Category: News Desk

  • Anderson .Paak Brings The Malibu Tour To Jones Beach Theater

    Eight-time Grammy winner Anderson .Paak is heading on tour. The Super Bowl halftime performer announced The Malibu Tour, featuring Maurice Brown and Gawd, where he will perform his critically-acclaimed sophomore effort, Malibu, in its entirety. The 3-week trek will see .Paak make 14 stops with a performance at Northwell at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh, NY for the penultimate performance.

    Maya Sarin

    Anderson .Paak is renowned for his work as a singer, rapper, and producer. His passion for music began as a child in his church band in Oxnard, California. In 2014 .Paak released his debut album, Venice, followed by Malibu in 2016.

    .Paak is known for his collaboration with other accomplisted artists. Silk Sonic, .Paak’s collaboration with Bruno Mars, earned the duo four Grammy’s and a sold out Vegas residency. Hits like “Leave the Door Open” and “Smokin’ out the Window” have cemented .Paak’s place in the public consciousness. .Paak appeared as a surprise guest at Logic and Friends’ show in 2022.

    Anderson .Paak’s tour will showcase all of his strengths. With experience playing at the Met Gala, F1 Las Vegas, and Coachella, .Paak is an experienced performer with an engaging stage presence.

    Tickets are currently available, and a full list of tour dates is available below. Anderson .Paak’s NPR performance is also available below.

    The Malibu Tour Dates

    Wed Sep 18 – Bend, OR – Hayden Homes Amphitheater

    Thu Sep 19 – Auburn, WA – White River Amphitheatre

    Sat Sep 21 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre

    Tue Sep 24 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl

    Thu Sep 26 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl

    Fri Sep 27 – Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

    Sat Sep 28 – Las Vegas, NV – Fontainebleau Las Vegas

    Wed Oct 02 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre

    Fri Oct 04 – Chicago, IL – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island

    Sat Oct 05 – Sterling Heights, MI – Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre

    Tue Oct 08 – Philadelphia, PA – TD Pavilion at The Mann

    Wed Oct 09 – Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion

    Fri Oct 11 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater

    Sun Oct 13 – Atlanta, GA – Lakewood Amphitheatre

  • Joe Hertler & The Rainbow Seekers Announce Manhattan Show at Drom

    Joe Hertler & The Rainbow Seekers, a genre-bending band from Michigan, announced new dates on their 2024 tour. The Rainbow Seekers will be playing Drom, a venue in the East Village. Known for their high energy, danceable music, the Rainbow Seekers’ tour promises an exciting show.

    The additional tour dates were announced following the release of their newest single, “Turn This Train Around”. The track describes Hertler’s experience after a breakup, specifically, the moment, “joy pierced through [his] sorrow” and it “felt good to dance again”.

    Jake Mulka

    Founded in Lansing, Michigan, Joe Hertler & the Rainbow Seekers are known for their upbeat, spirited performances. The Rainbow Seekers’ energy is contagious, they live up to the optimism their name invokes. Their music is far from one dimensional: high-energy, life-affirming live shows feature pensive-yet-uplifting lyrics featured on their album, Pursuit of Wonder.

    The band explores philosophical truths on their album, “looking at opposites: life or death, good or bad, happiness or sadness. None of those things can exist without the other.” Though the subject matter is existential, Joe Hertler is far from nihilistic. He described the process of writing the album as “uplifting’, and expressed a desire for the listener to “appreciate the brevity of their existence”.

    Tickets are available at the following link. A full list of tour dates is below, along with the “Turn this Train Around” music video. Pictures of a previous Rainbow Seekers show are also available at the following link.

    Tour Dates

    June 29 – St. Louis, MO @ Duck Room at Blueberry Hill

    June 30 – Oklahoma City, OK @ Twilight Series

    July 2 – Pioneertown, CA @ Pappy + Harriet’s

    July 4-5 – Quincy, CA @ High Sierra Music Festival

    July 7 – Portland, OR @ The Get Down

    July 9 – Seattle, WA @ Madame Lou’s

    July 10 – Boise, ID @ Neurolux

    July 11 – Victor, ID @ Music On Main

    July 13 – Denver, CO @ Meow Wolf Denver: Convergence Station

    July 24 – Thomas, WV @ Purple Fiddle

    July 25 – Check, VA @ FloydFest

    July 26 – Raleigh, NC @ Kings

    July 27 – Fayetteville, WV @ The Outpost New River Gorge

    August 8 – Lowell, MI @ Sizzlin Showboat at Riverwalk Plaza

    August 9 – Indianapolis, IN @ Hi Fi

    August 15 – Ann Arbor, MI @ Sonic Lunch (Daytime Set)

