Jazz at Lincoln Center Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/jazz-at-lincoln-center/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Tue, 27 Apr 2021 14:12:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/23/best-bets-april-23rd-april-26th/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/23/best-bets-april-23rd-april-26th/#respond Fri, 23 Apr 2021 12:50:47 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=13758 A lucky 21 great options to enjoy culture this weekend (and celebrate The Bard's birthday)

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Friday is Shakespeare’s birthday. In celebration of his 457th birthday (doesn’t everyone celebrate that one?), there are a few options for fans of his work amongst my Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th.

Indirectly celebrating this natal day are multiple options that fall under the category of a line from Hamlet, “The play’s the thing.” Beyond the Shakespeare options are five other plays.

If you want funky jazz, contemporary classical music, operas from Europe or modern dance, I’ve got that for you as well. They’re all so good, I can’t make one of them the top pick.

In As You Like It, these famous words are said, “All the world’s a stage and all the men and women merely players.” So in this spirit of this weekend’s Academy Awards, the nominees for great players in Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th are:

Charlayne Woodard (Courtesy Bret Adams Ltd.)

THEATER: Neat – Manhattan Theatre Club – Now – April 25th

Charlayne Woodard’s one-person show Neat opened at New York City Center in a Manhattan Theatre Club production in 1997.

Lawrence Van Gelder, writing for the New York Times, said of Woodard’s play, “Ms. Woodard sings, she dances, but most of all she tells good stories, bringing them to life in ways that are poignant.”

Woodard revisits the work in this prevention as part of MTC’s Curtain Call series. The great thing is you can see this wonderful play and performance for free. All you have to do is register. But act quickly, the run ends on Sunday, April 25th.

Mathilde Froustey in Marston’s Snowblind (Photo © Erik Tomasson/Courtesy SF Ballet)

DANCE: Digital Program 5 – San Francisco Ballet – Now – May 12th

Three archival performances make up this program from San Francisco Ballet. They include 7 for Eight from 2016 and Anima Animus and Snowblind from 2018.

Helgi Tomasson is the creator of 7 for Eight which is set to the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. David Dawson is the choreographer of Anima Animus which is set to music by Ezio Bosso. Cathy Marston is the choreographer of Snowblind which uses music by Amy Beach, Philip Feeney, Arthur Foote, and Arvo Pärt.

Tickets are $29 and allow for 72 hours of access to the program.

Gary Perez, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Florencia Lozano and Jimmy Smits in “Two Sisters and a Piano” (Photo courtesy New Normal Rep)

PLAY READING: Two Sisters and a Piano – New Normal Rep – Now – May 23rd ART IN AN EMAIL

Playwright Nilo Cruz is best-known for his Pulitzer Prize winning play Anna in the Tropics from 2002. Three years prior to that success he premiered Two Sisters and a Piano.

The play tells the story of two sisters under house arrest in Cuba in 1991. One sister is an author and the lieutenant keeping track of their case has fallen in love with her. The other is a pianist who finds her piano tuner falling head over heels for his client.

Cruz has directed a new reading of Two Sisters and a Piano with Jimmy Smits (Anna in the Tropics); Florencia Lozano (Rinse, Repeat), Gary Perez and Daphne Rubin-Vega (both of whom appeared in Two Sisters and a Piano at The Public Theater.)

In A.D. Amorosi‘s review of this reading for Variety, he says, “Cruz’s playful poetic language, even at its most harshly politicized, and his easy direction allow his actors a delicious freedom. Even when its characters are not free, enclosed in one cramped apartment with nothing but mangoes, rice and the occasional rum shot (and despite the virtual limitations of a laptop’s viewing screen), Two Sisters and a Piano is as open as a Havana landscape, with all of its flavors, scents and sensory overloads at full tilt.”

Tickets are $25 with $10 tickets available for students.

Khris Davis in “The Royale” (Photo ©T. Charles Erickson/Courtesy Lincoln Center Theater)

PLAY: The Royale – Private Reels: From the LCT Archives on Broadway on Demand – Now – May 16th

Real life boxer Jack Jackson (the first African-American world heavyweight champion) serves as the inspiration for the story of Jay “The Sport” Jackson in Marco Ramirez’s 2016 play The Royale. (He was also the inspiration for The Great White Hope).

The story is told in six rounds.

Rachel Chavkin, Tony Award-winner for Hadestown, directed this production. Starring are McKinley Belcher III (the 2020 revival of A Soldier’s Play), Khris Davis (Sweat), Montego Glover (Tony nominee for Memphis), John Lavelle (Catch-22) and Clarke Peters (Five Guys Named Moe).

As Ben Brantley said in his rave New York Times review, “…the great subject of The Royale, which has been given such original and graceful theatrical form, is the selfish single-mindedness required of champions, and the repercussions such a focus has when it’s exercised by a black man in a white man’s world.” 

There is no charge to watch The Royale, but you will have to register with Broadway on Demand.

Deborah Strang and Karen Hall in “An Iliad” (Photo by Eric Pargac/Courtesy A Noise Within)

THEATER: An Iliad – A Noise Within – Now – May 16th

Easily one of the most challenging and rewarding experiences I’ve had seeing a play was when I attended Denis O’Hare and Lisa Peterson’s An Iliad at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica. It’s a powerful work that is inspired by Homer’s Iliad.

This play, specifically called An Iliad because it isn’t the Iliad, calls for just one actor and a cellist and that actor has to be completely on top of his/her game.

A Noise Within is offering streaming performances of An Iliad with co-founder Geoff Elliott and actress Deborah Strang alternating performances. Joining them as both composer and cellist is Karen Hall. Julia Rodriguez-Elliott directs.

The link in the title will take you to the website so you can see which actor is performing in each performance. Tickets, which are $25 for an individual and $40 for a family, must be reserved a minimum of two hours before each performance.

To see what Denis O’Hare had to say about the show, check out my 2014 interview with him here.

Nina Machaidze in “Manon” (Photo courtesy Wiener Staatsoper)

OPERA: Jules Massenet’s Manon – Wiener Staatsoper – April 22nd – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM

Conducted by Frédéric Chaslin; starring Nina Machaidze, Juan Diego Flórez and Adrian Eröd. This Andrei Serban production is from 2019.

Massenet’s opera was composed in 1883 and had its world premiere in January of 1884 in Paris. The libretto is by  Henri Meilhac and Philippe Gille.

They based the opera on the 1731 Abbé Prévost novel, L’histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut.

A young woman from a small town has an intense desire to lavish herself with all the riches and pleasures life has to offer her. But life doesn’t always work out the way we want. Sounds like a story that could be written today.

This is the first of Vienna State Opera’s productions I’ve included in our listings. Very much like the Metropolitan Opera, they offer a different production each day. There is no charge to watch the productions, but you do need to register on their website. Each production will be available for 24 hours.

Adam Heller & company in “A Letter to Harvey Milk” (Photo by Russ Rowland)

MUSICAL: A Letter to Harvey Milk – Now – April 25th

The creators of this musical, Jerry James, Laura I. Kramer, Ellen M. Schwartz and Cheryl Stern were inspired by a short story of the same name by Lesléa Newman. A Letter to Harvey Milk opened off-Broadway in 2018 at the Acorn Theatre in New York.

The setting is San Francisco in the mid 1980s. Harry, a kosher butcher who has retired and is also a widower, is given an assignment to write a letter to someone who is dead. He chooses California politician Harvey Milk – the first openly gay politician elected in California who was later assassinated by Dan White in 1978. But why?

Members of the original cast has reunited for this streaming production. They include Adam Heller, Julia Knitel, Cheryl Stern who are joined by Michael Bartoli, Jeremy Greenbaum, Aury Krebs and Ravi Roth. Evan Pappas directs.

Tickets range from $10 – $50 with proceeds going to The Actors Fund and HIAS. All tickets purchased will allow viewing of the musical through Sunday, April 25th at 11:59 PM EDT/8:59 PDT.

Drawing of Shakespeare by Kyd (Courtesy Gingold Theatrical Group)

SHAKESPEARE: Shakespeare Sonnet Slam – Gingold Theatrical Group – April 23rd – 6:00 PM EDT/3:00 PM PDT

Happy Birthday William Shakespeare. You don’t look a day over 450. The Gingold Theatrical Group is celebrating by holding a virtual open mic where Shakespeare’s sonnets or other material based on or inspired by the Sonnets will be performed. Everyone is invited to participate and you have three minutes to give it your all.

Joining in this celebration are Stephen Brown-Fried, Robert Cuccioli, Tyne Daly, George Dvorsky, Melissa Errico, Alison Fraser, Tom Hewitt, Daniel Jenkins, John-Andrew Morrison, Patrick Page, Maryann Plunkett, Tonya Pinkins, Laila Robins, Jay O. Sanders, Renee Taylor, Jon Patrick Walker and more.

You’ll have to come up with your own take on the Sonnets, but this is a free party! You can find the Shakespeare Sonnet Slam on Gingold Theatrical Group’s Facebook page.

Composer Jessie Montgomery (Photo by Jiyang Chen/Courtesy MKI Artists)

CONTEMPORARY CLASSICAL MUSIC: Sonic Shift – Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra – Premieres April 23rd at 9:30 PM EDT/6:30 PM PDT

Composer Jessie Montgomery has curated this new episode of LA Chamber Orchestra’s Close Quarters series. On the program are works by composers Marcos Balter, Anna Meredith and Alyssa Weinberg. Each work explores the progression from acoustic music to electronic and electro-acoustic music with an emphasis on the wind section.

Will Kim provides the visuals that accompany the performance which is lead by Christopher Rountree of Wild Up! Nadia Sirota is the music producer.

This is the first of two Close Quarters episodes curated by Montgomery. I recently interviewed her about working with LACO. You can read that interview here.

There’s no charge to watch this performance. Donations are encouraged.

Neave Trio (Photo by Mark Roemisch/Courtesy Jensen Artists)

CHAMBER MUSIC: Neave Trio – Asheville Chamber Music Series – April 23rd – April 25th – Art in an EMAIL

Pianist Eri Nakamura, cellist Mikhail Veselov and violinist Anna Williams are the members in Neave Trio. Following on the heels of their 2019 album Her Voice, which featured female composers, their concert this weekend as part of the Asheville Chamber Music Series will also showcase female composers.

On the program is the Trio No. 1, Op. 33 by Louise Farrench; Rebecca Clarke’s Piano Trio and Cécile Chaminade’s Piano Trio No. 1, Op. 11.

Perhaps none of these composers is familiar to you. They aren’t to me. But Neave Trio’s passion for this lesser-known music makes this concert utterly compelling.

