Category: Regions

  • Tokyo Police Club Play Final US Show at Irving Plaza

    Tokyo Police Club performed their final show on US soil at Irving Plaza on Thursday, November 20. This was night two of the group’s NYC run for their farewell tour. Opening the show was fellow Canadian indie rock band Born Ruffians. 

    Both Born Ruffians and Tokyo Police Club got their start in Ontario, Canada in the early 2000s. In between songs, Born Ruffians’ Luke Lalonde reminisced on the bands coming up together at the same time. Now getting to perform together on Tokyo Police Club’s final tour, it feels like a bittersweet, full-circle ending. The band has been making their way throughout the US this fall, playing two nights at Irving Plaza before continuing to Canada to finish off their tour.

    Starting their set, Tokyo Police Club played a run through of their 2010 album Champ, followed by additional songs from their nearly two decade discography. The night was filled with nostalgic banter as Dave Monks reminisced on moments the band has experienced together throughout their career. He spoke about performing in New York City for the first time in 2006 and the feeling of stepping out of a rental car to play Mercury Lounge as well as their performance on Letterman.

    Friends since the 4th grade, Tokyo Police Club has amassed a large fan base since choosing to form a band in 2005. With their first EP released in 2006, A Lesson In Crime, they entered the indie rock scene. Coming into the early 2000s, we saw an “indie rock renaissance.” The band was welcomed in, quickly performing festivals with other quintessential bands from this era including Modest Mouse and Death Cab for Cutie.

    Tokyo Police Club will be continuing “The Final Tour” with a run of sold-out shows throughout Ontario, Canada through the end of November. These shows will be the last shows the band plans to play together. At this time, the band has no plans to reunite.

    Setlist: Favourite Food, Favourite Colour, Breakneck Speed, Wait Up (Boots of Danger), Centennial, In a Cave, Juno, Graves, New Blues, Simple Dude, Pigs, Hang Your Heart, Toy Guns, Hands Reversed, End of a Spark, Bambi, Frankenstein, Argentina (Parts I, II, III), Nature of the Experiment, Citizens of Tomorrow, Shoulders & Arms, Listen to the Math, Tessellate

    Encore:The Harrowing Adventures Of..., Ready to Win, Cheer It On, Your English Is Good

  • Amy Bloom Named Saratoga Arts New Executive Director

    Saratoga Arts Board of Directors has appointed long-time resident of Saratoga Springs Amy Bloom as the new Executive Director.

    Amy Bloom Named Saratoga Arts New Executive Director

    Founded in 1986 by and for artists and audiences, Saratoga Arts’ mission is to enrich the region by cultivating a vibrant arts community and by ensuring that the arts are accessible to all. In its 30+ years, Saratoga Arts has brought the arts to over 1,000,000 people through its programs and provided performing and visual artists opportunities to earn over $3,000,000 in art sales and performance fees. Saratoga Arts is a non-governmental, not-for-profit organization that relies on the support of our members, friends and community.

    Amy Bloom is an experienced leader in strategy, operations, marketing, and fundraising. Amy has worked regionally as an Executive at Planned Parenthood, Hudson Headwaters Health Network, and Alliance for Better Health. In 2020, she and colleagues founded and grew a local primary care organization and then led it towards acquisition by a national health care company.

    For the last several years, Amy has been a management consultant solving organizational challenges and bringing about culture change in not-for-profit organizations and for-profit corporations around the country. Amy is passionate about evolving the landscape of the arts and the arts community in the Capital Region. Over the last 20 years, Amy has served as a board member for several arts and community organizations including: SaratogaArtsFest, SPAC Action Council and Saratoga Independent School.

    Saratoga Arts is the community arts center located on the corner of Congress Park and Broadway in historic downtown Saratoga Springs. Accommodating all genres of creativity, they are home to arts education for both kids and adults in multiple studio style classroom spaces, a dedicated printshop, rehearsal and music studios, a gallery and exhibition space, a black box theater for film, music, theater, special events, a gift shop and so much more. Amy Bloom brilliantly compliments the arts center’s mission to celebrate all forms of artistic expression.

    For more information on Saratoga Arts and Amy Bloom’s new role as Executive Director, click here.

  • Bach To Rock and Hurleyville Music Festival – Two Forgotten New York Festivals

    After the original Woodstock Music Festival in 1969, there were many people who wanted to replicate the magic of peace, love and rock n roll. But not all future endeavors were destined for success. Two music festivals in particular, the Bach to Rock Festival in 1970 and the Hamlet of Hurleyville Music Festival in 1979, were both little-known festivals in small New York State towns that ultimately failed and were mostly forgotten with the passage of time. Today we look back on these festivals that were doomed from the start.

