On Sunday, Feb. 16, 2025 at Kleinhans Music Hall of Buffalo, the 120th birthday of legendary composer Harold Arlen will be celebrated.
Presented by JazzBuffalo in collaboration with Kleinhans Music Hall, a special 120th birthday celebration and concert will pay tribute to one of Buffalo’s most legendary musical icons, Harold Arlen, in the Mary Seaton Room at Kleinhans Music Hall.
Born on Feb. 15, 1905, Arlen was the composer behind some of the most beloved songs in the Great American Songbook such as, “Stormy Weather,” “Come Rain or Come Shine,” “Get Happy,” and, of course, “Over the Rainbow.” The latter is of course the iconic song from The Wizard of Oz that earned him an Academy Award and is frequently hailed as the greatest song of the 20th century.
Since passing away in 1986, Arlen’s compositions have left a mark on American music, shaping the landscape of jazz and popular music for generations.
This concert aims to highlight Arlen’s Buffalo roots by exploring where he grew up, performed, and began his illustrious career. From his early days playing piano on the S.S. Canadiana to his rise as a Broadway and Hollywood composer, Arlen’s Buffalo upbringing was integral to his success, and the event will honor the city’s role in shaping his career.
The concert will be headlined by acclaimed jazz pianist and Western New York native Pete Malinverni, who has made a name for himself as a composer, arranger, and educator based in New York City. Joining Malinverni will be internationally renowned violinist Julie Kurtzman and rising star jazz vocalist Anaïs Reno. Together, they will bring new life to Arlen’s cherished songs, including “Over the Rainbow” through fresh arrangements and performances, offering audiences a unique opportunity to experience the music of this Buffalo-born legend.
Early bird ticket pricing is available throughout Oct. at $35 and tickets are priced at $40 afterward. Purchase tickets here.
The Big Eddy Film Festival is coming to Narrowsburg in Sullivan County from October 18 to 20. The weekend festival contains several screenings of films along with workshops for all ages.
Over the three-day span at Big Eddy Film Festival, there are 11+ events to behold. Several film screenings are to take place prior to panel discussions where the films are dissected and analyzed. Along with the film screenings and panel discussions, a segment of the festival is dedicated to the young filmmakers of Sullivan County.
Nine kid-directed short films will be screened, followed by a Q&A with the cast and production teams. An animation workshop is also included in the festival on Sunday, October 20. This workshop aims to educate young filmmakers on animation, camerawork, and abstract artistry.
Opening night on Oct 18 features a single film screening – “Happy Campers.” From 10:00AM to 11:00PM on October 19, the day is jampacked with six total events for festgoers to enjoy. Wrapping up on Oct 20, four events take place, with the final film screening of the festival being documentary feature “Dory Previn: On My Way To Where.” This is an all-encompassing screening you won’t want to miss.
Followed by a panel discussion moderated by Greg Triggs. HAPPY CAMPERS chronicles the final days of a working-class summer colony in a scrappy trailer park that just happens to hold the secret to a rich life.
Saturday, October 19
10:00 AM Kids Make Film – Free Entry for Under-16s
Followed by Q&A with young filmmakers
Celebrating the creations of Sullivan County’s newly minted young filmmakers.
12:30 PM Prodigal Daughter – Feature Documentary
Filmmaker and former punk artist Mabel Valdiviezo reunites with her family in Peru after 16 years of estrangement, confronting her troubled past as an immigrant in the United States.
2:30 PM Space Cowboy – Feature Documentary
Followed by Q&A with the film’s editor Eric Bruggemann
Joe Jennings, an innovator in the world of skydiving, has spent decades capturing breathtaking aerial moments with his camera for extreme sports competitions, Super Bowl commercials, and Hollywood blockbusters. Flying at the top of their game, Joe’s world was shattered when tragedy struck, leaving him to navigate the skies alone. Filmmaker in attendance.
5:00 PM Rural Shorts
Followed by a Q&A with filmmakers moderated by Greg Triggs Short films celebrating local New York makers and the rural imagination. Filmmakers in attendance.
7:00 PM Start Them Young – Narrative Short David and Danielle take their 4-year-old daughter, Dahlia, to interview at the prestigious Future Generations Preschool; they are adamant that Dahlia gets into this school, they are sick with anxiety over it.