There are three performances: Friday, April 23rd at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT; Saturday at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT and Sunday at 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT.

You can watch this concert for free, but donations are encouraged.

Marshall Allen of Sun Ra Arkestra (Photo by Bud Fulginiti/Courtesy Sunraarkestra.com)

JAZZ: Sun Ra Arkestra – SFJAZZ – April 23rd – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

The name Herman Poole Blount probably doesn’t mean anything to you. But if told that was the birth name of Le Sony’r Ra who would later become known as Sun Ra, you might have a better idea who he was.

Experimental, free and avant-garde jazz was his specialty. It was always performed best by the Sun Ra Arkestra.

After Sun Ra’s death in 1993, alto saxophonist Marshall Allen starting leading the ensemble. As he does in this concert at SFJAZZ from 2017.

To get a sense of what might be in store for you in this Fridays at Five concert, here are some of the songs being performed: Space Loneliness, Saturn, Angels and Demons at Play and Space is the Place. It’s going to be trippy.

And you can take that trip for $5 (which offers one full month of digital membership or $60 (which includes a one year digital membership.)

There is an encore showing on April 24th at 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT.

“Romeo and Juliet” (Courtesy PBS)

PLAY: Romeo and Juliet – Great Performances on PBS – April 23rd – Check Local Listings

You don’t expect just some stand-up sonnets for Shakespeare’s birthday, do you? Of course not. Let’s throw in some tragedy. As in the tragic love story of them all – Romeo and Juliet.

The National Theatre created this film which maneuvers its way from rehearsal into and around the Lyttleton Theatre. The cast are stuck in a theater that has shut down and act out the story of the Capulets and the Montagues.

Starring as the title characters are Josh O’Connor and Jessie Buckley. The cast also includes Fisayo Akinade, Ella Dacres, Deborah Findlay, Tamsin Greig, Ellis Howard, Lloyd Hutchinson, David Judge, Adrian Lester, Lucian Msamati, Alex Mugnaioni, Shubham Saraf and Colin Tierney. Simon Godwin is the director.

As with any show on PBS, I’d advise checking your local listings for exact airdate and time in your part of the country.

Wiener Staatsoper’s “Die Zauberflöte” (Courtesy Wiener Staatsoper)

OPERA: Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte – Wiener Staatsoper – April 24th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Adam Fischer; starring Benjamin Bruns, Olga Bezsmertna, Íride Martínez, Markus Werba and Annika Gerhards. This Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier production is from 2015.

Mozart’s opera premiered in September 1791 in Vienna a mere two months before the composer died. It features a libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder.

Prince Tamino is asked by the Queen of the Night to free her daughter Pamina from Sarastro. Tamino, however, is impressed with Sarastro and the way his community lives in the world and wants to be a part of it. Both alone and together Tamino and Pamina endure multiple tests. If they succeed, what will happen to them? To the Queen of the Night?

Dory Al-Samarany in “Whispers International” (Photo by Taha Shanouha)

MONOLOGUES: Whispers International – April 24th – 2:00 PM EDT/11:00 AM PDT

As you know, there was a massive blast in Lebanon on August 4th of last year. Almost 200 people were killed and over 6,000 people were injured.

Whispers International was created to raise money for the victims and to help in the rebuilding of the area around the blast site.

British playwrights Geraldine Breenna, Mike Elliston, Kim Hardy, Angela Harvey, John Jesper and Kate Webster have made their writing available to a company of Lebanese actors to perform.

Those actors are Nadine Labaki, Georges Khabbaz, Nada Abou Farhat, Talal El Jurdi, Bernadette Houdeib, Rita Hayek, Badih Abou Chacra, Dory Al-Samarany, Bshara Atallah, Sany Abdul Baki, Josyane Boulos, Agatha Ezzedine and Hagop Der Ghougassian 

Tickets are £13.52 which at press time equals approximately $18.75.

Weiner Staatsoper’s “Händel und Gretel” (Courtesy Weiner Staatsoper)

OPERA: Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel – Weiner Staatsoper – April 25th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Christian Thielemann; starring Ileana Tosca, Daniela Sindram, Adrian Eröd, Janina Baechle, Michaela Schuster, Annika Gerhards

The Grimm brother’s fairly tale about a brother and sister who are lured to a house with sweets and candies only to find a witch who wants to eat the duo is the basis for this opera that had its debut in 1893 in Weimar. Richard Strauss conducted the premiere. A second production the next year in Hamburg was conducted by Gustav Mahler. Adelheid Wette, Humpderdink’s sister, wrote the libretto.

Hansel and Gretel has the distinction of finding much of its popularity not just through opera houses, but on the radio. It was the first opera broadcast on the radio in Europe when a 1923 Covent Garden production was heard over the airwaves. Eight years later in 1931, it became the first ever opera broadcast in its entirety by the Metropolitan Opera.

The opera is commonly seen and heard during the Christmas season. An odd choice, but librettist Adelheid Wette did soften some of the harsher elements found in the original Grimm tales for her brother’s opera.

Mandy Gonzalez (Courtesy Seth Concert Series)

CABARET: Mandy Gonzalez – Seth Concert Series – April 25th – 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT

With the upcoming film version of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s In the Heights, it’s a great time to check in on one of the musical’s original cast members: Mandy Gonzalez, who originated the role of Nina.

Gonazalez is an insanely talented singer and actress.

I saw her in In the Heights. She’s also appeared in Wicked, Lennon, Dance of the Vampires and as Angelica Schuyler in Hamilton.

I’ve also seen her perform her cabaret act and it is impossible to express the amount of pure joy that comes out of her when she’s singing. (And she does a killer version of Born to Run by Bruce Springsteen.)

She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest in his concert series this weekend.

Tickets are $25 and you can watch the live performance at 3:00 PM EDT or the replay of the concert at 8:00 PM EDT. Whichever you choose, you will certainly have a good time.

Betsy McBride and Jacob Clerico in “Indestructible Light” (Photo by Dancing Camera/Courtesy ABT)

IN PERSON: DANCE: Uniting in Movement – American Ballet Theatre – Segerstrom Center for the Arts – April 25th – 1:30 PM PDT

You could be ambivalent about the Academy Awards and go see a rare live performance of ballet in Costa Mesa. ABT has been creating a program of three different works that were filmed this week. On Sunday, they are opening up Segerstrom Center for the Arts for a limited number of people to see the performance live.

The works are Let Me Sing Forever More by choreographer Jessica Lang and set to the recordings of Tony Bennett (clearly the title comes from Fly Me to the Moon); La Follia Variations by Lauren Lovette set to music of the same name by composer Francesco Geminiani and Indestructible Light by Darrell Grand Moultrie which is set to music by Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Neal Hefti and Billy Strayhorn.

Hefti, by the way, composed the theme for the television series Batman.

At press time the only available tickets were $80 each. There are Covid-protocols in place for this performance.

For those willing to wait, Uniting in Movement will be available for streaming through Segerstrom Center for the Arts from May 12th – May 26th for $25.

Argus Trio (Photo ©The Noguchi Museum – Artists Rights Society)

CHAMBER MUSIC: Argus Quartet: noise/Silence – Five Boroughs Music Festival and The Noguchi Museum – April 25th – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT (Art in an email)

Cellist Audrey Chen, violinists Clara Kim and Gioncarlo Latta and violist Maren Rothfritz make up the Argus Quartet. Though they perform music from across all eras of classical music, they seem to excel in contemporary works.

This concert was filmed at one of my favorite museums in New York, The Noguchi Museum. It is being presented by the Five Boroughs Music Festival. The Argus Quartet will perform works by composers John Cage (String Quartet in Four Parts); Dorothy Rudd More (Modes for String Quartet), Rolf Wallin (several selections from Curiosity Cabinet) and Paul Wiancko (Vox Petra).

The concert will be available for free streaming on the Five Boroughs Music Festival YouTube channel through December 31st.

Anita Rachvelishvili in “Carmen” (Courtesy Weiner Staatsoper)

OPERA: Bizet’s Carmen – Weiner Staatsoper – April 26th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Andrés Orozco-Estrada; starring Anita Rachvelishvili, Piotr Beczala, Erwin Schrott and Vera-Lotte Boecker. This Calixto Bieito production is from 2021.

Georges Bizet collaborated with librettists Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy on this immensely popular opera. It was based on Propser Mérimée’s novella of the same name. 

When Carmen was first performed in Paris in 1875 it was considered both shocking and scandalous. 

Set in Seville, Spain, Carmen is a gypsy who has caught everyone’s eye. A soldier, Don José, plays coy and gives her no attention. Her flirtation causes troubles for both when Don José’s girlfriend, Micaëla arrives. Tensions escalate between the two women and after a knight fight, José must arrest Carmen. When she seduces him it sets off a series of events that will not end well for the gypsy woman.

A scene from “Measure for Measure” (Photo by Liz Lauren/Courtesy Goodman Theatre)

PLAY: Measure for Measure – Goodman Theatre – April 26th – May 9th

Here’s another opportunity to celebrate the bard. But this isn’t going to be your standard production of a Shakespearean play.

Director Robert Falls has transported this play from Vienna to New YOrk City circa the late 1970s (or as I like to describe it, before Disney moved into Broadway).

The story is still the same. Claudio is sentenced to death under an arcane law invoked by Angelo who has taken over for the Duke who has left rather than have to deal with morality issues in (originally Vienna). Claudio’s crime? Getting his girlfriend, Juliet, pregnant.

The Duke returns in disguise and becomes aware of the decisions Angelo has been making. Deception, bargains, bartering, love and death are all on the table in this fairly convoluted play.

Justin Hayford, in his review for the Chicago Reader, had mixed feelings about the production:

“It’s rare for one of Shakespeare’s plays to be ripped from its original setting, transplanted across centuries and continents—and still end up feeling vital, urgent, and utterly contemporary. At least for a while. If Falls and his stellar cast could maintain that vitality past intermission, they’d have a masterpiece on their hands.”

Nonetheless, I think the concept sounds interesting and worth checking out. What else are you going to do on a Monday night? (Of course, I have another option for you…)

Tickets are free, but require registration.

Playwright Aleshea Harris (Photo by R.J. Eldridge/Courtesy NY Theatre Workshop)

AUDIO PLAY: Brother, Brother – New York Theatre Workshop – Live Premiere April 26th – 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT Art in an email

New York Theater Workshop is offering up a twist on audio plays. This will feature visuals, but not of the performers. Rather, artists Ibrahim Rayintakath​ and Liang-Hsin Huang have created imagery that will accompany Aleshea Harris’ play.

