June 26, 2014

And If You Lose Your Way or A Food Odyssey

         You want to see something, right? Something cool. Go out, have a good time, and feel like you’ve got your finger on the pulse. It’ll make you feel alive, I’m guessing. You want to know there is a creative community in your neighborhood or nearby, that it isn’t all left to the movie screen out of reach from you and yours, that it isn’t only in the established or more traditional halls with only the famous gracing their stages. And, you wonder who these creative people are, right? You want to share moments with them because they are like you, but maybe they will change you, rekindle something gone dark, or make you feel something. Sweet sentiment aside, really, you’d love to just have fun with them. This. This is And If You Lose Your Way or A Food Odyssey, and is performed at The Invisible Dog Art Center in Brooklyn by people you would call friends easily and gladly.
         The Invisible Dog is a Cobble Hill, Brooklyn art space hosting this play on food and an old, epic story. After walking the two short flights of stairs that seem like they lead you to the secret part of the building that you are glad you know about, you enter a long, really open space with old, wooden floors that are lit by tall, huge windows on each end. The room is decorated with many mismatched wooden chairs around its center, which is held together by a worn, Quaker-like table. It’s crunchy and feels homey or like you’ve arrived at a party since friendly performers greet you and introduce themselves and their friends. While mingling with the performers and other audience members, you can participate in their questionnaire on food/meals by putting your answers on yellow post-it notes then adding them to the wall along with the others. Before the show even starts, you are collaborating as one group.
         During the show, the audience joins the performers by sitting in longish rows that frame the performance space, the kitchen table. Here many gatherings happen with the Mom, Penelope. Particularly heartfelt are those including the Dad, Odysseus, and the Son, Telemachus. The Dad is mostly absent as he journeys through life as a soldier, who is trying to find his way home. The Mom and Son struggle to sustain themselves, but the Son does begin to find his own way in the world. The play interweaves parallel narratives as Odysseus and his struggles mirror those of his wife: to keep promises made to those you love, to sustain yourself without them and to remain hopeful of reunion. A third narrative develops as the son grows older, trying never to forget his roots as he finds his way, just like his Dad. Although these characters were separated, they were connected through food since they had fond memories of making food and sharing it with one another. It was a beautiful story held together with music as its hinges; each character having their moment in the sun- a song.
         With music written by Nick Choksi, who another audience member called “the nicest guy in New York,” how can you go wrong? Teaming up with Lauren Feldman and Pirronne Yousefzadeh, they had listeners hanging on every word. I loved the immersive theater style and was surprised at many moments throughout when the actors included us in this journey as they opened us up as collaborators by asking us questions and giving us food. As involved as I felt in the play, I couldn’t wait to find out how it ended, thinking surely the Mom and Dad will reap the rewards of their tenacity or faithfulness and wondering then how their love would be expressed. Yes, it is a relatable twist to an old epic, The Odyssey, but they still surprised me at the end. They opened me up and I think everyone up to the good in each other. I left feeling like I had an opportunity to meet people well and share something special with them, what a privilege! We had good food and good conversation to boot. I found this unique: the creative intention of this cast to unite strangers in such a heartwarming way. So, forgo sand in your shoes, skip the sunblock, forget bug repellent, and seek out And If You Lose Your Way or A Food Odyssey because I know you want to have fun with them too.

