Celebrate Brooklyn at Prospect Park Bandshell
Thursday, June 14, 8pm
American Express American Roots Series
The Neville Brothers
New Orleans' royal family of funk brings the bayou to Brooklyn to open our 29th season. For more than 30 years Art, Charles, Aaron and Cyril have been turning out some of the tightest grooves and closest harmonies known to man, from classic albums like Fiyo on the Bayou and Yellow Moon to the triumphant 2004 reunion Walkin' in the Shadows of Life. With young Ivan on keyboards adding another generation of sound, the Nevilles' "spicy funk, heavenly ballads and righteous roots connections" (Rolling Stone) have never been more potent.
OPENING NIGHT GALA 5:30pm
Concert is FREE. Gala tickets—reserved seats, cocktails, dinner & dancing: $300 and up. Call (718) 855-7882 x33
Saturday, June 16, 7.30pm
WaMu Concert Series
Joan Osborne / The Jazz Passengers: The Supremes Project
With her brand new album Breakfast in Bed, an homage to the great soul and R&B of the ‘60s and ‘70s, Brooklyn's own JOAN OSBORNE has reconfirmed her status as one of the most powerful and versatile singers of her generation. "her voice, all on its own, conveys whole choirs of feeling." (Rolling Stone) The wild and wooly JAZZ PASSENGERS, whose "irreverent, sometimes gorgeously cinematic music somehow manages to orbit both Sun Ra and the Marx Brothers," (New York Magazine) take an instrumental approach the classic songs of The Supremes. A special commission for Celebrate Brooklyn.
Thursday, June 21, 7pm
The Richard Thompson Band / Ollabelle
The iconic British folk rocker RICHARD THOMPSON, here in a rare NYC appearance with his full band, delivers fearsome vocals and "guitar breaks so audacious it's like watching a highwire walker swinging in the wind but never falling off." (The Guardian UK) Drawing from a deep well of gospel, blues, bluegrass, and country influences, OLLABELLE creates a "rich, cross-referential take on American roots music." (Paste Magazine)
Friday, June 22, 7:30pm
American Express American Roots Series
Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys / James Reams & The Barnstormers
When it comes to bluegrass, RALPH STANLEY has no peers. The living legend, "one of the most important country musicians in the world today," (T Bone Burnett) has kept the flame alive for a half century—with grassroots help from folks like JAMES REAMS, the granddaddy of the local bluegrass scene.
Tuesday, June 26 & Wednesday 27, 6:30pm
Benefit Concert
Manu Chao
$30.00 GA
Ticketmaster.com
212/307-7171
Tickets also available with no service charge at the Nokia Theater box office, 44th St & Broadway
Friday, June 29, 7pm
Celebrate Brooklyn & JVC Jazz Festival present
Groove Collective / Ravi Coltrane / Craig Harris
The acid stalwarts GROOVE COLLECTIVE cap off a night of wide ranging styles with an "exhilarating soul-jazz jam session." (Down Beat) The "startlingly original" (New York Times) young sax lion RAVI COLTRANE has deftly forged his own path while embracing his father's legacy. Coltrane and his quartet bring a hard bop edge to the proceedings, while the esoteric trombonist CRAIG HARRIS "is a throwback to the days when brass players made their instruments speak." (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Saturday, June 30, 7pm
Canada in New York
The Stills / Sam Roberts Band / Malajube
A tasty sampling from Montréal's indie scene: THE STILLS' come packing "a rush of shoegazer guitars and suave loverboy angst"; (Rolling Stone) SAM ROBERTS BAND, with their epic new album Chemical City, arrive ready to "give American audiences a taste of their wistful, nouveau-psychedelic sound"; (Spin) and MALAJUBE will send the francophone contingent into a delirious swoon of ecstasy as they throb with "the ramshackle exuberance of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah" (Pitchfork) and sing about dirty things en Français. Presented with major support from the Canadian Consulate General in New York.
