Category: Upcoming Shows

  • 2024 NYC Winter JazzFest Reveals Full Schedule, Artists, Afternoon Talks Series

    NYC Winter JazzFest has announced the complete list of artists to be featured at the 20th annual event, held January 10-18, 2024.

    Founded by New York concert impresario Brice Rosenbloom, NYCWJF has become the definitive all-inclusive jazz event that offers a “state of the union” of jazz and its many stylistic camps from avant-garde to post-bop, jazz-funk, fusion, hypermodern through-composed music and jazz-inflected world music.

    From party bands to ambient electronic groups to the most advanced compositional approaches – audiences sample everything the jazz world has to offer. As a destination event, attendees regularly travel from other states and countries to attend the festival. Many in the industry see it as jazz’s answer to SXSW.

    It is our 20th season. We began in 2005 at the Knitting Factory on Leonard Street with the mission of highlighting music that deserved wider attention while the APAP conference was in town, and that mission remains. Over the years that mission has expanded to focus on artists with meaningful messages, in the desire to serve as a beacon for racial and gender justice, community building and wellness. Especially in these times of divisiveness,, we understand the importance of nurturing community through music.

    founder and producer Brice Rosenbloom.

    The NYCWJF has become a creative home for pathbreaking artists from the local NYC scene and globally, and a pivotal destination for arts leaders and cultural cognoscenti, hardcore fans and new listeners alike. The festival has grown at a rapid pace, from the original one-day single-location program to annual schedules putting as many as 150 groups (over 600 artists) on 20 stages throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn.

    A number artists who have gone on to wide industry acclaim including GRAMMYs, MacArthurs and or other major platforms for their work are among past performers: Jon Batiste, Kamasi Washington, Gregory Porter, Jason Moran, Vijay Iyer, esperanza spalding, Robert Glasper, Gretchen Parlato and more. These artists look back to their early WJF appearances as pivotal in terms of artistic growth and audience growth as well. Participants from our very earliest WJF days performing at this year’s festival include Marc Ribot and Burnt Sugar The Arkestra Chamber.

    Likewise, NYC Winter Jazz Fest will find unique ways to celebrate artists lost who will always be at the root of this music community: Max Roach, Alice Coltrane, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Curtis Fowlkes, Pharoah Sanders, Sun Ra, J Dilla, and Amp Fiddler.

    Artist-in-Residence Shabaka (f.k.a. Shabaka Hutchings)

    Our artist-in-residence this year, saxophonist and multi-reedist Shabaka, will perform in six different configurations over the course of the festival. Shabaka’s work transcends conventional notions of genre and draws from a vast palette of cultural influences. While he’s undeniably a pioneering voice in the renaissance of British jazz, his remit is much broader: he has also performed classical concertos with world-leading orchestras; led several hugely influential bands (Sons of Kemet, The Comet is Coming, Shabaka and the Ancestors) and has recently released a critically lauded solo album, Afrikan Culture, a work of exceptional beauty and urgency, focused around the shakuhachi, an east Asian instrument of which Shabaka is a major exponent.

    In addition to what is sure to be a revelatory (NOW SOLD OUT) January 11 duo set at Dizzy’s Club with the great Joe Lovano (preceded by an intimate chat at Jazz Congress on the “Universality of Jazz”), Shabaka will take part in both of our Marathon nights in ensembles including Jason Moran, Saul Williams, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson and more. He will perform at the January 14 tribute to Black cultural center, The East, (see below) and our Impulse! Records showcase at Le Poisson Rouge (LPR) on January 15 (NOW SOLD OUT).