-Sally

June 10, 2014

Vox Hebraica in Times Square

         Recently, I revisited Times Square and was surprised for some reason. . . it was the same as I left it. What we all experience there in one walk through and every walk through does not change an inkling, not one iota: bright lights decorating billboards along any inch of street side that often promote the latest musical, huge videos promoting the latest fad with beautiful, young people sporting their goods, tons of pedestrians with faces upward, stopping many times right in the middle of the flow of people to gawk at all of this or to stand mesmerized, fast food eateries and bars to satisfy that urge for comfort food, theaters with musicals that boast some of the most interesting artists in the city, who seem to do everything from dance, sing, play numerous instruments and compose, restaurant row which has its reputation of ethnic variety with a slower pace and a little more quiet, iconic stores selling products in a huge way like Hershey’s and M&M, which has bins upon bins of different colored M&Ms and a section where you can even print your own logo on them. Each and every walk through, this is Times Square.
         While realizing this, I walked my familiar path, but to a new place, The Actor’s Temple, which offered something different for the area, a concert of Jewish Classical music. Hosted by Marina Kifferstein, who curated the series and plays in the duo Rhythm Method, this concert was the last of the series, which was a really neat find in such a hyped-up area. It’s not too often that you find a concert series dedicated to preserving a particular heritage, and to hear it performed where an audience considers it their home, not without the shuffling sandals of elders, seemed quaint. In the case of this last performance, I think the program reflects the diversity of Jewish statements in Classical music.
         The program included music by John Zorn, Noam Faingold, and Gyorgy Ligeti. I’m familiar with John Zorn, I’ve heard his mosaics of rapidly changing genres in Naked City and his warmer, often jazzy, Masada project. For Ligeti, I’ve played his Six Bagatelles for woodwind quintet, which is incredibly fun and easily my favorite in the woodwind quintet repertoire. Written in the 1950s, originally for piano, it is a collection of short pieces with listenable melodies that are rhythmically spirited. The tunes are as catchy to listen to as they are tricky to play. With no knowledge of his String Quartet No. 1: Metamorphoses Nocturnes, I could only wonder if its statement was similar to that of Six Bagatelles- fun.
         I got my answer with the opening melody. The piece begins with a beautiful yet haunting violin melody, which fits well a piece named after night transformations. The 12 movements are played continuously, but they fly by! Ligeti seemed to group the movements together in such a way that they would start simply and build to become quite dense with all performers bowing heavily, only to suddenly withdraw to a single sustained tone, and then continue in much the same way throughout the piece. For all its intensity, the piece was really listenable even with atonal melodies and odd meters and/or syncopations. Frankly, it had a rock ‘n’ roll quality due to its call and answer moments, infectious vitality and harsher sounds. After quickly realizing in the beginning this piece was nothing like Six Bagatelles, I was surprised to hear the quartet's 8th movement, Subito Prestissimo, was strikingly similar to the 4th movement of Six Bagatelles, Presto Ruvido. The closing section, after hearing the frenzied section preceding it, was particularly beautiful: poignant with that haunting violin melody and an exhausted, somber cello line. Ending with a return to the beginning, to finally and reluctantly relent.
         Although changing quite a bit across the 12 movements, I think the general statement of the piece was intensity followed by our inevitable yield to it. Intensity was something this young quartet was not short on. Marina Kifferstein, Lavinia Pavlish, Meaghan Burke and Anne Lanzilotti, all gave incredible energy to this performance. Not only their execution, but their actual physical intensity heightened the emotional impact of the piece. I was impressed with their stamina and appreciated that they lightened when the music did as well, maybe even sneaking a smile to one another. Great to see people doing what they love!