Thursday, July 5, 7.30pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Issac Delgado / Xiomara Laugart / Pistolera
ISSAC DELGADO, the most inventive and beloved modern salsa singer of his generation, blends Afro-Caribbean rhythms with elements of pop and jazz. The liquid-voiced XIOMARA LAUGART, lead singer of the Cuban-African-hip-hop-funk mob Yerba Buena, introduces her new solo project to Brooklyn, and the blistering Mexican alt folk of PISTOLERA completes a night of deeply booty shaking Latin rhythms
Friday, July 6, 7.30pm
(Rain date Saturday, July 7, 7:30pm)
American Premier
REwind: A Cantata For Voice, Tape & Testimony / Richie Havens
Composed by Philip Miller with additional vocal arrangements by Mduduzi Mofokeng.
Commissioned by the Spier Arts Trust (South Africa), MASS MoCA, Williams College ’62 Center for Theater and Dance, and the Celebrate Brooklyn Performing Arts Festival.
Cape Town composer Philip Miller's extraordinary international collaboration is based on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings that led South Africa from apartheid to democracy. Opera superstar Sibongile Khumalo joins other South African soloists, a string octet, and a 100-voice chorus composed of Brooklyn's Total Praise Choir of Emanuel Baptist Church, the Williams College Choir, and a South African ex-patriot choir led by Lion King choirmaster Ron Kunene. The music blends seamlessly with samples of recorded TRC testimony and stunning projected images. "The Cantata brought together the cry of our country—our pain and fears, our hopes and especially our triumphs and joys in the way we as South Africans can best express these emotions—in music and song. It was a deeply moving, most powerful and uplifting experience." (Archbishop Desmond Tutu)
The evening begins with an introduction by a very special surprise guest host and a performance by folk icon Richie Havens. Bedford-Stuyvesant born and raised, Havens has used his music to convey messages of brotherhood and personal freedom since emerging from the Greenwich Village folk scene in the early 1960s. His fiery, soulful singing and guitar style remains unique and ageless, and his willingness to lend his voice to numerous worthy causes through the decades has made him one of the most enduring musician-activists of his generation.
Thursday, July 12, 7:30pm
Noche Flamenca / Andrew J. Nemr & CPD Plus / Darrah Carr Dance
This internationally acclaimed Madrid troupe practices flamenco in its purest, most passionate incarnation. "Powerfully raw in its sensuality . . . spellbindingly visceral." (Dallas Morning News) The hot young hoofers of CPD PLUS and the modern influenced Irish step of DARRAH CARR make it a far ranging evening of percussive dance.
Friday, July 13, 7:30pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Zoé / The Pinker Tones / Chetes
Alt-rock explosivo from Mexico City's ZOÉ meets a freakishly irresistible cocktail of electro, pop, dance, lounge, and loud sunglasses mixed by THE PINKER TONES—"take two parts James Bond, one part Madonna, half a cup of 60s and stir with a Latin spoon" (Mesh Magazine)—a Barcelona DJ duo on the fast track to global domination. Throw in the melodious pop of CHETES, a recent transplant from Monterrey, and we are en fuego. Presented in collaboration with the LAMC/Latin Alternative Music Conference.
Saturday, July 14, 8pm
Brooklyn Philharmonic With Music Director Michael Christie, Guest Artists Mark O'Connor And Maya Beiser
A genre-bending evening with the borough's world-class orchestra, directed by the dynamic MICHAEL CHRISTIE. Special guest soloist and composer MARK O'CONNOR, a violinist who is "one of the most talented and imaginative working in music-any music-today," (LA Times) has created a program that incorporates his country roots and features thrilling contributions from cellist MAYA BEISER, "a deeply serious, technically honed classical musician (crossed) with a fiercely sexy, attitude-driven pop star." (Strings Magazine)
Sunday, July 15, 4pm
Celebrate Brooklyn & Workmen's Circle present
Frank London's Yiddish Carnival
For this concert of old- and new-school Jewish music, the luminary Frank London-who has played with everyone from John Zorn to They Might Be Giants and LL Cool J-will be joined by New York City's hottest and most diverse group of Yiddish musicians for a radical festival in the park. Performers include the Grammy award winning klezmer band, The Klezmatics; television and theater star Fyvush Finkel; a rare performance by legendary Yiddish rocker Wolf Krakowski; Cuban Jewish percussionist Roberto Rodriguez; Rolling Stone's #1 non-English group of 2006, Frank London's Klezmer Brass Allstars featuring Brazilian percussionists Maracatú New York; Yiddish divas Joanne Borts and Adrienne Cooper; and the Festival Latin Jewish Carnival Orchestra & Social Justice Sing.