    Schedule of NYC Winter Jazz Fest Events

    January 10 

    Take Two: Tyshawn Sorey x Max Roach — Members, Don’t Git Weary + Gilles Peterson (SOLD OUT)

    On what would have been the late Max Roach’s 100th birthday, Pique-nique and NYC Winter Jazzfest along with BMI, present composer and MacArthur Fellow Dr. Tyshawn Sorey, who continues the innovative “Take Two” deep listening series. An ongoing series in Brooklyn and elsewhere, Take Two debuted at last year’s festival with an event in memory of Pharoah Sanders. This year Sorey devotes his attention to Max Roach’s 1968 Atlantic Records classic Members, Don’t Git Weary, which featured a new generation of future heavyweights: Gary Bartz, Charles Tolliver, Stanley Cowell, Jymie Merritt and Andy Bey. Tolliver and Cowell would go on to form the seminal Strata-East label and in many ways this record embodies the template of that sound. 

    The evening will consist of an uninterrupted playback of the 1968 album followed by Sorey and his ensemble making it their own, reacting to what they heard, feeding off audience energy and a shared listening experience. His ensemble includes highly acclaimed young musicians including trumpeter Adam O’Farrill, saxophonist Mark Shim, pianist Sullivan Fortner and bassist Matt Brewer, plus guest vocalist Fay Victor. The artists will connect the dots between record culture and live music culture. BBC Host and musical impresario Gilles Peterson will serve as master of ceremonies and also DJ a late-night set after the performance.

    January 11

    Winter Jazzfest x Jazz Congress

    Jazz at Lincoln Center produces Jazz Congress, an annual conference designed to bring together artists, media and industry leaders in the global jazz community to exchange ideas in order to nurture and grow the jazz community and the underlying business and organizations that promote, produce, present, market and support the music. The conference was co-produced in association with JazzTimes from 2018 to 2021. After a hiatus in 2022 and 2023, Jazz Congress returns as a one-day event on January 11, 2024. In 2024, Jazz Congress will collaborate with Winter Jazzfest in honor of its 20th anniversary. This will include a NYC Winter Jazzfest 20th Anniversary Panel titled “Universality of Jazz” featuring British multi-instrumentalist and 2024 WJF Artist-in-Residence Shabaka, bassist, composer and vocalist esperanza spalding, and South African pianist and composer Nduduzo Makhatini. The evening concert by Joe Lovano and Shabaka is now SOLD OUT.

    January 12 & 13

    Winter Jazzfest Manhattan & Brooklyn Marathons

    Our epic WJF Marathons will once again unfold across two nights (January 12 & 13), at eight Manhattan venues followed by eight more in Brooklyn the following night. Manhattan Marathon highlights include The Jazz Passengers Remember Curtis Fowlkes (Jan. 12), Marc Ribot’s 70th Birthday celebration (Jan. 12), and a Candid Records showcase (Jan. 12) that will include Terri Lyne Carrington + Social Science plus new label signings Zaccha’eus Paul, Morgan Guerin and Milena Casado, hosted by Carrington.

    January 12 & 13

    Winter Jazzfest Manhattan & Brooklyn Marathons

    Our epic WJF Marathons will once again unfold across two nights (January 12 & 13), at eight Manhattan venues followed by eight more in Brooklyn the following night. Manhattan Marathon highlights include The Jazz Passengers Remember Curtis Fowlkes (Jan. 12), Marc Ribot’s 70th Birthday celebration (Jan. 12), and a Candid Records showcase (Jan. 12) that will include Terri Lyne Carrington + Social Science plus new label signings Zaccha’eus Paul, Morgan Guerin and Milena Casado, hosted by Carrington.

    For the first time, NYC Winter Jazzfest will partner with Philadelphia-based presenter Ars Nova Workshop for a showcase of Philadelphia artists at Nublu (Jan. 12); TSFJAZZ/Paris Jazz Club host their annual French jazz artists showcase (Jan. 12), a sunset performance with Laraaji (Jan. 13), Next Jazz Legacy ensemble performs to open the night at City Winery (Jan. 12), keyboardist and producer Ray Angry hosts a stage curated by Future X Sounds (Jan. 13); Joshua Abrams and Tisziji Muñoz Curate “The Harvest Time Project,” a series of ever-evolving live iterations of Pharoah Sanders’ 1977 record Pharoah with a rotating cast of special guests each night (both marathon nights) with different guests including James Brandon Lewis, Chad Taylor, Surya Botofasina, Carlos Niño, Nate Mercereau, Irreversible Entanglements and special guests; a Jazz Passengers tribute to late trombone great Curtis Fowlkes; Ray Angry and J.Period host a 50th Birthday tribute to J. DIlla and remembering Amp Fiddler; three 70th birthday sets from Marc Ribot and much more.