Hummingbirds – Documentary Feature In HUMMINGBIRDS, Silvia and Beba tell their own coming-of-age story, transforming their hometown on the Texas-Mexico border into a wonderland of creative expression and activist hijinks.
9:30 PM Scarlet Winter – Narrative Feature After waking up to find his girlfriend murdered in bed, Mark must cover up her death while trying to piece together events from the previous night to find her murderer. Filmmaker in attendance.
Sunday, October 20
11:00 AM Drawing On Film Animation Workshop
At Tusten Community Center Join us for a lively workshop where we will collectively make a handmade animated film without using a camera. Participants will draw directly onto clear 16mm film to create colorful dancing abstractions of lines and shapes on celluloid.
11:00 AM Too Short To Suck
Followed by Q&A with filmmakers The Big Eddy Film Festival is excited to present a screening of “Too Short To Suck”. Organized by ConPAC, this shorts program celebrates brevity and intensity through the works of 23 filmmakers whose films run the gamut from narrative, experimental, stop-motion animation, and more. Each short is a universe onto itself that doesn’t exceed 2 minutes. Filmmakers in attendance.
1:00 PM A Song For Imogene – Narrative Feature After discovering she is pregnant by her abusive boyfriend, a fallen-away musician must decide between freeing herself or remaining a relic of her drive-by Southern town.
3:30 PM Dory Previn: On My Way To Where – Feature Documentary
Followed by Q&A with the film’s co-director
Writing and singing the unvarnished truth about one’s buried secret life experiences is more common today than when Dory Previn wrote brilliant, disturbing, and darkly funny songs in the 1970s. Previn began as an Academy Award-nominated lyricist for Hollywood musicals with songs for Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland & Dionne Warwick before a tabloid scandal and public breakdown led to her re-emergence as a cult artist in the Laurel Canyon scene. Filmmaker in attendance.
DORY PREVIN: ON MY WAY TO WHERE
Entry to each film costs $10 unless stated otherwise. For more information on the Big Eddy Film Festival and the many film screenings, click here.
Adirondack Theatre Festival (ATF) and Proctors Collaborative have entered into a three-year agreement to expand shared services and explore how the two will partner more significantly over the long term.
Proctors Collaborative has provided the Adirondack Theatre Festival with set construction and marketing services on a fee basis for the past three seasons and cross-marketed for over five years. These efforts have led to conversations about the production of theatre in the Capital Region, the state of locally produced professional theaters around the country and the opportunities for ATF, the Collaborative and its affiliate Capital Repertory Theatre to work together. The goal is to imagine and deliver ever-better professional theater with ever-more stable means and methods for the larger community.
Glens Falls-based ATF has operated a summer season for three decades under an agreement with the Actors’ Equity Association, casting actors, designers and directors who have worked regularly on and off-Broadway, on television and in movies. Under the leadership of Producing Artist Director Maggie Mancinelli-Cahill, Albany’s Capital Repertory Theatre has a longer but similar history. Since its founding in 1976, it has produced over 300 shows across 6,000 performances, including 46 world premieres and is the Capital Region’s only League of Resident Theatres member.
The merging of these two entities has potential to create a collaborative project that may change the state of theater in upstate NY and throughout the nation. Since the Covid pandemic, the theater industry has been struggling to get back to the glory of its past. With this new collaborative adventure afoot, the capital region may see an explosion of creativity, success, and artisanship.
“Our donor community and funding communities and the cultural industry in general are focusing more and more on collaborations and efficiencies. Proctors Collaborative was born of that sensibility; the opportunity to connect and work with the region’s other significant professional theater company just makes sense at this point.”
Philip Morris, CEO of Proctors Collaborative
For more information on the Adirondack Theatre Festival and their upcoming collaborations click here. To learn more about Proctors Collaborative and their upcoming events, click here.
Internationally acclaimed classical musicians Christie Julien and Alexander Markov have announced their groundbreaking new project called Baroque to Rock, a concert that bridges the works of classical masters with the energy and showmanship of rock music to be performed at the iconic Carnegie Hall on October 22.