Artist's Website:
Ani DiFranco
Thursday, July 19, 7:30pm
Music & Movies Series
Blackmail With Alloy Orchestra / Morley
ALLOY ORCHESTRA performs its gripping score to BLACKMAIL (1929), Hitchcock's last and best silent film. "Accompaniment is really an inadequate description of the voodoo they do with their strange and wonderful repertoire of sonic surprises." (Detroit Metro Times) Ease into the noir with the seductive charms of MORLEY, a "jazz minded pop chanteuse, soul sister, cosmopolitan home girl from Jamaica Queens." (NY Times) Rescheduled from 2006.
Friday, July 20, 7.30pm
American Express American Roots Series
Bobby "Blue" Bland / Catherine Russell
Half a century into a career in which his "evocative vocal style has taken the blues out of the barroom and into the bedroom," (Salon) BOBBY "BLUE" BLAND can still turn on your love light like nobody else—he's as untouchably authentic as ever. With the "incredibly talented and classy" (Village Voice) singer CATHERINE RUSSELL, who takes on jazz balladry, bordello blues, dance hall swing, country, pop, and soul with equal élan.
Saturday, July 21, 7pm
Hal Willner's Doc Pomus Project Featuring Lou Reed / Ben E. King / Teddy Thompson / Shannon McNally / Steven Bernstein / Joel Dorn / Mocean Worker / Peter Guralnick and many others
Maverick music producer HAL WILLNER, whose off kilter genius for dreaming up multi-artist concept shows is unparalleled, returns to the Bandshell after epic explorations of Leonard Cohen (2003) and Neil Young (2004) to celebrate the words and music of the late great Williamsburg born songwriter DOC POMUS, author of classics like "Lonely Avenue" and "Youngblood." Willner's eclectic crowd of artists will range, as always, from the emerging to the iconic. Check our Website for cast updates.
Sunday, July 22, 5pm
Ezra Jack Keats Family Concert
Dan Zanes & Friends
Brooklyn's resident rock star to the young and young at heart DAN ZANES throws an all-ages party in the borough's back yard! Zanes and his band, along with some special surprise guests, find that unique place in American music where sea shanties, Broadway standards, North American and West Indian folk music, fiddle tunes, the spirit of rock-and-roll, and soulful originals collide. "The happiest concert vibe since Woodstock. With a lot less drugs and mud." (New York Magazine) So pack up the wee ones, partake of our handy stroller parking, and enjoy a perfect afternoon at the Bandshell for the whole family.
Thursday, July 26, 8pm
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
One of the world's great modern dance companies presents a daring piece of repertory. In Another Evening: I Bow Down, Jones is both dancer and spectator, moving through a landscape of natural disasters and personal reminiscence. Jones' 10 dancers "explode with physical emotion in a riveting display of reckless abandon and total control." (Metro New York) Music by Wagner and contemporary Russian composer Anton Bagatov is juxtaposed with live performance by the Bronx based hardcore band Regain the Heart Condemned, ingeniously incorporated into the set. The evening begins with the classic Blauvelt Mountain, originally a Jones/Zane duet.
Friday, July 27, 7.30pm
Music & Movies Series
Laurel & Hardy With The Millennial Territory Orchestra / Ethan Lipton
Trumpeter/bandleader/musical archeologist Steven Bernstein, "the R. Crumb of jazz," (Village Voice) leads the incendiary MTO through new original scores to a selection of LAUREL & HARDY films—a Celebrate Brooklyn commission. The evening begins with Brooklynite ETHAN LIPTON, who "with the distinct high warble of his voice, homespun folksy tunes, and his gentle good manners, seems to have mistakenly wandered into the 21st Century directly from the Great Depression." (Popmatters)
Saturday, July 28, 2pm - 9pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Celebrate Brooklyn & the Boricua Festival Committee present
Boricua Festival: Tito Rojas / Joe Cuba Sextet / Viento De Agua / David Cedeño & others
Our festival of Puerto Rican culture features an all-day lineup headlined by "El Gallo Salsero" TITO ROJAS, who flies in from Borinquen with his 18-person salsa machine. Also on the menu: the father of Latin boogaloo JOE CUBA, the rowdy folkloric sounds of Puerto Rico's VIENTO DE AGUA, the hot hot hot Jersey trumpeter DAVID CEDEÑO and his orchestra, and more.