Brother, Brother tells the story of two brothers sharing a bicycle while making their way through Appalachia. They are actors headed to Tennessee. They start getting followed by a mysterious man in a maroon suit. At this moment the dreams they have for their future are confronted by the acts from their past.

Starring in this audio play are Amari Cheathom (terrific in August Wilson’s Jitney), André De Shields (Tony Award-winner for Hadestown), Gbenga Akinnagbe (To Kill a Mockingbird) and Owen Tabaka (Ratatouille: The Tik Tok Musical). Shayok Misha Chowdhury directs.

Tickets are $10. Brother, Brother will remain available for streaming through July 25th.

Those are my Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th. But a few reminders (and a preview):

MasterVoices has debuted the 3rd part of Myths and Hymns, a series of short films set to Adam Guettel’s song cycle. For details about the series, go here. For my interview with MasterVoices Artistic Director Ted Sperling, go here.

Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Gala 2021 is available for streaming through Sunday. For details about the program and how to get tickets, go here.

Carnegie Hall’s Voices of Hope series continues with multiple new shows available for free viewing. For details go here.

The Metropolitan Opera streams Philip Glass’ Satyagraha on Friday (highly recommended); Beethoven’s Fidelio on Saturday and Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites on Sunday (also highly recommended). For details and previews go here.

Here’s a preview of next week at the Met where the theme is City of Light (all the operas take place in Paris). Monday’s opera is, what else, La Bohème by Puccini.

That truly is the full and complete list of Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th. Enjoy your weekend!

Photo: William Shakespeare (By BatyrAshirbayev98/Courtesy Wikipedia Commons)

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Innovation + Soul – Jazz at Lincoln Center Gala https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/20/innovation-soul-jazz-at-lincoln-center-gala/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/20/innovation-soul-jazz-at-lincoln-center-gala/#respond Tue, 20 Apr 2021 16:41:35 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=14079 Jazz at Lincoln Center Website

Now - April 25th

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Usually the gala for Jazz at Lincoln Center is a high-priced event held in person in New York. Like many other organizations, that wasn’t possible this year. And we’re all the beneficiaries. Innovation + Soul, the 2021 gala for Jazz at Lincoln Center, is now available online for viewing through April 25th.

Serving as the host for the event is one of my favorite singers and people, Dee Dee Bridgewater.

Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra will be welcoming a slew of guests including playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith, dancer Charles “Lil Buck” Riley, vocalist Veronica Swift, conga player and vocalist Pedrito Martinez, trumpeter Michael Rodriguez and pianist Sean Mason.

The program calls for performances of songs by Willie Nelson, George and Ira Gershwin and Lou Donaldson and Gus Kahn. Compositions by Carlos Henriquez, Marsalis, Mason and Ted Nash (from his Presidential Suite) are also set to be performed.

Just as his wife Hillary made a special appearance at Classic Stage Company’s Tell the Story tribute to the musical Assassins last week, former President Bill Clinton is a special guest at Innovation + Soul.

There are two honorees being celebrated at this event. The first are Karen and Charles Phillips who are receiving the Ed Bradley Award for Leadership in Jazz.

Composer/songwriter and Oscar-nominee Jon Batiste (whose new album WE ARE is terrific) is the recipient of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Award for Artistic Excellence.

So how can you watch Innovation + Soul? Tickets are $30 to stream the performance. For $35 you get to stream the performance and an audio recording of the event. You’ll have to act quickly if you want to see this show as it will only be available through Sunday, April 25th. Tickets are available here.

As a side note, if you want to see more of what dancer Lil Buck can do, let me remind you that Metamorphosis, a collaboration between Movement Art Is (a dance company he founded with Jon Boogz) and Third Coast Percussion, becomes available today as part of Carnegie Hall’s Voices of Hope festival. You can find those details here.

Photo: Dee Dee Bridgewater in Innovation + Soul (Photo courtesy Jazz at Lincoln Center)

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Best Bets at Home: December 18th – December 20th https://culturalattache.co/2020/12/18/best-bets-at-home-december-18th-december-20th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/12/18/best-bets-at-home-december-18th-december-20th/#respond Fri, 18 Dec 2020 08:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=12265 Thirteen different shows to entertain you this weekend

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Can you believe there are only two more weekends left in 2020? And aren’t you glad there are only two more weekends in 2020? In my Best Bets at Home: December 18th – December 20th I have thirteen terrific ways for you to enjoy your weekend.

Music seems to be the best way to express holiday cheer (in a year when we truly need it) and multiple venues are using music to do just that. Fans of plays do not fear, we have a few options for you and there’s also a preview of a musical-in-development that was 10,000 years in the making.

Here are my Best Bets at Home: December 18th – December 20th:

Megan Mullally and Adam Devine in “Iceboy!” (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

MUSICAL: Iceboy! – PlayhouseLive – Now Available

As part of their original programming, Pasadena Playhouse’s PlayhouseLive offers a look into a musical in development called Iceboy!

Them musical tells the story of a Broadway star, Vera Vimm, who adopts a 10,000 year old Neanderthal, IceBoy. After being thawed out he becomes a fast-rising star whose popularity and fame begins to eclipse Vimm’s career.

Megan Mullally (Young Frankenstein) plays Vimm; Adam Devine plays Iceboy. Nick Offerman (Annapurna) and Laura Bell Bundy (Legally Blonde) are also in this preview. Three-time Tony nominee Kevin Chamberlin directs.

IceBoy! was written by by Mark Hollmann (Tony Award-winner for Urinetown), Erin Quinn Purcell (Duet!) and Jay Reiss (The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee). This 22-1/2 minute preview features four songs from the musical.

This is free to view, but you do need to register at PlayhouseLive.

Trey Lyford, Geoff Sobelle and Steve Cuiffo in “Elephant Room: Dust from the Stars” (Photo by Maria Baranova-Suzuki/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

MAGIC/PLAY: Elephant Room: Dust from the Stars – Center Theatre Group Digital Stage – Now – December 20th

Some show are just so out there that you have two choices: you go with it or you resist. According to the New York Times, it might be futile to resist the charms of Elephant Room: Dust from the Stars.

Elisabeth Vincentelli, writing for the paper, said, “The show, part of the Fringe Festival in Philadelphia, packs a lot in just over an hour and is the most resourceful, gleefully entertaining new theater piece I have seen during the pandemic. Yes, it all happens on Zoom. Yes, there are tricks, some of them involving the audience. And yes, it’s possible to laugh alone in front of your computer.”

That’s good information to have because the video about the show might leave you scratching your head (or thinking you’ve wandered into magic-meets-Spinal Tap):

Perhaps you have. This meta-show, which appears to be taking place in our present-day world, will hopefully explain just what the meta is for.

Tickets are $10 for non-members/free for members. Performances take place on Friday, December 18th at 7:00 PM PST; Saturday, December 19th and Sunday, December 20th at 1:00 PM PST and 7:00 PM PST.

Mariachi Garibaldi de Jaime Cuéllar (Courtesy The Soraya)

INTERNATIONAL HOLIDAY MUSIC: Nochebuena en Casa – The Soraya – December 18th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

Acclaimed writer/director/producer Dan Guerrero is your host for this at-home version of The Soraya’s annual holiday concert.

The artists performing include Ballet Folklórico de Los Ángeles, Aida Cuevas, Mariachi Garibaldi de Jaime Cuéllar, Suzanna Guzmán and José “Pepe” Martínez Jr. with Susie García. Some of them will welcome you into their homes for their performances, others were filmed safely on the stage at The Soraya.

There is no cost to watch this festive show which begins streaming on Friday, December 18th at 5:00 PM PST.

Kenny Barron (Photo ©Philippe Levy Stab – Courtesy Kenny Barron’s website)

JAZZ: Kenny Barron: Quartets – Village Vanguard – December 18th – December 19th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

When Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Getz needed a pianist they turned to Kenny Barron. The eleven-time Grammy Award nominee, who has recorded with more artists than this page can hold, has two performances this weekend from New York’s Village Vanguard.

He is performing in quartet formation, but the two performances will feauture slightly, but significantly, different line-ups.

At the core of both performances will be Kiyoshi Kitagawa on bass and Jonathan Blake on drum. Rounding out the quartet on Friday will be vibraphonist Steve Nelson (who appeared on Barron’s 1982 recording Golden Lotus). For Saturday’s performance saxophonist Immanuel Wilkins joins Barron. Omega, by Wilkins, was named Best Jazz Album of 2020 by the New York Times.

Tickets for each concert are $10.

Blind Boys of Alabama (Courtesy their website)

GOSPEL MUSIC: Blind Boys of Alabama Holiday Show – SFJAZZ – December 18th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

This week’s Fridays at Five concert from SFJAZZ is a bit of a departure from their regular jazz programming, but the concert being shown is an annual holiday tradition at the venue.

Blind Boys of Alabama will perform a concert of gospel and holiday music as only they can. If you’ve never heard them, you should. They are terrific.

The five-time Grammy Award-winning ensemble perform in this concert from 2018. They have recorded two Christmas albums: the 2003 Christmas release, Go Tell It on the Mountain, and their 2014 Talkin’ Christmas, which was a collaboration with blues great Taj Mahal.

The concert will stream only once at the allotted time. To view the Fridays at Five concerts you need either a monthly membership ($5) or an annual membership ($60).

Charles Dickens (Courtesy New York Public Library Archives)

PLAY READING: A Christmas Carol – Primary Stages – December 18th – December 22nd

Pulitzer Prize finalist Theresa Rebeck has co-written (with Erin Daley) a new version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol which will have a live-reading on Friday, December 18th as a fundraiser for New York’s Primary Stages and their programming aimed at younger audiences.

Starring as Scrooge is four-time Tony-nominated actor Raúl Esparza (Speed-the-Plow; Company).

Joining him are Mary Bacon (Rock ‘n’ Roll), Abadi Bacon Leynse, Kimberly Chatterjee (Life Sucks), W. Tré Davis (Seared), David Mason (Seared), Krysta Rodriguez (Spring Awakening) and Matthew Saldivar (Bernhardt/Hamlet). Rebeck is directing the reading.

The Friday, December 18th, performance is live at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST. Tickets for the live reading are $100. Beginning December 19th, and through December 22nd, the reading will be available for free viewing.

Portrait of J.S. Bach by Antoine Maurin (Courtesy New York Public Library Archives

CLASSICAL MUSIC: Bach’s Brandenburg 5 – Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra – December 18th – 9:30 PM EST/6:30 PM PST

Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra continues their Close Quarters series with this concert that features Johann Sebastian Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D Major and Claude Debussy’s Syrinx.

Music Director Jaime Martín will perform Syrinx which is a brief work by the French composer for solo flute.