    The “Bach To Rock” Fiasco

    The Bach To Rock Festival was set to take place near the Catskills in Sullivan County in the hamlet of Mountaindale. This was only about 25 miles away from Bethel, NY where Woodstock was first held. It was envisioned as a summer long cultural series with a mixture of opera, broadway music, dance and rock. The promoters hoped to attract 50,000 patrons and host events six days a week from July through August.

    new york festivals
    The small hamlet of Mountaindale – Photo from Wikimedia Commons

    The ambitious festival was contentious from the start. After last year’s wild festivities at Woodstock, many locals in Mountaindale were opposed to the sex, drugs and other “unsavory” activities that would likely occur during the event. The disaster at the infamous Altamont festival back in December was still fresh in many minds as well.

    Nevertheless, the festival site continued to be developed as a land deal was struck and $250,000 was put into the groundwork. The bill originally boasted acts like Joe Cocker, Grand Funk Railroad, Jethro Tull. However a concert on Randall’s Island that was occurring that same summer left many of the bands legally tied up and unable to perform again in such close proximity.

    new york festivals
    A flyer from the festival – Photo via Reddit

    New bands were booked including the Grateful Dead, Van Morrison and The Band.

    Then in early July, days before the start of the festival, a restraining order was issued against the Mountaindale Music Festival, prohibiting large public gatherings. The decision was later upheld on by the Sullivan County Supreme Court, one day before the concert was set to take place.

    Promoter Budd Filippo pictured on the festival grounds in Mountaindale. (Photo originally appeared in NY Daily News).

    On that day, July 7, the New York Times covered the ruling with an article titled “Court Order Delays Mountaindale Rock Festival.” The Times said the following:

    “A borscht circuit of rock musicals that seemed to be developing in the Catskills after last August’s Woodstock Festival suffered a new setback yesterday,” the Times reported, alluding as well to a 54-hour long rock festival that had just concluded, drawing 2,000 people to Saugerties. “A temporary restraining order against the Mountaindale Music and Arts Festival, scheduled to open tonight on its own 700-acre tract in eastern Sullivan County, was upheld by Appellate Justice Michael E. Sweeney.”

    But by then over 10,000 people were already on the way to to the small town of Mountaindale. The train was already in motion.

    new york festivals
    Hippies gather in Mountaindale – Photo from the New York Daily News

    The New York Daily News reported, “Bands of hip mountaineers roamed the Catskills today in a nomadic search for a rock festival that was canceled at the 11th hour by a politician on the other side of the generation gap.”

    While the festival was officially canceled, the masses of people threw together a free concert at hotel in South Fallsburg about ten miles from Mountaindale. There were rumors that the Grateful Dead would make an appearance, but besides some local bands the only major act who showed was Richie Havens. Havens had famously been the opener at the original Woodstock festival the year prior.

    new york festivals
    Richie Havens, famed musician who opened at Woodstock and was the only performer at the failed Mountaindale festival -Photo: Gunter Zint/K & K Ulf Kruger OHG/Redferns

    After the fact, the county’s rulings were upheld in the higher courts establishing a precedent for future mass gatherings, which greatly affected proposals for other music festivals to come.

    The Hamlet of Hurleyville Music Festival

    Ten years after the original Woodstock, and 9 years after the failed “Bach To Rock”, Sullivan County was once again abuzz with the hopes of music. A three-day festival was set in the Hamlet of Hurleyville with a lineup that included Joni Mitchell, Hall & Oats, Cheap Trick and REO Speedwagon, among others. Promoters expected to sell around 250,000 tickets. Tickets were priced at $37.50 for all three days. There were also plans to make an album and documentary film of the festival.

    The Hamlet of Hurleyville – Photo from Visithurleyville.org

    The hopes with this festival was to kick off a new permanent music venue in the area with the hopes of improving the local economy. The festival was envisioned by a local promoter Leon Greenberg who had previously managed to revitalize the Monticello Raceway.

    A photo of Leon Greenberg in the 70’s – Photo via New York Almanac

    The plans were covered by the likes of the New York Times.

    new york festivals
    A brief snippet in the New York Times described plans for the Hamlet of Hurleyville Music Festival – Photo from New York Times TimesMachine Archive

    Previous laws against mass gatherings established in Bach to Rock made a large number of hurdles and many locals were opposed to the festivities. A public relations campaign was launched to turn people’s sentiment, with the tagline “Success is a Traffic Jam,” which appeared on buttons and bumperstickers around town.

