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While We’re Still Here: Honoring Joni Mitchell + Carla Bley
This year, the Alt Guitar Summit launches a new annual series entitled "While We're Still Here," celebratinglivingcomposers. For this inaugural, the honorees will be none other than jazz big-band leaderCarla Bleyand the widely influential Canadian singer-songwriterJoni Mitchell.Bley, a 2015 NEA Jazz Masters recipient as well as the composer of “Ida Lupino” and “The Girl Who Cried Champagne,” plays piano, but like Duke Ellington, she makes an entire orchestra her instrument, expressing her trademark wit in large-scale structures of piquant harmonic density. She has also written for guitar, as heard on her 1977Dinner Musicand Gary Burton’s all-Bley albumDreams So Real. Mitchell, whose long career has traversed folk, pop, rock, and jazz, needs no introduction: her era-defining anthems like “Big Yellow Taxi,” “River,” and “Both Sides Now,” continue to resonate across the generations, as do her collaborations with the celebrated bassists Charles Mingus and Jaco Pastorius.
NYGF ACADEMY
The South African guitarist/composerDerek Gripperin conversation with author, guitarist, broadcasterBanning Eyre. Eyre has spent years exploring the guitar styles of Africa, and is the author of four books, includingIn Griot Time: An American Guitarist in Mali. The conversation will cover issues from techniques and innovations to the ethics of appropriation.
AUDIBLE CLOISTERS: GUITAR MARATHON
Perched atop North Manhattan’s Fort Tryon Park, with a view of the Hudson River below and cliffs of the Palisades across the way,The Cloistershouses one of the world's finest collections of medieval European art. The structure, assembled from Romanesque architecture and borrowings from Gothic cathedrals and abbeys, features chapel-like galleries, the repose of ornately carved tombs, unicorn tapestries, windows with centuries-old stained-glass panels, as well as cloistered gardens of fragrant herbs and spring crocus. In essence, what better place to hear 14 guitarists whose collective repertoire spans the Renaissance to right now. This year’s Guitar Marathon will be mostly unamped music and includes performances on the lute, oud, and pipa – all historic precursors of the guitar. Hosted by WNYC'sJohn Schaefer, curated by the New York Guitar Festival's Artistic DirectorDavid Spelman, and presented in collaboration withMetLiveArts.
Ring The Golden Bells
NYGF ‘16 begins with a Mother's Day concert in honor of gospel/blues legendSister Rosetta Tharpe, the godmother of rock & roll. She was America’s first national gospel star, and her famous windmill guitar moves lived on in Keith Richards and Pete Townshend. From the Cotton Club to Carnegie Hall and the Apollo, Sister Rosetta merged sacred lyrics with secular rhythms in a scorching guitar style.
MASTERCLASS: New Approaches to Guitar
Five modern masters discuss new approaches to jazz guitar through the lens of Paul Motian's music. Ben Monder, Steve Cardenas (both Motian alumni), Vic Juris, Liberty Ellman, and Joel Harrison will talk about comping, ensemble playing, linear improvisation, band-leading, electronics, philosophy, and more, using Paul Motian's singular opus as a starting point. All levels invited.
An afternoon masterclass with Nels Cline
Nels Cline will demonstrate how he achieves his unique sound world where all conceivable musical roads converge. This is Cline's first such class in New York City. All levels invited.
ALT-GUITAR SUMMIT
When drummer, bandleader, and composer Paul Motian died at age 80 in the autumn of 2011, it was, for jazz critic Steve Futterman writing inThe New Yorker, “like waking to find that your favorite neighborhood bookstore—the one that stocked the edgy stuff that no one else would touch—had closed overnight.” Motian’s music lives on in duo performances bySteve Cardenas and Jacob Sacks,Ben Monder and Bill McHenry (Motian band alums) Gilad Hekselman and Jeff Ballard,Brandon Ross and Stomu Takeishi,Vic Juris andMary Halvorson, theNels Cline & Julian Lage Duo, andJoel Harrison and Tyshawn Sorey.
ALT-GUITAR SUMMIT
An evening of trios that explore evolving concepts of rhythm, curated by Joel Harrison.
Silent Films/Live Guitars
The West African-inspired Asheville, North Carolina-based ensembleToubab Kreweplays Malian-accented world-pop that’s imbued with laconic, Southeastern minimalism. Their cross-cultural flair will take a turn to the East as the band premieres an original score to Japanese directorYasujirô Ozu’s boisterous 1932 comedyI Was Born, but…. Two young brothers, outsiders in a new town, skip school to dodge a bully and fret over their father’s lowly social standing as an office clerk.
SileNT Films/Live Guitars
Formerly lead guitarist with The Black Crowes and current front-man for North Mississippi Allstars, Memphis-bornLuther Dickinsondeploys his aggressively Southern sensibility toWalter Ruttman’s 1927 documentary portrait of a Berlin long gone by, Berlin: Symphony of a Great City. A painter and a chamber musician before becoming a filmmaker, Ruttman cast an impressionistic eye over a single day-into-night of life observed in the German capital.
