The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra has announced “Holiday Celebration,” its annual holiday concert, to be hosted on December 14 at 3:00 pm.
The concert takes place at Ford Hall at Ithaca College under the baton of Guest Conductor, Grant Cooper. Cayuga Orchestra’s “Holiday Celebration” is the perfect performance to get settled into the festive spirit ahead of Christmas. The program will feature a side-by-side with the CCO Youth Orchestra. The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra was founded in 1976 and is officially designated “Ithaca’s Orchestra.”
Each season includes an Orchestral Series, Chamber Music Series, a Holiday concert, free Family Concerts, and the long-standing Willard Daetsch Youth Outreach Program, which earned the 2015 Yale Distinguished Music Educator award.
Grant Cooper served as Interim Music Director for two seasons, 2022-23 and 2023-24. Cooper had collaborated with the CCO a number of times previously, both as guest conductor and commissioned composer. He remains especially passionate about creating works designed to introduce young audiences to the orchestra and has created a substantial body of works for this purpose, including Rumpelstiltzkin, a Cayuga Chamber Orchestra commission. His wry sense of humor and meticulous dedication to detail, together with his considerable experience as music director and conductor, and thoughtful approach to music making, drew in audience members and musicians alike.
For more information on Cayuga Orchestra’s “Holiday Celebration,” and to purchase tickets online, click here.
Championing artists and their creative process for each step from studio to stage, the Works & Process Spring 2025 season starts in January across New York City and Long Island.
Works & Process Artists-in-Residence, provided with fully funded, week-long LaunchPAD residencies, gather for the first Dance Out East on Long Island on January 9–11, in partnership with The Church in Sag Harbor, Guild Hall of East Hampton, and The Watermill Center.
Also kicking off the season is the third Works & Process Underground Uptown Dance Festival at the Guggenheim New York on January 9–13, as part of JanArtsNYC. The Underground Uptown Dance Festival is one of the city’s largest and most influential arts gatherings and draws more than 45,000 performing arts leaders, artists, and enthusiasts from across the globe.
The 40th season of Works & Process at the Guggenheim continues in the museum’s Peter B. Lewis Theater with events that highlight creative process by blending artist discussion and performance. A highlight of the programming will be a series of social dances in the Guggenheim’s rotunda, including a swing social to open the first Uptown Rhythm Dance Festival in partnership with 92NY.
Dance will to a key aspect of this Works & Process season, with new dances by BalletX, Ballet Hispánico, Andy Blankenbuehler, New Jersey Ballet, Miami City Ballet, and the Vail Dance Festival. All events feature post-performance receptions that continue the conversation and help foster understanding, appreciation, and community.
The upcoming season sees shows at a multitude of venues including the Guggenheim Museum, Manhattan West, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, The Watermill Center, National Sawdust and more. The season also sees multiple sub-series including the 40th Guggenheim Series, Dance Out East in Long Island, Underground Uptown Dance Fest, Rotunda Social Dances, and more.
The season plans to include step by step showcases of various Broadway plays, detailing behind the scenes actions that prepare the play for the big stage. SMASH, inspired by the hit TV show, is finally coming to Broadway this spring.
SMASH is a hilarious behind-the-scenes rollercoaster ride about the making of a Marilyn Monroe musical called Bombshell, it’s got all the iconic songs, kick-ass choreography, and backstage pandemonium that make Broadway the beloved institution it is today. The production will be helmed by five-time Tony Award–winner Susan Stroman and feature a score by Tony, Emmy, and Grammy Award–winning duo Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, who wrote over two dozen songs for the television show (many of which will be heard in the musical); a book by Tony Award–nominee Rick Elice and Tony Award–winner Bob Martin; and choreography by Tony Award–nominee Joshua Bergasse. Members of the creative team will participate in a moderated discussion and excerpts will be performed in advance of previews.
40th Works & Process at the Guggenheim Series – Performance Highlights and Discussions
Boston Lyric Opera: The Seasons by Antonio Vivaldi, libretto by Sarah Ruhl with Anthony Roth Costanzo, Sarah Ruhl, Zack Winokur, and Pam Tanowitz – Jan 14
Miami City Ballet: Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and Pam Tanowitz – Jan 25
Buena Vista Social Club by Marco Ramirez with Saheem Ali, Patricia Delgado, and Justin Peck – Jan 26
Purpose by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Phylicia Rashad– Jan 27
SMASH by Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman, Rick Elice, and Bob Martin, with Susan Stroman and Joshua Bergasse – Feb 3
Never Alone by Andy Blankenbuehler – Feb 7
Williamstown Theatre Festival: Jeremy O. Harris’s New Play First Look – Feb 9
BOOP! The Betty Boop Musical with Jerry Mitchell – Feb 10
Ballet Hispánico: Tango with Alejandro Cervera, Graciela Daniele, and Matthew Neenan – Mar 3
San Francisco Opera: THE MONKEY KING (猴王悟空) by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang with Diane Paulus – Mar 9
BalletX: Maslow’s Peak by Jennifer Archibald – Mar 23
Opera Theatre of Saint Louis: This House by Ricky Ian Gordon, Lynn Nottage, and Ruby Aiyo Gerber – Apr 6
Glimmerglass Festival: The House on Mango Street by Derek Bermel and Sandra Cisneros – Apr 7
New Jersey Ballet: Maria Kowroski and Harrison Ball – Apr 14
The Metropolitan Opera: John Adams’s Antony and Cleopatra – Apr 28
Vail Dance Festival – May 4
The Works & Process 2025 season begins on January 9 and comes to a close on May 15, 2025. To see a complete calendar of events for the upcoming season, and to purchase tickets to any of the events, click here.