    January 14 

    A Night at The East (Crown Hill Theatre)

    Curated by author and music journalist Marcus J. Moore and NYCWJF’s Brice Rosenbloom, an all-star lineup including Billy Hart and Gary Bartz alongside David Murray, Ahmed Abdullah, Charles Burnham, Nicole Mitchell, Moor Mother, Shabaka, Luke Stewart, Julius Rodriguez, Elucid and Kweku Sumbry will pay tribute to this all-but-forgotten Brooklyn landmark, where hundreds of shows self-produced by Black artists took place in Central Brooklyn from 1969-1975.

    January 15

    Impulse! Records Showcase at LPR (SOLD OUT)

    Impulse! Records is proud to present today’s most groundbreaking jazz stars with an evening headlined by Shabaka, debuting material from his upcoming solo album with guests esperanza spalding and more. Trailblazing jazz harpist Brandee Younger will honor the music of Alice Coltrane. Liberation-oriented free jazz collective Irreversible Entanglements will perform; plus instrumental power-trio The Messthetics (former Fugazi members Joe Lally and Brendan Canty with unclassifiable guitar wonder Anthony Pirog) with keeper of the avant flame James Brandon Lewis and harpist Brandee Younger.

    January 16

    My Words Are Music: A Celebration of Sun Ra’s Poetry (Nublu)

    Sun Ra is better known to most as a musician than a poet, but he identified equally as both. This evening provides direct access to the sentiments of a poet who never called Earth home. Featuring recitations of Sun Ra’s poems and original works by the participating artists, this spoken word event will immerse the listener in the rhythms of celestial verses, hosted by poet, activist and educator Mahogany L. Browne with music by poet and educator Jive Poetic. Special guests include Carl Hancock Rux, Moor Mother and Abiodun Oyewole.

    January 17

    Celebrating Ryuichi Sakamoto (Roulette)

    Join us in celebration of Ryuichi Sakamoto’s musical legacy as New York’s finest musicians come together for a tribute concert on January 17, marking what would have been his 72nd birthday. From the revolutionary Thousand Knives to the iconic sounds of the Yellow Magic Orchestra and the Oscar-winning film scores, the Sakamoto Tribute Ensemble (led by violinist Meg Okura and cellist Rubin Kodheli) will interpret his enduring compositions with the utmost reverence. The special guests, Sakamoto’s friends and collaborators including DJ Spooky, Yuka C. Honda and others will share their words and music in a heartfelt tribute.

    January 18

    MONONEON & Friends (Brooklyn Steel)

    Closing out NYCWJF 2024 will be Mononeon and Friends at Brooklyn Steel. The outrageously clad master of the electric bass will have on hand Knower, Georgia Anne Muldrow, Hannibal Buress, Tivon Pennicott, David Fiuczynski and more for a night to remember. This event is supported by Memphis Tourism.

    Danish musician Mikkel Hess brings his roving global collective Hess Is More to National Sawdust, in the groundbreaking experiential program Apollonian Blackout.

    JAZZ TALKS AFTERNOON SERIES

    As in past years, NYCWJF 2024 will program a series of Jazz Talks. These panel discussions spark intellectual reflection and provide the public with a wider context for understanding all that goes on in the artistic lives of our performers.

    Thursday, January 11, 2:30 PM 

    The Universality of Jazz 

    With panelists Shabaka, Nduduzo Makhathini, esperanza spalding and moderator Mike Bindraban 

    After over 100 years, the music we call jazz is still thriving, expanding, and influencing music and culture globally. In a dynamic conversation with three artists from around the world and across the diaspora of Black American Music—Shabaka who hails from Barbados and London, esperanza spalding from the United States, Nduduzo Makhathini from South Africa, along with moderator Mike Bindraban from The Netherlands—we will explore the universality of this music, examining past perspectives and imagining broader paths forward.

