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  • The 2025 edition of International Jazz Day was celebrated in more than 190 countries on April 30, with Abu Dhabi selected as the Global Host City.
  • Comprising rapper Showyousuck and producer STV SLV, Air Credits wrote its newest EP about a resource-strapped world not unlike our own. WBEZ's Vocalo Radio sat down with the 2018 Slingshot artist.
  • Works & Process, the performing arts series at the Guggenheim, begins its fall 2021 Season with a return to evening performances in the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Peter B. Lewis Theater this September and October at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10128. Following a spring season featuring robust in-person rotunda performances at a time when theaters remained dark, this fall Works & Process will resume its signature behind the scenes Artist-driven programs, uniquely blending performance highlights with insightful artists discussions all prior to premiere. Tickets on sale now for September and October programs at www.worksandprocess.org. Additional programs will be announced later in the fall. Works & Process programs will be 60 minutes, ticketed at full capacity, and require everyone to be fully vaccinated. All individuals will be required to wear a face mask at all times. At this time, children under the age of 12, for whom there is currently no available vaccination, will not be permitted to attend. The Metropolitan Opera: Fire Shut Up in My Bones by Terence Blanchard, libretto by Kasi Lemmons Monday, September 20, 7:30 pm Ahead of the Metropolitan Opera's 2021–22 season, learn more about the opening night production Fire Shut Up in My Bones—the Met's first performance of an opera by a Black composer. Written by Grammy Award–winning jazz musician and composer Terence Blanchard, this adaptation of Charles M. Blow's moving memoir features a libretto by filmmaker Kasi Lemmons. The opera tells a poignant and profound story about a young man's journey to overcome a life of trauma and hardship. James Robinson and Camille A. Brown co-direct this new staging; Brown, who is also the production's choreographer, becomes the first Black director to create a mainstage Met production. Prior to its premiere, General Manager Peter Gelb moderates a discussion with members of the creative team and cast members present highlights.    New York City Ballet: Sidra Bell and Andrea Miller Sunday, September 26, 7:30 pm Just days ahead of New York City Ballet's Fall Fashion Gala, choreographers Sidra Bell's and Andrea Miller's illuminate their first-ever works for the stage at NYCB. Bell's collaboration features costumes by Brooklyn-based designer Christopher John Rogers, and Miller's collaboration with Indigenous Colombian singer Lido Pimienta featurescostumes by Paris-based Colombian-American designer Esteban Cortázar. Both will premiere on September 30. NYCB company members will perform excerpts ahead of the premiere, and Associate Artistic Director Wendy Whelanwill moderate a discussion with Bell and Miller.   The Santa Fe Opera: M. Butterfly by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang Monday, October 18, 7:30 pm Joincomposer Huang Ruo and writer David Henry Hwang as they discuss their newest collaboration, M. Butterfly. Inspired by the true story of a French diplomat who carried on a twenty-year love affair with a star of the Peking Opera, M. Butterfly is based on Hwang's 1988 Pulitzer Prize finalist and Tony Award–winning Broadway play of the same name. Hear excerpts ahead of the production's world premiere as part of Santa Fe Opera's 2022 season. TICKETS & VENUE $25, $15 partial view, available for purchase online only House seats may be available for $1,000+ Friends of Works & Process. To purchase house seats, email friends@worksandprocess.org. House seats may be released to the public before performances. For more information, call 212 758 0024 or visit worksandprocess.org. Peter B. Lewis Theater Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 1071 Fifth Avenue at 89th Street Subway: 4, 5, 6, or Q train to 86th Street Bus: M1, M2, M3, or M4 bus on Madison or Fifth Avenue Heath and Safety Information - Your health and safety are important to us. Every audience member must be fully vaccinated and will be required to show proof in person of vaccination authorized by the FDA or WHO, against COVID-19 before entering the theater. Proof of vaccination may include a CDC Vaccination Card (or photo), NYC COVID Safe app, New York State Excelsior Pass, NYC Vaccination Record, or an official