Park Avenue Armory in NYC has announced its 2025 season that features bold, transformative artistic experiences from various notable names – Yoko Ono, Jamie xx, and Anne Imhof – among the many.
Comprised predominantly of world and North American premieres, the 2025 season builds on the Armory’s history of presenting masterpieces in spatial music, site-specific concert experiences, genre-defying theatrical works, and elevating singular artistic perspectives from across the world. In the expansive Wade Thompson Drill Hall, these productions will engage with the Armory’s iconic architecture in unexpected ways, offering unique settings for audiences to experience music, photography, and performance.
The historic period rooms will host intimate Recital Series performances and Artists Studio programs curated by Jason Moran, showcasing the talents of visionary artists across genres. These programs will be complemented by Making Space at the Armory, a series of talks and symposia.
Jamie xx
The Armory’s 2025 Wade Thompson Drill Hall programming begins in January with Jamie xx’s In Waves, a co-presentation with Bowery Presents that launches the North American tour for the artist’s first solo album in 10 years. Returning to the Armory following his sold-out residency with The xx in 2014, Jamie xx will perform a career-spanning set with an emphasis on his newest album, In Waves, which captures the bliss, volatility, and introspection of a night out.
Revolutionary artist and activist Yoko Ono will bring the largest installation to date in North America of her ongoing work Wish Tree to the Armory in February. Featuring a grove of 92 trees installed in the Wade Thompson Drill Hall to mark the artist’s 92nd birthday, the work will invite visitors to write and attach wishes to the branches, creating a large-scale yet personal activation. Ono’s work will be the topic of a two-day symposium as part of the Armory’s Making Space series, which will emphasize her legacy of advancing female empowerment, creativity, and peace.
Yoko Ono
Multifaceted contemporary artist Anne Imhof will transform the Armory with her new performance piece DOOM. Working across painting, drawing, video, music, and sculpture, Imhof is best known for creating large scale installations that meld various media, including endurance performance, to create singular compositions— one of which, Faust, received the Golden Lion at the 2017 Venice Biennale. Commissioned specifically for the Armory and curated by Klaus Biesenbach, DOOM marks Imhof’s largest performative work to date and will take over the Drill Hall. This sequential, durational performance punctuated by dramatic tableaux vivants of performers, sound, and scenography, will invite audiences into a shared experience that juxtaposes apathy and anxiety with resistance and optimism.
One of the most original and influential photographers of the twentieth century, Diane Arbus captured the wide breadth of humanity in postwar America with iconic documentary-style photographs that continue to resonate with artists and viewers today. Following Arbus’ death in 1971, a photographer and student of hers Neil Selkirk began printing for the Arbus Estate and remains the only person authorized to create prints from her negatives. Presented at the Armory in its North American premiere, Constellation brings together all prints from the set of more than 450 that Selkirk produced—the largest and most complete assemblage of Arbus’s work to date. Presented as an unconventional “constellation” of photographs, the exhibition invites visitors to wander freely among the works, revealing new connections between the images and highlighting the imperceptible architecture of chance, chaos, and exploration that underlies all creations.
Tickets for each show are sold on the Park Avenue Armory website – for more information on the upcoming 2025 season and to purchase tickets, click here.
Opera Saratoga based out of Saratoga Springs has announced their 64th Summer Season which runs from May 20 – June 29.
Offenbach, Meilhac & Halévy’s sparkling, witty, and electric La Vie Parisienne takes us to the heart of the demi-monde in 1860s Paris where two bachelors play tour guide to a Swedish Baron and Baroness. They showcase the Paris of their imagination, complete with visits to dives that they claim are fancy palaces and meetings with friends who are disguised as aristocrats. La Vie Parisienne is social critique at its most hilarious. You will leave the theater humming catchy patter songs and raucous party numbers. This show includes four performances at Universal Preservation Hall on June 20, 26 & 28 at 7:30 pm and June 22 at 2:00 pm.
Offenbach’s romp runs in repertory with Bock, Harnick & Masteroff’s jewel-box musical She Loves Me. Famous for tunes like “Vanilla Ice Cream”, “She Loves Me”, and “It’s Been Grand Knowing You”, this sweet story focuses on two employees in a Budapest parfumerie who are sworn enemies during the day but unsuspecting lonely hearts penpals at night. This show consists of five performances at Universal Preservation Hall June 21, 25, 27 at 7:30 pm and June 28 & 29 at 2:00 pm.
Universal Preservation Hall in Saratoga Springs
Earlier in the month, the company will produce a site-specific installation version of In a Grove composed by Chris Cerrone with libretto by Stephanie Fleischmann. This operatic adaptation of Akutagawa’s classic short story “In a Grove” which inspired the plot of Kurosawa’s renowned film Rashomon, offers a searing investigation into the impossibility and elusiveness of truth. This show takes flight with four performances at the Ferndell Pavilion in Saratoga Spa State Park on May 28 at 5:00 pm, 7:00 pm, and May 29 at 5:00 pm, 7:00 pm.
Saratoga Spa State Park
Finally, the company will present a work-in-progress showing of composer Emma O’Halloran and librettist Naomi O’Connell’s A Mass for Women in Bathrooms. This opera-theater work for three singers, an actress and electronic sound design by Alex Dowling reframes the structure of the Irish Catholic Mass to tell an intimate family story of three sisters and their mother. A story born from personal experience, A Mass for Women in Bathrooms examines themes of infertility, reproductive rights, and dementia, while reclaiming bodily autonomy for women in a historically violent space. This project is funded in part by the Arts Council of Ireland. This show airs with two work-in-progress performances at Universal Preservation Hall on June 22 at 7:30 pm and June 27 at 2:00 pm.
For more information on the Opera Saratoga Summer Series and to purchase tickets click here.