    August 22 – Charlotte, NC @ River Jam at the US National Whitewater Center

    August 23 – Chattanooga, TN @ Nightfall Concert Series at Miller Plaza

    August 24 – Covington, KY @ The Rooftop at Madison Live

    September 27 – Kalamazoo, MI @ Bell’s Eccentric Café – Beer Garden

    September 28 – Valpraiso, IN @ Valpo Brewfest

    September 29 – Columbus, OH @ Natalie’s Grandview

    October 1 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Crafthouse Stage & Grill

    October 2 – Bethlehem, PA @ Musikfest Café

    October 3 – New York, NY @ Drom

    October 4 – Boston, MA @ Arts at the Armory

    October 5 – Philadelphia, PA @ Milkboy

    October 6 – Washington, D.C. @ Pearl Street Warehouse

    October 8 – Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall

    October 10 – Atlanta, GA @ Vinyl

    October 11 – Nashville, TN @ East Room

    October 12 – Bentonville, AR @ City Sessions

    October 13 – Dallas, TX @ Deep Ellum Art Co.

    October 15 – Austin, TX @ 3STEN ACL Live

    October 17 – Phoenix, AZ @ Valley Bar

    October 18 – San Diego, CA @ Winston’s Beach Club

    October 19 – Venice, CA @ Venice West

    October 20 – San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of the Hill

    October 22 – Santa Cruz, CA @ The Atrium at the Catalyst

    October 24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Soundwell

    October 26 – Basalt, CO @ The Arts Campus at Willits

    October 27 – Greeley, CO @ Moxi Theater

    October 30 – Minneapolis, MN @ Green Room

    November 1 – Appleton, WI @ Appleton Beer Factory

    November 2 – Chicago, IL @ Subterranean

    November 3 – Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon

    November 9 – Lansing, MI @ Grewal Hall

  • Music is Art Festival Moves to Buffalo’s Outer Harbor

    Organizers for Buffalo’s Music is Art festival have announced the event’s relocation to the Outer Harbor. This move is the second time the festival has changed venues this year. The concert will take place on Saturday, September 21st.

    The 2024 Music is Art poster

    The Music is Art festival began in 2003 in North Buffalo. Led by Goo Goo Dolls bassist Robby Takac, the festival board has continually worked with volunteers and local organizations to hold the event. Since its start, Music is Art’s goal has been to “encourage people to find their musical voice [and] think about how music touches their lives.”

    Previously, Buffalo Riverworks and the neighboring Riverfest Park had hosted the festival. However, in early Spring 2024, the festival organizers announced that the festival would return to North Buffalo. This move had the Buffalo AKG and Buffalo State University hosting. Despite initial enthusiasm for this move, issues quickly began to arise.

    In an Instagram post, Takac announced “After months of planning, Music is Art Festival organizers and AKG staff have agreed that too many challenges stand in the way of presenting our annual music festival on the grounds of Buffalo’s AKG and Buffalo State University without compromising the energy and character of the event.”

    As a result of these challenges, the Music is Art festival will move to Buffalo’s Outer Harbor. The Outer Harbor hosts Buffalo’s newest concert venue Terminal B, as well as a large lakeside lawn to hold concerts. Despite the change of venue, the festival organizers will continue to work with the AKG and BSU to showcase local artists. With this change in location, festival organizers are “filled with excitement and anticipation for what this year’s festival will bring.”

    The Outer Harbor will host Music is Art on Saturday, September 21st from 11am-11pm. Across its 17 acres, the festival will host 26 concert stages with over 200 performers. The artist lineup has not yet been announced. In addition to musical performance, the festival will also feature visual artists, food trucks, local vendors, and more. These activities ensure MIA’s mission of being “a beacon of artistic expression and a truly inclusive cultural gathering in Buffalo showcasing the vibrant energy and diverse talents of the local and regional art and music scene” as per executive director Tracy Fletcher.

    Admission for Music is Art is free for all guests. Additionally there will be both free and paid parking options, shuttle services, and bike accommodations. To learn more, visit the Music is Art website here.

