Akwesasne Mohawk Casino Resort

    Address: 873 State Route 37, Hogansburg

    Website

    Find entertainment at Cascades Lounge with country karaoke and DJ dance parties, while the events center hosts performances by national recording artists.

    Lake Placid Center For The Arts

    Address: 17 Algonquin Dr, Lake Placid

    Website

    The Lake Placid Center for the Arts presents music, dance, and theatre performances year-round. Each season, the music series offers performances in a wide variety of genres: pop, jazz, indie folk, classical, Broadway hits, and more.

    Retro Live

    Address: 14 Margaret St suite c, Plattsburgh

    Website

    Retro Live is a dance club, hot spot, and live music venue with a great bar. Live bands perform every Saturday, and the open space makes for great acoustics and a fantastic dance floor with good views of the stage. If you’re looking for a live music venue with a mechanical bull, this is the place for you.

    The Midnight Revival Band, Retro Live. Photo by Frankie Cavone

    Strand Center Theatre

    Address: 23 Brinkerhoff St, Plattsburgh

    Website

    This North Country theatre is on the National Register of Historic Places. The Strand Center Theatre was built as a vaudeville theatre in 1924. The beautiful space has seating for 950 people and regularly hosts performances by touring musicians, from duets to orchestras.

    BluSeed Studios

    Address: 24 Cedar St, Saranac Lake

    Website

    This community art center offers musical performances year-round in a hip and funky atmosphere. Also offered: theatre, poetry, comedy, community meetings, art shows, art classes, and more!

    The Whallonsburg Grange

    Address: 1610 NY-22, Essex

    Website

    This building is over 100 years old, and regularly hosts regionally and nationally known musicians for concerts and shows. Visitors love the vibe and acoustics of the historic, open space. The Whallonsburg Grange is a great place to hear folk, bluegrass, and Celtic music, although you’ll find other genres as well!

    Smoke Signals

    Address: 2489 Main St, Lake Placid

    Website

    Smoke Signals is a popular BBQ restaurant and bar in Lake Placid with a fun atmosphere, breathtaking views of the lake, AND two spaces for musical performances. You’ll find regional and North Country local bands playing here almost every weekend.

    The Waterhole

    Address: 48 Main St, Saranac Lake

    Website

    A beloved spot among both locals and tourists, The Waterhole invites you to experience its dynamic music scene. Whether you choose the indoor setting or the outdoor areas, this live music venue promises a diverse lineup of musicians. With its Party On The Patio series, The Waterhole comes alive, especially during the vibrant summer months.

    winter carnival 2022 Music Venues New York State

    Raquette River Brewing

    Address: 11 Balsam St, Tupper Lake

    Website

    Voted among the Adirondacks’ Top 5 Best Wineries, Breweries & Distilleries, Raquette River Brewing offers more than just exceptional local beer and delectable food. Revel in live music both outside in the pavilion and inside the cozy tasting room. Perfect for enthusiasts of both craft beer and soulful tunes, this venue creates a harmonious blend.

    barVino

    Address: 272 Main St, North Creek

    Website

    Elevate your date night with live music at barVino, a family-owned wine bar and restaurant in North Creek in North Country. With an impressive beer menu and an intimate setting, this venue provides the perfect backdrop for an evening of good food and captivating local artists.

    Mids Park

    Address:  2445 Main St, Lake Placid

    Website

    Delight in the free summer music series, Songs At Mirror Lake, hosted at Mids Park every Tuesday at 7 PM. Immerse yourself in the melodies performed on a beautiful stage, creating a captivating atmosphere in this popular waterfront park on Main Street in Lake Placid.

    Olive Ridley’s

    Address: 37 Court St, Plattsburgh

    Website

    A hometown restaurant in Plattsburgh, Olive Ridley’s is well known for weekly entertainment, delicious food and great drinks. Check their calendar for up to date shows you can catch after dinner or watching the big game.

    P2’s Irish Pub

    Address: 31 Main St Tupper Lake

    Website

    P-2’s Irish Pub has the slogan, “The Place to Be in the Adirondacks!” and following being closed during the pandemic for 13 months, a new slogan – “The Place You Leave Smiling Bigger Than You Arrived!” – is fitting for the vibe of the crowd in this underrated Adirondack town. With a love of live music and talent from around the U.S. and Canada, a new bandshell provides a home venue for talented musicians.