The Adirondack Wind Ensemble’s Eleanor Marcus Memorial Concert was held on Sunday, Sept. 22 at the E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium in Plattsburgh.
The Adirondack Wind Ensemble (AWE) celebrated Eleanor Marcus’s love of music through its annual Memorial Concert. Marcus graduated from SUNY Plattsburgh in 1943 and loved music, attending almost every music event at E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium for decades until her passing. Since its founding in 2002 by Daniel Gordon, a member of the music faculty at SUNY Plattsburgh, AWE has performed an annual concert in E. Glenn Giltz Auditorium.
AWE is a professional musical ensemble of wind and percussion instruments comprised of music educators and other outstanding community musicians from around the North Country. Its performers represent every public school district in Clinton County as well as several communities beyond. AWE is dedicated to providing quality concert performances by members of this community for this community.
From 2010-20, AWE performed its program at a second venue in either Lake Placid or Saranac Lake.over the years, AWE has also performed at Battle of Plattsburgh Commemorations (2002-2004), in annual fall concerts at Plattsburgh High School (2007-2009), at First Night Saranac Lake (New Year’s Eve 2014), and as part of the Saranac Lake Winter Carnival (2020). These geographic expansions have made AWE a true “Adirondack” Wind Ensemble.
Program: “Home in the Adirondacks”
Gustav Holst (1874-1934):
Second Suite in F, Op. 28b (1911) – March – Song without Words “I’ll love my love” – Song of the Blacksmith – Fantasia on the “Dargason”
Maurice Whitney (1901-1984):
Introduction and Samba (1951) – for alto saxophone and band
Todd Pray, soloist – Intermission –
Ian Deterling (b. 1990)
Images of the Adirondacks, Op. 25 (2024) – Autumn Colors – Mountain Sunset – Tempest
– AWE Commission, World Premiere –
Charles Ives (1888-1897) arr. Elkus
Old Home Days – Waltz (1874-1954) – The Opera House – Old Home Day – The Collection – Slow March – London Bridge Is Fallen Down!
NYC-based ‘The Orchestra Now’ has announced Manhattan performances of ‘Siena, Wagner & Parsifal’ and ‘The Nutcracker & The Planets’ as part of their Sight and Sound series starting Dec 8.
On Sunday, December 8, the iconic Metropolitan Museum of Art (MET) hosts The Orchestra Now’s performances of ‘Siena, Wagner & Parsifal’ which kicks off the organization’s Sight and Sound concert series. The program will examine Wagner’s remarkable innovations in opera via selections from his work Parsifal, set against the background of notable painterly invention during the Italian Renaissance in Siena.
The Orchestra Now (TON) Sight & Sound series at the Met explores the parallels between orchestral music and the visual arts. Each performance includes an introduction by a Met curator, a discussion with conductor and music historian Leon Botstein accompanied by on-screen exhibition images and live musical excerpts, followed by a full performance of the works and an audience Q&A. Tickets include same-day museum admission.
Richard Wagner
At the dawn of the Italian Renaissance, Siena was the site of remarkable artistic innovation. Sienese artists—including Duccio, Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti, and Simone Martini—played a pivotal role in defining Western painting. Over 500 years later, Richard Wagner revolutionized opera composition in much the same way. Twelve years after he read Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival, a poem from the Renaissance era, he began working on a libretto inspired by this tale of the quest for the Holy Grail. This eventually became his final composition, the opera Parsifal.
The Orchestra’s second December performance will offer a FREE holiday concert of audience favorites by Johann Strauss II, Tchaikovsky, Borodin, and Holst, led by Leonardo Pineda and joined for some of the pieces by the All-City High School Orchestra at New York City’s Talent Unlimited High School on December 15.
The Orchestra Now and Interim Assistant Conductor Leonardo Pineda present a free holiday season concert at the Talent Unlimited High School for the performing arts on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The program of high-spirited popular works includes Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite and Johann Strauss II’s Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka. TŌN is joined by NYC’s All-City High School Orchestra for Borodin’s Polovtsian Dances and two movements from Holst’s The Planets.
For more information on the upcoming Manhattan performances by The Orchestra Now and to purchase tickets, click here.
The New York Philharmonic has announced the recipients of this year’s Marie-Josée Kravis Prize for New Music. The honor has been awarded to American composers David Lang and Missy Mazzoli.
One of the world’s largest new-music prizes, the Kravis Prize includes $200,000 and a commission for a work that the New York Philharmonic will premiere. Lang’s new work will be premiered in the 2025–26 season, and Mazzoli’s will be premiered in 2026–27. Additionally, the NY Phil has named Kate Soper the Kravis Emerging Composer, an honor bestowed as part of The Marie-Josée Kravis Prize for New Music. Soper receives a $50,000 stipend, including a commission to compose a work that the Philharmonic will premiere in May 2025. Funding for both honors comes from a $10 million gift to the New York Philharmonic in 2009 by Henry R. Kravis in honor of his wife, Marie-Josée, for whom the Prize is named.
The Philharmonic has performed two works by Missy Mazzoli: Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres), conducted by Dalia Stasevska (October 2021), and River Rouge Transfiguration, led by Daniela Candillari (February 2023). Musicians from the NY Phil have also performed Mazzoli’s works on CONTACT!, the new-music series (November 2014; April 2015), and Kravis Nightcap (October 2022). In February 2025 Mazzoli will be a featured speaker at the Young People’s Concert: The Future Is Innovation, in which the Orchestra, led by Jerry Hou, will reprise Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres).