Thursday, August 2, 8pm
Brave New World Repertory Theater: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry / Jenny Scheinman
The dynamic Brooklyn-based company follows last summer's Bandshell production of "The Great White Hope" with an adaptation of Walt Whitman's love song to the borough "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" that fuses poetry, projections, music, rap, and dance. Commissioned by Celebrate Brooklyn. Violinist/composer JENNY SCHEINMAN "has the street musician's trick of getting attention with the pure power of a single, perfect note." (NY Times) Her latest album, 12 Songs, includes the Whitman-inspired "Song of the Open Road."
Friday, August 3, 7.30pm
Bud Light Music Series
Lyricist Lounge With KRS-ONE / Ladybug Mecca / Blitz / Beat Entertainment / Turntable Anihilists
A night of consciousness-raising rap, with Boogie Down Productions co-founder KRS-ONE, "hip-hop's Cassius Clay," (Mics) LADYBUG MECCA of the seminal bebop hip-hop poets Digable Planets, and a selection of young talent from the open mic visionaries of the Lyricist Lounge.
Saturday, August 4, 7:30pm
WaMu Concert Series
Kassav' / Bonga
The Paris-based French Antillian founding fathers of zouk—a driving mix of Caribbean rhythms, Franco-pop, and American funk—storm into Brooklyn en masse, blowing horns, banging drums, and whipping the crowd into a frenzied, hip-shaking mob with music that "sounds like the makings of a glorious carnival." (NY Times) Brooklynite Gaston Jean-Baptiste, aka BONGA, is a master traditional Haitian drummer and a high priest of voodoo.
Thursday, August 9, 7pm
WaMu Concert Series
The Hold Steady / The Big Sleep / The Teenage Prayers
"Damn you, HOLD STEADY! How can any band be this good?" (Rolling Stone)
These local heroes are rock & roll's 21st Century saviors—and perfect headliners for a fist-pumping all-Brooklyn triple bill. THE BIG SLEEP churn out "seducing-yet-disorienting bedroom-metal," (Spin.com) while the gritty and soulful TEENAGE PRAYERS boast a front man, Tim Adams, whose vocals are "a fascinating cross between a traditional R&B belter and Stephen Malkmus." (Trouser Press) Friends of CB pre-concert reception supported by Betancourt & Associates Realty. See Friends panel for details.
Friday, August 10, 7:30pm
Music & Movies Series
Bollywood In Brooklyn: Hum Kisi Se Kum Nahin / Dj Rekha's Bollywood Disco
The Bollywood classic HUM KISI SE KUM NAHIN (1977) has an heiress, her underachieving paramour, her mobster father, his ruthless gang, and a rogue businessman all chasing a hidden cache of diamonds—and ready to burst into massive disco song and dance numbers at the slightest provocation, in the musical Bollywood tradition. The evening is hosted by the one and only DJ REKHA, who brings her famous Bollywood Disco party to the park to start off the festivities.
Saturday, August 11, 2pm - 9pm
WaMu Concert Series
African Festival: Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars / Sekouba Bambino / Stella Chiweshe / Shiko Mawatu / Baye Kouyaté et les Tougarakés
Our all-day African festival of music, food, and crafts from across the continent features a stellar lineup led by SIERRA LEONE'S REFUGEE ALL STARS, whose joyful mix of roots reggae and Afropop rhythms prove that "tragedy and even horrific brutality can somehow give birth to life-affirming, uplifting music," (Montreal Gazette) and SEKOUBA BAMBINO, "The Golden Voice of Guinea." Also with STELLA CHIWESHE of Zimbabwe, the Congolese soukous guitarist SHIKO MAWATU, and BAYE KOUYATÉ, a Malian master of the talking drum and the resident griot at Williamsburg's Zebulon Café.