    Jazz At Lincoln Center, The Appel Room 

    This conversation is included as part of Jazz Congress, registration required 

    Saturday, January 13, 2:00 PM

    Power to the Artists! Reimagining the Music Industry with Blockchain Tech

    With panelists Mark de Clive-Lowe, Pozibelle and Gavin Wong, and moderator Simon Rentner

    The music industry is broken and needs immediate resuscitation, and this is especially true for independent artists. Web3—the next, decentralized iteration of the Internet—has the potential to ease these pains by creating low-effort revenue streams for artists. Pianist and live electronics wizard Mark de Clive-Lowe (Everwave.xyz), DJ and Producer Pozibelle, and content creator and entrepreneur Gavin Wong (Sidechainme.com) will share case examples of Web3 working for the artists, such as perpetual royalties and revenue sharing. They’ll also share some of the pitfalls of Web3 and answer your questions. This is a conversation geared toward fans, consumers, and industry-folk alike who all dream of a better world for artists, especially the ones navigating niche cultures like jazz. As Bird might say, “Now’s The Time” for the artist to control their own brands and take action.

    Moxy Williamsburg, The Garden Room

    Saturday, January 13, 4:00 PM

    Live At The East: The Meaningful Music of a Brooklyn Community

    With panelists Basir Mchawi, Ahmed Abdullah and Fela Barclift

    Beginning in the late 1960s, The East served as a Pan-African cultural organization founded by teenagers and young adults in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. The East taught lessons to Black children that they wouldn’t get in public schools: a full and robust education that centered Africa and the Caribbean. The East was also a hotbed of a thriving Brooklyn jazz scene that hosted the likes of Pharoah Sanders, Max Roach, Betty Carter, Sonny Rollins, Juju, Gil Scott-Heron and many more. Fortunately, some of those sessions are captured on Juju’s 1973 album Live at the East, which has come to mean something special. It means the work on said album is vigorous, a rightful celebration of Black Classical Music. In a special panel discussion, held in conjunction with a one-time-only performance of the music of The East the following night, we delve into the venue’s musical impact on Bed-Stuy and Brooklyn as a whole.

    Moxy Williamsburg, The Garden Room

    In addition, on January 4, prior to the official start of NYC Winter Jazzfest, we are proud to present a screening of The Sun Rises in the East at Nitehawk Cinema Williamsburg — the first feature-length documentary to explore the inspiring story of The East and the people behind it. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion.

    Saturday, January 13, 6:00 PM

    The Art Of Being A Multi-Hyphenate

    With panelists Jashima Wadehra, Shelly Hartman, Trishes and Queen Esther 

    Presented with Keychange U.S

    Confirmed performers:

    Abiodun Oyewole (The Last Poets)

    Alex Zhang Hungtai, Che Chen, Leo Chang

    Alexis Lombre

    Alissia

    Allysha Joy

    Angelika Niescier, Tomeka Reid, Savannah Harris

    Anna Webber “Shimmer Wince”

    Anthony Tidd’s Sanity with Ursula Rucker

    Bark Culture

    Billy Hart

    Black Buttafly

    Brandee Younger Trio

    Burnt Sugar The Arkestra Chamber

    Carl Hancock Rux

    Carlos Niño

    Caroline Davis’ Alula

    Charles Burnham

    Christie Dashiell

    Cisco Swank

    Cyro Baptista

    Elsa Nilssen

    Elucid

    esperanza spalding

    Gary Bartz

    Genevieve Artadi Trio ft. Louis, Cole, Pedro Martins, Isis Geraldo

    Georgia Anne Muldrow

    Ghost-Note

    Gilles Peterson

    Guy Mintus

    Hannibal Buress

    Hess Is More

    Immanuel Wilkins

    Irreversible Entanglements

    Jason Lindner

    Jason Moran

    Joe Lovano

    Joel Ross

    José James Presents 1978

    Joshua Abrams

    Julius Rodriguez

    Kalia Vandever

    Karl Denson Project

    Knower

    Kweku Sumbry

    Laraaji

    Little Big w/ Aaron Parks, Greg Tuohey, DJ Ginyard & JK Kim

    Luke Stewart

    Mahogany L. Browne & Jive Poetic

    Marc Ribot Celebration (3 groups)