-Sally

June 05, 2014

Potential Energies

         May/June is a beautiful time of year in New York. Flowers and trees are blooming in May and the Cherry Blossoms are unforgettable. By June, the local parks have woken up and farmers markets have become the Saturday morning gathering with not only great food, but live music too. For this, it has been my favorite part of the year in New York, and as a musician, it has often been a time of celebration followed by rejuvenation. With many years here as a student, I’ve celebrated the end of the school year or the end of projects in May as well as the graduation of friends and eventually my own graduation; this as a teacher as well. June, on the other hand, has typically been the month of respite; the bounce back time until I begin looking for inspiration. This year, before I could wonder for too long on how or where I would find this inspiration, I was invited to Potential Energies, a Classical premiere with dancers. This concept piece expressed in some way my feelings of May/June in New York: to find renewed inspiration.
         Potential Energies was performed at BAM Fisher in Brooklyn by the Nouveau Classical Project and the TrioDance Collective. The BAM Fisher theater is pretty minimal with seating in auditorium style, and for this performance, there was no dressing of the stage as though we were seeing the performance from backstage or we were seeing them perform a dress rehearsal, the moments just before a shared realization. All of it was unadorned, not just the stage, the performers also were dressed simply in mostly black and grey; each dressed to accentuate their own personal form, but none were highlighted as a central character nor were they dressed to convey a personality or individualism. This was an interesting choice. It allowed the group to move and express itself as one unit, much like the corps de ballet in a ballet company, including the musicians in this case. Unlike a ballet, everyone was onstage with nothing hidden; I liked that.
         The show started with musicians filing in to sit along the back wall of the stage including a violinist, clarinetist, and flutist with a pianist off to the side. The cellist was more center stage and while plucking a staccato groove, a dancer, much as his shadow, began to move with him. As she became more independent, she began to gently move him and lean against him and his cello. Both liberated, she played music with him by plucking the strings.
         As this culminated, the remaining musicians along the wall, playing as you would expect off music stands, began to join the cellist one by one. The other dancers seemed to lure these musicians to join him. Each musician had a dancer that paired with them and explored their physical space and their movements as they played. The musicians influenced by their dancer began to dance while playing. The clarinet part I really liked: the clarinetist played a melodic hook that seemed to loop playfully and likewise she gracefully spun in a circle with her foot leading her through the slow, gentle movement. In this section, each musician huddled together near the piano with the dancers weaving in and around them as they seemed to wake up the musicians and their creativity. Dancer as muse, I really liked this; they expressed that unspoken spark that will drive a creator forward or open them up to a new idea- neat! This was my favorite part of the entire show.
         As the show continued, it seemed the role of the dancers changed. This was highlighted with solos and duos among the musicians; two, I especially liked. One duo was between the violinist and the cellist, who were sitting in chairs upstage facing the audience. As they played pretty spunky music with more frenetic rhythms and melodies, the dancers seemed not to lure the musicians, but to interfere and even argue with them. They were pulling their bow arm away from the instrument, trying to intrusively pluck the strings, and even pushing the musicians in and out of their seats. The dancers no longer that initial spark were the emotion or drive a performer may feel during a performance, particularly a challenging one.
         The other duo was between the flutist and clarinetist. Unlike the strings, they played facing each other, while standing center stage. Their duo seemed more like a private music-making moment or a rehearsal situation. Their music was less frenetic than the strings with smoother melodies and long, bright dissonances. The two seemed to be relying on each other rather than solely their inner drive/the dancer as they slowly moved together, changing their orientation to one another. That personal, inner drive or source of inspiration never left as the dancers would run up to the musicians and then run as far away from them as they could and stand still with their backs to them, never gone for long.
         It was a neat show and a cool concept piece. I enjoyed sitting and watching them play, to see that physical momentum transferred from dancer to musician. Impressive too, all musicians played by memory coordinated with their own dancing. Boundaries were loosened among performers that traditionally collaborate separately, not even sharing the stage, and it was enjoyable to see a collaboration that creates wonder on inspiration. As performers, what renews us? Maybe, it’s shows like these.

-Sally

June 02, 2014

The Raven

          NY Phil Biennial is the Big Apple’s Classical new music festival sponsored by the New York Philharmonic and its curators, lasting from May 28th through June 7th, 2014. There are 21 concerts programmed for these 11 days including opera premieres to the very young composers concert to performances by established groups, such as Bang on a Can All-Stars or the Orchestra of St. Lukes, and with concerts held at various venues within New York City. When I checked their calendar, what seemed most intriguing to me was the posting for an American premiere, The Raven, composed by Toshio Hosokawa and performed by Gotham Chamber Opera. It is an opera for one singer with dancer based on the famous poem by Edgar Allan Poe, one of my childhood favorites.
          The Raven was performed at the Gerald Lynch Theater at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan on 59th Street. The theater was nice with an art gallery at its entrance, which displayed artistic photographs of previous performances. Each provided for me a portal into a show I had missed, which made me glad I made it to this opera performance, but also eager to see what the staging and costuming would be like. On its medium-sized stage was an off-set square platform and off to stage right in the shadows were a few rows of empty chairs. All this with a shell behind it looming tall at just the right angle for sound projection. Of all this, what struck me most was the program. To me, it seemed fancy with its clean, perfectly pressed paper, and thick paper, that was larger than a book and smelled as new books do- good. Much like the off-kilter yet minimal stage, it had its own flair with its precisely torn corner at the bottom of all pages. In today’s digital age, this program seemed elaborate and much enjoyed as I thumbed through it, while waiting for the show to begin.
          In those spare moments before the show, I read again the poem in the program. Before reading it, I had vague memories of the poem, but I think with any amount of time, I will never forget the line: “Nevermore,” croaked by the raven, along with an image of this dark bird perched at the home of the bereaved narrator. After reading the poem, I couldn’t help but wonder how an opera on such a famous poem, and a story that had already drawn me in, would make me feel. I’ve only seen operas in mostly other languages, on stories that are near ancient, erring on melodramatic, and with no personal connection to me at all. So, I couldn’t help but feel excited to hear an opera with modern tonalities and instruments with a story that I not only knew but liked. And a story that seems timeless in its depiction of the unbearable loneliness of those grieving, or those lost in its darkness.
          My musings were answered when the opera began with a short overture played by a small combo of woodwinds and brass along with a string quintet and a percussionist. The atmosphere created by the ensemble in the overture and for much of the piece, I think, was mostly mysterious or ethereal in nature: air on a lonely, dark night. Not to suggest it was unchanging, the accompaniment flowed with the singer and her mental projections, as air can be cool and refreshing, cold and uncomfortable, still and calm, or windy and worrisome. These ideas were conveyed especially well in the woodwinds and brass. I have to say I really enjoyed all the sounds from the alto and bass flute- what a beautiful sound! And, the solos from the saxophone were played very unjazzlike and lent a heft to the flute sound, sometimes punctuating the more nebulous sounds of the ensemble with slap tonguing; this punctuating was heard from the percussionist as well. And, when warmth was needed, the trombone chimed in with just enough blat.