immunization record from outside New York City or the United States. Full vaccination is defined as being two weeks or more after receipt of the second dose in a two-dose series, or two weeks or more after receipt of one dose of a single-dose vaccine.Visitors over the age of 18 will also be asked to show a photo ID. Full vaccination is defined as being 2 weeks or more after receipt of the second dose in a 2-dose series, or 2 weeks or more after receipt of one dose of a single-dose vaccine. At this time, children under the age of 12, for whom there is currently no available vaccination, will not be permitted to attend this performance regardless of the vaccination status of their guardian. Bring your three-ply face mask, N-95, or equivalent to keep yourself and one another safe. All individuals will be required to wear a face mask at all times. There is no coat check; please do not bring bags. Do not attend if in the ten days leading up to the performance, you have tested positive or experienced COVID-19 symptoms or come into close or proximate contact with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19 case. If you are unable to attend due to COVID-19 exposure, please contact boxoffice@guggenheim.org in advance of the performance. An inherent risk of exposure to COVID-19 exists in any public environment where people are present. Those visiting the museum do so at their own risk of exposure. Lead funding for Works & Process season is provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Ford Foundation, Christian Humann Foundation, Leon Levy Foundation, Mertz Gilmore Foundation, NYC COVID-19 Response and Impact Fund, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Evelyn Sharp Foundation, The Geraldine Stutz Trust with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Works & Process at the Guggenheim  Described by The New York Times as "forward thinking" and "an exceptional opportunity to understand something of the creative process," since 1984 Works & Process has welcomed New Yorkers to see, hear, and meet the most acclaimed performers and creators of the performing arts. Led by Producer Caroline Cronson and General Manager Duke Dang, Works & Process nurtures and champions new works, shapes representation, amplifies underrepresented voices and performing arts cultures, and offers audiences unprecedented access to generations of leading creators and performers. Artist-driven programs blending performance highlights with insightful discussions are, when permitted, followed by receptions in the rotunda, producing an opportunity for collective learning and community building, while also helping to cultivate a more inclusive, fair, and representative world. Approximately fifty performances take place annually in the Guggenheim's Frank Lloyd Wright–designed, 273-seat Peter B. Lewis Theater. Every summer Works & Process produces a program at the Guggenheim Bilbao as well. In 2017 Works & Process established a residency program inviting artists to create newly commissioned performances made in and for the iconic Guggenheim rotunda. In 2020 Works & Process Artists (WPA) Virtual Commissions was created financially support 84 new works and over 280 artists and nurture their creative process during the pandemic. To forge a path for artists to safely gather, create, and perform during the pandemic, from summer 2020 through spring 2021 Works & Process pioneered and produced 250 bubble residencies supporting 247 artists, made possible through the generous support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. On March 20, 2021, after over a year of shuttered indoor performances, with special guidance from New York State's Department of Health, Works & Process, in the rotunda of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, was the first cultural organization to reopen live indoor ticketed performances. worksandprocess.org Works & Process bubble residencies and Works & Process reopening performances are made possible through the generosity of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, and Stephen Kroll Reidy. Works & Process has received support from the U.S. Small Business Administration Shuttered Venue Operators Grant and Paycheck Protection Program and NYC Employee Retention Grant Program.