    Ultimately, Greenberg was unable to sway the tides and the town board voted unanimously to deny a permit. The envisioned music venue which was meant to repurpose the site of the old Columbia Farm Hotel remains unused to this day. 

    The Columbia Farm Hotel circa 1940. It closed in 1969 and burned in a massive fire on Christmas Eve, 1971. – Photo via New York Almanac

    On a positive note, the Hamlet of Hurleyville now hosts an annual Hurleyville Music Festival through the Hurleyville Performing Arts Center which engages local artists and the community in a weekend of arts, music and culture.

  • Stunning Chaos and Silken Americana with The Orchestra Now at Carnegie Hall

    The Orchestra Now (TŌN), conducted by Leon Botstein, performed a set of works by modernist American composer Charles Ives at Manhattan’s Carnegie Hall, on Thursday, November 21st.

    The evening concluded a Bard College Ives festival, one of four Ives festivals supported this season by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    The Orchestra Now, conducted by Leon Botstein (Credit: David DeNee)

    The concert highlighted pieces in which Ives used themes from famous American tunes, each work being preceded by a mini-lecture by J. Peter Burkholder. Snippets of the original pieces were also played on piano by Donald Perlman and sung by William Sharp.

    The opening piece, The Fourth of July from A Symphony: New England Holidays, begins with a whispering and sighing of strings, a kiss of cymbals. Just when the audience has been tricked into thinking it can relax into this performance, Botstein is suddenly waving his arms and driving the orchestra into crashing crescendo.

    Like the other pieces played in the first half of the concert, The Fourth of July falls into the ‘modernist’ classical genre associated with musical innovation away from rigid classical principles. (Jazz can be considered a modernist art form.)

    In practical terms, Ives modernist work eschews such stuffy principles as ‘playing in time’ and ‘playing notes that sound good together’, in favor of less conventional means of constructing themes and musical ideas. Towards the end of the piece one feels that some part of the orchestra or another has lost the beat – the percussion is ahead, or no, the strings are behind, or, oh no it’s all falling apart! – until all of a sudden Botstein slams on the brakes. An exhausted sigh seems to emanate from the stage and all is – briefly – silent.

    Then tolls, from somewhere in the back, an impish bell – just once. The audience is reminded that Botstein and his players, recreating the kind of wild and competitive soundscape of a parade, were in control the whole time. Just how is hard to say.

    This is followed by Central Park in the Dark, a 7-minute tone poem about what one might hear during a steamy summer’s night in Central Park at the start of the 20th Century. We are invited to consider the mixture of sounds Ives might have heard before, according to the composer himself, “the combustion engine and radio monopolized the earth and air.”

    The piece begins with a slow, painful lament by the string section, described in the program notes by Haley Maurer Gillia, TŌN violinist, as representing “the omnipresent heat and the surrounding nature” that Ives might have felt.

    After the strings comes, from somewhere uptown maybe, a piano. But this pianist must not have been listening because now – vying with the sad, dissonant strings – we have ragtime?! And if that’s not enough, in chimes a trumpeter, warming up in a different key in the parlor of a nearby apartment.

    Balancing these different instruments, allowing them to pierce into our attention so suddenly and violently at times, must be somewhat novel for an orchestral conductor. Botstein’s day job presumably involves balancing the parts of an orchestra, letting soloist augment, without overwhelming, the accompanying musicians. Here, it feels as if the very point of the work is to accentuate this competition between sounds, all the more redolent for its clashing nature.

    The music cannot readily be described as beautiful, but it is so much more rewarding for its being challenging. Ives was not widely recognized in his time (other than for being a successful proto-finance bro), but there is a freedom, a playfulness to the performance which is hard to find elsewhere in classical music.

    But where were we? – the whole thing seems to have veered off course again: what Ives has put down on the page just can’t be, the whole thing is just becoming too literal, too wonderfully overwhelming. Once again Botstein has to wrest back control, exhorting his percussionists to beat some order into the rest of the orchestra. Back we find ourselves in the original theme, those sweet, hot, sticky violins on a warm night.

    The final performance before the interval is of Orchestral Set No. 2, which features themes from popular American hymns such as Bringing in the Sheaves by Knowles Shaw and George Minor (a ‘sheaf’, if for some reason you didn’t know, is a bunch of cereal crop tied together after a harvest).