Missy Mazzoli
The NY Phil has performed five works by David Lang, beginning in January 1991 with the New York Premiere of Eating Living Monkeys, conducted by Zdeněk Mácal, and most recently with the June 2019 World Premiere of prisoner of the state, conducted by then Music Director Jaap van Zweden. Additionally, Lang’s works have been performed by Musicians from the New York Philharmonic on two NY Phil new-music series: CONTACT! (January 2017) and Sound On (June 2019; March 2022).
In naming Kate Soper the Kravis Emerging Composer, the NY Phil is commissioning a work that will mark the Philharmonic’s first performance of one of her orchestral compositions. The NY Phil will give the World Premiere of Kate Soper’s Orpheus Orchestra Opus Onus — the fulfillment of her commission as part of being named a Kravis Emerging Composer — in May 2025, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. Soper, in her NY Phil debut, will also perform in the work as the soprano soloist. The only previous occasion on which the Philharmonic presented her work was a CONTACT! concert (November 2015), when Musicians from the New York Philharmonic performed Into That World Inverted for horn and piano.
David Lang
For more information on the NY Philharmonic’s Marie-Josée Kravis Prize recipients, click here.
The Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra has announced a new concert entitled “Thresholds,” the second event of the M&T Bank Symphonic Series. This event takes place on November 16 at Broome County Forum Theatre.
Composer Hilary Purrington
The program opens with young composer Hilary Purrington’s 2020 piece “Threshold,” an atmospheric soundscape of driving rhythms that explores the boundaries between motion and stillness. Next is Felix Mendelssohn’s evocative Hebrides Overture, one of the masterworks of 19th-century Romantic program music. Finally, the Philharmonic will conclude with the first performance of a symphony by Anton Bruckner in our region in 60 years, the Sixth Symphony in A Major, a monumental work long celebrated for the complexity of its harmonic language and the profundity of its emotional impact. The Philharmonic’s performance of Bruckner’s Sixth Symphony, coinciding with the 200th anniversary of the composer’s birth, will be an unforgettable experience for seasoned classical music lovers and new audiences alike.
The public is invited to a Pre-Concert Chat at 6:30pm, “Mist and Myth in 19th-Century Music,” led by the Philharmonic’s Director of Education and Community Engagement Dr. Julia Grella O’Connell, about the visual and historical imagination in Mendelssohn and Bruckner. The main event begins at 7:30pm. Tickets are $28 to $69. Kids 17 and under attend free, thanks to Symphonic Series Sponsor M&T Bank. Today, the Binghamton Philharmonic serves up to 10,000 people annually through innovative, engaging, and affordable programming, meeting its mission of “Building Community Through the Power of Live Music.” This upcoming “Thresholds” program encapsulates the organization’s mission statement beautifully.
For more information on the Binghamton Philharmonic’s upcoming “Thresholds” concert and to purchase tickets, click here.
SNL has officially returned, celebrating its 50th year on the air. Since its start in 1975, the show has introduced Americans to classic comedy skits, ranging from Wayne’s World to the Blues Brothers. On top of that, comedy icons like Eddie Murphy, Adam Sandler, and countless others have SNL to thank for launching their careers. But let’s not forget an often overlooked part of SNL’s history: its musical guests.
To celebrate SNL’s 50th anniversary, let’s take a look back at 50 classic performances from throughout the show’s history. In this installment, we’ll travel back to SNL of the 1980s to see some of the decade-defining acts that grace the 30 Rockefeller Plaza stage.
The B-52’s (1/26/1980)
To kick off the 1980s, New Wave icons the B-52’s performed an energetic set. Hailing from the college town of Athens, Georgia, the band was riding high after the release of their debut self-titled album. So in January, 1980, they made the trek up to New York City to soundtrack an episode hosted by the late-actress Teri Garr.
To start off their set, the band played their biggest hit at the time – “Rock Lobster.” Before the music even started, nothing stood out more than the band’s style. Their eclectic eighties meets fifties fashion was on full display. Cindy Wilson and Kate Pierson’s mile-high beehive haircuts instantly gave the audience a taste of the B-52’s ethos. They were deeply rooted in retro aesthetics, but also spearheading a New Wave of punk.
The audience did not have much time to gawk at the band’s style, because Ricky Wilson immediately fired into the iconic “Rock Lobster” riff. Alongside guitar, singer Fred Schneider played SNL’s favorite instrument – the cowbell. Throughout the song, Schneider bopped around the stage, waving his cowbell and drumstick. This dance party of a song dramatically halted at the bridge, with the band members collapsing as Schneider yells “Down! Down!” Following this, the band immediately sprung back up, whirling around the stage. Even Keyboardist Kate Pierson left her station to join in on the vortex. The B-52’s, unlike any band from that era, matched campy theatrics with a rough punk edge.
Following a number of skits, the band returned to play “Dance This Mess Around.” This track started off much differently than their opener, with harsh keyboard stabs and dissonant guitar. For this number, Schneider passed off vocals to Cindy Wilson. Her soft vocals grew into screaming as the chorus neared, with Schenider’s distinctive yelping backing joining in soon after. Throughout the song, the band all erratically danced, while somehow remaining unsettlingly still, mirroring their SNL predecessor Devo.
With this performance, the B-52’s both carried on history, and made history of their own. They brought the 1970s New Wave of Devo and Elvis Costello to a new decade. This performance, while unassuming at the time, hinted at a decade that both New Wave and the B-52s would thrive in.
Funky 4+1 (2/14/1981)
In 1981, a Bronx-based quintet made SNL history with a single performance. On Valentine’s Day, Funky 4 +1 played the first Hip-hop performance, not only on SNL, but on all of national television.
Known hip-hop aficionado Debby Harry hosted that night, and personally vouched for the band. During her work with Blondie, Harry formed a great appreciation for hip-hop. In 1981, Blondie made history with “Rapture,” becoming the first song with a rap verse to reach number one. As part of this, Harry became close friends with rap icon Fab 5 Freddy, who introduced her to Funky 4 +1.