  • Alon Nechustan and Brooklyn Music School present the world premiere of Mestizo on Friday, September 24, 2021 at 7pm at the Brooklyn Music School Theater, 126 St. Felix Street, Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY. The event is FREE and spots can be reserved online at brooklynmusicschool.org/calendar/2021/9/24/mestizo-original-music-for-strings-and-percussion. Mestizo is a new, groundbreaking work by pianist and composer Alon Nechushtan that explores the hidden connections between Native American melodies, our region as tribal land of the Lenni-Lenape, and the broad jubilation of rhythm, pulse and dance as global syntax. Mestizo is an expression of connectedness to land, people, traditions and language, premiering on National Native-American Day and scored for the award-winning Tesla String Quartet with the Grammy-winning percussionist Samuel Torres. "I wanted to tell a multilayered story through a series of fourteen vignettes," said Alon Nechustan. "Each crossing, exploring and honoring in a different rhetoric and musical angle the migration, beauty, uniqueness and relevance that Native American music — and a particularly regional one, right from our Brooklyn, home of the Lenni-Lenape, Mantaukett, Mohegan, Algonquin, among others — have in the 'now' moment."  "Mestizo" means a person of mixed indigenous heritage, the term did not have a fixed meaning in the colonial period. It was a formal label for individuals in official documentation, such as censuses, parish registers, Inquisition trials, and other matters. Priests and royal officials might label individuals as mestizos, but the term was also used for self-identification for racial mixing that only came into usage in the twentieth century; it was not a colonial-era term. In the modern era, Mestizo is used to denote the positive unity of race mixtures in modern Latin America. In the modern era, particularly in Latin America, Mestizo has become more of a cultural term, with the term Indian being reserved exclusively for people who have maintained a separate indigenous ethnic identity, language, tribal affiliation, etc. "I chose this title, Mestizo, for the composition inspired by various Native American dances, songs and melodies as an allegory to the diversity and hybrid mix of compositional elements," said Nechustan. "The traditional monodic character and contour of the melodic content, with the somehow untraditional pairing of sonorous harmonic interpolative and suggestive string instrument orchestration, while hovering above them all, the relentless percussive droning, with its earthy percussive pulse. For my objective reasons only, the title meant to honor the work as a personal creative endeavor, while implying the core nature of the inspirational and often surprising relevance it may have to our contemporary times." "I must clarify that Mestizo in its essence is a 'pure work of fiction' and not a note to note documentation of assembled melodies," continued Nechustan. "On the contrary, I admit to have taken a tremendous amount of liberty in the development of sometimes a single melodic nucleus, devising several of my own creations in regarding to voice leading, harmonic language or form, often straying from the puritan approach to arranging-'documenting' thus turning the drafting canvas upside down and forming my own music inspired by the aforementioned traditions - not the other way around." Nechushtan is quick to point out that Mestizo is a work of fiction, but itʼs one that resonates with the past and is built from extensive background research and sourcing. The performing ensemble group— which is led by Tesla String Quartet is joined in many exotic percussions by grammy winning, Columbian born Samuel Torres, who has an un-parallel ability to tell a story though his percussion gestures, grooves and beats and the unique hybrid between these contrasting musical families- the strings and the percussion section —is the heart of the driving force of the composition: "I wanted these two core elements, percussion and strings, stand like fire, wind, earth and water elements: each essential for this composition and interact with each other, as our natural preconception is that string quartet is a classical instrument and percussion as a latin, or regional instrument. I wanted to refute this - to have them both equally lead the story and be the protagonists," Nechushtan said. This project was supported by City Artist Corps Grant. COVID-19 Protocols Masks are required on the BMS premises.  