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AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY A miscellany of Hudson Valley art, entertainment and adventure | Calendar & Classifieds | Issue 24 | June 13 – June 20, 2013 MUSIC ANTIQUES TASTE KIDS’ ALMANAC Willie Nelson & Lady Treasure or tchotchke? A walk on the wild side Things to do Antebellum headline Antiques Road Show at with Rhinebeck foraging with Dear Old Dad Taste of Country Festival Woodstock Playhouse expert Pete Dykeman on Father’s Day 2 13 14 23 GREAT 35 TH ANNUAL HUDSON RIVER REVIVAL (cid:48) (cid:49) 5 DION OGUST 2 AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY June 13, 2013 rington, Montgomery Gentry, Trace 1. Taste of Country Adkins and Willie Nelson & Family Festival at Hunter will visit Hunter Mountain Thursday Mountain this weekend through Saturday, June 13 to 15 for the inaugural Taste of Country Festi- An impressive lineup featuring Lady val. Additional entertainers include Antebellum, Hunter Hayes, Billy Cur- Joe Nichols, Gloriana, Justin Moore, JUNE 15 & 16 845-339-3200 845-463-3900 900 Ulster Avenue 10 IBM Road Plaza CROTON POINT PARK CROTON-ON-HUDSON Kingston, NY 12401 Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 www.EdibleArrangements.com WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY FREE for kids 12 and under! Containers may vary. Delivery not available in all areas. EDIBLE ARRANGEMENTS® & Design and all other marks noted are trademarks of Edible Arrangements, LLC. ©2013 Edible Arrangements, LLC. All rights reserved. All the Live Music & Performances, Art, Exhibitions, Activities and Fun You Can Have, Right on the Water! PETE SEEGER SHARON JONES & THE DAP-KINGS HOT TUNA & STEVE KIMOCK MAVIS STAPLES SON VOLT KRIS KRISTOFFERSON PATTERSON HOOD JUDY COLLINS ANTIBALAS KELLER WILLIAMS & THE TRAVELIN’ MCCOURYS DAVID BROMBERG QUINTET Please call for a brochure (845) 565-2076 or see www.msmc.edu/communityed. RED BARAAT THE LONE BELLOW BUFFY SAINTE-MARIE JASON ISBELL TOSHI REAGON & BIG LOVELY IVAN NEVILLE’S DUMPSTAPHUNK ofno DFrgaaDetyohtn eD’rta’ sd NICOLE ATKINS DAN ZANES JOANNE SHENANDOAH THE KLEZMATICS PLUS Fun and Exciting Family Activities all Weekend Long! Family Stage · Tall Ships & Small Boat Rides · Story Grove · Circle of Song Children’s Crafts & Activities · Green Living Expo · Juried Crafts Fair Artisanal Food & Farm Market · Activist Area ·Market Place & Food Vendors... And So Much More! FFOORR MMOORREE IINNFFOORRMMAATTIIOONN PPLLEEAASSEE VVIISSIITT UUSS AATT CLEARWATERFESTIVAL.ORG CCCHHHEEECCCKKK IIITTT OOOU UUAAALLLMMMAAANNNAAATCCCTT WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 3 June 13, 2013 6/16 The first Father’s Day was celebrated in Spokane, Washington in 1910. The idea for the holiday is attributed to Sonora Dodd, who was raised by her father after her mother’s death during childbirth. President Richard Nixon made it a permanent American holiday in 1972. 2 1 3 Dustin Lynch, Blackberry Smoke, Parmalee, Craig Campbell, the Locash Cow- Law, Fawn Potash, Jacquie Roland, Cynthia Winika and Carol Zaloom. Performers will boys and Rachel Farley. include Spider Barbour, Wendy Kagan, Alison Koffler-Wise, Gilles Malkine, Pauline Ticket prices start at single-day admission for $59 on the day of show ($49 in advance), Oliveros, the Princes of Serendip (T. G. Vanini and Julie Parisi), Cheryl Rice, Linda and there are other options for VIP seating and packages that include campground Weintraub and Horowitz himself, who promises, “We’re going to welcome them in privileges online. For more information, call (888) 512-SHOW or visit www.tasteof- properly.” He also notes that video artist Steven Kolpan, who participated in the first countryfestival.com. Celebration in ’96, has found an early VHS videotape from 1972 titled Cicada Mantra that is “still playable” and will be screened at the opening. On the following afternoon, Saturday, June 15, “The mayor graciously gave us use of 2. Strawberry Festival & Civil War reenactment Rotary Park for three hours,” from 3 to 6 p.m. Situated right on the Hudson River across in Esopus the road from Kingston Point Beach, the park will provide a