    Marshall Allen’s Ghost Horizons

    Mary Halvorson & Thomas Fujiwara

    Matana Roberts

    Melanie Charles Trio w/ Endea Owens and Savannah Harris

    Micah Thomas Trio

    Miguel Atwood Ferguson

    Milena Casado

    MonoNeon

    Moor Mother

    Morgan Guerin

    Natalie Greffel

    Natural Information Society

    Nduduzo Makhathini

    Next Jazz Legacy

    Nicole Mitchell

    Oran Etkin

    Queen Esther

    Rafiq Bhatia with Chris Pattishall

    Ray Angry

    Rich Medina

    Rogê

    Roy Nathanson’s “82 Days”

    Samora Pinderhughes

    Saul Williams

    Shabaka (Artist-in-Residence)

    Simon Moullier

    Terri Lyne Carrington + Social Science

    The Harvest Time Project: A Tribute to Pharoah Sanders
    w/ Tisziji Muñoz, Joshua Abrams

    The Jazz Passengers

    The Messthetics with James Brandon Lewis

    Tineke Postma Aria Group

    Tisziji Muñoz

    Tobias Meinhart

    Tyshawn Sorey

    Zacchae’us Paul

    Zoh Amba, Shahzad Ismaily, Jim White, Steve Gunn

  • Albany Symphony’s “Steinke + Mozart & More from 1784” to Delight this January at Troy Music Hall

    The two-time GRAMMY Award-winning Albany Symphony will showcase two of Mozart’s greatest works, Haydn’s Symphony No. 80, and a world premiere by Harriet Steinke, on Saturday, January 13th at 7:30pm and Sunday, January 14 at 3:00pm at Troy Savings Bank Music Hall.  

    albany symphony mozart

    Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 19 and selections from Marriage of Figaro will feature renowned fortepianist Yi-heng Yang and singers from The Juilliard School.

    The Albany Symphony celebrates our living musical heritage through its adventurous programming, commissioning and recording of new work, and broad community engagement beyond the concert hall. 

    Performing Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 19, soloist Yi-heng Yang has been described as an “exquisite collaborator” (Opera News) and is noted for her “remarkable expressivity and technique” (Early Music Magazine).  Audience members will have the rare opportunity to experience the work performed on the fortepiano – a precursor of the modern piano — as it was by Mozart himself. “We are so fortunate to have an artist as deeply steeped in Mozart’s style as Yi-heng is, joining us to perform this amazing work very much the way Mozart himself would have performed it,” said Music Director and Conductor, David Alan Miller. Yang is on faculty at The Juilliard School where she teaches piano, fortepiano, chamber music and improvisation. She is a director of The Academy for Fortepiano Performance in Hunter, NY, and the creator of their international Fortepiano Salon Series 

    Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 19 premiered in 1784 and was one of six in the genre he composed that year and was written for the composer to perform himself. Described as “athletic,” combining grace with vigor, the work concludes with perhaps the most complex concerto finale that Mozart composed.

    The concert will also feature a world premiere by Harriet Steinke, The Slow Movement. Hailing from Michigan, Steinke captivated Albany Symphony audiences last season with her work Harrietlehre.  During the 2023-2024 season she will have new works premiered by the Voyager Reed Quintet, the Civic Orchestra of New Haven and saxophonist Zach Arthur and cellist Kellen Degnan. She completed graduate studies in music composition at Yale School of Music and has received a Charles Ives Scholarship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. “We are very happy to welcome Harriet back to the Albany Symphony,” said Miller.  “She is an exciting new voice in the composition world.”