    Snippets of the original pieces were also played on piano by Donald Perlman and sung by William Sharp. (Credit: David DeNee)

    The piece is opened by double bass and timpani – an ominous pairing. Listening to Ives’ work requires you to open your ear in a different way. In this kind of music, no use looking out for the violins or the oboes; better not try to contrast the clarinets and French horn with one another. The dissonance and, at times, lack of discernable rhythm invite you to listen to the thing as a whole, as a monolith.

    The work therefore seems challenging to play, the musicians needing to shed their desire to play notes from conventional chords and at the same time. How one actually plays this, let alone conducts it; how the whole thing falls together just right – these are questions I am not qualified to answer.

    Today there is a reasonable acknowledgement of the legitimacy of ‘borrowing’ ideas in music: from sampling to vernacular folk musics to – well, just about any ‘genre’ you care to name. Yet it is though hard to tell what Ives means through his musical borrowing.

    Most of the songs he borrows from are innocent, patriotic, simplistic pieces of music: Fourth of July parades, Protestant harvest hymns etc. Yet Ives’ work feels as much written with the hammer at the anvil than with the pencil at the bureau. Simplistic, balanced phrases are melted down and violently annealed into dissonant, chaotic ideas. Is there something irreverent about Ives’ use of old-school Americana? What drove Ives to work like this?

    After the interval, the final set of works is Ives’ Symphony No. 2. This is a return to more ‘conventional’ musical forms and, refreshments in hand, the audience can relax a little – no more errant drum rolls or angry trumpet notes flying overhead. I suspect that some members of the orchestra feel a little more relaxed now too.

    The symphony is honey-sweet, Ives passing the silken memories of his New England youth through the loom into perhaps the most indulgent art form around, the orchestral symphony. As with the rest of the performance, TŌN’s musicians handle the work with love and care and Carnegie Hall is, of course, a wonderful place to hear this. (At one point I was certain that the harp was being plucked not on stage but somewhere over my head. It is a magical experience.)

    Whether Charles Ives was an iconoclast or a proud patriot; whether he achieved his goal of writing the first Great American Symphony – these questions are not really relevant. Even though Ives was an innovator, his contemporaries chose not to enjoy his music in the way TŌN and Botstein treated us to in 2024. Their loss.

  • Goo Goo Dolls Announce “Summer Anthem Tour” With 3 NY Dates

    Buffalo natives, The Goo Goo Dolls have announced their 2025 summer tour. Joined with Dashboard Confessional, they will hit Broadview Stage at SPAC in Saratoga Springs on July 30, Northwell at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh on Aug. 2, and KeyBank Center in Buffalo on Aug. 9.

    Joined with Dashboard Confessional, they will hit Broadview Stage at SPAC in Saratoga Springs on July 30, Northwell at Jones Beach Theater in Wantagh on Aug. 2, and KeyBank Center in Buffalo on Aug. 9.

    Goo Goo Dolls

    Formed by John Rzeznik and Robby Takac in Buffalo, 1986, Goo Goo Dolls have connected to millions of fans and have impacted popular music for three-plus decades. Perhaps the band is best known for “Iris,” which clutched #1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 for 18 straight weeks and would be named #1 Top 40 Song of the Last 20 Years. The song has amassed billions of streams across platforms and is definitively one of the most popular songs from the 90s.

    Beyond selling 15 million records worldwide, the group has garnered 4x GRAMMY Award nominations and nearly a dozen platinum and gold singles combined, and seized a page in the history books by achieving 16 #1 and Top 10 hits. As a result, they hold the all-time radio record for “Most Top 10 Singles.” 

    So far, A Boy Named Goo (1995) has gone 2x Certified Platinum, Dizzy Up The Girl (1998) 5x Certified Platinum. Their music continues to reach new audiences around the world and has been covered by everyone from the likes of Taylor Swift, Phoebe Bridgers and Maggie Rogers.

    Public on-sale kicks off on Friday, Nov. 22 at 10 am. Learn more and purchase tickets here.

    Goo Goo Dolls Summer Anthem Tour Dates:

    Sunday, April 27, 2025 – Indio, CA – Stagecoach 

    Saturday, July 13, 2025 – Phoenix, AZ – Arizona Financial Theatre*

    Wednesday, July 16, 2025 – Fort Worth, TX – Dickies Arena*

    Thursday, July 17, 2025 – Sugar Land, TX – Smart Financial Centre at Sugar Land*

    Saturday, July 19, 2025 – Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP*

    Sunday, July 20, 2025 – Nashville, TN – Ascend Amphitheater* 

    Tuesday, July 22, 2025 – Atlanta, GA – Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain Park*