beautiful setting for the Cicada Celebration’s outdoor concert. Those who wish to attend the Saturday event are encouraged The Klyne Esopus Museum at 764 Broadway (Route 9W) in Ulster Park will to ride the trolley from the Rondout Historic District Rotary Park, and to bring a picnic hold its 43rd annual Strawberry Festival and a Civil War reenactment on Satur- and a blanket or lounge chair so you can practice your Deep Listening in comfort. day, June 15. Served under canopies, the event will be accompanied with live mu- Performers will include Spider Barbour, Mikhail Horowitz and Gilles Malkine, Ione, sic by singer/songwriter Vince Fisher. The menu includes hamburgers, hot dogs, David Rothenberg with Tony Levin and Pauline Oliveros, the Princes of Serendip, Chuck potato salad, beverages and fresh strawberry desserts. Food will be served from Stein, If Bwana (Al Margolis and Lisa Kelley) and Ryan Ross Smith and Torben Pastore. 12 noon to 3 p.m. Tickets cost $12 for adults, $5 for children ages 6 to10 and free ECM recording artist Rothenberg has a special interest in cicada song. He is the author for children under age 5. The cost for dessert and beverage only is $7. of the book and CD Why Birds Sing, published in seven languages and the subject of a Ulster County historian Anne Gordon will conduct a guided tour of the Museum with BBC television documentary. He is also the author of numerous other books on music, special emphasis on the 2013 exhibit “Ulster County in the Civil War: 1863” at 3:45 art and nature, including Thousand Mile Song, about making music with whales, and p.m. David Keene, educational coordinator of the Ulster County Historical Society, Survival of the Beautiful, about aesthetics in evolution. This spring he releases a book will portray lieutenant George Mulks of Kingston in a reenactment at 4 p.m., relating and CD called Bug Music, featuring the sounds of the entomological world. his Civil War experiences while serving in the 20th New York State Militia. Joining him Finally, on Sunday, June 16 from 1 to 3 p.m., artist/naturalists Spider and Anita will be musical guests Veterans in a New Field, specializing in music of the Civil War Barbour will conduct a guided visit to Eve’s Point, at the end of Lauren Tice Road in accompanied by guitar, banjo and bodhran drum.  Saugerties, where the cicadas will presumably be doing most of the singing. Admission to all of these events is free. More information about the activities and participants, plus recordings of cicada song and poetry and music from the 1996 Celebration, are 3. The Second Septendecimal Cicada Celebration available online at http://deeplistening.org/site/cicadas. They’re here, in their billions: the bug-eyed monsters (or rather, monster-eyed MARIA ZEMANTAUSKI TRIO bugs), invaders from a strange world beneath our own. If you live in one of the FLAMENCO GUITAR AND DANNCCEE pockets of territory paralleling the Appalachian Mountain chain where Brood II of Magicicada Septendecim, the 17-year cicada, makes its nurseries, you don’t With dancer Lisa Martinez need usto tell you that by now. Back during the last cicada emergence in 1996, Saugerties-based poet and perfor- mOlaivnecreo as ratnisdt Maritk ghaalliel rHy oorwowneitrzs gGoeto trogg aenthde Nr wanitchy aDvoannstk-goaj rtdoe o mrguasniicz de oKyienngnseto Pna’su fliirnset (cid:52)8(cid:34):0(cid:53)0(cid:1)(cid:116)(cid:1)P(cid:43)M(cid:54)(cid:47)(cid:38)(cid:1)(cid:18)(cid:22) OnTilcinkBeeu!tys Cicada Celebration: a “hail and farewell” display of art, video, music, poetry and a scientific presentation from an entomologist at the old location of Donskoj and Co. Sponsored by Mary Collins Real Estate, Inc; on lower Broadway in the Rondout. That same “brood” is reemerging for the Second William Weinstein, Licensed Acupuncturist; Septendecimal Cicada Celebration, which kicked off on June 5 with a series of cicada- Annie O’Neill Painted Clay themed events at Mohonk Mountain House. Still to come this weekend are the opening reception of a cicada-related art show with Where Art Happens spoken-word and acoustic music tributes to the cicadas, at the new location of Dons- koj & Company at 