          As for the mezzo-soprano, Fredrika Brillembourg, she began the opera in a sprechstimme style; she began switching between this and singing operatically within a stanza or two. Eventually, she was mostly singing and what a deep sound she created, sometimes meaty. Her sound filled the room and reverberated my head; I could feel my ear drums vibrating. As much as the singer touched the audience through her voice, she also spoke to us with many questioning or pleading glances as well as reaching out to us.
         On the other hand, the dancer, Alessandra Ferri, never danced to us or for us, but always with and for the narrator solely. She danced with bird like gestures; her legs and feet were bent and flexed talon-like. As the narrator became more intrigued by her, the raven entwined herself around the narrator with gangly and bony gestures. The narrator would not only be standing but lying down, kneeling or moving across the stage. This dance of the raven did not look beautiful nor comfortable, but always performed gracefully. At a point when the narrator seemed the most confused or lost, the raven perched on the back corner of the platform and on the shell was the shadow of the raven projected as a female figure, who was dancing. I’m still thinking of this: the dancing shadow as thoughts of Lenore or the allure of the raven? I’m not sure.
          Throughout this performance, I felt my original interpretation challenged and new ones formed. This is thanks to the performers being female. Due to this, I thought the dancer at times was the raven and other times Lenore. This was an intriguing ambiguity, since I had never thought of the raven as a visitation by Lenore in another form nor a memory of Lenore. Also, I liked the narrator sung as a woman. When reading and without much thought at all, the narrator was a man; I never questioned this. And as quickly, the raven as a bearer of darkness was a masculine entity. To consider for the first time the relationship of the narrator to Lenore as something other than that of lovers was refreshing, or if lovers then not heterosexual lovers. And, I welcomed the opportunity to reconsider that a somber, dark entity does not imply a masculine entity.
          With female performers and the opening up of possibilities in this old story on grief, it definitely made the poem new and without former performances created something as fresh as ever. By now, I can’t help but wonder if Lenore represents the narrator, who is lost in yesteryears as in memories of herself, or if the opera represents a woman so afraid of her own death that she is preoccupied with it. With all these questions and changes in perspective, I read the poem again to ponder and I think I just have to see the opera again!

-Sally

May 21, 2014

Celtic Cross

         I didn’t know what to expect from Celtic Cross before I saw them perform live at The Stephen Talkhouse in Amagansett, Long Island on March 22nd. Having heard about this Irish folk rock band from my Dad, I initially wondered what style this group represented: a straight-up Celtic chorus group, which embellished Mother Ireland, or a heavy metal band with a more modern Irish flair. Nevertheless, because it was the weekend of St. Patrick’s Day and this performance was available, my Dad and I agreed that it would be a fitting choice, and I was blown away that evening. Not only did Celtic Cross deftly infuse folk rock with Irish pride, they perfectly balanced a sense of nostalgia, modern sensibilities and casual enthusiasm. This balance was conveyed largely by the atmosphere of the venue and the emotions of the performers.
         Let’s start with the venue: The Stephen Talkhouse featured the perfect atmospheric blend of casual and nostalgic spirit with its fine-finished wood décor, its affable service, and its historic detail. The venue itself is named after a Native American resident who, in the 1800s, took daily, 25-50 mile walks from Montauk to East Hampton and Sag Harbor. There was even a large portrait of Talkhouse mounted on the back of the stage, indicating his significance to the venue. Along the walls, there stood innumerable photo stills of some of the most famous musicians to have performed at the venue from Laura Nyro to the Drifters to reggae artist, Jimmy Cliff.