    Wednesday, July 23, 2025 – St Augustine, FL – St. Augustine Amphitheatre*

    Friday, July 25, 2025 – Charlotte, NC – Skyla Credit Union Amphitheatre*

    Saturday, July 26, 2025 – Raleigh, NC – Red Hat Amphitheater*

    Sunday, July 27, 2025 – Vienna, VA – Wolf Trap – Filene Center*

    Tuesday, July 29, 2025 – Boston, MA – LeaderBank Pavilion*

    Wednesday, July 30, 2025 – Saratoga Springs, NY – Broadview Stage at SPAC*

    Friday, August 1, 2025 – Holmdel, NJ – PNC Bank Arts Center* 

    Saturday, August 2, 2025 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater*

    Sunday, August 3, 2025 – Philadelphia, PA – The Mann Center*

    Tuesday, August 5, 2025 – Bangor, ME – Maine Savings Amphitheater*

    Wednesday, August 6, 2025 – Gilford, NH – BankNH Pavilion*

    Friday, August 8, 2025 – Bridgeport, CT – Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater*

    Saturday, August 9, 2025 – Buffalo, NY – KeyBank Center*

    Saturday, August 10, 2025 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage* 

    Tuesday, August 12, 2025 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Blossom Music Center*

    Wednesday, August 13, 2025 – Chicago, IL – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island*

    Friday, August 15, 2025 – Indianapolis, IN – Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park*

    Saturday, August 16, 2025 – Sterling Heights, MI – Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre*

    Monday, August 18, 2025 – Waite Park, MN – The Ledge Amphitheater*

    Tuesday, August 19, 2025 – La Vista, NE – The Astro*

    Thursday, August 21, 2025 – St. Louis, MO – Saint Louis Music Park*

    Friday, August 22, 2025 – Kansas City, MO – Starlight Theatre*

    Sunday, August 24, 2025 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre*

    Tuesday, August 26, 2025 – West Valley City, UT – Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre*

    Thursday, August 28, 2025 – Airway Heights, WA – Northern Quest Resort & Casino*

    Friday, August 29, 2025 – Bend, OR – Hayden Homes Amphitheater*

    Sunday, August 31, 2025 – Seattle, WA – Venue TBD*

    Monday, September 1, 2025 – Seattle, WA – Venue TBD*

    Thursday, September 4, 2025 – Berkeley, CA – Greek Theatre*

    Saturday, September 6, 2025 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl*

    Sunday, September 7, 2025 – Los Angeles, CA – Greek Theatre*

    Tuesday, September 9, 2025 – Albuquerque, NM – Isleta Amphitheater*

    Thursday, September 11, 2025 – Oklahoma City, OK – The Zoo Amphitheatre*

    Friday, September 12, 2025 – Camdenton, MO – Ozark Amphitheater*

    *with Dashboard Confessional

  • Cayuga Chamber Orchestra Presents “Holiday Celebration” on December 14 at Ithaca College

    The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra has announced “Holiday Celebration,” its annual holiday concert, to be hosted on December 14 at 3:00 pm.

    Cayuga Holiday Celebration

    The concert takes place at Ford Hall at Ithaca College under the baton of Guest Conductor, Grant Cooper. Cayuga Orchestra’s “Holiday Celebration” is the perfect performance to get settled into the festive spirit ahead of Christmas. The program will feature a side-by-side with the CCO Youth Orchestra. The Cayuga Chamber Orchestra was founded in 1976 and is officially designated “Ithaca’s Orchestra.”

    Each season includes an Orchestral Series, Chamber Music Series, a Holiday concert, free Family Concerts, and the long-standing Willard Daetsch Youth Outreach Program, which earned the 2015 Yale Distinguished Music Educator award.

    Grant Cooper served as Interim Music Director for two seasons, 2022-23 and 2023-24. Cooper had collaborated with the CCO a number of times previously, both as guest conductor and commissioned composer. He remains especially passionate about creating works designed to introduce young audiences to the orchestra and has created a substantial body of works for this purpose, including Rumpelstiltzkin, a Cayuga Chamber Orchestra commission. His wry sense of humor and meticulous dedication to detail, together with his considerable experience as music director and conductor, and thoughtful approach to music making, drew in audience members and musicians alike.

    For more information on Cayuga Orchestra’s “Holiday Celebration,” and to purchase tickets online, click here.

  • Moshing to Telescreens at Webster Hall

    You want a rock concert? A mosh-pitting, floor-bouncing, head-yelling, crowd-surfing rock show? That’s exactly what Telescreens brought to Webster Hall on November 19. Hometown fans crowded the 1,500-person Grand Ballroom and for a few hours were swept up in the power of rock. 