  • Basilica Soundscape Returns to Hudson This September

    This September, the town of Hudson, NY, will host the 2024 Basilica Soundscape Music Festival. From September 27-29, fans and attendees can see a wide variety of concerts, art installations, and high-tech performances from local and nationwide artists.

    basilica soundscape

    Founded in 2010 by Melissa Auf der Maur, Patrick Doyle, and Tony Stone, Basilica Hudson has been providing local artists, writers, and musicians alike with a historic space to showcase their work. Located in a reclaimed industrial factory from the 1880s, the original architecture included industrial windows, brick walls, terracotta ceiling tiles, and an intricate steel truss system. With thorough renovations, but still preserving the original features, it became the perfect scenic location to present these works. Since then, a wide variety of programs hosted through Basilica Soundscape include music festivals, live readings, and gallery presentations.

    Through its programs, Basilica Hudson actively encourages and supports the creation, production, and presentation of independent arts and culture. One of its trademark festivals, Basilica SoundScape, features live concerts, conceptual sound performances, author readings, art installations, curated local vendors and artisans, on-site activities, and more, creating an immersive, innovative weekend of art, music, and culture.

    Presented below are the full list of performers coming to Basilica Soundscape:

    Friday, September 27

    “Motherbeat” vinyl DJs Eris Drew & Octo Octa return to Basilica Soundscape for a night of bass-blasting house music. They’re bringing their powerful, custom LUV NRG sound system to the cavernous Main Hall for an all-night party, presented by the Bunker. 

      Nitemind returns with an electric and innovative light show to accompany the party.

        Eris Drew and Octo Octa – Crack Magazine

        Saturday, September 28

        Noise legends Lightning Bolt bring their exciting sound from Providence, Rhode Island, to Hudson for a night of energetic rock and roll.

          Lightning Bolt – Official photo

          Post-rock band Still House Plants make their Basilica Soundscape debut. Join them on Saturday to hear some creative, innovative sounds.

            Still House Plants – Pitchfork

            An exciting combination of genres awaits as new rap combines forces with a nü-metal edge with the heavy style and flow of hardcore rapper E L U C I D.

              E L U C I D – Pitchfork

              Philadelphia-based singer-songwriter Greg Mendez shares songs from his newest self-titled album on Saturday night.

              Maria BC presents dark, ambient movements that accompany melancholy, soaring vocals with a haunting new song featured on the soundtrack for the new film “I Saw the TV Glow.”

              Cassandra Jenkins, the unofficial songwriter laureate of Central Park Birders, will present songs from her upcoming album, My Light, My Destroyer, set to release on July 12.

              Local band Babehoven brings the indie-rock sound to Basilica Soundscape. They will be presenting songs from their latest album, Water’s In You, released in April of this year.

                  Babehoven – Rolling Stone

                  Movement and music presented by Kinlaw, a composer, choreographer, and performer.

                  Open Head, one of the most exciting bands local to Kingston, NY, brings a night of post-punk fun to Basilica Soundscape.

                  Basilica Hudson’s signature Writers in the Rafters program makes a return to Basilica Soundscape, featuring live readings from local writers and poets alike.

                      Sunday, September 29

                      Although Sunday’s program is yet to be announced, Basilica Hudson promises a night of family-friendly fun for free!

                      For any festival, artist, or ticket information, visit the festival’s website.

                    • WNYC Announces Centennial Program Ahead of 100th Anniversary

                      New York City Public Radio (WNYC) is celebrating their 100th year on air with a months-long celebration and a centennial album to go with it. The celebration starts on July 8 and continues through the fall, including special broadcasts, concerts, and public participation.

                      New York Public Radio/WNYC Centennial

                      Since WNYC’s founding in 1924, they’ve transformed and fostered New York City’s connection through delivering news, entertainment, and technological advances. This year, they celebrate 100 years of doing so, beginning in July.

                      On July 8, Happy Birthday WNYC! An on-air celebration, hosted by Brian Lehrer at 7 PM can be found on 93.9 FM. Followed by the Re-imagining of WNYC’s inaugural broadcast hosted live from The Greene Space. Then, in true New York fashion, the Empire State Building will light up red to kick off the festivities.