101 Abeel Street on the Rondout in Kingston. Curated by Mikhail GALLERY EXHIBITIONS - PERFORMANCES - WORKSHOPS Horowitz, the event will run from 5 to 9 p.m. on Friday, June 14. Artists featured will Call for Membership, Information and Tickets include Anita Barbour, Cristina Brusca, Dennis Connors, Bob Crimi, Yourij Donskoj, Jim Fawcett, Jan Harrison, Susan Horowitz, Richmond Johnson, Hal Krieger, Polly 845-255-1559 (cid:116)(cid:1)www.UNISONARTS.org (cid:116)(cid:1)68 Mountain Rest Rd, New Paltz 4 MMM UUU SSS III CCC AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 94 June 13, 2013 Just turned 94 and still chopping firewood daily at last report, Pete Seeger will pop up all over the 35th annual Great Hudson River Revival this weekend in Croton Jonathan Richman & Tommy Larkin, Jonathan Richman to Sunday, June 16, 8 p.m., $15, Colony Café, 22 Rock City Road, Woodstock; (845) 679- play Colony Café in 5342, [email protected], Woodstock www.colonycafewoodstock.com. Cheap Time to play Hudson’s Half Moon Saloon The newly reopened Half Moon Saloon in Hudson makes a bold po- sitioning of sorts on June 18, when Cavestomp presents the infectious, snotty (in a good way) glitter punk- rockers Cheap Time from Memphis. The In the Red Records act will be paired them with deejays Jeff the Chef of the Empire State Soul Club and Peter Aaron of the Chrome Cranks, a man who has done more than his share of damage in the snotty (in a Last time Jonathan Richman played good way) sleaze-punk genre. the Hudson Valley with his longtime In its promotion for this event, Half drummer, Tommy Larkin, the eternal- Moon makes it clear that high-energy ly young neo-punk romantic had his punk, garage and old-school soul and R audiences in the palm of his hand & B are what you can expect in this room from the moment he entered the going forward. It’s a move that will ce- room. His first song was performed ment Hudson’s status as the area’s capital without amplification, in a near-whis- of the urban and the transgressive, if that per, as he walked around the room, weren’t already fully cemented. coming up to people’s tables to engage Song after song, Cheap Time’s 2012 full- them in his song. By evening’s end, length Wallpaper Music proves itself an Richman and Larkin had everyone irresistibly hooky, efficient, gently abrasive dancing – with both men trying out and – can I say this once more? – snotty new steps, to everyone’s delight – as masterpiece. By about track five, the well as in laughter and tears com- Kinksy “Take If It You Want It,” it should bined, via a powerhouse 20-minute be clear that this is a serious band with a song about the ways in which rela- wide and assured command of its idiom. SHOW tionships survive the ravages of time. There’s nothing slight or repetitive about If you can’t quite place Richman, think what is going on here; it’s almost florid back to his movie appearance as a Greek Mystical dazzle in its variety, every track exploring a dif- chorus of sorts (with Larkin) in There’s ferent kind of garage, a different color of Something about Mary. Or listen, in your smart, tuneful distemper. The monochro- memory, for his first big breakthrough Celtic Woman plays Bethel Woods on Saturday from the early 1970s, “Roadrunner” V (“Gonna drive by the Stop ‘n’ Shop now, ocalists Chloë Agnew, Lisa Lambe and Susan McFadden and with the radio on…”) Think Modern Lov- violinist Máiréad Nesbitt comprise Celtic Woman, a wildly popular ers, in various connotations from the ad- big-stage group that situates traditional Celtic melody amidst con- enoidally psychosexual to the kid-friendly temporary ambient pop, resulting in a sound that falls somewhere AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY wonderment of “Ice Cream Man” and between Enya and Lloyd-Webber-and-Rice. Their highly visual, spangled stage “I’m a Little Dinosaur.” Or stretch across show includes a six-member choir, a bagpiper and dancers. dozens of albums, some in Spanish, on Where better to enjoy this melodious and mystical dazzle than at the big shed almost as many record labels, covering at Bethel? Celtic Woman comes to the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts on editor Julie O’Connor everything from the wonder of summer Saturday, June 15. Tickets cost $31.50, $39.50, $45, $60, $82.50 and $101.50 contributors Bob Berman, John Burdick, feelings through complexities of affection for reserved seating. Ticket prices increase $5 on the day of the show. Tickets Jennifer Brizzi, Erica Chase- Salerno, Will Dendis, Sharyn and things growing better over time to are on sale now at www.bethelwoodscenter.org, the Bethel Woods box office, Flanagan, Ann Hutton, the beauties of Harpo playing his harp, Ticketmaster or by phone at (800) 745-3000. The Bethel Woods Center for the Mikhail Horowitz, Crispin Vincent Van Gogh and fast-disappearing Arts is located at 200 Hurd Road in Bethel. Kott, Megan Labrise, John Litton, Dion Ogust, Sue Pilla, corner stores. – John Burdick Frances Marion Platt, Richman is never a nostalgia act, and Lee Reich, Paul Smart, always has new material and schticks to Lynn Woods try out on his audiences – who always feel He’s completely one of a kind, and we’re Valley annually around this time of year. calendar Donna Keefe manager like friends, both to and because of him. lucky to have him come to visit the Hudson – Paul Smart classifieds Tobi Watson, Amy Murphy, Dale Geff ner (cid:48)(cid:78) (cid:41)(cid:36)(cid:53)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:49)(cid:39)(cid:3)(cid:58)(cid:44)(cid:39)(cid:40) (cid:54)(cid:68)(cid:87)(cid:88)(cid:85)(cid:71)(cid:68)(cid:92)(cid:15)(cid:3)(cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:21)(cid:21) (cid:70) (cid:82) (cid:24)(cid:29)(cid:22)(cid:19)(cid:3)(cid:16)(cid:3)(cid:27)(cid:29)(cid:19)(cid:19)(cid:83)(cid:80) (cid:87) (cid:36)(cid:86) (cid:55)(cid:43)(cid:40)(cid:3)(cid:24)(cid:55)(cid:43)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:49)(cid:49)(cid:56)(cid:36)(cid:47)(cid:3)(cid:58)(cid:50)(cid:50)(cid:39)(cid:54)(cid:55)(cid:50)(cid:38)(cid:46)(cid:3)(cid:53)(cid:40)(cid:42)(cid:44)(cid:50)(cid:49)(cid:36)(cid:47) ULSTER PUBLISHING (cid:71) (cid:82) (cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:72)(cid:71)(cid:3)(cid:69)(cid:92)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:81)(cid:81)(cid:76)(cid:81)(cid:68)(cid:3)(cid:49)(cid:82)(cid:86)(cid:72)(cid:76) publisher ................................. Geddy Sveikauskas (cid:36)(cid:82) associate publisher ......................... Dee Giordano (cid:58) (cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:20)(cid:24)(cid:3)(cid:16)(cid:3)(cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:79)(cid:92)(cid:3)(cid:20)(cid:23)(cid:3) (cid:45)(cid:82)(cid:76)(cid:81)(cid:3)(cid:88)(cid:86)(cid:3)(cid:73)(cid:82)(cid:85)(cid:3)(cid:73)(cid:68)(cid:69)(cid:88)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:88)(cid:86)(cid:3) advertising director ................. Genia Wickwire (cid:3) (cid:50)(cid:83)(cid:72)(cid:81)(cid:76)(cid:81)(cid:74)(cid:3)(cid:53)(cid:72)(cid:70)(cid:72)(cid:83)(cid:87)(cid:76)(cid:82)(cid:81)(cid:29)(cid:3)(cid:54)(cid:68)(cid:87)(cid:17)(cid:3)(cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:20)(cid:24)(cid:15)(cid:3)(cid:23)(cid:16)(cid:25)(cid:83)(cid:80) (cid:75)(cid:82)(cid:85)(cid:86)(cid:3)(cid:71)(cid:291)(cid:82)(cid:72)(cid:88)(cid:89)(cid:85)(cid:72)(cid:86)(cid:3)(cid:68)(cid:81)(cid:71)(cid:3)(cid:90)(cid:76)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:15)(cid:3) production/technology director......Joe Morgan (cid:58)(cid:81) (cid:68)(cid:3)(cid:86)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:72)(cid:81)(cid:87)(cid:3)(cid:68)(cid:88)(cid:70)(cid:87)(cid:76)(cid:82)(cid:81)(cid:3)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:3)(cid:74)(cid:82)(cid:82)(cid:71)(cid:86)(cid:3) circulation................................... Dominic Labate (cid:3)(cid:76) (cid:38)(cid:75)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:86)(cid:87)(cid:76)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:74)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:15)(cid:3)(cid:45)(cid:17)(cid:3)(cid:43)(cid:17)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:81)(cid:86)(cid:82)(cid:81)(cid:15)(cid:3)(cid:36)(cid:85)(cid:79)(cid:72)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:37)(cid:72)(cid:70)(cid:78)(cid:72)(cid:85)(cid:15) display advertising .......................... 