    Big Z’s

    Address: 2750 Main St., Lake Placid

    Website

    Whether you’re looking for a night of family fun in the bowling alley, or catching a game and enjoying a tasty burger at the bar, Big Z’s Hangout is a go-to destination. A newly renovated space offers a fun, comfortable and engaging environment for visitors and members of the community to enjoy themselves. From live music in the bar to concerts in the parking lot, Big Z’s is where the party’s at in Lake Placid.

    Beck’s Tavern (Gore Mountain)

    Address: 881 Peaceful Valley Road, North Creek

    Website

    Beck’s Tavern, bar and yurts are located right next to the Gore Mountain Lodge, serving German inspired fare and American favorites, with live music Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights.

    Stony Creek Inn

    Address: 6 Roaring Branch Rd, Stony Creek

    Website

    Located in the “Biggest Little Town in New York State” in downtown Stony Creek, the Inn is nestled in the hub of the Southern Adirondack mountains within a half hour of Lake George, Queensbury, Glens Falls, Saratoga or the Gore Mountain Region. For 35 years, the owners have provided a unique establishment with simple roots; good food & music, reasonable prices & a comfortable friendly setting to relax and enjoy family and friends.

    Daikers

    Address: 161 Daikers Cir, Old Forge

    Website

    Daikers is a restaurant and bar located in the heart of the Central Adirondack Mountains. Enjoy live music, great food and drinks while overlooking Fourth Lake.

    Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts

    Address: 3446 State Route 28. Blue Mountain Lake

    Website

    The Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts produces professional theatre, concerts as part of our Weekend Series, artist exhibits in three galleries, youth and adult arts-education workshops, and grant opportunities for art and cultural organizations and teaching artists. The Arts Center is coordinator for the Statewide Community Regrants (SCR) program of the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA) for the four-county region of Hamilton, Franklin, Clinton, and Essex counties.

    View Arts Center

    Address: 3273 NY-28, Old Forge

    Website

    The mission of the View Arts Center in Old Forge is to create a dynamic center for arts and culture based in the Adirondack Region, with a focus on enrich, educate, entertain, and inspire.

    Rudy’s Scar Bar

    Address: 788 Springfield Road, Wilmington

    Website

    Rudy’s Scar Bar and Grille is a spin-off of Flagship Rudy’s Lakeside Drive-In, located on the shore of the Great Lake Ontario, in Oswego. The mountain pub version stays true to core concepts and menu favorites, with great live music on a regular basis. Fun fact: Scar Bar is named in homage to Scarface Mountain, one of the Saranac 6er peaks in the Adirondacks.

    The Monopole

    Address: 7 Protection Ave, Plattsburgh

    Website

    Within the walls of this legendary bar & grill lies a fifteen foot oak bar, oak-paneled walls/cabinets and even an old-school bracketed television. Notoriously, decadent tales of grandeur continue to swirl atop the Monopole. Those incredibly potent folktales attracted original visitors and turned them into repeat customers, along with regular live music upstairs from rising acts in the Northeast, and some big names who have passed through the famous venue.

    Edwards Opera House

    Address: 161 Main St., Edwards

    Website

    The Edwards Town Hall Opera House is an architecturally unique theater seating about 275 people, with superb acoustics, raked auditorium and raised stage floor, with its original painted front curtain well preserved and still in place. This venue is an unusually intact example of a type of facility no longer surviving in most small towns in Northern New York. 

    Upper Jay Arts Center and The Recovery Lounge

    Address: 12198 9N (North), Upper Jay

    Website

    The Upper Jay Art Center was founded by Scott and Byron Renderer in 2005 as a place to enjoy music, theater, and visual art. In 2008, it incorporated as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and, with a wink and a nod the brothers, upholsterers by trade, named the performance space the Recovery Lounge. Over the past decade, the Lounge has become an essential gathering place in the Ausable River Valley, featuring plays by classic and contemporary playwrights, acted by an ever expanding troupe of local talent, play and poetry readings, performance art, dance, and art exhibits. All events are affordable and many are free.

    Ausable Brewing Company

    Address: 765 Mace Chasm Rd, Keeseville

    Website

    Located in the heart of the Champlain Valley, Ausable Brewing Company is a small farm based nanobrewery, brewing a variety of small batch artisan ales and sodas, and hosting local food trucks and live music all summer long.