Following this exciting announcement, NYS Music had the opportunity to discuss the project, its origins and roots in both artists’ lives, and what’s to be looked forward to in this one-of-a-kind musical evening bridging classical and rock and roll music.
Previous collaborators and seasoned musicians in their own rights, Christie Julien and Alexander Markov’s partnership for Baroque to Rock is an especially exciting one given their respective backgrounds and musical experiences.
An internationally renowned concert pianist, Christie Julien has toured the world countless times performing throughout China, Japan, South America, Europe and The United States. Graduating from the Peabody Conservatory with a prestigious Artist Diploma under the tutelage of pianist Leon Fisher, Julien is a decorated pianist with several prizes in solo and chamber performance, including first place in both categories in the renowned Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse in Paris.
Having performed some of the most iconic historical venues in her home country of France such as the Theatre des Champs-Elysées, Maison de Radio France in Paris, the Nouveau Siècle, Palais de Congres, and the host of annual concerts at Salle Gaveau, Julien specializes in the French repertoire but finds great joy in performing works across the musical spectrum.
All of Christie’s accomplishments as a pianist are rooted in a lifelong love for music as a whole. When asked about where her fascination with the art form began, Julien described an idyllic scene of her six year old self sitting in a tree in her backyard in the south of France for hours at a time with nothing but the company of a small radio next to her.
Her love story with the piano in particular began after a neighbor had to pass along a piano prior to moving away. The piano found its way into Julien’s home, and she was instantly enamored by its elegant simplicity, explaining that, “You could do the melody on the piano by itself and it was simple. There is something very humble about the way you can do a sound on the instrument.”
Markov has been around classical violin since his youth, being taught by his father, concert violinist Albert Markov, who he still performs alongside to this day. With a largely 19th century romantic virtuoso repertoire, Markov has toured the world several times over as one of the modern violin greats.
After making his Carnegie Hall debut back in 1983, Alexander Markov’s decorated legacy thus far has accumulated in a gold medal at the Paganini International Violin Competition, solo performances alongside the Philadelphia Orchestra, BBC Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, the Montreal Symphony, and the Budapest Festival Orchestra, in addition to the title of one of the only violinists ever to perform the entirety of the 24 Paganini Caprices in a singular recital, among many other feats.
These accomplishments among many others culminate in Markov’s iconic gold plated violin, custom made by James V. Remington and Barry Lipman. Born out of a lifelong love for rock music and the realization that there was a “void to be filled” in the electric violin world of a recognizable public figure, Alexander’s violin made of real gold paired with a bow that glows comparably to a lightsaber bridges this gap all while creating an iconic instrument that can evolve into a larger symbol for the electric violin akin to the custom-made guitars or drum sets for rock and roll icons.
Setting out to create an instrument that “didn’t just sound rock and roll, but looked the part,” the striking gold violin has become a Markov staple and will be appearing at the October 22 performance of Baroque to Rock.
An evening that bridges the works penned by the likes of Vivaldi, Chopin, and Beethoven among many others with the electric performance quality and spirit of rock and roll, Baroque to Rock is an entirely unique marriage of two musical worlds that almost seem to be opposite extremes.
Through a playful attitude and a broadened perspective of composition- not written with either rock or classical in mind but with the full breadth of all possible instrumentation and technique from the genres combined- the evening is to be a once in a lifetime live experience that is a love letter to music as a whole and what it can accomplish when labels like genres begin to blur or fall away entirely.
Baroque to Rock as a concept was formed out of Julien and Markov’s individual experiences with the genres and how the interactions between sounds expanded their horizons.
When asked about how rock was introduced to their classical lives, the pair’s answers were entertaining in the best of ways. Alexander admits that “when I came to America, I was not into rock and roll at all. In fact, I used to hate rock and roll.” He had moved to the United States for high school, and the experience ended up being eye-opening.
“… Something clicked. I found this whole new genre and that kind of opened the doors in my mind outside of where I came from- that cocoon. There is so much else, and there’s a great bonus… when you open your door, your musical imagination to other genres, you really start to become a better musician and you see from a much bigger perspective.”