Featured musicians performing the Bach will be Martín on flute; Conductor Laureate Jeffrey Kahane on fortepiano and Tereza Stanislav on violin.

Joining them will be Margaret Batjer, Susan Rishik and Josefina Vergara on violin; Erik Rynearson and Robert Brophy on viola; Andrew Shulman and Armen Ksajikian on cello and David Grossman on bass.

This series involves newly-created visuals to accompany each performance. This fourth episode of the Close Quarters series features the art of Ardeshir Tabrizi.

The concert is free and can be watched on the LA Chamber Orchestra website, their YouTube channel or their Facebook page.

Cyrus Chestnut (Courtesy his website)

JAZZ: Cyrus Chestnut & Dezron Douglas – MEZZROW – December 19th – 5:00 PM EST/2:00 PM PST and 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST

Jazz pianist and bassist Dezron Douglas team up for two shows from New York’s Mezzrow. They last performed together at sister club Small’s in July. (You can watch that and many other archived videos from Smalls and Mezzrow with a membership.)

Chestnut has released 34 records. He and Douglas have recorded together since 2007’s Cyrus Plays Elvis. They have five other recordings together. Douglas, amongst his many performances, appears in Beyonce’s Homecoming.

I’m a fan of both musicians. Though somewhat crudely filmed, you always get great music from these performances live at Small’s and Mezzrow.

There is no charge to watch the concert. However, those who have the means can purchase tax-deductible “reservations” for $50 for each set.

Wynton Marsalis (Photo by Frank Stewart/Courtesy Wynton Marsalis’ website)

JAZZ: Big Band Holidays – Jazz at Lincoln Center – December 19th – December 26th

Every year Jazz at Lincoln Center celebrates the holidays with a big band concert filled with seasonal songs. This year is no exception, but it will be virtual instead of live.

Wynton Marsalis leads the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in the concert. Special guests include Rubén Baldes, Kurt Elling, Ashley Pezzotti and Catherine Russell.

Premieres at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST on December 19th and will remain available for streaming through December 26th. Tickets are $25 for non-members; $20 for members.

Bette Davis (Photo by Friedman-Abeles/Courtesy New York Public Library Archives)

PLAY: Interviewing Miss Davis – Fountain Theatre – December 19th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

I’m sure I don’t have to tell you who Miss Davis is. (Okay, I will.) Bette Davis, of course. This play by Laura Maria Censabella is based on her experiences.

Just after leaving college with dreams of being a writer, she gets a job interview with the screen legend to be her assistant. Would this job be a fast track to her dreams or sideline her aspirations?

And what of her possible new employer? A woman who famously said, “In this business until you’re known as a monster, you’re not a star.”

Karen Kondazian plays Davis in this reading. Wonjung Kim plays the woman being interviewed and Aleisha Force is the longtime assistant who is leaving Davis.

There is no charge to watch Interviewing Miss Davis. There will be a Hollywood holiday theme party along with the reading.

Nick Cearley and Lauren Molina (Courtesy Laguna Playhouse)

FILMED RADIO PLAY: It’s a Wonderful Life – Laguna Playhouse – December 19th – January 1st

Who doesn’t watch It’s a Wonderful Life during the holidays? Well, even if you are one of those who doesn’t consider the play a seasonal tradition, you might want to check out this version from the Laguna Playhouse.

Nick Cearley and Lauren Molina, who are known together as The Skivvies, have filmed a radio play version that has been adapted by Joe Landry to suit their talents. Since The Skivvies usually perform in their underwear, I’m not sure I can guarantee which talents Landry is relying on.

One thing that does serve as a foundation for his work is the screenplay from the original Frank Capra movie written by Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Capra and Jo Swerling.

For the uninitiated, It’s a Wonderful Life tells the story of George Bailey. He’s suicidal and it’s only because of the intervention of his guardian angel, Clarence, that Bailey learns just how valuable his life has always been. The film starred Jimmy Stewart and features the classic line, “every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings.”

Maybe in this version every time a bell rings a cast member removes an article of clothing.

Tickets are $20.

Audra Mae (Courtesy of The Wallis)

VOCALS CONCERT: Audra Mae: Songs of Joy and Peace with Dylan Meek – The Sorting Room at The Wallis – December 19th – 11:00 PM EST/8:00 PM PST

Christina Aguilera, Avicii, Kelly Clarkson, Celine Dion and Miranda Lambert are just some of the performers who have recorded songs written/co-written by Audra Mae. The singer-songwriter, who happens to be the great great niece of Judy Garland, is also a singer with multiple albums of her own.

She performs a concert of holidays songs and is joined by Dylan Meek, a singer/jazz pianist who was mentored by Johnny O’Neal. The concert is part of The Sorting Room series from The Wallis in Beverly Hills and is produced in conjunction with For the Record Live.

Mae has two special guests joining for the show: Darren Criss and Tracie Thoms.

Tickets are $25 and will allow for streaming for 24 hours from the start time.

Adam Pascal (Courtesy his Facebook page)

BROADWAY VOCALS: Adam Pascal with Seth Rudetsky – December 20th – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

Broadway fans, and particularly Rent-heads, know Adam Pascal from his role as Roger in the original production of Jonathan Larson’s Rent. His other Broadway credits include the Elton John and Tim Rice musical, Aida, Cabaret, Chicago, Memphis, Something Rotten! and most recently, Pretty Woman.

He’s Seth Rudetsky‘s guest for this week’s concert and conversation. Pascal knows Rudetsky well. He appeared in his musical, Disaster!

This replaces the concert with Pascal that was originally scheduled for November.

If Sunday’s live stream doesn’t work for you, they will re-stream the concert on Monday, December 21st at 3:00 PM EST/12:00 PM PST.

Tickets are $25.

Those are my Best Bets at Home: December 18th – December 20th. Stay safe. Stay healthy. Enjoy your weekend. Happy Holidays!

Photo: Jesse Vargas and Megan Mullally in Iceboy (Photo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy Pasadena Playhouse)

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Best Bets at Home: October 30th – November 1st https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/30/best-bets-at-home-october-30th-november-1st/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/30/best-bets-at-home-october-30th-november-1st/#respond Fri, 30 Oct 2020 07:01:29 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11481 With an extra hour added to your weekend, you'll have more time to watch some culture!

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It’s a good thing you gain an extra hour this weekend, because our Best Bets at Home: October 30th – November 1st are filled with so many options you’ll want to find some extra time.

This weekend’s choices range from several jazz performances to a topical one-woman show to a powerful dance performance and some great classical music.

If you’re looking for Halloween-themed events in our Best Bets, I want to point you to our special column dedicated to all things spooky you and your family can enjoy this weekend.

Here are our selection of the Best Bets at Home: October 30th – November 1st:

Composer Reena Esmail (Photo courtesy of the artist)

Reena Esmail’s Piano Trio – The Wallis – Now – November 19th

The world premiere of composer Reena Esmail’s Piano Trio took place last November in Seattle. It is a work that finds both Indian and Western classical music combined. As Esmail said about the work, “Imagine if you could say a single sentence, but it could be understood simultaneously in two different languages – that is what I aim to create through my music.”

Over the course of the next four weeks The Wallis will present a performance of one movement of her Piano Trio combined with insights and observations from Esmail and the three musicians performing the work. They are Vijay Gupta on violin, Peter Myers on cello and Suzana Bartal on piano.

Each movement will be streamed via Zoom. After that initial stream each movement can be found on The Wallis’ YouTube channel. Since the streaming events are on Thursdays, this week we have included a link to the YouTube page. If you want to watch subsequent performances on Zoom, you can go here to register for those.

Esmail is one of our most talented and interesting composers. This is going to be well worth your time if you love chamber music.

“Becoming” Album Cover (Courtesy KamasiWashington.com)

Kamasi Washington – Los Angeles Philharmonic – October 30th – November 29th

Jazz musician/composer Kamasi Washington takes to the Hollywood Bowl stage for a performance of the music he wrote for the film Becoming. This concert is part of the LA Phil’s Sound/Stage series and is free and available on their website. Becoming is the documentary about Michelle Obama’s book tour.

Along with the recently released Andra Day concert, this is a performance without the LA Phil.

Washington and his band perform his score. In addition to the performance, Washington will also be seen in an interview.

Of his work for Nadia Hallgren’s film, Washington told Rolling Stone Magazine, “Nadia asked me to write a song that would capture what the movie was saying about Michelle Obama. She’s a down-to-earth, brilliant queen who lives next door. She’s aware of who she is and what she has done, but she’s also aware of the people around her. So I tried to give that song a sense of depth and lightness. I thought, ‘If Michelle was going to write a song, what would it sound like?’”

Washington is one of our most exciting jazz musicians. I wouldn’t miss this.

Trio 3 (Photo by Richard Conde)

Trio 3 & Vijay Iyer – Blue Note – October 30th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT – $10 Restream 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT

New York’s Blue Note will live stream a concert on Friday featuring the supergroup Trio 3 and they are joined for this performance by pianist/composer Vijay Iyer.

The members of Trio 3 are Oliver Lake on alto sax, Reggie Workman on bass and Andrew Cyrille on drums. Iyer joined them for 2014’s Wiring.

Each musician has a lengthy career as both a leader and as a sideman. It is the combination of the three of them that makes truly unique music.

Nate Chinen, in writing for the New York Times about a 2015 performance at the Village Vanguard, said of Trio 3, “One misperception about the jazz avant-garde is that it’s essentially reactive, a single-minded pushback against conventions of form. Whatever lump of truth or slander you might find in that idea, Trio 3, which is playing at the Village Vanguard, provides scant supporting evidence for it. 

“An alliance of eminent composer-improvisers now in their 70s — the alto saxophonist Oliver Lake, the bassist Reggie Workman and the drummer Andrew Cyrille — Trio 3 belongs squarely to the jazz avant-garde, both in process and pedigree. But there was no rebellious undercurrent in the group’s first set on Wednesday night, which moved briskly through its allotted hour, propelled by cooperative forces.”

Adding Iyer to this trio will make for a truly wonderful concert.

Tickets are $15. There is also a re-streaming of the performance at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT.

Lila Downs (Courtesy SFJAZZ)

Lila Downs – SFJAZZ – October 30th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

This week’s Fridays at Five concert from SFJAZZ features Lila Downs in a concert from May 2019 at the venue in support of her album, Al Chile.

Downs, who is from Oaxaca, rose to fame with her participation in the soundtrack to Julie Taymor’s 2002 film, Frida. She is the winner of one Grammy and three Latin Grammy awards.