    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    Telescreens formed after frontman and lead guitarist Jackson Hamm moved to New York to attend the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music. There he met keyboardist Josiah Valerius and bassist/keyboardist Austin Brenner in 2016. The final member of the band, drummer Oliver Graf, joined the other three in 2019 – adding to their explosive sound. The band started playing gigs around the city before COVID-19 but was forced to stop because of the pandemic. Since their return to live touring, they’ve played Austin City Limits and Governor’s Ball

    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    On Tuesday, hometown bands Skorts and Kareem Rahma & Tiny Gun opened the show. Skorts amped the crowd up with head-banging energy and a light show with more than enough fog to fill the room. The one problem was Skorts’ drummer hidden in a wall of mist. Following Skorts, the multi-hyphenate singer/ comedian/ interviewer Kareem Rahma came on stage with his trademark sunglasses – which he never took off. Playing off his success as a video creator, the band’s song “Content Machine” got the audience jumping as the singer poked fun at his other jobs.  

    Kareem Rahma Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    By the time Telescreens came on, the audience was ready, and a moshpit formed almost immediately. Within the first two songs Jackson Hamm jumped from the stage into the crowd to re-form the pit in the middle of the room. Once he was back on stage, moshing started again, and the floor of the ballroom roiled like the ocean – visibly shaking and bouncing from the audience’s movement. 

    Throughout the night, Hamm encouraged the audience to lose themselves to the music, asking them to “take this as an opportunity to push yourself a little out of your comfort zone.” The lead singer also admonished wallflowers who weren’t engaging with the music, “You on the sides, why do you wanna be so fucking cool?” 

    Jackson Hamm reforms the Moshpit, Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    It’s clear that Hamm believes in the power of rock. Throughout the set, the singer and guitarist worked up a sweat and, at one point, said: This [Rock and Roll] is like a religion. You have to believe it will make you feel better. You’re not supposed to stand there with your arms crossed. You’re supposed to move your feet. You’re supposed to get your heart rate up. 

    Telescreens, Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    As the night wore on, mosh pits formed and closed, and dozens of people crowd surfed, egged on by Hamm, who said, “Keep crowd surfing, that shit feels good, I promise.” As crowd surfing escalated, Webster Hall had to call in extra security to ensure everyone was safe.

    A crowd surfer, Credit Aidan Lukomnik

    Telescreens ended their set with Hamm ripping chords, jumping from the stage to the crowd and back (again), and the band leaving it all out for their hometown fans. 

    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Telescreens Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    A crowd surfer, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    A crowd surfer, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Skorts, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Skorts, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    @Alukomnik
    Skorts, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Skorts, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Skorts, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Kareem Rahma & Tiny Gun, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Kareem Rahma & Tiny Gun, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
    Kareem Rahma & Tiny Gun, Credit Aidan Lukomnik
  • The FMs Release Elevated Commemorative Album 51122

    New York City based synth-rock band The FMs have released their junior album 51122, a commemorative project for their late member Frankie Rex.

    Photo: Dylan Mars Greenberg

    Originally a musical partnership between high school friends Matte Namer and Frankie Rex, The FMs have curated a tight-knit community over the years with their synth-infused sound, unapologetically queer narratives, and underground shows held atop a ferry boat in the industrial canals of Bushwick.

    Not only did the ferry shows introduce many to the sound of The FMs, the boat provided the duo a space to record and self-produce three full-length LPs. Debuting in 2017 with Machinacene Epoch, The FMs quickly established their ethos of a rather traditional album creation process in which each release exists with its own personality and sonic statement.

    The FMs 51122

    PINK + BLACK, the duo’s sophomore double-LP began taking shape quickly after Machinacene Epoch’s release in 2017 and saw promising progress into 2020, amassing 2,000 hours of recording, producing, and tinkering. However, PINK + BLACK was delayed after the news of a devastating loss. Frankie Rex passed away from an overdose in 2022, understandably putting the project on pause as the loss was processed.

    This was not the end for The FMs, however. Matte Namer was determined to continue Rex’s legacy and prove that not even death could stop Frankie’s voice from being heard- a sentiment that came to fruition with the posthumous release of PINK + BLACK in 2024, which was met with acclaim from critics and LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations like GLAAD.

    In preparation for this new chapter of The FMs, Namer gathered Ithaca-based trans musicians Bubba Crumrine on guitars, Basim Hussain on synths and keys, and Nick Scollard on drums. Now reformed, The FMs have returned for their newest album, 51122. 