From the first second of their SNL performance, “That’s the Joint” was a straight blast of joy. The Funky 4 all in matching red sweaters accentuate their female lead Sha-Rock. In a way, the monochrome male backers and the standout female lead vocalist wasn’t too different from Blondie itself. A sample of “Rescue Me” by A Taste of Honey propels the song forward with funky bass and horns. Over this disco beat, the five rappers pass off lines between each other, making for a great early hip-hop track.
One key member of the band wasn’t even a member, but rather a DJ. Throughout the performance, he can be seen spinning records in front of the group. This sampling-based number marks a radical shift in the style of musical performances on SNL, foregoing live instrumentation altogether. This showing also revolutionized how rap artists performed live. Rather than bopping to the beat, the band adopted fully choreographed synchronized dance moves. Drawing from older Motown acts, the band looked more akin to the Jackson 5 than the Sugarhill Gang on stage.
Only one week after Funky 4 + 1, SNL introduced a future superstar to the world. Prince, the artist formerly known as Prince, or Ƭ̵̬̊, whatever you want to call him, he made his special debut appearance on February 21st, 1981. While not the musical guest – that was rock icon Todd Rundgren – SNL invited Prince to perform one song from Dirty Mind. This performance marked the first of four guest slots Prince filled during his life.
Following two performances by Rundgren, it was Prince’s turn to perform “Partyup.” Prince and his band emerged on stage in matching trench coats. Under his trench coat, Prince wore only a bandana, short-shorts, and stockings, mirroring the cover of Dirty Mind. The performance got off to an energetic start, driven by funky synths, bass, and guitars. Throughout the funk number, Prince’s iconic falsetto vocals soared. However, one vocal line also caused controversy. Some claimed Prince sang the original lyric “Fighting war is such a f*cking bore,” violating broadcasting regulations. Prince himself, however, claims he said “Freakin.”
Funnily enough, yet another F-bomb overshadowed this performance, this time coming from cast member Charles Rocket. During the farewell, Rocket, parodying JR from Dallas, angered TV censors yet again. Turning to the camera he said “Oh man, it’s the first time I’ve ever been shot in my life. I’d like to know who f*ckin’ did it.” Needless to say, the cast and broadcast staff were all shocked, and Michaels promptly fired Rocket. This, however, was the last time anyone outshined Prince, as he would go on to dominate for the rest of the eighties.
This performance is sadly near impossible to find in its entirety online. Whether due to the multiple swears, or Prince’s estate’s strict licensing policy is unsure. It is a shame, as it is one of the best to ever grace 30 Rock. Immediately after, Jeffrey Doumanian writing for Rolling Stone said, “I was blown away, he was just the most original act I had seen in a long time.
FEAR (10/31/1981)
For one night only, the SNL stage transformed into a no-holds-bar mosh pit. That night was Halloween of 1981, when Lorne Michaels invited LA-based hardcore band FEAR onto the program. With his previous bad luck with punks *cough, cough, Elvis Costello* why would Michaels push his luck with an even rowdier crowd? The answer is pretty simple: he didn’t. In fact, it was SNL alum and notorious party animal John Belushi who pitched the idea.
John Belushi was an avid fan of all things punk rock, quickly becoming close friends with FEAR. Earlier that year, he even offered the band the opportunity to soundtrack his movie Neighbors. The studio, however, was not impressed and thought the band’s music was highly inappropriate. Belushi, being the good friend he was, offered FEAR a musical slot on SNL to make up.
Belushi’s plan, however, was much more complex than just having the band perform. He pitched Michaels his idea – to turn 30 Rock into a full-fledged punk venue with slam dancers. Then, Belushi began making calls to punks across New York and Washington DC. By Halloween night, 40 punks closed in on the SNL studio, including future Minor Threat singer Ian Mackaye. For the dress rehearsal, the punks mellowed out, lulling Michaels into a false sense of security. But when have punks ever been ones to follow the rules?
When FEAR took the stage that night, all hell broke loose. They began with “Beef Bologna,” a breakneck pace hardcore track with screamed vocals and fiery guitars. As soon as the music began, the punks in the audience showed what they were really made of. Some dove across the camera, others stormed the stage, and all of them indulged in the pure chaos. As singer Lee Ving recalled, “The real audience at Saturday Night Live was scared to death.” Luckily for everyone at 30 Rock, after the relatively short song, the crowd seemed to calm down slightly.
It wouldn’t last. Ving – the comedian he is – grabbed the mic and said, “It’s very nice to be here in New Jersey,” warranting immediate boos. This segued into their second track “New York’s Alright if You Like Saxophones.” Sonically, this song is unique among eighties hardcore, featuring dissonant saxophone at its center. The audience couldn’t savor this musical complexity, as not even two seconds into the song, the moshing resumed. In the mayhem, the mic even fell into the audience. The young DC-raised Ian Mackaye seized on this opportunity, yelling “New York Sucks,” starting a small fight.
The band’s final track was “Let’s Start a War,” which seemed like a good reflection on what they were doing in the studio. Unfortunately for FEAR, they did not have the chance to finish this performance. In fact, they didn’t even get 15 seconds in. From stage right, a man entered holding a massive pumpkin. Lumbering across the stage, he then chucked it directly at producer Dick Ebersol’s chest. In a panic, SNL cut to dead air for the first time in its history. After some hesitation, the broadcast resumed with a pre-recorded Eddie Murphy skit. As audiences watched on, cops chased the 40 punks out of the studio, restoring order to 30 Rock. Needless to say, Lorne Michaels never invited FEAR back to SNL.