Thursday, June 14, 8pm
American Express American Roots Series
The Neville Brothers
New Orleans' royal family of funk brings the bayou to Brooklyn to open our 29th season. For more than 30 years Art, Charles, Aaron and Cyril have been turning out some of the tightest grooves and closest harmonies known to man, from classic albums like Fiyo on the Bayou and Yellow Moon to the triumphant 2004 reunion Walkin' in the Shadows of Life. With young Ivan on keyboards adding another generation of sound, the Nevilles' "spicy funk, heavenly ballads and righteous roots connections" (Rolling Stone) have never been more potent.
OPENING NIGHT GALA 5:30pm
Concert is FREE. Gala tickets—reserved seats, cocktails, dinner & dancing: $300 and up. Call (718) 855-7882 x33
Saturday, June 16, 7.30pm
WaMu Concert Series
Joan Osborne / The Jazz Passengers: The Supremes Project
With her brand new album Breakfast in Bed, an homage to the great soul and R&B of the ‘60s and ‘70s, Brooklyn's own JOAN OSBORNE has reconfirmed her status as one of the most powerful and versatile singers of her generation. "her voice, all on its own, conveys whole choirs of feeling." (Rolling Stone) The wild and wooly JAZZ PASSENGERS, whose "irreverent, sometimes gorgeously cinematic music somehow manages to orbit both Sun Ra and the Marx Brothers," (New York Magazine) take an instrumental approach the classic songs of The Supremes. A special commission for Celebrate Brooklyn.
Thursday, June 21, 7pm
The Richard Thompson Band / Ollabelle
The iconic British folk rocker RICHARD THOMPSON, here in a rare NYC appearance with his full band, delivers fearsome vocals and "guitar breaks so audacious it's like watching a highwire walker swinging in the wind but never falling off." (The Guardian UK) Drawing from a deep well of gospel, blues, bluegrass, and country influences, OLLABELLE creates a "rich, cross-referential take on American roots music." (Paste Magazine)
Friday, June 22, 7:30pm
American Express American Roots Series
Ralph Stanley & The Clinch Mountain Boys / James Reams & The Barnstormers
When it comes to bluegrass, RALPH STANLEY has no peers. The living legend, "one of the most important country musicians in the world today," (T Bone Burnett) has kept the flame alive for a half century—with grassroots help from folks like JAMES REAMS, the granddaddy of the local bluegrass scene.
Tuesday, June 26 & Wednesday 27, 6:30pm
Benefit Concert
Manu Chao
$30.00 GA
Ticketmaster.com
212/307-7171
Tickets also available with no service charge at the Nokia Theater box office, 44th St & Broadway
Friday, June 29, 7pm
Celebrate Brooklyn & JVC Jazz Festival present
Groove Collective / Ravi Coltrane / Craig Harris
The acid stalwarts GROOVE COLLECTIVE cap off a night of wide ranging styles with an "exhilarating soul-jazz jam session." (Down Beat) The "startlingly original" (New York Times) young sax lion RAVI COLTRANE has deftly forged his own path while embracing his father's legacy. Coltrane and his quartet bring a hard bop edge to the proceedings, while the esoteric trombonist CRAIG HARRIS "is a throwback to the days when brass players made their instruments speak." (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Saturday, June 30, 7pm
Canada in New York
The Stills / Sam Roberts Band / Malajube
A tasty sampling from Montréal's indie scene: THE STILLS' come packing "a rush of shoegazer guitars and suave loverboy angst"; (Rolling Stone) SAM ROBERTS BAND, with their epic new album Chemical City, arrive ready to "give American audiences a taste of their wistful, nouveau-psychedelic sound"; (Spin) and MALAJUBE will send the francophone contingent into a delirious swoon of ecstasy as they throb with "the ramshackle exuberance of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah" (Pitchfork) and sing about dirty things en Français. Presented with major support from the Canadian Consulate General in New York.