It is suggested that everyone in the BMS building remain 6ft apart or more. Distancing of 3ft is acceptable if masks are kept on and space has proper ventilation. We give all who enter the BMS building a temperature check and provide symptom & exposure waivers for any individuals who enter the facility to allow for contact tracing. All office personnel have been trained on the process for responding to COVID-related incidents, and alerting the leadership administration. We clean and sanitize the BMS facility frequently and have PPE/sanitizing supplies throughout the building. Alon Nechushtan's music adventures has brought him to various far corners of the globe such as the Yokohama 'Rejoicing Sounds' Festival in Japan with his contemporary orchestral compositions, The Manila Cultural Center of the Arts, with his Clarinet Concerto for the Philippines Philharmonic Orchestra, The Sao-Paolo Brazil Jewish Music Festival with his groove based Quintet Talat, Toronto and Montreal with his words beyond Jazz Trio and Tel Aviv New Music Biennale with his Compositions for Large Ensemble. Alon has performed in venues such as Carnegie Hall, Jazz @ Lincoln Center, Central Park Summer Stage, The Blue Note Jazz Club and the Kennedy Center with his projects as a band leader of various groups or as an in-demand sideman. in October 2015 the Kennedy Center has commissioned from Alon Nechushtan a new piece for Billy Strayhorn Centennial Celebration, following by a Far East tour in China and Philippines, along with Jazz Festivals in Belo Horizonte-Brazil, Israel. In 2017 the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C has commissioned from Alon Nechushtan a new program of Thelonious Monk's less-known compositions. All About Jazz magazine called him "A fantastic pianist-composer with abundant chemistry and boundless eclecticism," while DownBeat Magazine recognized him as "a talent to watch, with a surfeit of ideas, an unbridled spirit and bold, two-fisted sense of Architecture." www.musicalon.com Praised for their "superb capacity to find the inner heart of everything they play, regardless of era, style, or technical demand" (The International Review of Music), the Tesla Quartet brings refinement and prowess to both new and established repertoire. Dubbed "technically superb" by The Strad, the Tesla Quartet has won top prizes in numerous international competitions, most recently taking Second Prize as well as the Haydn Prize and Canadian Commission Prize at the 12th Banff International String Quartet Competition. In 2018, the Tesla Quartet released its debut album of Haydn, Ravel, and Stravinsky quartets on the Orchid Classics label to critical acclaim. BBC Music Magazine awarded the disc a double 5-star rating and featured it as the "Chamber Choice" for the month of December. Gramophone praised the quartet for its "tautness of focus and refinement of detail." Their second disc on the Orchid Classics label, a collaboration with clarinetist Alexander Fiterstein featuring quintets by Mozart, Finzi, John Corigliano and Carolina Heredia, was released in October 2019. Celebrated Latin Grammy Award winning percussionist, composer, and arranger Samuel Torres was born in Bogota, Colombia. He was artistically nurtured in this bustling and culturally sophisticated metropolis where jazz and classical music share the stage with salsa and an infinite variety of Colombian folkloric idioms. Torres's earliest exposure to music came at home, thanks to an extended family of musicians and access to a wealth of Colombian music genres, from the infectious rhythms of the cumbia and vallenato to styles which reflect a range of African, indigenous and European influences, including the porro, bambuco and pasillo. Having participated in a number of Grammy, Latin Grammy and Emmy award-winning and nominated productions, Torres continues cultivating a successful musical career that will no doubt have many milestones to come. The Brooklyn Music School (BMS) is a community school for the performing arts, founded in 1909 as the Brooklyn Music School Settlement. As a part of the Downtown Brooklyn Cultural District, BMS is a long-standing member of the National Guild of Community Schools of the Arts. Today, BMS is committed to serving the community by providing high quality music and dance instruction without regard to income, age, previous experience or professional aspirations. Learn more at brooklynmusicschool.org.
  • The Rose Parade, also commonly known as the Rose Bowl Parade, is the highlight of the annual Tournament of Roses that greets the new year in Pasadena every year since way back in 1890. The Rose Parade is a lively, loud and colourful parade involving dozens of floats, marching bands and equestrian units, and is watched by a huge audience, both on the city streets and also on televison and online via the increasingly popular and free live stream, which is back once again for the 2023 event, which will be the 134th year this fabulous event has taken place.