As a friend said to me recently in an e-mail, “Hope you are able to watch Lila Downs! I love her and saw her concert in Portugal a couple of years ago!! Lively!!!”

Even though the clip we have from this concert is a ballad, expect lively for much of the performance.

Membership is required to watch the concert. Either a $5 monthly membership or a $60 annual membership. Tips are also encouraged during the streaming of the concert which will be split between the artists and SFJAZZ.

“A Swingin’ Sesame Street Celebration” (Photo© 2019 Richard Termine/Courtesy Jazz at Lincoln Center)

A Swingin’ Sesame Street Celebration – Jazz at Lincoln Center on PBS – October 30th

Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra have played with a veritable who’s who of jazz artists throughout their careers. But this weekend’s show on Jazz at Lincoln Center on PBS finds them sharing the stage with some of the biggest stars in the world.

Elmo, Bert & Ernie, Big Bird, Grover, Oscar the Grouch and more Sesame Street characters join the orchestra to sing songs from the show in A Swingin’ Sesame Street Celebration.

The one-hour concert, which took place October 2019, is scheduled to air on October 30th. As with most PBS programming, best to check your local listings for exact start times.

So if you want to go where the air is sweet….

Kristina Wong (Photo by Tom Fowler Photography/Courtesy Center Theatre Group)

Kristina Wong for Public Office – Center Theatre Group – October 30th – November 29th

We often wonder why our elected officials seem to lack a sense of humor. Or why they lack any awareness of the absurdity of it all. That isn’t the case with Kristina Wong who both serves in office and is also a performance artist with a wicked sense of humor.

She combines both those seemingly disparate sensibilities in a new one-person show called Kristina Wong for Public Office.

The 75-minute comedy performance becomes available at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT from Center Theatre Group in Los Angeles.

Kristina Wong for Public Office examines the role an artist, who is also a politician, can play in the democratic process. She also examines what that process is like, the history of voting and what it takes to run a campaign – all filtered through Wong’s unique perspective.

Tickets to watch Kristina Wong for Public Office are $10.

Pam Tanowitz, “Four Quartets” and Kathleen Chalfant (Courtesy Bard College)

Four Quartets: 2018 Premiere – Fisher Center at Bard – October 31st – November 1st

In February of this year choreographer Pam Tanowitz’s Four Quartets was performed at UCLA’s Royce Hall. This work is a collaboration with Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho, American painter Brice Marden and actress Kathleen Chalfant.

For two days this weekend Bard College will stream the 2018 premiere of Four Quartets. The work is inspired by T.S. Eliot’s monumental work.

Four Quartets is comprised of four different poems written by Eliot over a period of six years. They are Burnt NortonEasy CokerThe Dry Salvages and Little Gidding. Thematically Eliot is exploring mankind’s place in the world and our relationships with both time and God.

Four Quartets is comprised of four different poems written by Eliot over a period of six years. They are Burnt NortonEasy CokerThe Dry Salvages and Little Gidding. Thematically Eliot is exploring mankind’s place in the world and our relationships with both time and God.

The result of this collaboration has earned worldwide acclaim. Rightly so, it is a beautiful and powerful work.

Tickets range from $5 for Bard Students up to $25 to stream Four Quartets. (Pricing is based on your individual ability to afford tickets.)

There is another option as well. On Friday, October 30th at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT, you can join the premiere of a documentary, There the Dance Is (In the steps of Pam Tanowitz’s Four Quartets). The film features interviews with the dancers, Tanowitz and Chalfant.

Prior to the screening there will be a live Q&A between Tanowitz and Alistair Macaulay of the New York Times. You will also gain early access to stream the performance of Four Quartets. Tickets are $100.

Gloria Cheng (Courtesy Pittance Chamber Orchestra)

Modern Beauty – Pittance Chamber Orchestra – November 1st – 6:00 PM EST/3:00 PM PST

Pittance Chamber Orchestra is comprised of musicians from the LA Opera Orchestra. This weekend they begin rolling out a three-part performance series called Modern Beauty. The performances were all filmed during the pandemic and feature Grammy Award-wining pianist Gloria Cheng.

The first performance finds Cheng and bassoonist Judith Farmer performing Sonata for Bassoon and Piano by Billy Childs. Included in this performance will be comments from Childs.

Part two of the series will stream on November 8th and the third part will stream on November 15th.

There is no charge for the performances, but donations are strongly encouraged.

Quinteto Astor Piazzolla (Courtesy CAP UCLA)

En 3×4 – Quinteto Astor Piazzolla – November 1st – 6:00 PM EST/3:00 PM PST

One could argue that Astor Piazzolla redefined the tango with his compositions and his playing. Quinteto Astor Piazzolla celebrates his work in this performance filmed live in Buenos Aires for CAP UCLA.

On the program are seven different compositions: Verano Porteño, Camorra III, En 3×4, Soledad, Milonga del Ángel, Adios Nonino and Libertango.

The members of Quinteto Astor Piazzolla are Pablo Mainetti on bandoneón, Nicolás Guerschberg on piano, Serdar Geldymuradov on violin, Daniel Falasca on bass and Armando de la Vega on guitar.

There is no charge to watch the performance. However, donations are encouraged.

Carlos Izcaray (Courtesy of the artist)

American Youth Symphony Fall Concert – November 1st – 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST

Since its inception in the early 1960s, the American Youth Symphony has afforded Los Angeles-based students the opportunity to perform symphonic works as part of a fully-functioning orchestra. They regularly perform live concerts (commonly at Royce Hall) throughout the year.

Obviously 2020 is a different year. For their Fall Concert, Music Director Carlos Izcaray has assembled a combination of remotely-lead performances and two in-person filmed performances.

On the program is Stravinsky’s Symphonies of Wind Instruments performed by the AYS Virtual Wind & Brass Ensemble, Jessie Montgomery’s Starburst performed by the AYS String Ensemble, the world premiere of Izacary’s Bloom, performed by a Percussion Trio and Britten’s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge also performed by the AYS String Ensemble.

Through the performance both Montgomery and Izacary will discuss the creation of their two compositions.

Tickets are free, but require registration. The link in the title will take you to details and provide access to register for the concert.

Beth Malone with Seth Rudetsky – November 1st – 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM EST

Tony Award-nominee Beth Malone is best known for her performance as Adult Alison in the musical Fun Home. She recently appeared in the 2018 revival of Tony Kushner’s Angels in America. Earlier this year she starred as the title character in the off-Broadway production of The Unsinkable Molly Brown.

She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest this weekend for music and conversation about her life and career.

If you are unable to catch the live performance of Beth Malone‘s appearance, there is a re-stream on Monday, November 2nd at 3:00 PM EST/12:00 PM PST. Tickets are $25 for either date.

They are also making a VIP Upgrade available three hours prior to the live performance that allows a behind-the-scenes look at the sound check and prep for the live show. That’s an additional $25 and is only available on November 1st and requires the purchase of a ticket to the performance.

Those are our selections are your Best Bets at Home: October 30th – November 1st. As always, we offer a few reminders:

This weekend’s operas from the Metropolitan Opera are Boris Godunov on Friday, The Ghosts of Versailles on Saturday (which I strongly recommend) and Satyagraha on Sunday (another strong recommendation).

Table Top Shakespeare At Home features Cymbeline on Friday, Julius Caesar on Saturday and Antony and Cleopatra on Sunday.

You can stream all three plays in the Donmar Warehouse’s Shakespeare Trilogy on Film this weekend. St. Ann’s Warehouse is making Julius Caesar, Henry IV and The Tempest available.

The reading of David Mamet’s Race continues through Sunday.

Have a safe and enjoyable Halloween weekend. I hope you enjoy our Best Bets at Home: October 30th – November 1st.

Photo: Kamasi Washington (Courtesy of the artist)

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Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/16/best-bets-october-16th-october-18th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/16/best-bets-october-16th-october-18th/#respond Fri, 16 Oct 2020 07:01:11 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11146 Over a dozen performances to enjoy this weekend

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The first thing you might notice about Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th is I’ve left out the words at home. This doesn’t reflect a re-thinking of our coverage. Instead, for the first time during the pandemic I have a live event you can attend as part of this weekend’s listings (if you live in Los Angeles).

As I mentioned a couple weeks ago, cultural events are picking up now that we’ve entered the traditional fall season. This week proves that point as we have 13 different shows for you to consider. Plus a few reminders, just in case you don’t find something you like. But seriously, what are the odds of that?

So here are our Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th:

The company of “Shipwreck” in rehearsal (Photo courtesy The Public Theater)

Shipwreck – The Public Theater – October 16th – 12:00 PM EDT/9:00 AM PDT

Starting on Friday – for an open-ended run – is a radio play from The Public Theater called Shipwreck. This is a recent work from playwright Anne Washburn who was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 2009.

The play was scheduled to be part of The Public Theater’s 2020 season and has been recorded and produced for listening at home.

In Shipwreck a group of friends have gathered in upstate New York. What starts out as a glorious day, suddenly turns dark and stormy. That applies to both the weather and to the relationships. It turns out that even close, liberal friends, can find their belief systems challenged in present-day America.

Performing Shipwreck are Mia Barron, Brooke Bloom, Phillip James Brannon, Rob Campbell, Bill Camp, Raúl Esparza, Jenny Jules, Sue Jean Kim, Bruce McKenzie, Joe Morton, Jeremy Shamos and Richard Topol. Saheem Ali directs.

When the Almeida Theatre in London produced Shipwreck in 2019, the play earned strong reviews. Amongst them was this comment from Michael Billington writing in The Guardian: “…this is an important play that not only examines the Trump phenomenon but also asks why he was elected: one character shocks his friends by explaining that he voted for Trump because a failing democracy needs a shock to the system. It is precisely the argument you sometimes hear in Britain about a no-deal Brexit being a catalyst for change.”

Andra Day (Courtesy Buskin Records)

Andra Day – Los Angeles Philharmonic Sound/Stage – October 16th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

The fourth episode of the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Sound/Stage online series starts running on Friday and it is the first one to feature a solo artist without the orchestra: singer/songwriter Andra Day.

Day is perhaps best known for her hit song, Rise Up. She’ll perform that song along with Gold (both songs are from her 2015 album Cheers to the Fall) and also Nina Simone’s classic song, Mississippi Goddam. She will also appear in an interview as part of the program.

Included in the program as well will be performances from Flypoet Summer Classic that was filmed at The Ford.

For details about the full Sound/Stage series, please check out our full preview here.