    The title coincides with the date of Rex’s passing, and in many ways is a simultaneous goodbye and thank you to Rex’s incredible contributions to the band and the world as an artist throughout their life and musical career. 51122 contains the last recordings of Frankie’s voice to be published ever, including in a pre-release single that came in the form of a Joy Division cover– a tribute to one of the original duo’s favorite bands and Frankie’s favorite track of theirs.

    “It’s also a bit somber being the last music that I think will ever be released with Frankie’s incredible, powerful, unique voice. I think there’s something about that that makes me remember they are really gone, like an orchid blooming from a coffin nail. 51122 is the date Frankie passed away, but is also a type of symbol in a way, or perhaps a word. I’m not sure what that meaning is yet, perhaps the orchid needs to grow.” 

    – Matte Namer

    With influences ranging from lo-fi all the way to disco, 51122 is a dreamy, gritty, synth-y collection that stands as an undeniable testament to how far the band has come while simultaneously honoring where and with whom it all began.

    Tracks like “You Feel Like God” and “A Means To An End” take listeners on a guitar-infused synth adventure through space and complex interpersonal relationships, while songs like the rock-ballad “Deviant” reflect upon and reject concepts of deviance and societal other-ing over acoustic guitar and floating piano.

    The FMs 51122
    Photo: Dylan Mars Greenberg

    “Domino” cuts to the bone with unforgettable vocals, gritty guitars, and a sharp bass line, putting what The FMs can do when they lean full-on into the punk sound on full display- and the impact is undeniably felt.

    Throughout 51122, the skills of Namer, Rex, Crumrine, Hussain, and Scollard are on full display- not a moment goes by where there’s a lack of sonic interest. Whether it be a dystopic cyber-future like in “Future Pope” or the wistful nostalgia of  “Record Store”, each track off of the album paints a vivid picture effortlessly.  51122 is above all a triumph- a sign that The FMs will go on, and so will Frankie Rex and their unrelenting musical spirit. 

    In celebration of 51122’s release, The FMs have announced a set of album release parties on November 22 and 23. On Friday the 22, the band will pay a visit to Angry Mom Records in Ithaca, and on the 23 they’ll grace the stage of Berlin in Manhattan for a joint album release party and queer rock showcase. To learn more about these shows and how to attend, check out The FMs’ tour page here.

    To learn more about The FMs, listen to their past releases, and keep up to date with all of their future ventures, be sure to explore their official website here.

  • Works & Process Announces Spring 2025 Season

    Championing artists and their creative process for each step from studio to stage, the Works & Process Spring 2025 season starts in January across New York City and Long Island.

    Works & Process Artists-in-Residence, provided with fully funded, week-long LaunchPAD residencies, gather for the first Dance Out East on Long Island on January 9–11, in partnership with The Church in Sag Harbor, Guild Hall of East Hampton, and The Watermill Center.

    Also kicking off the season is the third Works & Process Underground Uptown Dance Festival at the Guggenheim New York on January 9–13, as part of JanArtsNYC. The Underground Uptown Dance Festival is one of the city’s largest and most influential arts gatherings and draws more than 45,000 performing arts leaders, artists, and enthusiasts from across the globe.

    The 40th season of Works & Process at the Guggenheim continues in the museum’s Peter B. Lewis Theater with events that highlight creative process by blending artist discussion and performance. A highlight of the programming will be a series of social dances in the Guggenheim’s rotunda, including a swing social to open the first Uptown Rhythm Dance Festival in partnership with 92NY.

    Dance will to a key aspect of this Works & Process season, with new dances by BalletX, Ballet Hispánico, Andy Blankenbuehler, New Jersey Ballet, Miami City Ballet, and the Vail Dance Festival. All events feature post-performance receptions that continue the conversation and help foster understanding, appreciation, and community.

    The upcoming season sees shows at a multitude of venues including the Guggenheim Museum, Manhattan West, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, The Watermill Center, National Sawdust and more. The season also sees multiple sub-series including the 40th Guggenheim Series, Dance Out East in Long Island, Underground Uptown Dance Fest, Rotunda Social Dances, and more.

    The season plans to include step by step showcases of various Broadway plays, detailing behind the scenes actions that prepare the play for the big stage. SMASH, inspired by the hit TV show, is finally coming to Broadway this spring.