    Click Here Rose Bowl Games 2023 Live Streaming Free

    Click Here Rose Parade Show 2023 Live Streaming Free

    This year's Grand Marshal is Arizona Congresswoman, Gabby Giffords and the theme "Turning the corner" The Rose Bowl college football game, typically starting later on the same day, although sometimes falling on the day before, also forms part of the Tournament or Roses - see how to watch that on TV and online here: Rose Bowl live coverage
    Parade Date

    As is most common, the Rose Parade usually takes place on 1st January, new year's day itself, however, for 2023 it is scheduled for the 2nd January from 8am to 12 noon to stay in line with the tradition "Never on a Sunday"
    Parade Route

    The parade predominantly follows the town's main street of Colorado Boulevard, where the main grandstands are located. The formation area for participants is in front of Tournament House, and then the start point is at the corner of Green Street and Orange Grove Boulevard. The parade then moves north on Orange Grove before turning onto Colorado Boulevard for the main viewing, then onto Sierra Madre Boulevard before the parade ends at Villa Street.

    There are ticketed seating areas available in reserved grandstand areas on the parade route, and you must have a ticket if you wish to sit in the grandstands. Tickets can be reserved via Sharp Seating here.
    Rose Parade Lineup

    Here is the details of the participants for the 2023 Rose Parade, many more will of course be added in time:

    All Gifu Honor Green Band (Gifu, Japan)
    Banda de Musica La Primavera (Santiago, Panama)
    Buhos Marching Band (Veracruz, Mexico)
    Foothills Falcon Band (Tucson, Arizona)
    Fresno State Bulldog Marching Band (Fresno, California)
    LAUSD All District High School Honor Band (LA, California)

    More to be announced here
    TV & Live Streaming

    For anyone who can't make it to the parade, or who just has an interest in seeing a bit of life and colour at a traditionally drab time of year, local TV station KTLA5 will be streaming the parade live online.

    Page content by Martin Kerrigan. If you have found the content on this page useful then please feel free to share it with your friends and family, or if you have any information or updates that might be useful for us to add to the page then please contact us

  • Don’t miss Vicki Burns in the Birdland Theater at 8:30!

    Vicki Burns celebrates the release of her new CD, Lotus Blossom Days on Thursday, February 2 with a stellar band featuring Art Hirahara on piano and Sam Bevan on bass and arrangements. The album features fresh lyrics to instrumental tunes like Billy Strayhorn’s “Lotus Blossom (Lotus Blossom Days)” and”Bittersweet,” John Coltrane’s “Equinox (A Long Way to Go),” and original music, such as the new song “Love Spell,” dubbed”intoxicating” by noted Grammy Award winning jazz critic, Neil Tesser. Tesser also said, “You can cobble a definition of a true “jazz singer” from various factors, but here’s the thing: no matter which ones you choose, Vicki Burns will still fit the bill.”Rounding out the program will be Sam Bevan’s new arrangements of such greatSongbook classics as Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer’s haunting “Out OfThis World.”

    Described by the legendary jazz drummer Max Roach as a “gold mine of talent,” Vicki Burns has been singing professionally since she was a teenager when she joined the acclaimed New England based big band, The Clayton Poole Orchestra and toured throughout her college years. Later as a solo act, she sang regularly throughout the Boston area performing at legendary clubs like The Starlight Roof, Ryles and the 1369 Club before heading west, first to San Jose where she sang at clubs like Garden City and the renowned San Jose Jazz Festival and later San Francisco, where she sang regularly at Yoshi’s, Jazz at Pearl’s, Enrico’s and Anna’s Jazz Island. It was at Anna’s that she recorded her first live album in 2008 with Blues legend Taj Mahal in the audience. Her first studio album Siren Song, released in 2003, received rave reviews including a quote from noted jazz critic Dan Ouelette, who said that she succeeded with “rapturous, mystical beauty” and by Herb Wong, beloved Bay Area jazz critic who said: “Avoiding the predictability of safe havens, her music brims with many more surprises and uncharted delights in the jazz tradition. Vicki Burns is irresistible.”

    Since moving to New York City in 2009, Vicki has performed at such noted venues as Birdland, The Iridium, Mezzrow, Jazz at Kitano, Zinc Bar, Cornelia Street Cafe, The Plaza Hotel and The Metropolitan Room and has had a residency at The Lexington Hotel’s Stayton Room since 2015. She will release her new studio album in June of 2022. Entitled Lotus Blossom Days, it features sparkling new arrangements of rarely heard standards and originals.

    ”VickiBurns has a limitless future. Her very attractive voice, versatile style and infectious delivery combine to give her her own memorable sound.” Scott Yanow Jazz Times, Downbeat, Cadence

  • The Harlem Blues Project has been a staple on the New York City Blues scene for over a decade.
    Led by Jerry Dugger on bass and vocals, and joined by David ”Doc“ French, Barry Harrison, Junior Mac, they bring together the best of New York City’s Blues talent.
    The band is geared toward historic, rhythmic, listenable, and danceable Blues. Audience participation is expected, as it enhances the total experience. You’re guaranteed a funky, bumpin, jumping good time.