– Alexander Markov
Christie’s side of the story takes root in a surprise concert she held for her husband at their wedding where she performed alongside various other musicians over the course of 25 minutes for their 444-guest ceremony. The set began as expected with a standard classical piece that was familiar and “nice for the ears,” and then suddenly Christie was standing on her piano, the other instrumentalists were on their chairs, and alongside Markov’s striking electric violin skills the performance took a surprising turn into exciting rock and roll covers.
After the unforgettable evening, Julien found herself consistently approached by people who were present at the wedding asking about when they would perform something like that again- and the idea for this collaboration was born.
Conversation over the hypothetical set list quickly grew. Julien discussed a distancing from the more strict works like 40-minute sonatas that were beautiful to hear but lacked the spark they were looking for, instead leaning into “something that is fluid, something that goes with a different atmosphere so we could travel in time.”
The two proposed pieces that generally contained a more deeply inspired sound, searching for something that was “expressing something much more than just the instrument” as Julien put it- hence works from ballets like Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet and the Khachaturian Sabre dance of Gayane. Baroque to Rock is not meant to make the audience simply sit their seats, it instead aims to capture how music does not have to exist within the confines of refined airs and stiff attitudes when music’s greatest power is to make people feel.
This removal of social confines allowed for the traditionally classic works to be reimagined without boundary or fear of staying true to what’s written on paper. Both musicians excitedly would embellish or alter the pieces where they felt additional or entirely new instrumentation could be added- treating the full breadth of classical and rock writing styles, motifs, and techniques not as separate selections but one expansive toolset.
Baroque to Rock’s appeal is just that- both Julien and Markov are artists that value the power of music as a whole over convention. The event has no singular audience- folks of all ages, backgrounds, and life experiences will be able to attend and experience the essential truth of music as an art: it communicates and connects in a way where just words, or sometimes words entirely, fail. There is no “requirement” of previous knowledge or experience to attend a classical concert, especially not one crafted especially to show the world that music is something every single human being can enjoy.
Tickets for Baroque to Rock have extremely reduced prices for a Carnegie Hall show starting at just $14 thanks to generous donors who agree with the sentiment that there should be no bar from live music, including price range. In addition, profits from the evening will be dedicated to supporting music education initiatives in underserved communities and uplifting the creative exchange between the United States and France through partner organizations savethemusic.com and villa-albertine.org.
Tickets for this once in a lifetime genre-bending experience are available now- you can visit the event’s page for more information and purchasing opportunities here.
On Friday, Oct. 18 at the Bearsville Theater, the documentary Left Behind will premiere as part of the 25 annual Woodstock Film Festival.
The feature documentary Left Behind follows a group of determined moms who band together to open NYC’s first public school for dyslexic students. The documentary depicts the long journey as the heroes face both institutional and personal hurdles as they try to upend a system for the city’s dyslexic youth.
The film gives insight into the ways that the public school system ignores the needs of students with learning disabilities and, in doing so, contributes to the school-to-prison pipeline. It examines the current public education system and evaluates it is not built to help students with learning disabilities succeed or thrive. This becomes especially a problem for lower income families as just about every single dyslexia-centered school in the country is privately owned. Anna Toomey’s gripping documentary chronicles a group of advocates in their struggle to start New York City’s first public school for dyslexia.
“Powerful…inspiring Left Behind is an urgent call to action to help dyslexic kids”
Anderson Cooper
Director, Anna Toomey, is an Emmy Award winner as a Producer for ABC News, Good Morning America, ABC News long-form unit, and Peter Jennings Reporting on projects including The Gun Fight, an inside look at the NRA, The Century, and more. Left Behind began in 2020 after her son was diagnosed with dyslexia and she realized the inadequate resources for millions of children across the country. Toomey created, developed and directed the film and it is her first feature length independent documentary. She owns her own production company, Sandy Dog Productions, where she works on independent film projects.
Following the screening on Oct. 18, Juju Chang, multiple Emmy Award-winning co-anchor of ABC News’ “Nightline,” will host a Q&A on the emotional impact of dyslexia within families and the global issue of the school to prison pipeline.
The Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame has announced a celebration honoring the life of inductee, long-time music teacher, and record holding saxophone player Pat DeRosa.