Thursday, July 5, 7.30pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Issac Delgado / Xiomara Laugart / Pistolera
ISSAC DELGADO, the most inventive and beloved modern salsa singer of his generation, blends Afro-Caribbean rhythms with elements of pop and jazz. The liquid-voiced XIOMARA LAUGART, lead singer of the Cuban-African-hip-hop-funk mob Yerba Buena, introduces her new solo project to Brooklyn, and the blistering Mexican alt folk of PISTOLERA completes a night of deeply booty shaking Latin rhythms
Friday, July 6, 7.30pm
(Rain date Saturday, July 7, 7:30pm)
American Premier
REwind: A Cantata For Voice, Tape & Testimony / Richie Havens
Composed by Philip Miller with additional vocal arrangements by Mduduzi Mofokeng.
Commissioned by the Spier Arts Trust (South Africa), MASS MoCA, Williams College ’62 Center for Theater and Dance, and the Celebrate Brooklyn Performing Arts Festival.
Cape Town composer Philip Miller's extraordinary international collaboration is based on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings that led South Africa from apartheid to democracy. Opera superstar Sibongile Khumalo joins other South African soloists, a string octet, and a 100-voice chorus composed of Brooklyn's Total Praise Choir of Emanuel Baptist Church, the Williams College Choir, and a South African ex-patriot choir led by Lion King choirmaster Ron Kunene. The music blends seamlessly with samples of recorded TRC testimony and stunning projected images. "The Cantata brought together the cry of our country—our pain and fears, our hopes and especially our triumphs and joys in the way we as South Africans can best express these emotions—in music and song. It was a deeply moving, most powerful and uplifting experience." (Archbishop Desmond Tutu)
The evening begins with an introduction by a very special surprise guest host and a performance by folk icon Richie Havens. Bedford-Stuyvesant born and raised, Havens has used his music to convey messages of brotherhood and personal freedom since emerging from the Greenwich Village folk scene in the early 1960s. His fiery, soulful singing and guitar style remains unique and ageless, and his willingness to lend his voice to numerous worthy causes through the decades has made him one of the most enduring musician-activists of his generation.
Thursday, July 12, 7:30pm
Noche Flamenca / Andrew J. Nemr & CPD Plus / Darrah Carr Dance
This internationally acclaimed Madrid troupe practices flamenco in its purest, most passionate incarnation. "Powerfully raw in its sensuality . . . spellbindingly visceral." (Dallas Morning News) The hot young hoofers of CPD PLUS and the modern influenced Irish step of DARRAH CARR make it a far ranging evening of percussive dance.
Friday, July 13, 7:30pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Zoé / The Pinker Tones / Chetes
Alt-rock explosivo from Mexico City's ZOÉ meets a freakishly irresistible cocktail of electro, pop, dance, lounge, and loud sunglasses mixed by THE PINKER TONES—"take two parts James Bond, one part Madonna, half a cup of 60s and stir with a Latin spoon" (Mesh Magazine)—a Barcelona DJ duo on the fast track to global domination. Throw in the melodious pop of CHETES, a recent transplant from Monterrey, and we are en fuego. Presented in collaboration with the LAMC/Latin Alternative Music Conference.
Saturday, July 14, 8pm
Brooklyn Philharmonic With Music Director Michael Christie, Guest Artists Mark O'Connor And Maya Beiser
A genre-bending evening with the borough's world-class orchestra, directed by the dynamic MICHAEL CHRISTIE. Special guest soloist and composer MARK O'CONNOR, a violinist who is "one of the most talented and imaginative working in music-any music-today," (LA Times) has created a program that incorporates his country roots and features thrilling contributions from cellist MAYA BEISER, "a deeply serious, technically honed classical musician (crossed) with a fiercely sexy, attitude-driven pop star." (Strings Magazine)
Sunday, July 15, 4pm
Celebrate Brooklyn & Workmen's Circle present
Frank London's Yiddish Carnival
For this concert of old- and new-school Jewish music, the luminary Frank London-who has played with everyone from John Zorn to They Might Be Giants and LL Cool J-will be joined by New York City's hottest and most diverse group of Yiddish musicians for a radical festival in the park. Performers include the Grammy award winning klezmer band, The Klezmatics; television and theater star Fyvush Finkel; a rare performance by legendary Yiddish rocker Wolf Krakowski; Cuban Jewish percussionist Roberto Rodriguez; Rolling Stone's #1 non-English group of 2006, Frank London's Klezmer Brass Allstars featuring Brazilian percussionists Maracatú New York; Yiddish divas Joanne Borts and Adrienne Cooper; and the Festival Latin Jewish Carnival Orchestra & Social Justice Sing.