         In addition to its historical spirit, the venue balanced its atmosphere with more modern sensibilities. The venue was a pub, which complimented the Irish vibe of the concert, and its people greatly elicited the casual mood and affable tone. The owner was surprisingly friendly to us, greeting us when we arrived and assuredly bringing me another Diet Coke upon my dad’s request. The audience was in a similarly positive mood: it consisted of predominantly middle-aged adults, who talked and dressed casually and attended simply to have a really entertaining concert experience. By far the most memorable and high-spirited moments of the show occurred when some of the female attendees stood up and danced to well-known songs being played on fiddle. Cue in extra touches, such as the use of subtle lighting and the integration of amplified speakers onto wooden posts, and you had a perfectly balanced atmosphere like no other.
         What reinforced this blend of timeless emotions with nostalgic and modern traits were the musicians themselves. As they charismatically performed on stage, they stood upright, dressed as casually as the audience, and calmly let their energy flow with the music. The instruments they played consisted of a diverse mix of traditional and modern tools ranging from accordion and fiddle to drums and electric guitar. These instruments not only sounded great when played in tandem, but the performers creatively varied how they were balanced: it became typical for songs to use select instruments more heavily than others.
         The varied instrumental structure perfectly complimented the diverse and poignant themes of the songs. Those such as “Shores of America,” which dealt with immigration from Ireland, tended to use more fiddle; others such as “Molly,” which tackled everyday romance, relied more on drums and guitar. Because of this, I would argue that the performers were more expressive through the music than the lyrics. Some songs, like “Monster,” didn’t even have lyrics, relying solely on the music to convey their mood. I finally want to give brief credit to the group’s lead singer, Kathleen Fee, because she arguably lent the most emotion and artistic talent to the music. All throughout, she sang in a consistently mellow tone of voice, which reinforced the poignancy of these songs, even as they presented different styles and themes.


         All in all, my concert experience with Celtic Cross had the perfect blend of energy, emotion, nostalgia and atmosphere. It totally blew me away with how much creativity and sophistication this group compounded into nearly an hour-and-a-half, and it was a concert I won’t soon forget (I have a signed album to prove it). I greatly enjoyed Celtic Cross and would love to see them play again in the future.

-Anonymous, Spring 2014

May 17, 2014

Serenade Duo

         I attended a performance by the Serenade Duo with Michelle LaPorte playing flute, and Gerry Saulter on Classical guitar. The program was called “From Brazil to Barcelona” including pieces from Brazil, Argentina and Spain. I originally wanted to attend a Pink Floyd tribute show, but the time wasn’t there, so I attended this without knowing much of what to expect.
         The concert was held in our auditorium at the Eastern Campus of Suffolk County Community College. It is a nice, big room with comfortable chairs that wrap around the stage in a half crescent. I sat in the furthest row directly in the middle where I had a great view of the performers. The setup of the auditorium, along with the silence of the audience, allowed the music to be heard loud and clear by all. Surprisingly, there were not many people in the audience: a wide age range of a few students and familiar teachers that I have noticed go to music events on campus. People dressed casually as it took place during common hour on an average school day. The performers however were dressed very elegantly. Michelle LaPorte wore a very nice, black dress as Gerry Saulter played in a sharp, grey suit. The audience behaved as most would in a small, formal set up as such. At the end of each song, I wanted to give a standing ovation, but my fear of embarrassment being the only one stopped me from doing it, which I regret.
         The performers had a great introduction and got to know the audience. They continued by teaching us a little about the origins of the music. Before the start of each song, they gave us interesting facts on the inspiration for how the pieces were written as well as insight on how they were received by the audience at the time. LaPorte played the flute standing up on the left as Saulter played his nylon acoustic sitting down next to her. They collaborated very well by taking turns speaking to the audience, and even better as they played together. Although they didn’t have any extras, such as light shows or dancing, the music being played was enough to transport the audience somewhere culturally diverse and peaceful. I enjoyed the show immensely and I will now consider going to more Classical shows.
         This was the first time I experienced a duo with guitar and flute. The word that comes to mind when I think of the music is beautiful. Although it sounds corny, the music was soul-touching, and I believe every audience member had some emotion tapped into by each piece played. There were no lyrics in any of the songs, but with the introductions to each song and the performance to back it up, everyone understood the song and how it could portray its title. For example, the piece called “Nuages,” which means clouds in Portuguese, painted a vivid picture of wonderful scenery full of nature and happiness created by a slow-paced and relaxing rhythm. The last piece, “Progessiones para Pauline,” was about a woman the original writer knew, who passed away fairly young. He described her as a friendly, helping and loving woman. The piece was touching as the audience was placed in the life of Paulina, which had an overall upbeat and positive feel to it.
         I was extremely fond of how Saulter utilized his guitar differently during some parts to make a distinct sound. This was demonstrated by his tapping on the guitar to provide a beat and what looked like bumping the strings to partially mute them for a moment. That gave the performance an exciting push that somewhat wowed the audience. I also paid much attention to LaPorte, since I am not used to watching flute players. I was really surprised by how long she could hold notes and play her music while making it look easy and fun. She continued to smile throughout playing and I could tell she was enjoying herself, which made it easy for me to enjoy it as well.
         I would definitely attend another concert that includes flute and guitar. My experience with that genre of music is not much, and it left me with a different perspective on music in general. Classical music is the ultimate form of a universal language that speaks directly to emotions and other aspects of what makes us human.