The Donmar Warehouse production of “Henry IV” (Courtesy St. Ann’s Warehouse)

Henry IV – St. Ann’s Warehouse – October 16th – October 22nd – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT

Brooklyn’s St. Ann’s Warehouse has partnered with London’s Donmar Warehouse to stream Shakespeare Trilogy on Film, three of his plays performed by all-female casts. They began by streaming the 2013 production of Julius Caesar last week. (Don’t worry, you have another chance to see it).

This week the 2016 production of Henry IV is streaming.

Phyllida Lloyd (who, for better or worse, was the director of Mamma Mia! both on stage and screen) directed all three plays.

In this version of Henry IV, the two Shakespeare plays have been condensed into one 135-minute play. Harriet Walter, who is perhaps best known for her roles in Sense and Sensibility and Atonement, plays Henry.

Ben Brantley of the New York Times, called Walter “one of the great Shakespearean interpreters of her generation” in his review of this production when it played St. Ann’s Warehouse in 2015.

He also said of Lloyd’s Henry IV, which is set in a women’s prison, “It’s a multilayered act of liberation. Prisoners are allowed to roam the wide fields of Shakespeare’s imagination; fine actresses are given the chance to play meaty roles that have been denied them; and we get to climb out of the straitjackets of our traditional perceptions of a venerated play.”

The third play in this trilogy is The Tempest, which will become available on October 23rd – October 29th. But fear not, the entire trilogy (which includes Julius Caesar) will be available for streaming at will October 30th – November 1st. All viewings are free.

Mary Stallings (Photo by Ronald David/Courtesy SFJAZZ)

Mary Stallings and Bill Charlap Trio – SFJAZZ – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

This week’s Friday’s at Five concert from SFJAZZ features vocalist Mary Stallings with the Bill Charlap Trio (which includes Peter Washington on bass and Kenny Washington on drums). The concert is from March, 2018.

If Mary Stallings isn’t familiar to you, let me start by sharing this review from her concert.

“At 78, Stallings has entered territory that’s largely uncharted. Her voice sounds remarkably lithe and strong, and her gift for blues-tinged phrasing links her directly to matriarchs Billie Holiday and Dinah Washington.

“The only precedent for a world-class jazz vocalist sounding this good closing in on 80 is Ernestine Anderson (the extraordinary Sheila Jordan is still going strong at 89, but she’s a very different kind of jazz singer). Considering how relatively little Stallings has recorded, her performances feel like precious, ephemeral experiences, and she made the most of her time with Charlap’s trio, a unit that’s been touring and recording together for more than two decades.”

Those were the words of Andrew Gilbert writing in the San Francisco Classical Voice.

Stallings’ most recent album was last year’s Songs Were Made to Sing. She has kept some pretty fine company during her career: Tony Bennett, Billy Eckstine, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Joe Williams and the list goes on. Her best known recording was Cal Tjader Plays, Mary Stallings Sings which came out in 1960.

This collaboration with the Bill Charlap Trio should be a great way to start your weekend.

The lead cast of “Sticks & Stones”

Sticks & Stones – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

The story of David versus Goliath gets a new telling in the musical Sticks & Stones which was written by composer John McDaniel and lyricist/bookwriter Scott Logsdon.

A concert performance of Sticks & Stones will stream this weekend as a fundraiser for Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and Lady Gaga’s Born This Way Foundation.

Teen bullying is the theme of Sticks & Stones with the Biblical story serving as the setting for the story.

An impressive cast has been assembled for the concert. Audra McDonald plays David’s mother, Nizevet. Javier Muñoz, who was the first actor to take over the title role in Hamilton after Lin-Manuel Miranda left the show, plays David’s father, Jesse. George Salazar, who appeared in Be More Chill, plays King Saul. Joshua Colley (2014 revival of Les Misérables) is David and Mykal Kilgore (Motown: The Musical) is The Prophet Samuel.

The concert will be available for streaming through October 20th. There is no charge to watch Sticks & Stones, but donations are encouraged.

Aaron Diehl Trio – Caramoor – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Because I think he is one of the finest pianists working today, I’ve written about Aaron Diehl a few times and have interviewed him. He plays both jazz and classical music. (You can read the interview here.)

For this concert he’ll be performing standards and some of his own compositions with Aaron Kimmel on drums and Paul Sikivie on bass.

Rather than reiterate his credits or offer more praise, just listen to the music.

This concert is streaming from Caramoor in Katonah, NY which is a bit more than 40 miles from Manhattan. They are presenting the Aaron Diehl Trio in association with Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Tickets are free for Caramoor members. If you’re not a member, there is a $10 fee to watch the live stream concert.

Ben Williams (Courtesy his website)

Ben Williams Live – Blue Note New York – October 16th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

At the 2009 Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz International Bass Competition, the musicians had a mightily impressive jury to win over. Ron Carter, Charlie Haden, Dave Holland, Robert Hurst, Christian McBride and John Patitucci were the judges. They awarded 1st place to Ben Williams.

Williams will be performing live from Blue Note in New York on Friday.

In addition to the live stream listed above, there is an encore showing at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT.

Lest you think his competition victory was a fluke, he’s gone on to work with George Benson, Terence Blanchard, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Stefon Harris, Roy Hargrove, Chaka Kahn, Pharrell and many more.

His most recent album is I Am a Man which was released earlier this year. It’s a terrific album. He also released an instrumental-only version called I Am a Man: Mentals.

Tickets for either the live performance or the re-stream are $15.

Los Angeles Dance Festival Week #3 – October 16th – October 18th

The third week of Los Angeles Dance Festival is upon us. The show, which runs two hours, becomes available at 9:00 PM EDT/6:00 PM PDT on October 16th and will remain available until 3:00 AM EDT/12:00 AM PDT on October 19th.

This week’s line-up features Charlotte Katherine & Co (modern dance), Nannette Brodie Dance Theater (modern dance), Kybele Dance (multi-cultural contemporary dance), Poets In Motion, MarieElena Martingano & Camryn Eakes, John Castagna (contemporary ballet), Louise Reichlin & Dancers/Los Angeles Choreographers & Dancers (contemporary dance), The Dance Narrative Project, Lula Washington Dance Theatre (modern dance) and SIDFIT South Korean Artists: Lee Jihee, Kim Jubin. 

San Francisco Opera’s “Atilla” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy SF Opera)

Atilla – SF Opera – October 17th – October 18th (begins 10:00 AM through 11:59 on 10/18)

This marks the second weekend of opera productions streamed by San Francisco Opera this fall. This weekend finds a rarely performed opera by Giuseppe Verdi: Atilla.

Verdi’s opera, his ninth, had its premiere in Venice in 1846. The libretto was based on Zacharias Werner’s play Attila, König der Hunnen (Attila, King of the Huns) and was written by Temistocle Solera.

Atilla isn’t an easy man to please. Odabella, a prisoner of war, hopes to kill Atilla in retribution for his killing of her father. Ezio, a Roman Envoy, wants to cause havoc in the empire with Atilla’s help. Instead he infuriates him.

Amongst those who have survived the carnage that is dividing the empire is Foresto. He reunites with Odabella who had assumed he was dead.

Meanwhile Attila has a dream where an old man tells him not to enter Rome. He disregards the advice and marches in. In doing so, he sets off a series of events that will ultimately lead to his death.

This 2012 production marked the return of Atilla to San Francisco Opera after 21 years. Ferruccio Furlanetto sings the title role. Ana Lucrecia García sings Odabella. Diego Torre is Foresto and Quinn Kelsey sings the role of Ezio. Gabriele Lavia directed and Nicola Luisotti conducted.

In looking up reviews of this production, my favorite quote comes from Joshua Kosman writing in the San Francisco Gate. He wrote, “…it was a swift, short onslaught marked by ferocity and thunder. The difference was that only the title character died, and everybody else had a grand time.”

Atilla runs 1 hour and 50 minutes. It will become available at 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT and ends on Sunday, October 18th at 11:59 PM PDT/2:59 AM EDT on October 19th.

Orpheus performs digital concert with Liev Schriber and Karen Slack at Hilldale Park, 10/01/2020. Photo by Chris Lee (Courtesy Orpheus Chamber Orchestra)

Speaking Truth to Power – Orpheus Chamber Orchestra – October 17th – October 22nd

Most classical music fans are well-acquainted with Ludwig van Beethoven’s Egmont Overture. Fewer are familiar with the subsequent nine pieces that follow which call for soprano, narrator and orchestra.

In Beethoven’s work (inspired by a play by Johann Wolfgang Goethe) he used the story of Lamoral, Count of Egmont, whose execution prior to the start of the Eighty Years’ War inspired a movement that led to Netherlands’ independence.

The composer was using this work as a statement against Napoleon.

The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra has commissioned a new translation to reflect our present-day world. Egmont was adapted by playwright/translator Philip Boehm.

Joining Orpheus for this performance are Liev Schreiber as the narrator and Karen Slack singing the soprano parts.

Schreiber won a Tony Award for his performance in the 2005 production of David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross. He also starred in the Showtime series Ray Donovan.

Slack made her Metropolitan Opera debut in their 2006 production of Verdi’s Luisa Miller. She also sang the role of Emelda Griffith in Terence Blanchard’s Champion at San Francisco Opera. (That production will be streaming next week by SFJAZZ beginning on October 21st.)

The concert was recorded in Beechwood Park in Hillsdale, New Jersey, following social distancing guidelines.

Speaking Truth to Power begins streaming at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT on October 17th and remains available through October 22nd. Tickets to watch the performance are $15.

Lizz Wright (Photo by Jesse Kit/Courtesy Kurland Agency)

Lizz Wright – Mandolin – October 17th – 9:00 PM EDT/6:00 PM PDT $15

I’ve seen singer Lizz Wright several times in concert. From the first time I heard her 2003 record, Salt, I was hooked. She has a beautiful voice and has a unique ability to make each song she sings her own.

Rather inexplicably she has only recorded five other albums since her debut. The most recent was 2017’s Grace. She does appear on No Beginning No End 2 by José James which was released earlier this year.

If you don’t know Lizz Wright, I strongly encourage checking out this concert. If you do, you know how terrific it’ll be.

Ticket are $15.

Jon Lawrence Rivera (Photo by Kelly Stuart)

March – Los Angeles LGBT Center Anita May Rosentein Campus Parking Lot – October 17th – November 15th

Our first live and in-person event (and the reason the title of this column was changed). The venue is the parking lot below the Anita May Rosentein Campus at the Los Angeles LGBT Center. Sixteen cars will be admitted per performance. The audio will be broadcast to you through your radio.

The title of this play is March and it was conceived and directed by Jon Lawrence Rivera. The cast has contributed to the writing of the play during exercises and rehearsals.

A pandemic is gripping the world in March. The time could be a quarter century into the future – or not. Three Trans/Gender Non-Confirming women need to find a place where The Military will not find them. Not much is known beyond that. A little mystique never hurt anyone, did it?