Artist's Website:
Ani DiFranco
Thursday, July 19, 7:30pm
Music & Movies Series
Blackmail With Alloy Orchestra / Morley
ALLOY ORCHESTRA performs its gripping score to BLACKMAIL (1929), Hitchcock's last and best silent film. "Accompaniment is really an inadequate description of the voodoo they do with their strange and wonderful repertoire of sonic surprises." (Detroit Metro Times) Ease into the noir with the seductive charms of MORLEY, a "jazz minded pop chanteuse, soul sister, cosmopolitan home girl from Jamaica Queens." (NY Times) Rescheduled from 2006.
Friday, July 20, 7.30pm
American Express American Roots Series
Bobby "Blue" Bland / Catherine Russell
Half a century into a career in which his "evocative vocal style has taken the blues out of the barroom and into the bedroom," (Salon) BOBBY "BLUE" BLAND can still turn on your love light like nobody else—he's as untouchably authentic as ever. With the "incredibly talented and classy" (Village Voice) singer CATHERINE RUSSELL, who takes on jazz balladry, bordello blues, dance hall swing, country, pop, and soul with equal élan.
Saturday, July 21, 7pm
Hal Willner's Doc Pomus Project Featuring Lou Reed / Ben E. King / Teddy Thompson / Shannon McNally / Steven Bernstein / Joel Dorn / Mocean Worker / Peter Guralnick and many others
Maverick music producer HAL WILLNER, whose off kilter genius for dreaming up multi-artist concept shows is unparalleled, returns to the Bandshell after epic explorations of Leonard Cohen (2003) and Neil Young (2004) to celebrate the words and music of the late great Williamsburg born songwriter DOC POMUS, author of classics like "Lonely Avenue" and "Youngblood." Willner's eclectic crowd of artists will range, as always, from the emerging to the iconic. Check our Website for cast updates.
Sunday, July 22, 5pm
Ezra Jack Keats Family Concert
Dan Zanes & Friends
Brooklyn's resident rock star to the young and young at heart DAN ZANES throws an all-ages party in the borough's back yard! Zanes and his band, along with some special surprise guests, find that unique place in American music where sea shanties, Broadway standards, North American and West Indian folk music, fiddle tunes, the spirit of rock-and-roll, and soulful originals collide. "The happiest concert vibe since Woodstock. With a lot less drugs and mud." (New York Magazine) So pack up the wee ones, partake of our handy stroller parking, and enjoy a perfect afternoon at the Bandshell for the whole family.
Thursday, July 26, 8pm
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
One of the world's great modern dance companies presents a daring piece of repertory. In Another Evening: I Bow Down, Jones is both dancer and spectator, moving through a landscape of natural disasters and personal reminiscence. Jones' 10 dancers "explode with physical emotion in a riveting display of reckless abandon and total control." (Metro New York) Music by Wagner and contemporary Russian composer Anton Bagatov is juxtaposed with live performance by the Bronx based hardcore band Regain the Heart Condemned, ingeniously incorporated into the set. The evening begins with the classic Blauvelt Mountain, originally a Jones/Zane duet.
Friday, July 27, 7.30pm
Music & Movies Series
Laurel & Hardy With The Millennial Territory Orchestra / Ethan Lipton
Trumpeter/bandleader/musical archeologist Steven Bernstein, "the R. Crumb of jazz," (Village Voice) leads the incendiary MTO through new original scores to a selection of LAUREL & HARDY films—a Celebrate Brooklyn commission. The evening begins with Brooklynite ETHAN LIPTON, who "with the distinct high warble of his voice, homespun folksy tunes, and his gentle good manners, seems to have mistakenly wandered into the 21st Century directly from the Great Depression." (Popmatters)
Saturday, July 28, 2pm - 9pm
Bud Light Latin Music Series
Celebrate Brooklyn & the Boricua Festival Committee present
Boricua Festival: Tito Rojas / Joe Cuba Sextet / Viento De Agua / David Cedeño & others
Our festival of Puerto Rican culture features an all-day lineup headlined by "El Gallo Salsero" TITO ROJAS, who flies in from Borinquen with his 18-person salsa machine. Also on the menu: the father of Latin boogaloo JOE CUBA, the rowdy folkloric sounds of Puerto Rico's VIENTO DE AGUA, the hot hot hot Jersey trumpeter DAVID CEDEÑO and his orchestra, and more.