-Leonardo Figueroa, Spring 2014

Brad Paisley

         On February 16 of this year, my girlfriend and I went to see Brad Paisley perform at the Nassau Coliseum. Brad Paisley is a country singer and an amazing guitar player; he puts on a really awesome show. Two performers opened for him and they were Danielle Bradberry and Chris Young. This was of course a country concert and I picked this concert to go to because it was a Valentine's Day gift between my girlfriend and myself and we both enjoy some country music.
         The Coliseum itself is nice for hockey games, but for a concert it feels a little crowded and the seats are uncomfortable. We stood up most of the time, so the actual seating had no effect on the concert experience. The music is played very loudly, but inside the Coliseum, which is not very big at all, the performers sounded pretty clear and well practiced.
         The audience including myself cheered a lot and took part in singing along to most of the songs. The performers would sometimes sing a few lines then hold the microphone out to the crowd for us to finish, which is not uncommon at a rock/country type of concert. It was clear to tell that all of the audience were fans of Chris Young and Brad Paisley, but not much for Danielle Bradberry, who is a young singer and is just starting out. She has a really nice voice though. The people of the audience were all ages from young children to older folks with gray hair, who still like to have a good time. For the most part, everyone wore jeans and a t-shirt or sweatshirt, but many others had on their cowboy boots and hats with flannel shirts to fit in with the style of music. Of course, beer was served, but they were $9.50 each so no one got too rowdy. Other country concerts I have been to, the crowd was much more wild and free.
         Danielle Bradberry is only a teenager still and new to the stage, so she did not interact or get the crowd going like Chris Young or Brad Paisley. She got up, dressed kind of flashy and just stood with the mic and sung her songs, and was very surprised as I could tell at how much the crowd enjoyed her performance. Chris Young I said could have been a stand up comic as well as a singer because he told jokes and drank liquor up on stage like it was a regular thing for him, which it is. I could tell he had a good time and really got the crowd dancing and singing along with his attitude.
         Brad Paisley played last and of course was the star of the whole show. He played about 10­-12 songs and many, many guitar solos; he is an extremely talented guitarist. The show was originally supposed to be the Thursday before, which was Valentine's Day, but was moved because of the snow we had. Brad started off by saying things like, “Damn, you Long Islanders are some real country freaks to want to still come and wouldn't let a little snow get in the way, and I didn't know they made country fans this far north.” I could tell he was a good performer just by how comfortable he was up on stage and how he could really communicate with the audience and make us feel like he knew us personally. He was also dressed with his American Flag t-­shirt, boot cut jeans with cowboy boots, and of course, the white cowboy hat:


Brad played all over the stage and even played while walking around the Coliseum floor. There were lights and a projection screen to show signs or animations of things that went along with the songs he was playing. The songs differed a little from the album, but I was not going to complain; it all sounded great.
         Each performer sang and had guitars, bass guitars, and drums on stage and even electric fiddles. Most of the words were clear and easy to understand, but it’s country music, so of course, there was some slang, such as “gunna and cause.” The songs were about breakups, alcohol, mud on the tires of a truck, love songs, all the fun stuff and upsetting stuff that you would expect to hear in a country band. There were some slow songs sung by Danielle Bradberry and a very soft dynamic song by Chris Young called “Gettin' You Home” about coming home with his girlfriend and just having some fun. And the songs by Brad were all over the board: happy songs, slow songs, fun songs, dancing songs and drinking songs. One song called “Mud on the Tires” is about buying a new truck and grabbing his girl and taking it down a back road to get it all dirty and broken in: “I've got some big news / The bank finally came through / And I'm holdin' the keys to a brand new Chevrolet / Have you been outside / It sure is a nice night / How about a little test.”
         They each have their own sound, and with the instruments, they make the music and their lyrics sound like one. With songs about working hard, coming home to relax after a long day, cracking open a beer and loving your baby, this concert was awesome and I would definitely go see Brad Paisley and Chris Young again. I really enjoyed the show- my girlfriend and I had an amazing time.