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AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 5 June 13, 2013 FESTIVAL Clean, green music machine Clearwater’s Great Hudson River Revival this weekend at Croton Point Park “E xquisite torture” isn’t the first phrase that would leap to mind for most people if asked to characterize the Great Hudson River Revival, popularly known as the Clearwater Festival. None- theless, it’s an apt description for the two-day, environmentally themed roots-music blowout that has been happening every Fathers’ Day week- end for 35 years now. The problem, you see, is that there’s just so much going on at any given time that you’ll want to rip yourself in pieces so that you can be present at more than one stage at once. At 2 p.m. this Saturday, for instance, you could be listening to the Afrobeat orchestra Antibalas, blues from the Guy Davis Band, zydeco from Jesse Lége and Bayou Brew or several other interesting acts. On Sunday at 6 p.m. you could catch iconic singer/songwriter/actor Kris Kristofferson; phrase-looping phenom Keller Williams, a/k/a K-Dub, jamming bluegrass with the Travelin’ McCourys (that’s the Del McCoury Band minus Del); satirical songwriter Jill Sobule; Sierra Leone’s Refugee All-Stars; or local faves Magpie. There are three main stages – Rainbow, Hudson and Sloop – plus a Dance Stage, Photo of Pete Seeger (above) and the Sloop Clearwater (on cover) by Dion Ogust a Family Stage for particularly kid-friendly acts, a Story Grove for spoken-word entertainment and the Circle of Song. The latter is where the “parkin’ lot pickin’” action primarily happens, with miscellaneous big names and amateur musicians bay is a constant reminder of why the need for the Clearwater organization does gathering to swap songs or learn tricky licks, and where you can catch a workshop not diminish, even as the Hudson River becomes swimmable again and the PCBs on humorous political songs, a jug-band jam or a convocation of mad ukulele get cleaned up further north. players. Croton Point Park is spread-out enough that the sound rarely bleeds over The festival also boasts a crafts fair, a farmers’ market area devoted to locally from one stage to another, and you can find quiet spots easily enough if you want sourced artisanal food and agriculture, a display of hand-built boats and rides a break from the overflowing musical bounty. around the bay on the Clearwater herself. Plus there are a gazillion things for Most folks are attracted by the headline performers, of course, and Clearwater kids to do, from face-painting to storytellers to making birdfeeders from recycled never disappoints when it comes to folk-revival “legacy acts.” This year, Judy materials. Everything, including stage lighting and sound, is biodiesel- and solar- Collins, the David Bromberg Quintet, Hot Tuna unplugged, Mavis Staples, Tom powered; there’s ample space set aside at each stage for handicapped access, Chapin, David Amram and Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk are all playing on Sat- and main-stage concerts typically are accompanied by American Sign Language urday, June 15. The Sunday lineup includes Pete Seeger with Lorre Wyatt, Buffy interpreters (who are great fun to watch even if you’re not hearing-impaired). Sainte-Marie, more Hot Tuna with Steve Kimock sitting in, more David Amram, If you’ve never been to the Revival, now is the time to find out why National Josh White, Jr., Terrance Simien and the Zydeco Experience, Vieux Farka Touré, Geographic Traveler cited it in its “Best Trips 2013” issue and why Outside Maga- Levon Helm’s Dirt Farmer Band and the Klezmatics. zine calls it “one of the top four music festivals in the US.” Ticket prices range from Just turned 94 and still chopping firewood daily at last report, Seeger will likely $64 for an advance-purchase single-day pass for a Clearwater member to $200 pop up all over the festival, not just during his headline slot; and every musician for a full weekend pass