                      Other special offerings include “From the Archives” Audio Spots  (July 8 – ongoing), where past and current staff will guide listeners through important radio moments from the WNYC archives. Artist Katie Merz will create an ongoing art exhibition called Public Art for Public Radio inspired by New York City and Listener stories. Next, “Your New York Stories” – an audio storytelling initiative (July 8 – ongoing) will allow listeners to broadcast their own stories. Lastly, 100 Years of 100 Things with Brian Lehrer (July 8 – ongoing) will cover significant NYC political histories and events.

                      Brian Lehrer, Brooke Gladstone, and Michael Hill

                      The celebration extends down to the subways as well. Starting July 8, subway announcements will feature the voices of WNYC radio personalities, Brian Lehrer, Michael Hill, and Brooke Gladstone.

                      Additionally, All of It‘s “Public Song Project,” invited listeners to submit reimaginings of songs from the 1920s. A panel of esteemed judges selected the top entries for WNYC to play on air. The winners will also be featured on the Centennial album alongside, Rosanne Cash, The Lemon Twigs, Steve Earle, and They Might Be Giants, among others. Listeners will have a chance to perform their renditions on July 20 at 6 PM in The People’s Concert at Lincoln Center alongside award-winning musician, Jay Blount.

                      Later, on July 27, WNYC will present the Rhapsody for This Land: The American Odyssey in Music free concert. The show will take place in Brooklyn Bridge Park and feature pianist, Lara Downes. Other artists featured include Christian McBride, Rosanne Cash, Arturo O’Farrill, Time for Three, and the Orchestra Elena under Aram Demirjian.

                      Picking back up again in the fall on September 9, the celebration will include a live broadcast from Central Park SummerStage with Brian Lehrer. Furthermore, the show will include comedy, music, trivia, sets by Freestyle Love Supreme, mxmtoon, Donwill, and segments from WNYC hosts. Along with some currently unannounced guests, a few surprise ones will also be in attendance.

                      Lastly, the last festivity on November 19 will bring the Centennial celebration to a close. The New York Public Radio’s Centennial Gala, held at The Greenhouse will celebrate contributors and supporters. Attendees will get to enjoy a cocktail hour, dinner, and an afterparty to celebrate WNYC’s century of accomplishments.

                      For a timeline of WNYC’s last 100 years visit www.wnyc.org/100. To find the complete schedule of events for the WNYC Centennial visit nypublicradio.org.

                    • Soul Coughing Announces Reunion Tour With Final Date in NYC

                      Soul Coughing, one of the most unique and influential rock and roll bands of the last four decades, is returning to the stage fully formed for the first time in 25 years.

                      All four original members, Mike Doughty, Sebastian Steinberg, Mark degli Antoni and Yuval Gabay will be performing from coast to coast this September and October, capping the tour off with back-to-back nights in New York City.

                      NIELS VAN IPEREN/GETTY IMAGES

                      Each exclusive performance will feature songs from their El Oso, Irresistible Bliss and their genre-defining debut album Ruby Vroom which celebrates its 30th anniversary this fall.

                      The four members of Soul Coughing have said it again and again to audiences, fans, and journalists: We will not reunite. Stop asking. Well, you might want to pose that question one more time, because the tune has changed. This fall, all four original members will take the stage once more, with 17 dates across the country—bringing their glorious, off-kilter magic to a whole new audience.

                      Mike Doughty (vocals/guitar), Mark degli Antoni (keyboards/sampler), Sebastian Steinberg (bass), and Yuval Gabay (drums) formed Soul Coughing in 1992 after meeting at New York’s Knitting Factory, where Doughty worked the door. A truly eclectic collection of musicians, the guys merged drum & bass, trance, rock & roll and hip-hop to create a totally unique strain of music. As Doughty says: “Our music didn’t fit into the landscape then and it doesn’t now. We were super incorrect. We were messy. We were all over the place. There were moments in our career where we tried to be less different, and we always failed.” And thank God for that.

                      Over their eight-year history, the guys collected a motley crew of fans who gravitated to the deeply weird—yet danceable—energy of their discography, starting off with their 1994 debut, Ruby Vroom. They broke up in 2000, but Soul Coughing has lived on in the minds and hearts of their most ardent fans—and a new crop of listeners who may have heard standouts like “Super Bon Bon” on a video game soundtrack or “Circles” on a favorite TV show.