The cast of March includes Miss Barbie Q (MJ), Chad Christopher, Matthew Clark, Amir Levi, Marcelino Mendoza, Coretta Monk, and Roland Ruiz.

What makes this so appealing is that Rivera is one of the most interesting and talented writer/directors working in Los Angeles theater. I have no idea what to expect from March, but I have absolutely no doubt that it will be fascinating.

Performances take place only on Saturday and Sunday. There are two performances each night. One at 7:30 PM and one at 9:00 PM. The per car price to attend is $20.

Keala Settle (Courtesy her Facebook page)

Keala Settle & Seth Rudetsky – October 18th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Anyone who saw The Greatest Showman knows who Keala Settle is. She introduced the song This Is Me to the world in her role as Lettie Lutz, the bearded lady in the film. She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest this week for his conversation/concert show.

If you only know Settle from that film, you’re missing out. She was memorable as Norma Valverde in Hands on a Hardbody. It’s a role that yielded multiple nominations including a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She’s appeared in the musicals Les Misérables, Waitress, Hairspray and South Pacific.

If the Sunday live performance does not work for you, there will be an encore showing of the concert on Monday, October 19th at 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT. Tickets for each showing are $25.

That’s the official list of Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th. A few reminders before we go:

Donizetti Week at the Metropolitan Opera concludes this weekend with Maria Stuarda on Friday; Roberto Devereux on Saturday and Don Pasquale on Sunday. You can read our full preview here.

Table Top Shakespeare: At Home has the following plays this weekend: Henry VI, Part 2 on Friday; Henry VI, Part 3 on Saturday and Richard III on Sunday. You can read our preview here.

Part 2 of Evelina Fernández’s A Mexican Trilogy is now streaming from Latino Theater Company. The play is called Hope and will be available through October 22nd. For details read our preview here.

That is my complete list of your Best Bets: October 16th – October 18th. Whatever you choose to watch, I hope you enjoy!

Photo: Aaron Diehl (Photo by Maria Jarzyna/Courtesy AaronDiehl.com)

Update: Center Theatre Group has changed the dates for Luis Alfaro’s trilogy of plays. Though originally announced to start this week, they have been rescheduled to start November 6th. We have removed “Electricidad” from this weekend’s Best Bets.

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Jeremy Pelt and George Cables at Dizzy’s https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/14/jeremy-pelt-and-george-cables-at-dizzys/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/14/jeremy-pelt-and-george-cables-at-dizzys/#respond Wed, 14 Oct 2020 07:01:38 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11118 Live from Dizzy's

October 15th

7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT

10:30 PM EDT/7:30 PM PDT

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Trumpeter Jeremy Pelt released a gorgeous new album this year called The Art of Intimacy, Volume 1. He’s joined on the album by bassist Peter Washington and pianist George Cables. This Thursday Pelt and Cables will reunite for this week’s Live From Dizzy’s concert. The concert will be live at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT with a re-stream for the West Coast at 10:30 PM EDT/7:30 PM PDT.

Pelt began his career in 2000. Amongst the artists with whom he’s performed and/or recorded are Bobby “Blue” Bland, Ravi Coltrane, The Duke Ellington Big Band, Jimmy Heath, Roy Hargrove Big Band, Lewis Nash Septet, Ralph Peterson, Bobby Short, Wayne Shorter, The Village Vanguard Orchestra, Cedar Walton, Cassandra Wilson and Nancy Wilson.

As a leader, he’s recorded ten albums and toured all over the world. To hear how good he and Cables are, listen to this track from the album.

Which brings me to George Cables.

You know you have to be a very fine musician if Dexter Gordon invites you to join his band. Cables got that invitation in 1977. By that time Cables had already worked with Joe Henderson, Freddie Hubbard, Sonny Rollins and Woody Shaw. After Gordon he spent a lot of time working with Art Pepper.

The collaborations kept coming. Art Blakey, Bobby Hutcherson, Dizzy Gillespie, Roy Haynes, Max Roach, Sarah Vaughn and Tony Williams are just a few of the jazz legends with whom Cables has worked.

As a leader he has recorded over 35 albums.

Together these two artists create some absolutely beautiful music. Thursday night’s show from Dizzy’s seems like it will be the perfect tonic for these troubled times. Why not escape for an hour or so with Pelt and Cables?

Tickets are pay what you can with a suggested minimum donation of $10. For tickets for the livestream go here. For tickets for the re-stream go here.

Photo: Jeremy Pelt (Photo by Kasia Idzkowska/Courtesy JeremyPelt.net)

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Jazz Stream: October 6th – October 11th https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/06/jazz-stream-october-6th-october-11th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/06/jazz-stream-october-6th-october-11th/#respond Tue, 06 Oct 2020 07:01:58 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=10954 Soloists and Ensembles/Legends and Rising Stars in 11 concerts

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Jazz Stream: October 6th – October 11th packs in a lot of great music. Eleven concerts to be exact. As you might expect there’s a mix of household names and other artists who, at some point, will no doubt also be commonly known.

Amongst the artists performing are Chick Corea in a solo concert from his studio, Wadada Leo Smith performing solo trumpet and piano and cutting edge musicians like trumpeter Theo Croker and singer Melanie Charles.

So let’s get right to the music. Here is Jazz Stream: October 6th – October 11th:

The Le Bouef Brothers – Smalls – October 6th – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

No reason to be shy about this one, identical twin brothers Remy and Pascal Le Boeuf are considered amongst the most adventurous and creative musicians working in jazz. And a little classical. In fact, they straddle and blur the lines between the two to create music all their own.

Their most recent recording was Imaginist which was released in 2016 and finds the brothers working with JACK Quartet.

Remy plays alto sax and Pascal plays piano. For this gig from Smalls in New York, they will be joined by Martin Nevin on bass and Allan Mednard on drums.

The Melanie Charles Quartet – Smalls – October 8th – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

Melanie Charles is a singer, songwriter, flautist born in Brooklyn and of Haitian descent. Any attempt to pigeon-hole her music into just one style would be foolish. Jazz, soul, Haitian music and more find their way into her music and the end result is mesmerizing.

Her most recent album, The Girl with the Green Shoes, was released in 2017. In 2019 she released a single called Trill Suite, No. 1 (Daydreaming/Skylark) which pairs Aretha Franklin’s song Daydreaming with the Hoagy Carmichael/Johnny Mercer song Skylark. The result is amazing.

For this show she will be joined by Axel Laugart on piano, Jonathan Michel on bass and Anwar Marshall on drums.

Janis Siegel with John Dimartino – Birdland – October 8th – 7:00 PM/4:00 PM EDT

You know Janis Siegel as one of the founding members of The Manhattan Transfer. Her work with that famous vocal group has been acknowledged with ten Grammy Awards.

John Dimartino is a fixture in the New York jazz scene. His most recent album, Passion Flower, celebrates the music of Billy Strayhorn.

He and Siegel collaborated on 2014’s Night Songs and, along with Nanny Assis, comprise The Requine Trio. Their album, Honey and Air, was released in 2015.

For this concert Siegel and Dimartino will be performing music by Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein, bossa nova, new jazz songs and the Great American Songbook. If you’ve ever heard Siegel sing, with or without The Manhattan Transfer, you know she can swing!

Tickets are $23.50 

Wadada Leo Smith Solo – Vision Festival Healing Soul – October 8th – 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

The Vision Festival Healing Soul launches on Friday and each day they are offering access to a full day of programming online. They start very strongly with trumpeter, composer, improviser and multi-instrumentalist Wadada Leo Smith. He will be performing solo trumpet and piano.

As someone who has embraced music from multiple cultures and stands as one of the finest avant-garde musicians in jazz, this should be a very interesting concert.

Amongst my favorite albums he’s recorded is A Cosmic Rhythm With Each Stroke with Vijay Iyer. The video below shows how powerful his music is and how impactful just a solo trumpet can be.

$16.74 (that includes service charges) will also give you access to Jazz Response to Humanity in Crisis – in and outside of the Jazz Community. This is a Roundtable discussion with William Parker, Amirtha Kidambi, Fay Victor, Arturo O’Farrill, Gerald Cleaver, and JD Allen; moderated by Patricia Parker. 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Bill Charlap: An Evening of Solo Piano – Live From Dizzy’s Club – October 8th – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT

Pianist Bill Charlap will perform songs by George Gershwin, Leonard Bernstein, Jerome Kern, Hoagy Carmichael and more when he takes to the piano for this solo concert from Dizzy’s Club in New York.

Last week Dizzy’s Club, a part of Jazz at Lincoln Center, re-launched their streaming concerts. They have started strong and this concert will certainly be one of this week’s highlights.

There is a suggested price of $10 to watch the show live. If that timing is not convenient for you, there will be a rerun of the concert three hours later at 10:30 PM EDT/7:30 PM PDT.

Abraham Burton Quartet – Smalls – October 9th – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

Growing up in Greenwich Village in the 1970s and 1980s would provide a great location to explore the world of jazz in New York. That’s precisely what tenor and alto sax musician Abraham Burton did. No wonder he ended up playing jazz music.

Though he doesn’t have a large catalog of recordings as a leader, he has recorded and performed with some of the genre’s biggest and brightest stars including Kenny Barron, James Carter, Roy Hargrove, Louis Hayes, Roy Haynes, Christian McBride, Jackie McLean, Mulgrew Miller, Nicholas Payton, Wallace Roney, Jimmy Smith, Horace Tapscott and Jimmy Woode.

He is a featured performer on the 2011 Grammy Award winning album Mingus Big Band Live at Jazz Standard.

Joining him for this gig will be Dezron Douglas on bass and Eric McPherson on drums

Thelonious Monk Celebration – SFJAZZ – October 9th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Jazz legend Thelonious Monk would be 103 this year. Two years ago, on the occasion of his 101st birthday, SFJazz celebrated him with a concert that featured three pianists: Joanne Brackeen, Helen Sung and Kris Davis.

Brackeen is a 2018 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master. Her career took off when she became the first female member of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers. Stints with Joe Henderson and Stan Getz followed before she struck out on her own. She is also the composer of over 300 pieces.

Sung began playing classical music, but switched to jazz and has never looked back. She has worked with such artists as Terri Lyne Carrington, Regina Carter, Ron Carter, Wynton Marsalis, Wayne Shorter, Clark Terry and one of my personal favorites, Cécile McLorin Salvant. Her most recent recording is 2018’s Sung with Words: A Collaboration with Dana Gioia.