-Matt Chepinskas, Spring 2014

April 04, 2014

Williamsburg & Iktus

         The elephant claw bell? What a discovery! A beautiful sound within a dreamy electronic soundscape at Baby’s All Right in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. This was a night full of not only discoveries: my first time to this bar just south of the Williamsburg bridge, but it was also a night full of reminders: I can still enjoy Williamsburg. It’s been years since I’ve spent time in Williamsburg, but with friends I managed to find a vegetarian-friendly Italian cafe called Wild on Bedford Ave. Wild is the opposite of that evenings concert with its boasting of garden access, promotion of a natural, organic menu and lots of dried herbs and flowers hanging on the walls. It was a quaint getaway in a city full of sound and people.
         The concert on the other hand was very urban and technology-based. The kind of concert where performers seem very comfortable absorbed in their equipment and the audience seems satisfied to stand and listen austerely, perhaps with the occasional head bopping. Tristan Perich gave us a world that can only be created with electricity and gadgets. Sitting in the middle of the room with the audience gathered round, he played a noise set that was rhythmically simple, but with a variety of textures. These densities thinned and thickened as the sound became its own physical presence in the room. You could feel the sound around you; this I liked about it. You could not ignore this added presence as it joined you and those around you in one moment, not through lyrics or catchy rhythms but through its physicality.
         To compliment these harsh sounds, Iktus followed Perich’s noise set with a percussion and electronic piece. This was played on stage, which was lit by hundreds of small multi-colored decorations on the back wall.



With the rainbow lit in these circular decorations, there could be no better back drop for this dreamy, melodic electronic piece with catchy rhythmic grooves played by the percussion quartet. The ear catching moment in all this, as you may have guessed, was the elephant claw! If the percussionist could somehow turn and play one of the lit, circular decorations behind him on the wall, this is what it would sound like, as if one color pulsed among this polka dot rainbow or one color radiated just a little bit brighter than the others for just a short while. It was ear catching and wonderful.

-Sally, Spring 2014

April 03, 2014

Between the Buried and Me

         I've been to over 50 concerts and there are very few bands that each time I see them, they leave me speechless each time. On February 21st at the Paramount Theater in Huntington, I went to see one of those bands for the 6th time, the headliner Between the Buried and Me, and they didn't disappoint me or any musician in the audience. As a band that is progressive, extremely complex and technical, all musicians including myself go to witness the profound musicianship this band delivers each time. They had other bands open the show that suited their style of music and everyone in the audience respected the musicianship and talent that comes from all of these hardworking bands. With such talent warming up the audience, Between the Buried and Me had quite a warm welcome to the stage.
         This was the first time I’d been to the Paramount; it was a nicely sized venue and a very sophisticated venue for a Progressive Metal-core band, from men in suits opening doors to the bathroom attendants, which I’d never experienced at a concert like this before, but it was a great plus. The size of the venue encouraged bigger mosh pits and louder crowd participation. The audience would watch in awe, singing and screaming every line or mosh their hearts out; all being fans of either the aggressive nature of the music or talent of the musicians. When there was no band playing, the members of the audience would converse and bond over other progressive, technical bands, talk about their own bands or influence people to go out and listen to other bands they had never heard of. If anybody wasn't a fan before but were brought by a friend because they like “heavier” music, I guarantee that they fell in love with the complexity and musicianship the band displayed.
         Between the Buried and Me's performance was astonishing with their musical prowess. They played each song flawlessly as they appeared on the albums, leaving no room for improvisation and with little emphasis on the backdrop lighting to make the focus the real show of talent they displayed. They didn’t have a stage show or a unique way they dressed; they were all dressed casually. Besides a few key moments when the members would interact with the crowd, they were focused on keeping time and the constant changes in time signatures over the course of songs that would go on for about 16 minutes. With the ability to play so fast in such a complex manner over a long period of time makes them one of my favorite bands and makes Blake Richardson one of my favorite drummers. Each member throughout the night had their time to shine with guitar solos, bass solos, drum solos, and keyboard solos from the singer, when he wasn't displaying his vocal ranges from melodic singing to aggressive screaming.