Queen (9/25/1982)
SNL’s eighth season began with a performance by one of the biggest legends in rock: Queen. With SNL alum Chevy Chase hosting, the band joined to perform two songs from their 80s discography. This should have been an easy slam dunk: iconic host, equally iconic band, how could it go wrong? The issue came with Queen’s touring schedule. The SNL premiere came on the back of a 27-city US tour. The band were all exhausted, and Freddy Mercury’s booming voice was shot. Queen, however, were never a band to shy away from a challenge, and persevered. Playing sped up, more rock-edged versions of their tracks, they stunned the audience.
The first track they performed was #1 hit “Crazy Little Thing Called Love.” This performance was a much more beefed-up rock version of the hit. It began with Mercury front-and-center, surprisingly playing the acoustic guitar. Maybe it was because of his vocal limitations, or the need for the song’s iconic riff, Mercury ditched the keyboard for the guitar. Once the song started, honky tonk pianos and a jazzy electric guitar riff from Brian May joined in. Listening to the performance, you couldn’t even tell Mercury’s voice was all but destroyed from a month of touring. To close out the track, May laid down a legendary extended electric guitar solo.
Later in the episode, Queen returned to the stage to perform “Under Pressure.” Although their latest album Hot Space was a commercial disappointment, its lead single – a debut with David Bowie – was an instant classic. Prior to Mercury’s passing in 1991, “Under Pressure” was a sole Queen live track – with or without Bowie. Beginning with the song’s iconic bassline, everything started according to plan. However, when Mercury’s vocals begin, his exhaustion was much more noticeable. There was no way he would be able to hit the song’s rising vocal lines. As a result, he had to alter the melodies, allowing his more limited register to boom through the studio. Throughout the song, he confidently strutted across the stage in a leather jacket. It was clear that his voice didn’t phase him in the slightest.
This performance marks a sad moment in music history. SNL was the final performance the band ever played in the US prior to Mercury’s passing from AIDS 9 years later. Even though it was their final American show, and the band were clearly not at their highest, it was a clear show of force. They may have been exhausted and had no voice, but their musical prowess and stage presence made all of that unimportant. Watching the performance, there is no question why Queen was one of the greatest bands to ever do it.
The Replacements (1/18/1986)
Yet another punk band banned from SNL for disorderly behavior – I guess third times a charm. This story, much like Elvis Costello, began with a last-minute fill in by Lorne Michaels. Originally, SNL booked the Pointer Sisters to perform on a Harry Dean Stanton hosted episode. However, when they canceled, Lorne Michaels called in Minnesota-based alternative band The Replacements.
Riding on the success of their major label debut Tim, the Replacements’ SNL performance was a medium to prove themselves on a live stage. What better way to prepare for such a momentous occasion than partying like there’s no tomorrow. Leading up to the performance, the band made a day of binge-drinking with Harry Dean Stanton. And did they drink…and drink…and drink. When it came time to go up on stage, guitarist Bob Stinson tripped and fell, smashing his guitar.
Once a replacement guitar was given to the Replacements, they took the stage for their first song. From the first second of “Bastards of Young,” it was clear something was off. It seemed like each band member was playing in a different key. In other words, their drinking had caught up to them and the performance was a mess. Clearly, the band was already at odds with Lorne Michaels, poking fun at him during the performance. As Paul Westerberg sang, “The ones who love us least are the ones we’ll die to please,” he gave a big exaggerated wink right in Michaels’ direction.
The real trouble came right after this. Westerberg was worried that Stinson was so intoxicated that he would miss his cue for the song’s guitar solo. Taking action into his own hands, Westerberg yelled, “Come on f*cker” to cue Stinson himself. Michaels was furious, fearing backlash from network censors for this use of profanity.
Michaels, however, did let the Replacements take the stage for another song. When the band reemerged, they seemed to have swapped outfits with each other for some reason. Maybe it was the outfit change, or the extra time to sober up, but their performance of “Kiss Me on the Bus” was much more composed. The band played together, in tune, and in key. When the moment of truth came for Stinson to play his solo, he was even able to do so without any swearing needed.
This cleanup job was not enough to quell Michael’s anger however. By the time the Replacements left the stage, Michaels had banned them. For the third time in SNL’s history, a punk act’s hijinx had gotten them banned from the show. Singer Paul Westerberg, however, was allowed to return to the show seven years later as a solo act. During this performance, he even played a Replacements track – “Can’t Hardly Wait.” The band’s next performance at 30 Rock wasn’t until a 2014 appearance on Jimmy Fallon – a whopping 32 years later.
Phillip Glass (3/22/1986)
Who screams SNL musical guest more than pianist and experimental composer Phillip Glass? If you thought literally anybody else, you’d most likely be correct. However, for one special episode of SNL, Glass performed and soundtracked the whole night. This decision, while odd at first glance, makes much more sense in the greater context of the unique episode it soundtracked.
On March 22nd, 1986, filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola hosted alongside comedian George Wendt. This episode, unlike SNL’s normal skit-based format, this night had an overarching narrative arc. It followed Coppola in his quest for an Emmy award. To do this, he directed the entire episode, repeatedly misunderstanding and twisting SNL’s concept to make it more artful. This vision was put on display immediately after the cold open. In place of the show’s fun intro was a moody opening credits sequence. Glass’s track “Facades” from Glassworks substituted the usual upbeat jazz theme.
After this, the show’s skits doubled down on its concept. First came Wendt’s monologue, which Coppola repeatedly interrupted hoping to capture the perfect take. To add onto this, he even told the audience how they should laugh in response. Following the monologue was a number of experimental, esoteric, and realist sketches tackling everything from Vietnam to The Honeymooners. Coppola even recorded a number of satirical commercials to make sure every aspect of the broadcast was up to his standards.