A special event hosted by the daughter of Pat DeRosa, Patricia, the festivities on October 19 will celebrate the lifelong musical passions and accomplishments of the seasoned saxophonist and all that he gave to his Long Island community throughout his life.
Born in Brooklyn on December 6, 1921, Pat DeRosa discovered his love for saxophone at just twelve years old after his mother brought him to a music store on the Bowery. After a move to Huntington, Long Island, DeRosa developed already commendable self-taught skills due to a lack of musical resources in the area that would only flourish as he grew up, joining the Central School District’s high school band.
Following graduation, DeRosa found work at Grumman manufacturing airplane parts for the war. Within a year, he had joined the Grumman band and had formed his own trio that performed at nightclubs and parties all throughout New York City and Long Island.
After a draft into the Army Air Forces at the height of World War II and a successful audition into the Glenn Miller Army Air Force Band, Pat spent three years traveling the country with the band performing for and entertaining the troops.
In 1946 DeRosa was able to return to Long Island and subsequently enrolled in the Manhattan School of Music, creating the opportunity for him to perform alongside legends of the time including Bob Hope, Milton Berle, Andy Williams, Dean Martin, and Jerry Lewis. Despite the lengthy evenings spent dedicated to live performance, DeRosa was dedicated to his studies and graduated with a Bachelors and Masters in Music Education.
The 1950s found DeRosa pursuing this passion for music education further, becoming a music teacher at Huntington Elementary and South Huntington Memorial Junior High. During this time Pat also performed alongside the jazz great John Coltrane until Coltrane’s passing and formed the Pat DeRosa Trio, which played constantly, including at the historic inaugural ball of President Richard Nixon.
Despite retiring from education in 1978, DeRosa’s musical spark refused to go out. He continued to perform shows spanning venues from the Hamptons to Florida. On Veteran’s Day in 2020, Pat was inducted into the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame, and in 2021 he was recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the ‘Oldest Professional Saxophone Player.’
Hosted at the LIME Hall of Fame on October 19, the celebration of Pat DeRosa’s legacy will include a special video/interview presentation, a Q&A with his daughter and granddaughter, a special raffle for all attendees, and a live performance played by his family and friends.
The event is free with a general admission ticket purchase. For further information on the event and the Hall of Fame, please visit their website here.
Famed indie-pop group Foster The People have announced their anticipated Paradise State of Mind Tour which sees a single stop at Brooklyn Paramount on February 24, 2025.
The upcoming North American headline tour is set to hit 23 cities in all, including a stop in Brooklyn, NY at the Brooklyn Paramount on February 24, 2025. The tour begins October 11 in Austin, Texas, and finishes on March 6, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. Foster The People will host special guest Good Neighbours for the entirety of the tour. The eagerly awaited tour celebrates the recent arrival of Foster The People’s acclaimed new album, Paradise State of Mind. The album is highlighted by such acclaimed tracks as “Chasing Low Vibrations,” “Take Me Back” and the cosmically catchy first single, “Lost In Space.”
The band continues to celebrate Paradise State of Mind with a top-billed appearance at Austin, TX’s Austin City Limits Music Festival, both last weekend Friday, October 4th and on Friday, October 11. Foster The People first marked the album’s arrival this summer with an intimate pair of sold-out live dates at New York City’s Bowery Ballroom and Los Angeles, CA’s The Roxy Theatre as well as an electrifying performance of “Lost In Space” on NBC’s The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.