         Their songs have a wide range of weird topics like their song, “Sun of Nothing,” which is about a spaceman, who ends up traveling into the sun in an attempt to commit suicide, but when he realized that suicide wasn't the answer, it was too late to turn back and had accepted his fate. The lyrics “I just see faces/faces staring blank as they go on with the routine/this routine/nothing new/it’s time to go through with this” display his wish to escape society and to commit suicide, while other lyrics “floating to the sun/farther away/I can't believe that's what it has come to/I never really had it all that bad” show his regret in his decision. The lines of the song that are the most sympathetic have the melodic singing and guitar tones, while the aggression being released is displayed through screaming and the guitarist's complex rhythmic parts. Obscene stories like that attract people to the worlds these musicians created within their minds as opposed to just focusing on their musical talent.


         Between the Buried and Me has done what everyone expects of them, which is to display why they are on the stage in the first place. Their performances are always memorable ones and inspire every musician in the audience to practice and attempt to achieve their level of talent. Between the Buried and Me has left me speechless for the 6th time and there definitely will be a 7th time for them to do it again. Witnessing them show off such skill will never get old. With complexity in their songs, frequent time changes, displays of calm emotion to aggressive screaming, and extreme musical prowess, they are a force to reckon with in the Progressive Metal world. I encourage any inspiring musicians to check them out or at least experience them in concert to see what the human body can do.

-Keith Just, Spring 2014

March 21, 2014

Malloy and Friends

         Dave Malloy’s latest: a song revue of Moby Dick at Joe's Pub. If you haven’t read Moby Dick, but really wanted to hear Dave Malloy’s latest and still know what was going on, you were in luck!
         Paul Pinto as Reverend Roy G. Biv explained all, but not without ranting on ideas of race and our natural scheme of things. He questioned in a frenetic style of spoken word with an avant-garde girl group accompanying him. His rant was infectious, which seemed to be him challenging difficult ideas, but with an open heart and without too much worry about tradition or correctness. The general spirit suggests we reword and recraft the lens by which we look at people and their situations; I liked this idea.
         Next, we met Pip in a dire situation, and what a contrast from the high energy Roy G. Biv. Pip seemed the lonely sort, almost defeated; the kind that seems to teach most when or if you can peer into their world. What a sweet moment as we listened to quiet query on the significance of his life. These questions with lots of time for wonder were filled in by jazz melodies on piano; I was especially fond of these, the silver lining in his dark moment. Were Pip’s questions answered? I don’t know, but he was not entirely alone as he pondered his fate.
         I think Malloy may have tricked us. We sat and were caught up in the charisma of these performers, were surprised by nods to various genres, and I think everybody in the audience at some point wanted to shake a tambourine (!), but really, we sat and pondered meaningful life questions. Whether potent and high-energy or sweet and sparing, these two characters each gave us their view of universal questions regarding our fate as well as our place with others.

-Sally, Spring 2014

March 18, 2014

East Bank Music Series - Jay Sorce

East Bank Music Series:

         As I sat and listened to Benjamin Britten played by Jay Sorce in an Episcopal church in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, I couldn’t help but think of Moonrise Kingdom by Wes Anderson. In that movie, the church scene showcases the performance of Noye’s Fludde by Britten; this is the moment when the two main characters meet and ultimately fall in love. The boy has a chance meeting with his future girlfriend in disguise; she is in a bird costume. He doesn’t let that throw him, but instead uses this as a conversation starter: “What kind of bird are you?” he asks. “I’m a raven,” she responds. While thinking of this scene, I realized I probably would not be meeting my future husband in this church scenario. Obviously, I mean, I wasn’t even wearing a costume, and so what would we have to talk about anyway?
         My mind wandered as I listened to Nocturnal after John Dowland by Britten. It is the perfect piece for this, since it is several movements of variations on a theme. The original is “Come, Heavy Sleep,” an old vocal piece with lute written by John Dowland, and it is a dwelling on death, or perhaps with a lighter mind, endings or seeking respite. I’m glad I did not know this because it would have hung a dark cloud over my more current dwellings on birds (wink and nod). Instead, I was able to listen to the beautiful plucking of an acoustic guitar within this resonant, quiet space. Every sound lifted up and each movement of Nocturnal after John Dowland telling their own perspective on the same story, perhaps on a raven? One was quick-paced and impatient, another one still and quiet, while another steady in its dream-like lulling. The final movement, Passacaglia, was the most catching with its rhythmic turns and groovy, downward-flowing melody. Differences told in part by the many color changes with the guitar: sometimes plucked bright and hollow with an ethereal delicateness and other times strummed heavy-like and grounded. All thanks to Jay Sorce, who was able to create these different characters and moods, and all with one instrument. I applaud in thanks, caw!

-Sally, Spring 2014