Throughout this experiment in television broadcasting, Coppola invited the Phillip Glass Ensemble to perform twice. The first of these was “Lightning” from Glass’s 1986 album Songs from Liquid Days. This track was unlike anything 30 Rock had witnessed previously. In Glass’s normal fashion, repetitive whirling percussion and winds propelled the song forward. Minor-key keyboard stabs supplemented this, creating an almost alien atmosphere. At the center of the piece was Janis Pendarvis’ beautiful operatic vocals, performing lyrics by Suzanne Vega. This track marked one of the most accessible moments in Glass’s discography, while remaining musically complex.
Glass’s second performance was “Rubric,” an excerpt from his 1982 classical opus Glassworks. This track was much more abstract than its predecessor. Keyboard and woodwind arpeggios drove the song forward. This song was much more emblematic of Glass’s discography, being a repetitive, deeply-minimalist composition. As it went on, it grew more and more lush, adding operatic vocals on top of the mix. As the ensemble performed, clips from the experimental documentary Koyaanisqatsi overlaid the show. The excerpts, featuring nighttime timelapses of a city, only added to the monumental aura of the performance.
Due to the unorthodox one-off nature of this episode, it is unlikely that 30 Rock will witness anything else like it again. It really is too bad, as the Phillip Glass Ensemble’s appearance was one for the ages. Equal parts experimental and approachable, minimalist and lush, the performance bent the rules of what an SNL performance could really entail.
Elvis Costello (3/25/1989)
So far, Lorne Michaels has not shied away from banning anyone he disagreed with. Play a song he didn’t like – banned. Said a naughty word on air – really banned. However, on March 25th, 1989, Michaels felt in a much more forgiving mood. After a 12 year ban, SNL invited back New Wave icon Elvis Costello for a solo performance. 12 years prior, Elvis Costello and the Attractions received a “lifetime” ban for going off script. Instead of playing “Less than Zero” like planned, Costello switched into a rendition of “Radio, Radio,” which angered Michaels beyond belief. Now a solo artist, Costello returned to support his hit album Spike, playing two new songs.
In the leadup to Costello’s first song, host Mary Tyler Moore made one of the strangest performance announcements in the history of SNL. Continuing a streak of raunchy language, she told the audience “Elvis Costello’s penis is here tonight, so stick around, we’ll be right back.” After that strange introduction, Costello took the stage to perform top-20 hit “Veronica.” Co-written by Paul McCartney, the song was an upbeat pop-rock number, lacking Costello’s punk edge that got him in hot water during his first appearance. Picking up an acoustic guitar, Costello led the band, singing about a woman slowly losing her memories with old age. Despite the sad lyrics of the song, you would have no idea based on Costello’s lively energy.
Following this, Costello returned to perform “Let Him Dangle.” This track is noticeably more solemn than his opener, discussing a man preparing for the gallows. The mostly acoustic track provided a comedown from the frenetic energy of “Veronica.” Despite the more serious nature of Costello’s tracks that night, he managed to stay in Michaels’ good graces. All it took was Costello staying on script. This forgiveness appears to have lasted, with Costello making two additional guest appearances throughout the 1990s.
On top of this performance, the episode was also notable for its sketches. Following Costello’s second song, SNL debuted a new sketch. Featuring Mike Myers and Dana Carvey, it introduced the world to the Wayne’s World public access television show. The charming sketch, featuring the two loveable music nerds in Wayne’s basement, quickly became a fan-favorite. Within just four years, it became a recurring sketch, spawned two movies, and got an entire generation saying “Wayne’s World, Wayne’s World. Party time! Excellent!” This one unassuming episode not only mended SNL’s past conflicts, but also paved the way to its future.
Tom Petty (5/20/1989)
In 1989, Tom Petty arrived at 30 Rock for his third appearance on SNL. This episode, hosted by Steve Martin, however, marked Petty’s first time without the Heartbreakers backing band. His solo SNL debut was also preceded by tragedy. That night, SNL original cast member Gilda Radner passed away following a battle with ovarian cancer. In response, Petty made his performance a tribute to the legendary comedian
Petty’s first song was “Runnin’ Down a Dream.” Starting with its iconic descending riff, the song quickly jumped into an upbeat rock groove.With chugging guitars and Petty’s soft vocals, the song lilted along for a really fun two minute stretch. After this, the song erupted into a fiery guitar solo from Mike Campbell to close it out. With this amped up shredding over his usual heartland rock, Petty entered his solo career with a bang.
Prior to the episode, Petty had planned to play his hit “I Won’t Back Down,” to close his set. However, as Saturday approached, he felt it did not fit the mood of the night. Instead, he opted to play a yet-unreleased track off his new album Full Moon Fever. This track was the future megahit “Free Fallin’.” Originally, his label was unconvinced, wanting him to play his tried and tested current hit. In response, Petty told them that “Free Fallin’” was actually the late Radner’s favorite song, so they relented.
This SNL episode marked the first live performance of what many consider Petty’s signature song. Unlike the album cut, this live performance featured much more lush instrumentation, mirroring a wall of sound. In place of acoustic guitar is an immensely reverberated electric one. With synth strings, piano, and reverb vocals, the song echoed like Petty was performing in a cathedral. Aiding in this feeling were the Renaissance paintings surrounding the band on stage. To end this beautiful performance, Petty decided to make things a little awkward. As the song ended, he went to hug Howie Epstein who did not seem interested. So, they both just buffered in place awkwardly until the camera faded.
In this performance, Petty took a somber occasion and made it a celebration of life. In doing so, he not only introduced audiences to his new hit, but also his new path forward as a solo artist. Following this performance, Petty returned to 30 Rock a whopping five times as a musical guest.