including camping privileges for a non-member. Kids age present will undoubtedly want to perform with the folk legend at some point. Also 12 and under get in free with an adult, and students, seniors and the disabled get don’t miss the Sunday afternoon workshop “Remembering Richie Havens,” who a 15 percent discount. Sails on the Clearwater and the Mystic Whaler cost extra was a longtime Hudson River Revival mainstay. and should be booked online in advance. Younger generations of performers will be represented by such acts as Son Volt, This event is the single biggest fundraiser for one of the Hudson Valley’s most Drive-By Truckers graduates Patterson Hood and Jason Isbell, Mike & Ruthy, the important environmental watchdog and educational organizations. Visit www. Last Bison, the Lone Bellow and Canadian Bhangra/Celtic fusion band Delhi 2 clearwaterfestival.org for advance-purchase discount tickets and check out the full Dublin. Previously announced R & B stars Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings had schedule. The gates open at 9 a.m.; the concerts start at 11 a.m. and run officially to bow out, unfortunately, due to a medical emergency. But disappointed fans until 8:30 p.m. (but usually later) on Saturday and until 7 p.m. on Sunday. will find plenty of other great sounds to console them. One of the great pleasures For the reasonably fit, Croton Point Park is walking distance from the Croton of the Revival has always been the wealth of opportunities to discover fabulous Metro North station, but a free shuttle is provided. Onsite parking at the Park bands that you may never have heard of before, just by wandering from stage to itself is very limited and carries a $10 fee; parking at the train station costs $5. stage – especially in the “world music” sphere. Carpooling or utilizing public transportation is highly recommended. Then there are all the activist booths where you can stock up on tee-shirts, – Frances Marion Platt pamphlets, buttons and bumper stickers and sign petitions for every progressive cause imaginable, with special focus on sustainability and green energy. The Clearwater’s 35th annual Great Hudson River Revival, Saturday/Sunday, June 15/16, 9 a.m.-8:30 p.m., $64-$200, Croton Point Park, 1A Croton Point Av- looming presence of the Indian Point nuclear plant’s cooling towers across the enue, Croton-on-Hudson; (845) 236-5596, www.clearwaterfestival.org. matic sameness that can be the Achilles’ heel of punk rock is never even an issue prevailed in a piece’s era of origin. mance, not scholarship. And, entering its under the artistic direction of violinist here, laughed out the door by the Gary But the goal, of course, is a living perfor- fifth decade now, Aston Magna, currently Daniel Stepner, offers some of the best Glitter stomp of track two, “Straight and Narrow.” By the time you reach the sunny Britpop classicism of track nine, “Typi- cally Strange,” nothing will surprise you PIANOSUMMER anymore about Cheap Time. Historical importance aside, I’ll take this stuff over the Ramones ten times out of ten. AT NEW PALTZ VLADIMIR FELTSMAN JULY 6 – 26 – John Burdick ARTISTIC DIRECTOR Cheap Time with DJs Jeff the Chef & Pe- ter Aaron, Tuesday, June 18, 8 p.m., $5, FESTIVAL CONCERTS “Pictures at an Exhibition,” Beethoven’s Fifteen Half Moon Saloon, 48 South Front Street, Variations and Fugue in E flat major, Op 35 and Hudson; (518) 822-1913. (cid:27)(cid:29)(cid:19)(cid:19)(cid:3)(cid:83)(cid:17)(cid:80)(cid:17)(cid:135)(cid:3)(cid:48)(cid:70)(cid:46)(cid:72)(cid:81)(cid:81)(cid:68)(cid:3)(cid:55)(cid:75)(cid:72)(cid:68)(cid:87)(cid:85)(cid:72) Sonata in E flat Major, Op 7. PIANOSUMMER FACULTY GALA Aston Magna Musical SYMPHONY GALA WITH THE HUDSON Saturday, July 6 Festival begins at Bard VALLEY PHILHARMONIC Schubert, Brahms, Chopin, Scarlatti, Vladimir Feltsman, conducting on Friday Shostakovich, Ravel and Scriabin Friday, July 26 Mozart, Overture to “Impresario“ The Aston Magna Musical Festival’s JONATHAN BISS RECITAL Piano Concerto performed by the 2013 winner mission is to perform serious music Saturday, July 13 of The Jacob Flier Piano Competition in a way that is as close