    Tannery Pond Center

    Address: 228 Main Street, North Creek

    Website

    Tannery Pond Center in North Creek is dedicated to enriching lives with quality arts programming and a welcoming community center. TPC presents a full schedule of arts programming, including exhibits of original art, musical concerts and performances, as well as workshops and children’s programs. Other groups presenting arts programs at the center include Our Town Theatre Group, North Country Singers, and Adirondack Lakes Center for the Arts.

    Paradox Brewing

    Address: 2781 U.S. 9, North Hudson

    Website

    Paradox Brewery is a certified veteran owned, independent craft brewery founded in the heart of the Adirondack Mountains brewing innovative beer of the highest quality. You can find live music in their taproom on weekends, as well as open mic nights, especially in the summer months.

    Sticks and Stones

    Address: 739 US-9, Schroon Lake

    Website

    Sticks & Stones is a casual dining gallery café featuring fresh food and a full bar in a rustic Adirondack setting. The inviting interior includes rustic artisan wood and stone, a crackling hand laid stone fireplace, wood burning oven, craft beer, boutique wine, handcrafted cocktails, and fresh locally sourced foods. Enjoy a bite and drink with contemporary and classic acoustic folk music from locals like Rich Ortiz and Ryan Leddick.

    20 Main Tavern

    Address: 2522 State Hwy 9N, Au Sable Forks

    Website

    20 Main has long been a staple of the Au Sable Forks and surrounding communities.  Welcoming townspeople, visitors from all over the globe, bikers and a range of musicians and other entertainment, 20 Main Bar as well as host community fundraisers for Christmas in the Forks and other local charities. With a new outdoor space behind the main bar with sound stage, garden area, and a light, friendly atmosphere, its a great place for live music every Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

    Basil and Wick’s

    Address: Route 28, North Creek

    Website

    Located near Gore Mountain, Basil and Wick’s has recently reopened, offering traditional American comfort fare, classic cocktails in a warm, homey location. Plenty of music is on tap – open mics, karaoke, or local musicians performing après ski.

    Hex and Hop

    Address: 1719 State Route 3, Bloomingdale

    Website

    Just north of Saranac Lake in the small town of Bloomingdale is Hex and Hop, creating delicious craft beers and meads in the hear of the Adirondack Park. In the summer, outdoor live music can be enjoyed at Hex and Hop, as you take in the crisp Adirondack mountain air with a side of craft beer & good tunes from bands and solo artists all summer long.

    The Garagery

    Address: 53 Main Street Rear, Saranac Lake

    Website

    A newly opened venue in Saranac Lake, The Garagery is holds the Saranac Lake Hootenanny each Monday night, hosted by Charlie Reinersten, offering a vibrant musical experience in collaboration with Twolined Studio. Musicians are welcome every Monday from 6:30-10:00 pm for a night of featured artists, and open mic performances.

    The Mill

    Address: 2121 US-9, Round Lake

    Website

    The Mill, as suggested by the name, was originally built in 1952 as a grain mill for the Champlain Valley Seed Cooperative. In 2021, the abandoned building was repurchased and in a collaborative effort between creative director Taylor Haskins and local contractors, they rebuilt the building up as a new cultural hub. For visitors looking for a drink and a bite to eat, The Knock is a speakeasy inside the venue that has a sultry 1920’s prohibition aesthetic. The menu of small plates made in house are all created from locally sourced ingredients.

    the mill

    The Hub

    27 Market St. Brant Lake

    Website

    The Hub is a cafe, restaurant, lounge, bar, and bike repair shop focused on serving Lake George, Brant Lake, Loon Lake, Friends Lake, and Schroon Lake.

  • San Juan Heal: The Evolution of Lincoln Center and Its Troubled History

    Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts occupies a three-block area of the Upper West Side of Manhattan, bordered by Amsterdam and Columbus Avenues to its sides, and 62nd and 65th Streets at its top and bottom. 80 years ago, this area had a different name: San Juan Hill.

    San Juan Hill
    Phipps Houses, 235-247 West 63rd Street. Wurts Bros, 1944 – Museum of the City of New York

    San Juan Hill was a vibrant, predominantly Black community in Manhattan, inhabited by over 7,000 families and 800 business who were later displaced by “urban renewal” efforts. These efforts, led by the infamous Robert Moses, targeted San Juan Hill as a slum to be cleared, citing loosely hidden racial prejudices angled to improve the city’s appeal to middle-class white Americans.