    The January program also includes selections from The Marriage of Figaro, considered one of the great operas. In addition to favorite arias featuring talented Juilliard vocalists, the Albany Symphony will perform the well-known and much beloved overture to the opera.

    The evening concludes with Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony No. 80. Though No. 80 lacks a nickname as sometimes grace Haydn’s symphonic works, it is nonetheless full of character, drama, and surprises. Not for nothing is the prolific Haydn called by some the “Father of the Symphony.”

    Recognized as one of the American’s most innovative and creative orchestras, the two-time GRAMMY® Award-winning Albany Symphony Orchestra is renowned for virtuosic performances featuring classic orchestral favorites, lesser-heard masterworks, and a diverse array of new music from leading and emerging voices of today. The Symphony has received more ASCAP Awards than any other orchestra in America, as well as several GRAMMY® nominations, including the orchestra’s most recent win in 2021.

  • Five Can’t-Miss Shows in Rochester This January

    There might not be a lot of musicians traveling this time of year but Rochester is still brimming with great options for shows this January. Immerse yourself in all the local scene has to offer, high-quality music spanning all genres.

    January 13: Chi Therealist at Essex

    Rochester has original hip hop. Chi Therealist has made big splashes on the scene opening for the sold-out Danielle Ponder show where he is about to headline himself, and with big gigs at Flour City Station and shows at the Rochester Fringe Fest. Get ready to feel the beats as he starts off the year right. The bill is rounded out by local R&B singer Shay Shine.

    Tickets are $30 and the show starts at 8pm

    January 19: Overhand Sam and Bad Weapon at LUX Lounge

    Rochester has original psychedelic rock. And no one is hitting that space harder than Overhand Sam and Bad Weapon right now. An active 2023 looks to continue as they get things started early this year. Late night on a Friday at LUX is the perfect place to take in their manic and hooky typhoon of sound. Their local brothers in psychedelic rock Fuzzrod will open.

    Tickets are $5 at the door and show will start around 10pm.

    January 12: Honey Smugglers at Essex

    Rochester has original Americana. If you’re looking for a show with that down-home rootsy sound, look no further. The Honey Smugglers have got you covered. And tonight they’re joined by like-minded folks in Folkfaces and A Girl Named Genny. It will be a night full of singalongs, sway-alongs, and good old-fashioned body moving and foot stomping.

    Tickets are $29.50 and the show gets going at 8pm.

    January 20 & 21: fivebyfive at RMSC Strasenburgh Planetarium

    Rochester has original classical music. Rochester also has a solar eclipse coming up in a few months. The two marry up, in one of many planned events around the celestial marvel coming our way. fivebyfive, an award-winning, chamber ensemble known for its impeccable musicianship and adventurous spirit, will play specially-commissioned works as immersive visuals are presented on the dome of the planetarium. Might be better than the actual eclipse?

    Tickets are $25 and the shows get started at 4pm, with pre-concert talks at 3:30pm.

    January 31: Dean Keller’s Soul Jazz Joint at Faircraft Brauhaus

    Rochester has original jazz. OK so this isn’t entirely original as they play covers of pop and rock hits, but of Dean Keller’s own arrangements and all very good. Sometimes it even gets into a name-that-tune situation, fun all around!

    This one is free, and will start at 6:30pm.

  • Greensky Bluegrass Add Dates To Extensive US Winter Tour

    Greensky Bluegrass, the Michigan-based bluegrass quintet, added additional dates for their upcoming 2024 Winter Tour. In addition to their extensive legs in November and December, the group will make their way across the country with stops in Huntington and Buffalo.

    Greensky Bluegrass

    The tour’s first leg will begin November 1 in Stateline, NV, and run through November 18 in New Orleans, LA. The group will make their way down to Mexico for the Strings & Sol festival in Puerto Morelos, followed by a series of hometown Michigan shows in Saginaw, Detroit, and Kalamazoo. Finally, they will make their way across the eastern half of the country with dates in Boston, Atlanta, Chicago, DC, and New York’s own Huntington and Buffalo.