as possible An all Beethoven program. Mr. Biss is Brahms Symphony #1 to what the composer imagined and internationally recognized for his artistry, musical intelligence and deeply felt interpretations. what the original audiences heard. INSTITUTE EVENTS This entails far more than the use of Concerts, recitals, piano competitions, (cid:36)(cid:47)(cid:40)(cid:59)(cid:36)(cid:49)(cid:39)(cid:40)(cid:53)(cid:3)(cid:46)(cid:50)(cid:53)(cid:54)(cid:36)(cid:49)(cid:55)(cid:44)(cid:36)(cid:3)(cid:53)(cid:40)(cid:38)(cid:44)(cid:55)(cid:36)(cid:47) period instruments. Much histori- Saturday, July 20 master classes, lectures – all open to the cal inquiry and best-guess scholar- (cid:48)(cid:85)(cid:17)(cid:3)(cid:46)(cid:82)(cid:85)(cid:86)(cid:68)(cid:81)(cid:87)(cid:76)(cid:68)(cid:15)(cid:3)(cid:83)(cid:85)(cid:68)(cid:76)(cid:86)(cid:72)(cid:71)(cid:3)(cid:73)(cid:82)(cid:85)(cid:3)(cid:87)(cid:75)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:70)(cid:79)(cid:68)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:87)(cid:92)(cid:3)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:3)(cid:75)(cid:76)(cid:86)(cid:3) public. Visit www.newpaltz.edu/piano for ship goes into understanding not only technique, richly varied tone and dynamic complete schedule. what instruments were used, but also phrasing, will perform Mussorgsky’s how they were played, what kinds of articulations and gestures would have (cid:37)(cid:82)(cid:91)(cid:3)(cid:50)(cid:73)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:70)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:72)(cid:81)(cid:86)(cid:3)(cid:45)(cid:88)(cid:81)(cid:72)(cid:3)(cid:22)(cid:3)(cid:135)(cid:3)(cid:27)(cid:23)(cid:24)(cid:17)(cid:21)(cid:24)(cid:26)(cid:17)(cid:22)(cid:27)(cid:27)(cid:19)(cid:3)(cid:135)(cid:3)Online tickets available at: www.newpaltz.edu/piano(cid:3)(cid:135)(cid:3)(cid:44)(cid:81)(cid:73)(cid:82)(cid:85)(cid:80)(cid:68)(cid:87)(cid:76)(cid:82)(cid:81)(cid:29)(cid:3)(cid:27)(cid:23)(cid:24)(cid:17)(cid:21)(cid:24)(cid:26)(cid:17)(cid:22)(cid:27)(cid:25)(cid:19) 6 AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY June 13, 2013 period interpretations in the world. Gilbert & Sullivan: The Aston Magna is a multi-venue Festival, rotating theaters through the Berkshire Ballet! at Kaatsbaan region though June and July. Friday nights are given to the Olin Theater at Bard College, and include “The Art of the Chalumeau,” an early clarinet (June 14), “J. S. Bach: The Six Sonatas for Violin and Harpsichord” (June 21), “Masterworks by J. S. Bach and Marin Marais” (June 28), “Shades of Love Lost: Madrigals of Mon- teverdi and Wert” (July 5) and “Music from the Library of Thomas Jefferson” (July 12). Olin Hall is located on the campus of Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson. For tickets, call (845) 758-7887. For more information on the programs and on As- ton Magna, visit http://astonmagna.org. – John Burdick The glory of Sir William S. Gilbert SHOW and Sir Arthur Sullivan, the warring lyricist and musical genius of the un- paralleled Gilbert & Sullivan cata- Dear Abby logue of comic operas from the Victo- rian Era, is the way their warring, sparring, childish yet ultimately tri- Woodstock’s own Abby Hollander & Boot Heel umphant partnership works as well Drag to play Rosendale Café off- as onstage, at least in these post- modern days. The two have become A the epitome of all show business and bby Hollander, a young Woodstock singer/songwriter now arts-related creativity clichés, from based in Brooklyn, will return to the area with her new five-song the show always needing to go on to EP CD, self-titled Abby Hollander and the Boot Heel Drag. The cel- the ways in which inspiration can ulti- ebration will take place with a performance at 8 p.m. Saturday, June mately (and almost inevitably) come 22 at the Rosendale Café, located at 434 Main Street in Rosendale, the favorite from the most unexpected of places. stomping ground of many a musician. The hard-driving rockabilly band will And then there are the songs and op- feature Hollander on guitar and vocals, Ryan Langlois on electric guitar, Roger erettas themselves: From