    Up until its destruction, San Juan Hill was a thriving Black neighborhood with great pride. The neighborhood is cited as the birthplace of Bebop music and The Charleston. Notable residents included pianists Thelonius Monk and James P. Johnson, as well as Arctic explorer Barbara Hillary, the first Black woman to reach the North and South Poles. 

    Robert Moses spearheaded numerous programs similar to slum clearance. He served as the Secretary of State of New York from 1927-1929, and despite never being elected to an office, he is regarded as one of the most influential figures in the history of New York City. When FDR’s New Deal freed up millions of dollars for infrastructure projects, Moses planned out systems of parks, swimming pools, expressways, and bridges across New York City, many of which still stand today.

    In addition to these efforts to expand New York’s community spaces, Moses began the slum clearance projects, based on the idea of eradicating what he viewed as “blight.” He served as Chairman of the Committee on Slum Clearance in New York City, and used the precedent of eminent domain to seize San Juan Hill and declare it an unlivable slum. The neighborhood was flattened, and the City of New York broke ground on May 14, 1959 to begin the construction of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

    San Juan Hill
    President Eisenhower Breaking Ground at Lincoln Center
    Bob Serating, 05-14-1959

    When Lincoln Center was built, the poignant Opera House that faces Columbus Avenue was built with its back to the Amsterdam Houses, a public housing development on a neighboring block to its west. Musician Etienne Charles, in conversation with NPR, pointed this out. “You can make huge statements with architecture. It’s body language with bricks.”

    As it stands today, Lincoln Center hosts the country’s highest caliber of performing arts, including the New York Ballet, New York Philharmonic, and the Metropolitan Opera. Nevertheless, as it continues to celebrate that excellence, the development stands as a reminder of the thriving neighborhood that once existed on those blocks. 

    Today, on West 65th Street, a 150-foot mural spans the side of David Geffen Hall, commemorating San Juan Hill, the artistry that was born there, and the people who were ultimately displaced by the construction of Lincoln Center. Created by Nina Chanel Abney, the mural was commissioned by Lincoln Center alongside The Studio Museum in Harlem and Public Art Fund. 

    San Juan Hill lincoln center
    Photo Credit: Nicholas Knight

    The abstract, colorful work centers words such as “homage,” “honor,” and “culture,” a commemoration of San Juan Hill that reminds passersby of the rich history that stood on the ground now occupied by Lincoln Center. The title of the work – San Juan Heal

    In addition to installations like San Juan Heal, Lincoln Center is taking initiative to create an inclusive and relaxed atmosphere for the community. Henry Timms was appointed as President and CEO of Lincoln Center in 2019. Under his leadership, the organization began summer programs like Summer For The City, and expanded the repertoire and diversity of music and art performed at the Lincoln Center venues.

    Timms began the Summer For The City festival in 2022, aiming to help “loosen up” the performing arts center. For much of the summer during the inaugural celebration, its regal campus was covered in turf carpeting, eclectic seating options, and in 2023, a sea of pink plastic flamingos.

    After years of exclusivity, it is safe to say that Lincoln Center is beginning to loosen up and turn away from the stuffy elitism that infused the highest-brow of American performing arts. 

    lincoln center
    Photo Credit: Chris Lee

    The original Lincoln Center festival was discontinued before Timms arrived on scene, citing quality over quantity of programming. This also came with the scrapping of a diverse selection of performances coming from all around the world, showcased each summer at Lincoln Center. 

    In the years after, the team decided to focus on the Mostly Mozart Festival, an annual summer selection of performances by orchestras from across the country. In 2023, the festival was led by Jonathon Heyward, the first Black music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and the youngest music director of any major orchestra in the United States.

    Lincoln Center began in direct opposition to the Black communities it flattened in order to be built. For years, it stood for the elite, the exclusive, and predominantly, the white. To casual passersby, the mural remembering San Juan Hill by the organization that facilitating the neighborhood’s demise gives due pause to the integrity of the installation. However, as the organization begins to reflect on this troubled history and implement changes and programming to address it, reconciliations are slowly making way. 

    Journeying back to San Juan Hill evokes a rich history somewhat forgotten by the upscale neighborhood of Lincoln Square. Looking back once again, the native Lenape people of the region also have claim to the area. In realizing a community once neglected, another is regrettably pushed to the side, but as Lincoln Center begins to grapple with the colonizing history it stands for, the native people of Manahatta still await.