    Greensky Bluegrass Upcoming Tour

    Greensky Bluegrass, known for their extensive touring schedules, formed in 2000 in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Their newest singles, “Congratulations and Condolences” and “Get Out,” came following their newest live recording, Courage for the Road: Fall 2021 (Live)

    Tickets for the November 1-December 31 shows are now on sale. Tickets for the January 11-March 9 shows go on sale November 3 at 10AM EDT.

    Presale tickets are available now and are allotted through a request system. Fans can submit a request for a chance to be selected for tickets to see Greensky Bluegrass. The request period will close on November 1 at 5PM EDT. 

    GREENSKY BLUEGRASS 2023-24 TOUR

    Nov 01 – Harrah’s Lake Tahoe – Stateline, NV

    Nov 02 – Fox Theater – Oakland, CA*

    Nov 03 – The Sound at Del Mar – Del Mar, CA*

    Nov 04 – The Bellwether – Los Angeles, CA*

    Nov 07 – Tower Theatre – Oklahoma City, OK^

    Nov 09 – The Heights Theater – Houston, TX^

    Nov 10 – Austin City Limits Live at The Moody Theater – Austin, TX^

    Nov 11 – Ferris Wheelers Backyard & BBQ – Dallas, TX^

    Nov 12 – The Espee – San Antonio, TX^

    Nov 15 – JJ’s Live – Fayetteville, AR^

    Nov 16 – Minglewood Hall – Memphis, TN^

    Nov 17 – Sanger Theater – Hattiesburg, MS^

    Nov 18 – The Joy Theater – New Orleans, LA^

    Dec 06-10 – Strings & Sol – Puerto Morelos, Mexico

    Dec 28 – Temple Theatre – Saginaw, MI

    Dec 29 – The Fillmore – Detroit, MI

    Dec 30 – Kalamazoo State Theatre – Kalamazoo, MI

    Dec 31 – Kalamazoo State Theatre – Kalamazoo, MI

    GREENSKY BLUEGRASS ON TOUR

    Jan 11 @ Florida Theatre | Jacksonville, FL 

    Jan 12 @ Miami Beach Bandshell | Miami Beach, FL

    Jan 13 @ Jannus Live | St. Petersburg, FL

    Jan 14 @ House of Blues | Orlando, FL

    Jan 17 @ Charleston Music Hall | Charleston, SC*

    Jan 18 @ The Ritz | Raleigh, NC*

    Jan 19 @ The Fillmore | Charlotte, NC* 

    Jan 20 @ The Eastern | Atlanta, GA* 

    Feb 1 @ College Street Music Hall | New Haven, CT^

    Feb 2 @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway | Boston, MA^

    Feb 3 @ The Fillmore | Philadelphia, PA^

    Feb 4 @ The Paramount | Huntington, NY^

    Feb 7 @ Town Ballroom | Buffalo, NY^

    Feb 8 @ Stage AE | Pittsburgh, PA^

    Feb 9 @ The Anthem | Washington, DC#

    Feb 10 @ The Anthem | Washington, DC^

    Feb 29 @ Val Air Ballroom | West Des Moines, IA%

    Mar 1 @ Palace Theatre | St. Paul, MN%

    Mar 2 @ The Salt Shed | Chicago, IL%

    Mar 3 @ The Sylvee | Madison, WI%

    Mar 6 @ KEMBA Live! | Columbus, OH@

    Mar 7 @ Old Forester’s Paristown Hall | Louisville, KY@

    Mar 8 @ The Ryman Auditorium | Nashville, TN@

    Mar 9 @ The Ryman Auditorium | Nashville, TN@

    May 23-26 @ DelFest | Cumberland, MD

    May 24-26 @ Dark Star Jubilee | Thornville, OH

    July 4-7 @ High Sierra Music Festival | Quincy, CA

    *Duane Betts & Palmetto Motel

    ^Melt

    #Molly Tuttle (solo) 

    %The High Hawks

    @Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country

  • Bernie Williams to debut with New York Philharmonic at Spring Gala

    Former New York Yankees star Bernie Williams has announced he is making his debut with the New York Philharmonic on April 24 at the Philharmonic’s Spring Gala at the Lincoln Center.