    SMASH is a hilarious behind-the-scenes rollercoaster ride about the making of a Marilyn Monroe musical called Bombshell, it’s got all the iconic songs, kick-ass choreography, and backstage pandemonium that make Broadway the beloved institution it is today. The production will be helmed by five-time Tony Award–winner Susan Stroman and feature a score by Tony, Emmy, and Grammy Award–winning duo Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, who wrote over two dozen songs for the television show (many of which will be heard in the musical); a book by Tony Award–nominee Rick Elice and Tony Award–winner Bob Martin; and choreography by Tony Award–nominee Joshua Bergasse. Members of the creative team will participate in a moderated discussion and excerpts will be performed in advance of previews.

    40th Works & Process at the Guggenheim Series – Performance Highlights and Discussions

    Boston Lyric Opera: The Seasons by Antonio Vivaldi, libretto by Sarah Ruhl with Anthony Roth Costanzo, Sarah Ruhl, Zack Winokur, and Pam Tanowitz – Jan 14

    Miami City Ballet: Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and Pam Tanowitz – Jan 25

    Buena Vista Social Club by Marco Ramirez with Saheem Ali, Patricia Delgado, and Justin Peck – Jan 26

    Purpose by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, directed by Phylicia Rashad – Jan 27

    SMASH by Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman, Rick Elice, and Bob Martin, with Susan Stroman and Joshua Bergasse – Feb 3

    Never Alone by Andy Blankenbuehler – Feb 7

    Williamstown Theatre Festival: Jeremy O. Harris’s New Play First Look – Feb 9

    BOOP! The Betty Boop Musical with Jerry Mitchell – Feb 10

    Ballet Hispánico: Tango with Alejandro Cervera, Graciela Daniele, and Matthew Neenan – Mar 3

    San Francisco Opera: THE MONKEY KING (猴王悟空by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang with Diane Paulus – Mar 9

    BalletX: Maslow’s Peak by Jennifer Archibald – Mar 23

    Opera Theatre of Saint Louis: This House by Ricky Ian Gordon, Lynn Nottage, and Ruby Aiyo Gerber – Apr 6

    Glimmerglass Festival: The House on Mango Street by Derek Bermel and Sandra Cisneros – Apr 7

    New Jersey Ballet: Maria Kowroski and Harrison Ball – Apr 14

    The Metropolitan Opera: John Adams’s Antony and Cleopatra – Apr 28

    Vail Dance Festival – May 4

    The Works & Process 2025 season begins on January 9 and comes to a close on May 15, 2025. To see a complete calendar of events for the upcoming season, and to purchase tickets to any of the events, click here.

  • The Albany Symphony to Dazzle the Palace Theatre with “Magic of Christmas” Concert December 8

    The Albany Symphony plans to take the holiday season to new heights with their “Magic of Christmas” concert at The Palace Theatre this December.

    The award-winning Albany Symphony provides a whole lot of extra sparkle this holiday season in one of the Capital Region’s favorite holiday musical traditions. On Sunday, December 8, “The Magic of Christmas” fills The Palace Theatre with festive holiday music, family fun and special guests. The Albany Symphony and its sleigh-full of hometown talent will delight and entertain audiences of all ages with an afternoon of holiday musical favorites, a carol sing-along and a visit from the big man in the red suit.

    In keeping with the Albany Symphony’s longtime role as a collaborator, the orchestra is proud to be joined by community partners, including The Music Studio, Capital District Youth Chorale, Rince go Brach (formerly Boland) School of Irish Dance, Northeast Ballet, Saratoga Springs High School Choraliers, and Schalmont High School Concert Choir.

    Founded in 1930 in New York’s Capital Region, the Albany Symphony serves a diverse regional audience covering more than seven counties and parts of three states. In addition to an eight-concert subscription season, an annual multi-day American Music Festival including performances by the orchestra’s genre-bending ensemble Dogs of Desire, and a host of education and community outreach events, the Albany Symphony regularly serves as an ambassador for new music and Upstate innovation beyond the Capital Region. 

    “The Magic of Christmas” takes place from 3:00pm to 5:00pm on Sunday, December 8 at The Palace Theatre in downtown Albany. Conducted by David Alan Miller, prepare for an afternoon of festive family fun and cheer. Sponsored in part by Price Chopper and Market 32, the concert is jam-packed with holiday classics. Like everything the Albany Symphony does, the afternoon includes a medley of familiar and brand-new tunes, including “Joy to the World,” “Sing Noel,” “Santa’s Holly Jolly Little Christmas,” Nutcracker selections with dancers, and much more. In traditional joyful fanfare, audiences join in a Christmas sing-along to close the program. 

    For more information on “The Magic of Christmas” concert at The Palace Theatre on Dec 8 and to purchase tickets, click here.