Davis is a highly-acclaimed pianist who was named DownBeat Magazine’s Rising Star Pianist in 2017 and Rising Star Artist in 2018. She has performed and/or recorded with Terri Lyne Carrington, Michael Formanek, Mary Halvorson, Julian Lage, Ingrid Laubrock, Tony Malaby, Eric Revis, Tyshawn Sorey, Craig Taborn and John Zorn.

Registration is required to view the show. Monthly membership of $5 or annual membership of $60 are your options.

Theo Croker – Blue Note – October 9th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Can music be in someone’s blood by virtue of their relatives? If so, Theo Croker is blessed as this impressive trumpeter is the grandson of the legendary Doc Cheatham. Croker’s father is, amongst other things, a civil rights activist. If you combine the two you start, but only just, to paint a picture of who Theo Croker is.

Early in his career he was associated with singer Dee Dee Bridgewater, but has established a music and style all his own. Collaborations with Common and Ari Lennox live alongside his five albums. His most recent album, Star People Nation, was released last year. It’s a stunning record that offers a contemporary approach to jazz.

This concert will be streamed live from Blue Note in New York. Joining Croker will be Mike King on piano, Eric Wheeler on double bass and Shekwage Ode on drums.

Tickets are $15. There will be a re-stream of the concert three hours later at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT.

The Cyrus Chestnut Trio – Smoke Jazz and Supper Club – October 9th – October 10th – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

I first became aware of pianist Cyrus Chestnut when I heard his 1966 album Earth Stories. From there I immediately picked up everything I could find. I still do.

His playing is, in a word, sublime. He plays everything from standards to music from Charlie Brown television shows to spirituals to classical music. Kaleidoscope, his most recent album, was released in 2018.

This weekend he’ll be playing two shows from New York’s Smoke Jazz and Supper Club. Each performance will feature Peter Washington on bass and Willie Jones III on drums.

Tickets are $11 (which includes the $1 service charge).

To purchase tickets for Friday go here.

To purchase tickets for Saturday go here.

Chick Corea Live in Concert: From Mozart to Monk – October 10th – 4:00 PM EDT/1:00 PM PDT

When you have received 65 Grammy nominations and received 23 of the awards, when you are a NEA Jazz Master, when you’ve recorded 14 albums with Miles Davis (including Bitches Brew) and when musicians from all genres hail your work, you don’t need an introduction. (Of course, that was an introduction, wasn’t it?)

Chick Corea will be performing live from his studio on Saturday. The show is called From Mozart to Monk which reflects the pianist’s versatility. This is a one-time only event. There will be no re-stremaing of the performance. You see it (which you should) or you don’t (at your own peril.)

Tickets are $20.

Melissa Aldana Quintet – Smalls – October 11th – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

Saxophonist Melissa Aldana won the prestigious Thelonious Monk International Jazz Saxophone Competition in 2013. She is a member of the all-star jazz ensemble Artemis and she’s good. Real good.

If you read Cultural Attaché you know we’ve written about her before. So rather than repeat those details, simply listen to the music.

For this gig from Smalls in New York, she will be joined by Charles Altura on guitar, Sullivan Fortner on piano, Pablo Menares on bass and Kush Abadey on drums.

Which of these concerts will you watch? The established artists or the newer performers who continue to make jazz exciting two decades into this century? You can get a taste of it all with any or all of these eleven concerts.

That’s Jazz Stream: October 6th – October 11th. Enjoy the music

Photo:Theo Croker (Photo by Sam Croskery/Courtesy of DL Media)

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Jazz Stream: September 29th – October 4th https://culturalattache.co/2020/09/28/jazz-stream-september-29th-october-4th/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/09/28/jazz-stream-september-29th-october-4th/#respond Mon, 28 Sep 2020 16:35:33 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=10831 Nine jazz concerts to enjoy this week

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Previous weeks our Jazz Stream column has had a healthy mix of legendary performers and newer artists. For Jazz Stream: September 29th – October 4th, lesser-known artists take center stage. It isn’t that some of them aren’t well known, but each of the artists listed this week deserves a bigger audience than they currently have.

New York’s Village Vanguard, which has featured weekly performances by jazz legends, is taking some time off to address some technical issues with their streaming efforts. We’ll be sure to let you know when they are back up and running.

Sit back, relax and explore some truly fine artists who are performing and now find their place on this week’s Jazz Stream: September 29th – October 4th.

Barry Stephenson “The Iconoclast” Album Release – September 30th – Smalls – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

On Wednesday, bassist Barry Stephenson is releasing his new album The Iconoclast. To celebrate the album’s release, he is performing at Smalls in New York.

Stephenson has performed with established veterans like Diane Schuur, Nicholas Payton and David Sanborn. He’s also performed with some of the newer jazz musicians on the scene including Jazzmeia Horn, Theo Croker and Cyrille Aimée.

Joining Stephenson for this performance are Patrick Bartley Jr on alto sax, Stacy Dillard on tenor sax and Kush Abadey on drums. You might recall we previously had one of Stacy Dillard’s shows on our Jazz Stream listings.

Spike Wilner Quartet – October 1st – Smalls – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

A passion for the music of Scott Joplin lead Spike Wilner to take an interest in ragtime, stride and jazz. While his passion for the music might have started with the traditions set by the likes of Fats Waller, his playing can also be exactly the music you’d expect to hear in a small smoky club in New York.

Wilner and his fellow musicians are known for playing until late in the evening. As this performance takes place in the late afternoon, they won’t be playing that long, but close your eyes, pour yourself an early cocktail and take in the music.

Joining Wilner for this show are Joe Magnarelli on trumpet, Peter Washington on bass and Joe Farnsworth on drums.

Catherine Russell Trio – Jazz at Lincoln Center – October 1st – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT

Vocalist Catherine Russell is comfortable singing rock ‘n’ roll (she sang back-up with David Bowie for years) and singing jazz and blues. She’ll be showcasing the latter when she helps re-launch Live from Dizzy’s Club (part of Jazz at Lincoln Center.)

For more on Russell, you can read my interview with her here. She’s immensely talented and has had an interesting and diverse career.

This show will be live streamed on Thursday. There will be an encore showing of the performance at 10:30 PM EDT/7:30 PM PDT.

Joining Russell for this show will be Matt Munisteri on guitar and Tal Ronen on bass.

Tickets for the live performance or encore presentation are “Pay What You Can,” but the suggested minimum donation is $10.

John Ellis – The Jazz Gallery – October 1st – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PDT & 9:30 PM EDT/6:30 PM PDT

Earlier this year saxophonist John Ellis released his eleventh album, When the World Was Young. The album features songs by Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis (with considerable help from Chuck Wayne) and the standard, How High the Moon.

He will be performing two sets at New York’s The Jazz Gallery. The first set is at 7:30 PM EDT and the second is at 9:30 PM EDT. Tickets to live stream the sets are $15 for non-members/$5 for members per set.

Ellis loves jazz and has a particular fondness (vis-a-vis his band Double Wide) and passion for New Orleans style jazz.

Joining him for these two sets are Kevin Hays on piano, Reuben Rogers on bass and Kendrick Scott on drums.

James Carter Organ Trio – October 1st – Blue Note – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

Both readers and critics have regularly included saxophonist James Carter on their list of best baritone sax players. In addition to 19 albums as a leader, Carter has performed with Kathleen Battle, Lester Bowie, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Herbie Hancock, Wynton Marsalis and his cousin, Regina Carter. In other words, he’s perhaps the best known musician on this week’s list.

Carter is enormously talented and a truly fine improviser. His playing is challenging at times and comfortable at others. His organ trio is amongst the most interesting trios in jazz right now.

Tickets to watch this live performance are $15. There will be a re-stream of the concert at 11:00 PM EDT/8:00 PM PDT the same night.

Bobi CéspedesSFJAZZ – October 2nd – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

If you aren’t from the Bay Area, you might not be familiar with Cuban jazz singer Bobi Céspedes. Now’s your chance to get acquainted.

In June she released her most recent album, Mujer y Cantante. The album celebrates son music of Cuba – a style of music that mixes African and Spanish influences.

John Santos, who appears with his sextet in the clip above, joins as her special guest for this concert from 2019.

This concert is part of SFJAZZ’s Fridays at Five series. To watch the show requires signing up for either a one-month membership ($5) or a one-year membership ($60). Either will give you access to this show and either a full month of upcoming shows or a full year.

Joey Alexander – Blue Note – October 2nd – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT $15

Pianist Joey Alexander released his most recent album, Warna, earlier this year. The Verve Records album takes its name for the word for color is Alexander’s native Indonesian language of Bahasa. All of 17 years old, this marks Alexander’s sixth album.

When his album Eclipse came out in 2018, I interviewed him about the project and his approach to music. You can read that interview here.

Some of the other BlueNote concerts are filmed in advance, this performance (as well as James Carter’s) will stream live from the New York venue. Joining Alexander for this performance are Daniel Winshall on bass and Tyson Jackson on drums.

Tickets to stream the concert are $15.

Victor Lewis Quintet – October 3rd – Smalls – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

Kenny Barron, Art Farmer, Stan Getz, Dexter Gordon, Bobby Hutcherson, Earl Klugh, Hubert Laws, Abbey Lincoln, David Sanborn, Wood Shaw and Grover Washington Jr. have all at one time or another called on drummer Victor Lewis to join them in the recording studio or on the road.

Like most jazz musicians, Lewis functions as both a sideman and a leader. It is as a leader with his quintet that Lewis will be taking the stage at Small’s on Saturday afternoon. Lewis is considered one of the best drummers working today.

This clip does not show Lewis with his quintet, but does show off his fierce skills.

Joining Lewis will be Josh Evans on trumpet, Abraham Burton on tenor sax, Dave Kikoski on piano and Ed Howard on bass.

Brian Charette Piano Trio – October 4th – Smalls – 4:45 PM EDT/1:45 PM PDT

Brian Charette has played piano and organ throughout his career. For this gig at Smalls, he’ll be at the piano with his trio: Joe Martin on bass and Ari Hoenig on drums.

A fixture on the jazz scene in New York, you most commonly will find Charette playing the organ. He’s recorded and/or performed with Lou Donaldson, Chaka Khan, Cyndi Lauper, Joni Mitchell, Paul Simon and Kamasi Washington. He also had the late Roy Hargrove as a special guest at a Smalls performance in 2017. For that gig, he was at the piano.

He performs less frequently on the piano. Sunday’s concert will offer an opportunity to see and hear what Charette does with a single keyboard. It should be terrific.

That’s the full line-up for Jazz Stream: September 29th – October 4th. Enjoy the jazz and have a terrific week.

Photo of James Carter courtesy of his website.

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