FOSTER THE PEOPLEPARADISE STATE OF MIND TOUR 2024/2025
WITH SPECIAL GUEST GOOD NEIGHBOURS
JANUARY 2025
25 – Seattle, WA – The Paramount Theatre
27 – Vancouver, BC – Queen Elizabeth Theatre
28 – Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom
31 – Oakland, CA – Fox Theater ^
FEBRUARY 2025
3 – Santa Ana, CA – The Observatory
4 – Phoenix, AZ – The Van Buren
6 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Palladium
8 – Las Vegas, NV – Fontainebleau Las Vegas
11 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Union Event Center
12 – Denver, CO – The Fillmore Denver
14 – Minneapolis, MN – The Fillmore Minneapolis presented by Affinity Plus
15 – Chicago, IL – The Salt Shed
17 – Detroit, MI – The Fillmore Detroit
18 – Toronto, ON – HISTORY
19 – Montreal, QC – MTELUS
21 – Philadelphia, PA – The Fillmore Philadelphia
22 – Boston, MA – Citizens House of Blues Boston
24 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Paramount
27 – Raleigh, NC – The Ritz
28 – Atlanta, GA – Tabernacle
MARCH 2025
3 – New Orleans, LA – The Fillmore New Orleans
5 – Houston, TX – House of Blues
6 – Dallas, TX – House of Blues
* Festival Appearance
^ Non-Live Nation Date
“I think the trickiest part about this record was trying to be authentic about what had been going on with me, without writing something super dark and without glossing over it, either. Because, to me, it was really important that hope remain at the core of this whole thing. People need hope. I need hope. And when I think about what hope is – it’s having the courage to walk towards something that you think can be better, while fully acknowledging the darkness and reality around you. That was the goal, walking into this album, which was actually really tricky – to make something that rang true to what was on my mind, but that had this much groove and that would be fun to dance to. You know, to me, they’re like Trojan Horses, the message is hiding in the melody.”
Mark Foster
For more information on Foster The People’s upcoming Paradise State of MindTour, and to purchase tickets, click here.
All You Need Is Love returns in 2025 with a tour across North America that will feature 14 dates in celebration on John Lennon’s 84th birthday. The tour contains a stop in Patchogue, Long Island on January 16.
All You Need Is Love effortlessly captures the essence of The Beatles’ legendary career from their 1964 arrival in America, through 1969. From the infectious innocence of “I Want To Hold Your Hand” to the melodic masterpiece of “Yesterday,” All You Need Is Love promises to deliver a night beyond nostalgia encompassing transcendent sing-along moments, and pure musical bliss. In addition to the captivating performances, the concert tour features state-of-the-art production and visuals, creating an immersive experience that will transport audiences through the golden era of The Beatles.
With sold-out shows across North America in 2024 for the 60th Anniversary of The Beatles in America, All You Need Is Love assembles American and Canadian Artists. Once again, an extraordinary ensemble of world-class musicians come together to pay homage to the iconic British rock band that forever changed the landscape of music.
The all-star lineup consists of exceptional musicians whose talent and passion for The Beatles guarantee an authentic and electrifying concert experience. The lineup includes Kasim Sulton, Steve Kimock, Prairie Prince, Bobby Lee Rodgers, Gil Assayas, Mark Rashotte, and Andy Forgie. All of these musicians have toured with massively popular bands groups like Meatloaf, Blue Oyster Cult, Journey, Jefferson Starship, Creed and more.
All You Need Is Love 2025 Tour Dates:
1.11.25 The Empire – Belleville, ON
1.14.25 The Wilbur – Boston, MA
1.15.25 The Wellmont Theater – Montclair, NJ
1.16.25 Patchogue Theatre – Patchogue, NY
1.17.25 Keswick Theatre – Glenside, PA
1.21.25 The Birchmere – Alexandria, VA
1.23.25 Carnegie of Homestead Music Hall – Munhall, PA (Pittsburgh)
1.26.25 Jergel’s Rhythm Grille – Warrendale, PA
1.28.25 Memorial Hall OTR – Cincinnati, OH
1.29.25 The Egyptian Room – Indianapolis, IN
1.30.25 Pabst Theater – Milwaukee, WI
2.1.25 Des Plaines Theatre – Des Plaines, IL
2.2.25 Arcada Theatre – St. Charles, IL
For more information on the upcoming ‘All You Need Is Love’ tour celebrating John Lennon’s 84th birthday and to purchase tickets, click here.
Upstate New York natives Annie in the Water have announced their next studio album Things to Do which will be released on October 25 to go along with two shows in NY in support of the album.
As a follow up to their 2022 album Sun at Dawn, Annie in the Water’s fourth studio album was written and recorded from 2022 to 2024 at Bijou Artist Space in Malta, NY. Things to Do represents a step forward for the band towards a new sound inspired by their surroundings Upstate. Things to Do is a love letter to the region they call home.