                      And the guys themselves are no slouches. Doughty has been releasing solo records at a steady clip since the band broke up and has penned two memoirs. Meanwhile, degli Antoni has thrown himself into the soundtrack world, scoring films by the likes of Wernor Herzog. He also collabed with Steinberg, who has played with everyone from Iron & Wine to Fiona Apple—notably on her critically acclaimed 2020 record Fetch the Bolt Cutters. Steinberg also linked up with Gabay on a drum and bass project called UV Ray and select recordings for Suzanne Vega. Gabay then moved to the U.K. and recorded with DJ Krust, ADF, and Roni Size Reprazent.

                      When they hit the 30th anniversary of Ruby Vroom, though, Doughty started looking backward. After playing the whole record on tour solo, he reached out to the band with a radical idea: a reunion tour where they’d play a best-of collection of tracks from Vroom, 1996’s Irresistible Bliss, and 1998’s El Oso. “The end was acrimonious, but I just thought I’d give it a shot,” he says. “So I just wrote an email to all three guys. It took a little convincing for some of them, but I was really gratified that everyone wanted to take part in that again—to see if we can be a great band again.”

                      To say the guys were shocked might be a bit of an understatement. But it was also a kind of much-needed salvation. “When he first reached out it was such a relief,” says Steinberg. “We all have our part to play in any dysfunctional relationship. But it was an immediate relief. I could just say, ‘Hey, man, we did something wonderful. And I’m sorry, too. That was cool.’” Gabay had a similar reaction: “I respect the music. I love what I did there. I love what the guys are doing—we were a good band.”

                      As for the setlist, that’s still in flux. Doughty lives in Memphis, degli Antoni in New York, Steinberg in L.A., and Gabay in Jerusalem, so they have yet to get together for rehearsals. Still, they’re all practicing—and will rehearse for a solid week leading up to the show. Doughty is singing three hours per day, Steinberg is getting back into the very muscular swing of Soul Coughing, as is Gabay—and degli Antoni? He’s unearthing his old sampler—which he bought decades ago with his student loan money—and sorting through everything from snippets of ‘60s songs to seagull calls.

                      “We’re just trying to pick the songs that bring us joy,” Doughty says. “We’re really trying to kind of revel in each other as musicians and that’s what the setlist is going to be based on. One thing that’s always been true about this band is every song is somebody’s favorite song.”

                      “Really one of the best conversations I’ve had in this band ever was Mike and I sitting down by the L.A. river for almost two hours and just going through the songs,” Steinberg adds. “I think there’s nothing I wouldn’t try to tackle, because it’s all so insane.” As for the clubs, they went back to venues that supported them back in the day. “Our agents did some archaeological work, finding people in the music business that would really care about this—and really, really be excited about it,” Doughty says.

                      As they head toward making history, all Soul Coughing knows for sure is that the band was something special—something never replicated. And this time around, it’s all about unity. “Music is a place of escapism, for people to go to a magical world,” Gabay says. “That’s what interests me. I want to bring people together. How can you bring a variety of people to the gig? Music brings people together—both the band and the audience.”

                      And as for how they promised to never get back together? “We just decided to let bygones be bygones. You know, everybody had issues,” Doughty says. “Our fans are going to be shocked, man. I can’t even believe how much they’re going to be shocked.”

                      Find tickets and information on the tour here. See below for a full list of dates.

                      Full Tour Lineup

                      September

                      11 – San Diego, CA – Belly Up Tavern

                      13 – Los Angeles, CA – The Bellwether

                      14 & 15 – San Francisco, CA – The Fillmore

                      17 – Portland, OR – Crystal Ballroom

                      18 – Seattle, WA – The Showbox

                      20 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot

                      21 – Denver, CO – Ogden Theatre

                      22 – Boulder, CO – Boulder Theater

                      24 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue

                      25 – Chicago, IL – Vic Theatre

                      27 – Pittsburgh, PA – Mr. Small’s Theatre

                      28 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club

                      29 – Boston, MA – Royale

                      October

                      3 – Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer

                      4 & 5 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel

                    • The Waterhole Presents 2024 Parties on the Patio and More in July

                      Saranac Lake’s Waterhole Music Lounge has an exciting slate of Thursday “Parties on the Patio” and other events spanning from July 4 to 25. The lineup of free, outside events also includes 2 Saturday Nights on the Patios on July 13 and 20 and the Howl Story Slam on July 9.

                      Kicking off July’s events at the Waterhole on July 4 is Party on the Patio with Joslyn & The Sweet Compression. The R&B band is making their return to Saranac Lake after an electrifying performance at the venue’s Winter Carnival. Led by Joslyn Hampton, the six-piece ensemble’s funky, yet soulful and psychedelic musical productions never fail to generate a fun environment.

