#shuffle-along-1921

[ follow ]
#jazz
NYC music
fromThe New Yorker
13 hours ago

The History of Jazz Has Instantly Expanded

New archival live performances by Ahmad Jamal, Joe Henderson, and Cecil Taylor enhance their legacies and the jazz art form.
NYC music
fromABC7 Los Angeles
4 weeks ago

In Harlem living room, jazz tradition blends heart and soul

Marjorie Elliot hosts weekly jazz concerts in her Harlem apartment to honor her late son and connect with the community through music.
fromVulture
1 week ago

Lin-Manuel Miranda's Octet Cast Could Not Be More Exciting

The cast for Lin-Manuel Miranda's upcoming film adaptation of Octet features stars like Amanda Seyfried as Jessica and Rachel Zegler as Velma, alongside Sheryl Lee Ralph as Paula.
Film
NYC music
fromElite Traveler
3 days ago

So You Like Jazz? These Are the Coolest Bars to Listen Live

Jazz bars worldwide are evolving, blending tradition with modern aesthetics while maintaining the genre's core essence.
fromwww.amny.com
2 weeks ago

1776' at 250: Still arguing, still relevant

For all its historical trappings, 1776 isn't a pageant, and it doesn't behave like one. It's a talky, funny, occasionally cranky chamber piece about a group of men stuck in a room, led by the stubborn, relentless John Adams, arguing their way toward independence.
Washington DC
NYC music
fromVariety
1 week ago

HBO's 'Earth, Wind & Fire' Documentary to Open Tribeca Festival's 25th Anniversary Edition

The Tribeca Festival will open its 25th annual event with the documentary 'Earth, Wind & Fire' directed by Questlove on June 3.
Berlin music
fromwww.amny.com
2 weeks ago

Beyond the metronome: The emotional intelligence of ballet | amNewYork

Ballet's beauty stems from the intricate collaboration between music and dance, emphasizing trust and relational excellence among artists.
Portland
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
3 weeks ago

DanceWatch: South Indian, 'Princess and the Pea,' Dance Theatre of Harlem and more * Oregon ArtsWatch

April showcases a vibrant mix of traditional and experimental dance performances across Oregon, highlighting Bharatanatyam and new ballet interpretations.
#broadway
fromVulture
1 week ago
NYC music

Is a Bank Heist Supposed to Sound This Groovy?

The Broadway adaptation of Dog Day Afternoon features a strong musical element, enhancing the gritty atmosphere of the original film.
fromTime Out New York
2 weeks ago
NYC music

Broadway review: Paris is purring in Cats: The Jellicle Ball ()

The revival of Cats: The Jellicle Ball on Broadway reinvigorates the musical, transforming its inherent strangeness into a celebratory experience.
NYC music
fromVulture
1 week ago

Is a Bank Heist Supposed to Sound This Groovy?

The Broadway adaptation of Dog Day Afternoon features a strong musical element, enhancing the gritty atmosphere of the original film.
NYC music
fromTime Out New York
2 weeks ago

Broadway review: Paris is purring in Cats: The Jellicle Ball ()

The revival of Cats: The Jellicle Ball on Broadway reinvigorates the musical, transforming its inherent strangeness into a celebratory experience.
#luna-lauren-velez
Berlin music
fromwww.berkeleyside.org
4 weeks ago

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to Cal Performances April 7-12

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to Berkeley with new artistic director Alicia Graf Mack, showcasing diverse programs and a rich musical soundtrack.
NYC music
fromTime Out New York
2 weeks ago

This interactive map uncovers NYC's jazz history through top neighborhoods

A new interactive map by Village Preservation showcases the rich jazz history of Greenwich Village, East Village, and NoHo, highlighting venues and musicians.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Act Black: posters of Black Americans on stage and screen in pictures

Many of these posters are the only surviving proof of certain shows, with no recordings of plays, and certain films, having been lost over time. They offer a history of Black Americans trying to counter harmful stereotypes and provide vital and humanizing contributions to a growing Black culture.
Arts
NYC music
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

Review | The Wild Party' is worth the hangover

The Wild Party is a complex musical that explores themes of performance, decadence, and the darker sides of revelry through its characters and narrative structure.
NYC music
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

Harlem's Breeze Team brings high-energy breakdancing and comedy to busy New York City streets | amNewYork

The Breeze Team is a street performance crew in Times Square, blending breakdancing, comedy, and acrobatics to entertain crowds.
Music
fromFortune
2 months ago

Introducing Duke Ellington (Fortune; August 1933) | Fortune

Jazz slang encodes musical meaning: 'hot' signals spontaneous, syncopated playing, while 'sweet' and 'corny' label sentimental or old-fashioned styles.
Business
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Why the best problem-solvers think like jazz musicians

Organizations that toggle between wonder (imagination) and rigor (discipline) generate novel value and shape disruption better than those relying solely on technical systems.
Miscellaneous
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