Musically, the album is a culmination of two years of hard work with the goal of creating a polished sound that transverses multiple genres. The songs are a reminder to honor one another, to dance while living life with intention, integrity, loyalty, and patience. Each person involved in this project left a tangible impact, creating a truly collaborative album.
Annie in the Water is an alternative rock band from Upstate New York. Since their first album in 2011, Destination, the band’s feel good sound found its roots in acoustic guitars without limits. Their songwriting, led by guitars and synthesizers over a ground-shaking rhythm section, gives the listener the ability to traverse multiple genres.
Annie in the Water will be playing three shows in support of their new album which are listed below. They will also have new album related merchandise and vinyl pre-sales available at upcoming shows.
Annie in the Water Tour Dates:
Saturday, Oct. 26th – Ophelia’s – Albany, NY (Phish at MVP Arena pre and after parties) Friday, Nov. 15th – Cooperstown Concert Series – Cooperstown, NY Saturday, Nov. 30th – Wonder Bar – Asbury Park, NJ (Supporting Fungkshui)
Revered alt-country singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams is bringing her acclaimed live show on the road for four dates in New York State. The tour begins on October 11 in Fort Worth, TX and wraps up on February 28, 2025, in Miami, FL.
Lucinda Williams’ tour sees 18+ dates across the US, including four dates in NY. Williams plays Town Ballroom in Buffalo on November 8, The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester on November 9, and the legendary Beacon Theatre in NYC on December 1 and 2. Williams’ shows at the Beacon Theatre include a benefit for rock artist Jesse Malin who has suffered a rare spinal cord stroke in 2023 leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.
William’s 2023 memoir, Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets I Told You, was released to wide critical acclaim and debuted at #5 on the New York Times Bestsellers. This memoir is the subject of a few of her upcoming tour dates. Over the past two years, her music has been the force driving her recovery from a debilitating stroke she suffered on November 17, 2020, at age 67.
Her masterful, multi-Grammy-winning songwriting has never deserted her. To wit, her stunning, sixteenth studio album, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart, brims over with some of the best work of her career. And though Williams can no longer play her beloved guitar – a constant companion since age 12 – her distinctive vocals sound better than ever.
Lucinda Williams 2024-2025 Tour Dates:
Oct 11, 2024 – Tannahill’s Tavern & Music Hall – Fort Worth, TX – with special guest Kelsey Waldon
Oct 12, 2024 – The Guthrie Green Tulsa, OK – FREE SHOW
Oct 17, 2024 – Kia Forum Inglewood, CA – Life is a Carnival: A Musical Celebration of Robbie Robertson
Nov 8, 2024 – Town Ballroom – Buffalo, NY
Nov 9, 2024 – The Capitol Theatre – Port Chester, NY
Nov 10, 2024 – White Eagle Hall – Jersey City, NJ
Nov 12, 2024 – Chevalier Theatre – Medford, MA
Nov 14, 2024 – State Theatre – Portland, ME
Nov 15, 2024 – Veterans Memorial Auditorium – Providence, RI – Lucinda Williams and her band, A “Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets” Show with stories, songs, & visuals
Nov 16, 2024 – Garde Arts Center – New London, CT
Nov 19, 2024 – Lincoln Theatre Washington, DC – Lucinda Williams and her band, A “Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets” Show with stories, songs, & visuals
Nov 20, 2024 – The Paramount Theater – Charlottesville, VA – Lucinda Williams and her band, A “Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets” Show with stories, songs, & visuals
Nov 22, 2024 – McCarter Theatre Center – Princeton, NJ – Lucinda Williams and her band, A “Don’t Tell Anybody The Secrets” Show with stories, songs, & visuals
Nov 23, 2024 – Ocean City Music Pier – Ocean City, NJ
Nov 24, 2024 – The Grand Opera House – Wilmington, DE
Dec 1, 2024 – Beacon Theatre – New York, NY – JESSE MALIN BENEFIT
Dec 2, 2024 – Beacon Theatre – New York, NY – BENEFIT FOR JESSE MALIN
Feb 22, 2025 – Feb 28, 2025 – Outlaw Country Cruise – Miami, FL
To learn more about Lucinda Williams’ tour, and to purchase tickets to her upcoming shows, click here.