                      On Tuesday, July 9, the Waterhole presents a different form of entertainment with a storytelling slam. The Adirondack Center for Writing and North Country Public Radio (NCPR) will co-host the event. Anyone interested in signing up for the Howl Story Slam with a story to tell may do so. The night’s story theme is “Risky Business,” ensuring that audience members and storytellers simultaneously have an amusing time.

                      The third type of event presented by the Waterhole this month is a thrilling Saturday night edition of Party on the Patio. Saturday Night on the Patio will take place twice throughout the month. Firstly, The Seapods, a band from North Country labeled “Psychedelic Americana” will play on the patio on July 13 from 6-10 PM. On the following Saturday, July 20, genre-bending group Annie in the Water from Saratoga Springs, will play an incredible free show on the patio.

                      Full July 2024 Schedule

                      Thursday, July 4- Joslyn & The Sweet Compression (Party on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      Tuesday, July 9th- Howl Story Slam (7 PM)

                      Thursday, July 11- New Planets (Party on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      Saturday, July 13- The Seapods (Saturday Night on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      Thursday, July 18- The Mallett Brothers Band (Party on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      Saturday, July 20- Annie in the Water (Saturday Night on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      Thursday, July 25- Bywater Call (Party on the Patio, 6-10 PM)

                      All July shows at the Waterhole Music Lounge are free admission and 21+. For the full Waterhole schedule visit www.saranaclakewaterhole.com

                    • Songs At Mirror Lake Summer Concert Series Returns to Lake Placid

                      The Songs at Mirror Lake summer series is returning to Lake Placid once again this year. All shows will be free to the public and take place Tuesdays from 7-9 p.m. at the scenic Mid’s Park in downtown Lake Placid.

                      Initially beginning in 2006, Songs at Mirror Lake has consistently strived to host free, communal and family-friendly musical concerts during the summer months. This year’s shows are no different.

                      Located in Mid’s Park, directly next to the gorgeous Mirror Lake in Lake Placid, all Songs at Mirror Lake performances have a picturesque backdrop to add to the already vibrant atmosphere.

                      In each year’s series, every night is themed around a different genre of music. Some of this year’s themes include Philly funk, reggae and roots rock.

                      All shows will run between 7-9 p.m., but the grassy field overlooking the stage fills up quickly, so guests are advised to arrive early for good spots. Seating is not offered, so make sure to bring some blankets and lawn chairs. If you have a boat with no motor, you are more than welcome to paddle up to the shore and watch any of the shows from there.

                      Meter parking is available on Main Street and is free after 6:00 p.m. A public bathroom is also available in the Main Street Parking Lot.

                      Guests are welcome to bring food and drink from home as long as it is properly disposed of. T-shirts, hats, reusable cups and stadium seats are all available for purchase at the venue.

                      Songs at Mirror Lake (SAML) is an all-volunteer, nonprofit community organization whose mission is to introduce residents and visitors to a diverse range of musical offerings and to provide regional artists with a platform for exposure and experience.

                      Visit here for more information and updates about Songs at Mirror Lake.

                      2024 Full Lineup

                      July 9 – Philly Funk Night with G. Love & Special Sauce

                      July 16 – Americana Night with the Sam Grisman Project

                      July 23 – British Blues Night with Joanne Shaw Taylor

                      July 30 – Reggae Night with SunDub

                      August 6 – Local Indie Night with Sven Curth

                      August 13 – Roots Rock Night with the Chad Hollister Band

                    • BAM Announces New Artistic Director and Fall Season Events

                      The Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) has announced the program for the Fall 2024 season, along with their new musical director, Amy Cassello. Since 2013, Cassello has filled several roles for BAM, including programming, artistic director, and producer. During her decade-long run, Cassello produced and oversaw numerous concerts, plays, festivals, and series at BAM.