Thursday, August 2, 8pm
Brave New World Repertory Theater: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry / Jenny Scheinman
The dynamic Brooklyn-based company follows last summer's Bandshell production of "The Great White Hope" with an adaptation of Walt Whitman's love song to the borough "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" that fuses poetry, projections, music, rap, and dance. Commissioned by Celebrate Brooklyn. Violinist/composer JENNY SCHEINMAN "has the street musician's trick of getting attention with the pure power of a single, perfect note." (NY Times) Her latest album, 12 Songs, includes the Whitman-inspired "Song of the Open Road."
Friday, August 3, 7.30pm
Bud Light Music Series
Lyricist Lounge With KRS-ONE / Ladybug Mecca / Blitz / Beat Entertainment / Turntable Anihilists
A night of consciousness-raising rap, with Boogie Down Productions co-founder KRS-ONE, "hip-hop's Cassius Clay," (Mics) LADYBUG MECCA of the seminal bebop hip-hop poets Digable Planets, and a selection of young talent from the open mic visionaries of the Lyricist Lounge.
Saturday, August 4, 7:30pm
WaMu Concert Series
Kassav' / Bonga
The Paris-based French Antillian founding fathers of zouk—a driving mix of Caribbean rhythms, Franco-pop, and American funk—storm into Brooklyn en masse, blowing horns, banging drums, and whipping the crowd into a frenzied, hip-shaking mob with music that "sounds like the makings of a glorious carnival." (NY Times) Brooklynite Gaston Jean-Baptiste, aka BONGA, is a master traditional Haitian drummer and a high priest of voodoo.
Thursday, August 9, 7pm
WaMu Concert Series
The Hold Steady / The Big Sleep / The Teenage Prayers
"Damn you, HOLD STEADY! How can any band be this good?" (Rolling Stone)
These local heroes are rock & roll's 21st Century saviors—and perfect headliners for a fist-pumping all-Brooklyn triple bill. THE BIG SLEEP churn out "seducing-yet-disorienting bedroom-metal," (Spin.com) while the gritty and soulful TEENAGE PRAYERS boast a front man, Tim Adams, whose vocals are "a fascinating cross between a traditional R&B belter and Stephen Malkmus." (Trouser Press) Friends of CB pre-concert reception supported by Betancourt & Associates Realty. See Friends panel for details.
Friday, August 10, 7:30pm
Music & Movies Series
Bollywood In Brooklyn: Hum Kisi Se Kum Nahin / Dj Rekha's Bollywood Disco
The Bollywood classic HUM KISI SE KUM NAHIN (1977) has an heiress, her underachieving paramour, her mobster father, his ruthless gang, and a rogue businessman all chasing a hidden cache of diamonds—and ready to burst into massive disco song and dance numbers at the slightest provocation, in the musical Bollywood tradition. The evening is hosted by the one and only DJ REKHA, who brings her famous Bollywood Disco party to the park to start off the festivities.
Saturday, August 11, 2pm - 9pm
WaMu Concert Series
African Festival: Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars / Sekouba Bambino / Stella Chiweshe / Shiko Mawatu / Baye Kouyaté et les Tougarakés
Our all-day African festival of music, food, and crafts from across the continent features a stellar lineup led by SIERRA LEONE'S REFUGEE ALL STARS, whose joyful mix of roots reggae and Afropop rhythms prove that "tragedy and even horrific brutality can somehow give birth to life-affirming, uplifting music," (Montreal Gazette) and SEKOUBA BAMBINO, "The Golden Voice of Guinea." Also with STELLA CHIWESHE of Zimbabwe, the Congolese soukous guitarist SHIKO MAWATU, and BAYE KOUYATÉ, a Malian master of the talking drum and the resident griot at Williamsburg's Zebulon Café.