    Jerry Dugger, bass
    Barry Harrison, drumc
    Jr. Mack, guitar & vocal
    David "Doc" French, guitar & vocal


    JERRY DUGGER
    Jerry was raised in Harlem and caught the music bug early in life. He was introduced to the NewYork City Blues scene by way of the now infamous Dan Lynch Blues Bar.
    Jerry spentthirteen years learning to play Bass and sing, while also hosting the Saturday and Sunday Blues Jams.
    Jerry Shared his stage with Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnny Copeland, James Cotton and many more influential Blues Artists.
    His Bass baritone voice and thunderous bass playing have earned him a place in New York's Blues Hall of Fame.
    JerryDugger.Com
    JerryDugger@Hotmail.Com

    DAVID “DOC” FRENCH
    For the past forty plus years, guitarist Dave ‘Doc’ French has been a fixture of the Big Apple blues scene playing what he calls “City Blues, New York Style”.
    Best known as leader of the long-running band French Cookin’, Doc has performed in suchiconicManhattan venues as The Bitter End and held a ten year residency at Lucille’s Grill inTimes Square and they were inducted into The New York Blues Hall of Fame in 2015
    Frenchcookin.com
    Facebook/davidfrench

    JUNIOR MACK
    Junior Mack, a New York Blues Hal lof Fame inductee,deftly displays his influences, his playing lies in the soulfulness of Gospel and Blues.
    An opportunity to play for the late Pops Staples and the encouraging reaction from both Pops and Mavis Staples was the first in a chain of eventsthat drove Mack to present his interpretation of the blues to a wider audience.
    He has sat in or worked with The Allman Brothers Band, Derek Trucks, Robert Randolph, Dickey Betts, and Honeyboy Edwards.
    JuniorMack.Com

    BARRY HARRISON
    Barry Harrison, a New York Blues Hall of Fame inductee, spent five and a half years with thelegendary Johnny Copeland, and after his passing, Harrison went on to spend six years workingwith his daughter, Shemekia Copeland. He has also worked with Sonny Rhodes, Eddie Kirkland, Phil Guy, and Lonnie Shields.
    Facebook/BaronHarrison
  • This year’s Village of Ridgefield Park’s Earth Day celebration is set for Saturday May 20 from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at Riverfront Park, located behind the Department of Public Works building located at 24 Industrial Avenue.

    Hosted by the Ridgefield Park Environmental Commission, the day starts off with multiple interactive shows featuring lessons on different animal species and scientific demonstrations.

    The fun continues with eco-cruises from the Riverkeeper along the Hackensack River, all-day music provided by Mark Rust, face painting and a Green Fair featuring local artisans, environmental exhibits and demonstrations throughout the day. A new addition to this year’s program will be Neighborhood Compost, a New Jersey subscription-based compost pick-up service and circular home shop.

    Once again, the Hudson River Fisherman’s Association will be on hand to help those who would like to fish on the Hackensack River with a catch and release program. The association will be providing fishing equipment for those who don’t have their own fishing gear. The Board of Recreation will also be offering a mini archery clinic throughout the day.

    Mayor John Anlian said, “This year’s Earth Day celebration features a number of fun and educational activities for the residents of Ridgefield Park and their families. It is a day for us all to celebrate all the natural resources our Village has to offer all of us.”

    “We hope to raise awareness about environmental issues that are affecting our community as well as encourage all residents to enjoy and take advantage of the environmental treasures that are all available here in Ridgefield Park,” he said. “Over the last couple of years our Environmental Commission has tackled some important issues and has introduced new programs and ideas that have and will continue to transform Ridgefield Park into a more sustainable community. This includes the Ridgefield Park Nature Preserve initiative and the newly formed Ridgefield Park Nature Preserve Association.”

    The following shows will be presented throughout the day and include:
    Mad Science –Interactive Science Experiments Show – Start Time: 11:00 a.m.
    Snakes n Scales – Start Time: 12:15 p.m.
    Tenafly Nature Center-Raptors Show-Start Time: 1:15 p.m.
    Bats-Bats-Bats with NJ’s Bat-Man, Joe D’Angeli-Live Animal Show-Start Time: 2:15 p.m.

    There is no cost to attend the Earth Day Celebration. Those interested in attending this year’s celebration can send the Ridgefield Park Environmental Commission an email at envcomm@ridgefieldpark.org. The Earth Day celebration will take place rain or shine.
  • Lillie Mae, "Over The Hill And Through The Woods"
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