SILENT Films/Live Guitars
The extraordinary Brazilian guitarist/singerBadi Assadpremieres her score for one of the best-known films of China's cinematic golden age:Wu Yonggang’s 1934 debutThe Goddess, the story of a prostitute working the seamy streets of Shanghai to afford an education for her young son.
Silent Films/Live Guitars
“Marc Ribotdid such a fabulous job with Chaplin's classicThe Kidat the 2010 Festival,” NYGF Founder David Spelman remembers, “bringing out not just the humor, but the deep humanity of the film, that I knew we wanted to have him back, but this time with a film that might summon up an even wider emotional palette.” This season, Ribot returns with a new score for Joseph von Sternberg’s passionate 1928 dramaThe Docks of New York, which tells the New York waterfront story of a boiler room stoker’s romance with a suicidal dance-hall girl. Ribot has frequently collaborated with Tom Waits and John Zorn; his most recent band is the trio Ceramic Dog.
GUITAR MARATHON: LAS AMERICAS
FREE for the first time in our Festival's history, this six-hour Marathon (taking place on MLK Day) celebrates the classical guitar in North and South America, contrasting rich traditions with bold experimentation.
Pepe Romero
Pepe Romero’s distinguished career, both as a solo performer and charter member of the "Royal Family of the Guitar," encompasses some 60 albums, multiple White House invitations, Carnegie Hall concerts, and world premieres by Rodrigo and Moreno Torroba, in addition to receiving a Knighthood by King Juan Carlos I of Spain. This New York Guitar Festival appearance marks Romero’sfirst ever all-Bach recital in New York. Touring the world in celebration of his 70th year, Romero will givehis only New York concert this seasonat the New York Guitar Festival.
Marc Ribot’s Ceramic Dog and Skeleton$
Ceramic Dog is a post-everything band combining the energies of two masters of downtown New York City mayhem: guitarist/vocalist Marc Ribot (Tom Waits, John Zorn, Robert Plant, T-Bone Burnett, Elvis Costello) and bassist Shahzad Ismaily (Laurie Anderson, Will Oldham), with West Coast indie/experimental genius drummer Ches Smith. Ribot is a widely recognized original on the guitar, with influence across multiple genres of music, including rock, jazz, punk, Latin, soul, 80s No-Wave, avant-garde and noise. Opening the show will be Matt Mehlan's revolving ensemble musical project Skeleton$, also known as Skeletons and the Girl-Faced Boys and Skeletons and the Kings of All Cities.
Silent Films/Live Guitars
Charlie Chaplin’s Pay Day & The Idle Class plus short animations from Harry Smith’s Early Abstractions. The Peruvian-influenced psychedelic pop of Chicha Libre mixes Colombian cumbia, dreamy surf guitar, and Andean melodies. They present their scores to Chaplin’s Pay Day (1922) and The Idle Class (1921). Gyan Riley is an equally strong presence in the worlds of classical guitar and contemporary music. He’s performed throughout Europe and the U.S., both as a soloist and in ensembles with Zakir Hussain, the San Francisco Symphony, the Falla Guitar Trio, and his father, the composer/pianist/vocalist Terry Riley.
The Guitar Marathon: Bach
Our 5th biannual Guitar Marathon at the 92nd Street Y’s Kaufman Auditorium is co-curated by Paul O’Dette and the NYGF’s David Spelman. Some of today’s finest classical guitarists and lutenists will reveal the different facets of the music of J.S. Bach and his contemporaries. The event runs from 2—10pm, with a break at 5pm. “An epic event” is how the The Wall Street Journal classified our first Marathon, and Jazz Times called it “a veritable guitar orgy.” Half and full-day tickets will be available in August. Presented in association with WNYC Radio and broadcast on 93.9 FM.
Silent Films/Live Guitars
One of the top fingerstyle, steel-string guitarists, Grammy nominee Alex de Grassi is renowned for his impeccable technique and compelling compositions. He’s explored a variety of world music influences and drawn acclaim for his 14 recordings on Windham Hill and other labels. He presents his original score for Chaplin’s 1918 masterpiece Shoulder Arms. James Blackshaw is a London-based prodigy who's released seven albums of mesmerizing 12-string compositions. His style is often described as "American primitive” and incorporates elements of Indian raga, improvisation, and psychedelia. He presents his original score for The Fall of the House of Usher (directed by James Sibley Watson and Melville Webber).
Blue Country Heart: The Music of Loretta Lynn
American icon and songwriting giant Loretta Lynn has entered the very heart of what country music describes: hard times made good through sharing music. Her career has been an autobiographical journey of what is truly one of the toughest spirits at work in music. |www.jormakaukonen.com|www.lauracantrell.com|www.gesmith.com|www.jenchapin.com