    Williams, who won four World Series and the 1996 ALCS MVP as part of the franchise’s dynasty of the late 1990s, is a classically trained guitarist and will perform in the orchestra under the direction of Gustavo Dudamel. He made his debut as a musician during his playing career with the Yankees, releasing his first album The Journey Within in 2003, going on to study guitar and composition at SUNY Purchase, receiving his Bachelor of Music from the Manhattan School of Music in 2016. His 2009 album Moving Forward reached the No. 2 best-selling ranking among U.S. Jazz albums.

    Gustavo Dudamel will formally join the New York Philharmonic in 2026 upon finishing a 17-year tenure as the music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He will conduct the Philharmonic in the Spring Gala, with the soloists consisting of artist, actor, author, and activist Common (in his NY Phil debut), soprano Hera Hyesang Park, and Bernie Williams. The Philharmonic will perform several works side-by-side with student musicians from communities across New York City who are being chosen through auditions to participate in this weeklong celebration. The repertoire will be announced at a later date.

    Gala events will begin with a cocktail reception at 6:00 p.m. on the Leon and Norma Hess Grand Promenade and continue with the concert, at 7:00 p.m., concluding with a post-performance seated dinner, attended by New York Philharmonic musicians, on the Hess Grand Promenade and Hearst Tier 1. Gala dress will be cocktail attire. For more information visit here.

  • RMSC Announces Eclipse Experience with fivebyfive

    In collaboration with fivebyfive, the RMSC (Rochester Museum & Science Center) announced they are presenting a one-of-a-kind concert experience with live music and immersive visuals presented on the dome of the RMSC Strasenburgh Planetarium on Jan. 20 and 21, 2024.

    fivebyfive, the artist-led Rochester-based ensemble, formed in 2015 with a simple mission, to engage audiences by performing music of leading and emerging composers. Composed of a flutist, clarinetist, electric guitarist, bassist, pianist, and audio/video engineer, the group advocates for creators who are underrepresented in the field and chooses to collaborate with artists across disciplines, while staying committed to performing new music. fivebyfive has been inspired to connect people in an engaging public event to build awareness and excitement for the upcoming Total Solar Eclipse on April 8, 2024.

    “We’re thrilled to be partnering with fivebyfive for this collaborative concert in January,” said Jim Bader, RMSC Strasenburgh Planetarium Director. “Visitors will be able to immerse themselves in newly commissioned works by fivebyfive, while celestial visuals illuminate the Planetarium dome, creating a truly unforgettable atmosphere.”

    The mission of the RMSC is to inspire a better future for all through curiosity, exploration, and participation in science, culture, and the natural world. The RMSC includes the RMSC Museum & Science Center, the RMSC Strasenburgh Planetarium, and the RMSC Cumming Nature Center. Offering experiences at the Museum & Science Center with more than 200 interactive exhibits, the Planetarium with a 65-foot dome screen and several hands-on exhibits, and the Nature Center on 900 acres of land and 14 miles of trails, the RMSC stimulates community interest in exploration.

    fivebyfive will present its eclipse-inspired program Light & Dark: Eclipse Music in Rochester at the Planetarium and other communities within the path of totality. Performances will include newly commissioned works by composers Jessica Meyer, Marc Mellits, Kamala Sankaram, Glenn McClure, and a new arrangement by Julie Herndon. 

    “These concerts will truly be the prelude to the Total Solar Eclipse,” exclaimed Laura Lentz, fivebyfive Artistic Director. “We can’t wait to share this multi-level concert of brand new eclipse-inspired music with new beautiful images, making for an incredible all-sensory eclipse experience!”

    Tickets are now on sale for this one-of-a-kind concert here. The RMSC is also offering experience gift packages for the holidays including tickets to the Light & Dark concert, admission to the RMSC ROC The Eclipse festival, and RMSC eclipse glasses to use for the upcoming Total Solar Eclipse.