New York City Ballet Premieres for the "No Kings" Era

Justin Peck choreographs Beethoven's 'Eroica' symphony while Alexei Ratmansky adapts 'The Emperor's New Clothes' into an anti-authoritarian ballet at New York City Ballet.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

The Jazz Pictures the FBI Silenced

Lisette Model's thousand hidden photographs of East Coast jazz legends from 1940-1959 are revealed in a new book, exposing how government repression forced her to bury this significant artistic legacy.
fromAdvocate.com
2 months ago

The lush life of Billy Strayhorn, the gay Black man who was Duke Ellington's 'right arm'

Even if you're just a casual jazz fan, you probably recognize "Take the A Train," Duke Ellington's swinging theme song. Or you've heard the melancholy ballad "Lush Life" sung by Nat King Cole, by Linda Ronstadt during her Great American Songbook era, or by Lady Gaga on the album she recorded with Tony Bennett. Both of those - and many other tunes - were written by a gay man, musician, composer, and arranger Billy Strayhorn.
Music
#harlem-renaissance
NYC music
fromVariety
1 month ago

Blue Note Jazz Festival New York Unveils 2026 Lineup (EXCLUSIVE)

The Blue Note Jazz Festival 2026 runs June 1-July 1 in Manhattan, featuring diverse jazz and R&B artists across Greenwich Village and Times Square venues.
Music
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 months ago

'The Wiz,' the Black retelling of 'The Wizard of Oz', comes to Keller Auditorium * Oregon ArtsWatch

Alan Mingo Jr. currently defines The Wiz on the Broadway revival tour, delivering a family musical rooted in a Black perspective that resonates across audiences.
Berlin music
fromwww.amny.com
1 month ago

Meet the BLCK Madonna: Jazz singer Ana Hoffman redefining reverence and Black womanhood | amNewYork

Ana Hoffman adopted the moniker The BLCK Madonna to reclaim the Italian term's original meaning of reverence toward dignified women, while discovering over 300 historical Black Madonnas in European churches.
fromChicago Tribune
1 month ago

Review: With 'American Icons,' here's why the Joffrey Ballet is different

It's typical for the Joffrey Ballet to seat a mixed-repertory concert near the beginning of the year. But the 2026 edition of such an evening (a series of loosely connected shorter works packaged together), breaks at least one habit. There's nothing new in "American Icons," running two weekends at the Lyric Opera House. Instead, the Joffrey has dug up a range of works showcasing mid-20th century innovation and the porous kinship between ballet and modern dance during that time.
Arts
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"The Wild Party" Returns

Set during the Roaring Twenties, the show takes place at the Manhattan apartment of Queenie (Jasmine Amy Rogers), a vaudeville bombshell, and her man of the moment, the comedian Burrs (Jordan Donica). Guests include a former prizefighter, a pair of piano-playing twins, an "ambisextrous" playboy, a stage diva past her prime, and someone's kid sister from Poughkeepsie.
NYC music
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Tomeka Reid: Dance! Skip! Hop! review an early contender for jazz album of the year

Fujiwara's hustling brushes set up a churning guitar hook on the title track that sounds infectiously like a kind of highlife bebop, before Reid's superb pizzicato cello solo takes off with Halvorson comping the tune in the background. Her own seamlessly skimming improvisation is then followed by a spontaneous counter-melodic dance between the two of them.
Music
Arts
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Review: Production of classic musical in Berkeley is just about perfect

A staging of Sunday in the Park with George vividly captures Seurat's pointillist process, artistic obsession, and Sondheim and Lapine's collaborative genius.
Berlin music
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 month ago

Review: Gibney Dance offers up a beautiful evening of high-quality rep * Oregon ArtsWatch

Gibney Dance returned to Portland's Newmark Theatre after 20 years, performing new works including pieces by Roy Assaf and William Forsythe that showcased contemporary dance aesthetics rooted in Batsheva and Gaga-informed movement.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

He used the trumpet as a songbird': 100 years of Miles Davis, by jazz greats Sonny Rollins, Yazz Ahmed and more

The architect of the bestselling jazz album of all time, 1959's Kind of Blue, trumpeter Miles Davis is a towering figure in the history of the genre. Possessed of a piercing tone, innate melodic sensibility and a singularly uncompromising approach on the bandstand, Davis spent his five-decade career presiding over numerous stylistic shifts: bebop to cool jazz, modal jazz, electronic fusion, jazz funk and even hip-hop.
Music
Arts
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

At Catch One, a funk concert transports you to 1974 - and it's immersive theater at its finest

An immersive theatrical-concert at Catch One recreates 1974 LA, blending music, participatory theater, Vietnam-era PTSD narratives, and the underground LGBTQ+ refuge in music.
fromHarper's BAZAAR
1 month ago

Dance Theater of Harlem Is Bringing Back Firebird . It's Never Felt More Timely.

First performed in 1910 by Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes and adapted by George Balachine for New York City Ballet in 1949, Firebird was inspired by a Russian folk tale. The ballet tells the story of Prince Ivan, who captures the firebird, a creature who is part bird, part woman, and then lets her go.
NYC music
[ Load more ]