Neil Young (9/30/1989)
To close out the 1980s, Lorne Michaels finally caught his white whale. For the past 10 years, SNL attempted to nab Neil Young as a musical guest. The first time they tried, SNL ended up stuck with weirdo new wavers Devo. Finally, the folk legend was in the building to perform a three song set.
At the time of this performance, Young was far from young. At the ripe age of 43, Young was still at the top of his game. When he entered 30 Rock, he sported an Elvis t-shirt, leather jacket, patched up jeans, and maple leafs gears. This outfit was equal parts cool and puzzling, but one thing for sure was that it was 100% Neil Young. In his three decades performing, Young had built up a routine for putting on amazing live shows, saving the upbeat rockers for last. After hours of building up adrenaline and intensity, he would rip out fiery guitar solos like they were nothing. For SNL he had to reach this intensity level instantly. To do this, he took up an intense training regimen, including weightlifting and calisthenics. This training paid off, as Young went on to unleash one of if not the greatest SNL performance ever.
Young’s first song was his newest hit “Rockin’ in the Free World” from 1989’s Freedom. The track kicked off with its iconic chugging guitar riff imbued with fiery distortion. As Young’s lyrics entered, they only added to the sonic intensity. The lyrics initially seem patriotic, referencing the “colors on the street, red, white, and blue.” As the song continued, Young’s lyrics transformed into an indictment of HW Bush-era America as fiery as its guitar tone. With lyrics attacking everything from drug addiction, pollution, and gun violence, the song was a scathing criticism of the US. As the song continued, Young stomped and headbanged across the stage, before erupting into a legendary guitar solo. While firing out metallic guitar bends, Young jumped on the drum kit and crashed into his bandmates. Apparently, Young’s training regimen worked, with the performance having the intensity of a grunge concert.
Following this incendiary performance, Young returned with a much more somber song. The solo acoustic rendition of “The Needle and the Damage Done” worked as a much needed comedown from the explosive energy of Young’s opener. Upon retaking the stage, Young received immediate applause. The song’s lyrics tackled the issues of heroin addiction and the overdose of Young’s Crazy Horse bandmate Danny Whitten in 1972. Following applause throughout the song, Young swapped out his acoustic guitar for an electric one to begin “No More.”
As Young swapped out his gear, his band rejoined him on stage for this last piece. Young originally wrote this track as a spiritual successor to “The Needle and the Damage Done,” and it continued many of its themes. Throughout the song, Young sang of the difficulty to kick drug addiction, accompanied by bluesy solos. Compared to “Rockin’ in the Free World,” the song was much more mellow, finding a comfortable middle ground with the rest of the set. When Young reached the repeated chorus of “no more,” harsh guitar stabs amped up the track. By the time the track ended, Young made all of Lorne Michaels’s greatest wishes come true. He had finally caught his white whale, and Young’s performance was well worth the decade-long wait.
The Sembrich in Bolton Landing has announced they have given the Marcella Sembrich Memorial Performance Prize to American tenor Michael Butler. The venue has also received an award from the Greater Hudson Heritage Network.
Michael Butler
The Sembrich features museum exhibitions and an annual summer festival with an exciting mix of world-class musicians, noted musical scholars, a free film series, and the opportunity to enjoy it all on the beautiful shores of Lake George. Listed on the National Historic Register, The Sembrich was once the teaching studio of Polish soprano Marcella Sembrich, one of the most famous musicians at the turn of the 20th century.
Visitors can discover her storied legacy, which includes over 400 performances at the Metropolitan Opera and faculty positions at both the Juilliard Graduate School and the Curtis Institute of Music. With a treasured museum, performance series, and over four wooded acres of nature paths to explore, The Sembrich is truly a unique cultural experience.
The Marcella Sembrich Memorial Performance Prize awarded to Michael Butler exemplifies the artistic legacy of Polish soprano Marcella Sembrich. The prize guarantees the selected singer a solo performance at The Sembrich, the famed singer’s former lakeside teaching studio in Bolton Landing on Lake George, during an upcoming season. The auditions were held on the weekend of October 12-13 at the Kosciuszko Foundation’s house in NYC.
Michael Butler hails from Washington, D.C. and is American lyric tenor. Of nearly 120 applicants, 34 singers were admitted to participate. Butler placed second in the overall competition and won the award for the best performance of a Polish work by a non-Polish entrant. The grand prize was awarded to Polish-American soprano Magdalena Kuźma, and third prize was awarded to Canadian contralto Rose Naggar-Tremblay.
Along with awarding a prize, The Sembrich has also received an award of their own. The 2024 Award for Excellence was given by The Greater Hudson Heritage Network (GHHN) for The Sembrich’s recent efforts to preserve Marcella Sembrich’s “Queen of the Night” costume. The museum staff attended the annual GHHN conference on Tuesday, October 15 to accept the award and present at an awardee poster session. The conference “Embracing Innovation,” was held at Manhattanville College in Purchase New York and was attended by museum professionals from across New York State.
GHHN is New York State’s ‘go-to’ service organization focusing on interpretation, collections care programming, and the conservation and preservation of objects in collecting institutions statewide. Its programming and professional development training programs, webinars, hands-on workshops, web-based resources, responsive technical assistance, and grant opportunities provide the tools so that historical societies, historic house museums, heritage centers, historic sites, archives, and libraries may better care for their own collections.
Greater Hudson Heritage Network’s Awards for Excellence program seeks to recognize and commend exceptional efforts among GHHN members. Awards are made to projects that exemplify creativity and professional vision resulting in a contribution to the preservation and interpretation of the historic scene, material culture, and diversity of the region.
The Sembrich Staff at the Awardee Poster Session
For more information on The Sembrich, Marcella Sembrich Memorial Performance Prize, and the GHHN, click here.