                      This fall, BAM will host a multidisciplinary variety of programs, including plays, poetry readings, multimedia demonstrations, dance shows, holiday concert series, and a new set of in-house resident musicians. Among the events is this year’s rendition of Next Wave, an arts showcase contextualizing the artistic visions projected for the near future. Also featured this year is the return of BAMboo!, The Best of BAMkids Film Festival, and a film program featuring repertory screenings alongside new releases.

                      brooklyn academy of music
                      Amy Cassello, Artistic Director, BAM Brooklyn Academy of Music, Brooklyn, New York, June 7, 2024. Photograph © Beowulf Sheehan

                      Each year, the Next Wave 2024 & Emerging Visions events represent dynamic elements integral to BAM’s path into the future. With a renewed focus on works-in-process, increased presentations from the Global South, and greater investment in presenting partnerships, Next Wave and Emerging Visions support musicians and artists from all over the country. These events provide artists with the space and resources necessary to showcase their hard work and serve as a reminder to all that BAM will always welcome creative visionaries, no matter where they are from or where they trained.

                      This is an exciting moment for BAM as we bridge our past with our future. Amy is a deep thinker who considers the needs of artists and arts workers at every turn. As a longstanding BAM programmer and creative producer, she intimately understands our role in the arts ecosystem. I could not have a better partner in leading BAM’s artistic programming at this pivotal moment.

                      Gina Duncan, BAM President

                      This year’s Next Wave presents well-known creators who bring their groundbreaking theater, music, poetry, multi-media, and dance to the BAM stage. Works being presented at Next Wave include Bill T. Jones’s Still/Here, Hanif Abdurraqib’s election week poetry program honoring the legacy of June Jordan, Dana Gingras’ Frontera, Guillermo Cacace’s Gaviota, Tiago Rodrigues’ Catarina and the Beauty of Killing Fascists, Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens’ American Railroad, Liquid Music’s Sun Dogs, Modesto Flako Jimenez’s Mercedes, Part 1, Journey LIVE with American Composers Orchestra, and ONX Studio’s TECHNE

                      Among the new works being presented at BAM, the theatre has also announced its resident artists for the 2024 season. This year’s BAM residents include Baba Oludaré, Hope Boykin, Mayfield Brooks, Delano Burrowes, Kayla Hamilton, Soomi Kim, and Yaa Samar! Dance Theatre. 

                      brooklyn academy of music

                      Below are the dates for Emerging Visions and Next Wave. For more information and tickets, visit BAM’s website here.

                      Emerging Visions

                      Sep 17—Oct 20: Safety Not Guaranteed, directed by Lee Sunday Evans, with music by Guster’s Ryan Miller 

                      Oct 24—27: Preview performances of a new play, Reconstructing (Still Working but the Devil Might Be Inside), directed by Rachel Chavkin and Zhailon Levingston 

                      Next Wave 2024 – BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, 30 Lafayette Ave Brooklyn

                      Oct 25—27 Music engagement (to be announced June 26)
                      Oct 30—Nov 2 Bill T. Jones’s Still/Here
                      Nov 5—9 Hanif Abdurraqib’s I Guess It Was My Destiny To Live So Long poetry series
                      Nov 8 & 9 Dana Gingras’ Frontera
                      Nov 13—23 Guillermo Cacace’s Gaviota
                      Nov 13—17 Tiago Rodrigues’ Catarina and the Beauty of Killing Fascists
                      Nov 18 & 19 Liquid Music’s Sun Dogs with Alarm Will Sound
                      Nov 23 Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens’ American Railroad
                      Dec 3—8 Modesto Jimenez’s Mercedes, Part 1
                      Dec 6 & 7 Journey LIVE with American Composers Orchestra
                      Jan 4—19 ONX Studio’s TECHNE

                      Holiday Offerings 

                      Dec 12—22: Mark Morris Dance Group’s The Hard Nut 
                      TBD: Music engagement 

                    • American Symphony Orchestra Shares 2024-25 Season Lineup

                      The American Symphony Orchestra is presenting four full orchestra concerts as a part of their upcoming 63rd season. The lineup consists of free shows at Bryant Park and Kupferberg Center for the Arts on September 6 and 7 as well as ticketed shows at St. Bartholomew’s Church on January 24, Lincoln Center’s David Geffen Hall on March 23, and Carnegie Hall on June 6, 2025.

                      American Symphony Orchestra

                      The exciting upcoming season of the American Symphony Orchestra will have rich offerings for fans of a vast variety of music styles. The series of shows will start with a free concert as a part of the Bryant Park Picnic Series and will bring more exposure to the artists, classical music fans, and curious listeners.

                      Highlights that concert attendees have to look forward to include the U.S. premiere of C.P.E. Bach’s oratorio Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu, the ASO’s David Geffen Hall of Lincoln Center debut, and the first New York City performance this century of Richard Strauss’ first opera Guntram.

                      In 1962 Leopold Stokowski created the American Symphony Orchestra with the intention of playing music fit to everyone’s liking. The ASO consistently upholds that sentiment and will continue to do so throughout their upcoming 63rd season. Audiences are sure to get a unique experience at any of the four shows.

                      I’m delighted that ASO’s two previous outdoor season-opening concerts with free performances in Bryant Park have attracted so many new concertgoers, and I am looking forward to repeating this success again in September. It’s a wonderful start to our exciting 2024-25 programs and a perfect introduction for these ever-widening audiences to ASO’s mission of presenting surprising premieres and music rarely heard onstage today in a way that’s accessible and affordable for everyone

                      Leon Botstein, Music Director and Principal Conductor

                      ASO 2024-25 Program

                      Friday, September 6 (Bryant Park at 7 PM) and 7 (Kupferberg Center for the Arts at 3 PM)Beyond the Hall: Free Opening Concerts

                      Featuring: American Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein, conductor, Scott Joplin: Treemonisha: Overture (1911), Florence Price: Suite of Dances (1933), Bernard Herrmann: Psycho: A Narrative for String Orchestra in Three Parts (1960), Kurt Weill: Kleine Dreigroschenmusik (Little Threepenny Music) (1928), Leonard Bernstein: Three Dance Episodes from On the Town (1945)

                      The pieces being played in Beyond the Hall come from different backgrounds and forms of musical entertainment. Ranging from opera and theatre to movies and dance halls, the music played will provide audiences with an authentic and diverse preview of the upcoming season.

                      For Bryant Park on Sept. 6, no tickets or RSVP required; For Sept. 7 at Kupferberg Center for the Arts, attendance is free with online RSVP at americansymphony.org (starting on Aug. 7)

                      Friday, January 24, 2025 (St. Bartholomew’s Church at 7 PM)- Bach at St. Bart’s

                      Featuring: American Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein, conductor, Bard Festival Chorale, James Bagwell, music director of the Bard Festival Chorale, C.P.E. Bach: Heilig ist Gott, H.778 (1776), C.P.E. Bach: Die Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu, H.777 (1787) (U.S. premiere)

                      Dipping into the Baroque and Classical periods with vocal compositions from Carl Phillipp Emanuel Bach. The ASO in collaboration with the Bard Festival Chorale will explore changes in mood, harmonic writing, and Romanticism. This performance marks the U.S. premiere of Bach’s Die Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu (The Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus).

                      Tickets, priced at $25–$45, are available on Sept. 9 at americansymphony.org.

                      Sunday, March 23, 2025 (David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center at 2 PM)- Tapping into the Twenties

                      Featuring: American Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein, conductor, Orion Weiss, piano, John Alden Carpenter: Skyscrapers (1924), Erwin Schulhoff: Concerto for Piano and Small Orchestra, Op. 43 (1923), William Grant Still: Symphony No. 1, Afro-American Symphony (1929-30), Edgard Varèse: Amériques (1922)

                      Signifying the ASO’s David Geffen Hall debut, Tapping into the Twenties will honor composers whose careers flourished in the 1920s. This list of composers includes Edgar Varèse whose work portrays imagery, and Erwin Schulhoff who brings jazz and piano pieces to the mix. In the March 23 show, Orion Weiss will perform as the piano soloist.

                      Tickets, priced at $25–$65, are available on Jan. 3 at lincolncenter.org, by calling CarnegieCharge at 212.721.6500, or by visiting the box office at 10 Lincoln Center Plaza.

                      Friday, June 6, 2025 (Carnegie Hall, Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage at 7 PM)- Strauss’ Guntram

                      Featuring: American Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein, conductor, Bard Festival Chorale, James Bagwell, music director of the Bard Festival Chorale (Soloists to be announced at a later date), Richard Strauss: Guntram (1887-93, rev.1939)

                      ASO will perform Richard Strauss’ rarely performed first opera, Guntram, in New York City, for the first time this century. Themes of love, guilt, and renunciation tell the story of Strauss in his youth. With exemplary orchestral work and vocal techniques, this execution of Guntram is not to be missed.

                      Tickets, priced at $25–$65, are available on Sept. 9 at carnegiehall.org, by calling CarnegieCharge at 212.247.7800, or by visiting the box office at 57th St. & 7th Ave.

                      More information about the ASO’s 2024-25 season is available at americansymphony.org