The Pirates of Mason on bass and Zack Bruce on drums. The special guest for the evening is Penzance and The Mikado to HMS Pin- Guy “Fooch” Fischetti on fiddle and pedal steel guitar. afore and the ever-hilarious Patience, “It’s always fun for me to bring my band home to Ulster County, and playing Gilbert & Sullivan works are instantly at Rosendale and having Fooch on board just rounds out that feeling – it’s like memorable yet always surprising in their blending my musical background with my present,” said Hollander. “Honky-tonk dexterity and wit. They capture their and country are musical genres that simply remind you of what you’re already time yet lampoon it just enough to feel feeling; expect the Boot Heel Drag to tap into that. It’ll be heartache, loneliness or maybe the urge to get just a little bit wild.” The new CD features two originals by Hollander, one by her brother, Jonah Bruno, a co-written gem and a George Strait cover tune, and features fine city players like Bennett Sullivan on guitar and Thomas Bryan Eaton, doubling on pedal steel and guitar. Admission costs $10. The Rosendale Café doesn’t take reservations, but serves a fine vegetarian dinner, so arriving early is not out of the question. For more information, call (845) 658-9048. eternally relevant. They are the best of all – Paul Smart songbooks – which makes the new pro- duction from Dance Patrelle premiering at Gilbert & Sullivan: The Ballet!, Dance Patrelle, Saturday, June 15, 7:30 p.m., the troupe’s new residence across the river Sunday, June 16, 2:30 p.m., $30/$10, in Tivoli, at the Kaatsbaan International Kaatsbaan International Dance Center, Dance Center, so enticing. 120 Broadway, Tivoli; (845) 757-5106, Gilbert & Sullivan: The Ballet! is set extension 2 or 10, www.kaatsbaan.org. as a revue of parts from The Pirates of Penzance, The Mikado and HMS Pin- Bardavon to screen afore, redesigned to focus on choreogra- pher Francis Patrelle’s take on the vari- Bizet’s Carmen ous joys, trials and rewards of a life in the theater where Sir William and Sir Arthur Can one ever have enough Carmen, battle over casting, bond over music and the great Bizet opera? It’s getting re- get ripped off by their producer. The cast prised as the latest Live from the Met includes 14 dancers, nine singers and two high-definition screening at the Bar- instrumentalists. davon 1869 Opera House in Pough- Patrelle, a graduate of Juilliard, has cho- keepsie on Saturday afternoon, June reographed more than 50 original works 22. The classic story of a proper sol- ranging from American songbook stan- dier ruined by his love of a tempes- dards – his forte – to reinterpretations of tuous woman, who leaves him for a operatic and ballet masterpieces. bullfighter (and ends up killed by her jilted lover), the work met with criti- cism for its focus on lower-class mo- rality and base emotions when first Giant premiered, but gradually gained favor Book Sale with a public who have made it among the most popular of operas over time. Saturday’s Met: Live in HD encore per- June 14 - 18 formance, starring Anita Rachvelishvili as 900 Dutchess Trnpk Carmen and José Cura as Don José, will Rt 44 be preceded by a 12:30 p.m. lecture on the Poughkeepsie Business Park work and Bizet by Ulster Publishing’s own (0.9 miles east of Leslie Gerber, a professor at Marist Col- Adams Fairacre Farms) lege and longtime writer on music. The Fri, Sat & Mon: broadcast starts at 1 p.m. Over 200,000 10 A.M. - 9 P.M. – Paul Smart gently used Sun: 10 A.M. - 6 P.M. books & media Tue: 8 A.M. - 2 P.M. The Met: Live in HD presents Bizet’s at reasonable Carmen, Saturday, June 22, 1 p.m., Sponsored by Friends of the prices Poughkeepsie Public Library District $26/$19, Bardavon, 35 Market Street, poklib.org Poughkeepsie; (845) 473-2072, www. bardavon.org. AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 7 June 13, 2013 7970, www.liveatthefalcon.com, www. teriroiger.com. Leo Kottke to play Club Helsinki on Wednesday Leo Kottke has been around long enough to seem always there. But don’t take his oddball guitar virtuosi- ties for granted. Kottke really arrived with his third album, 1971’s explicit- ly titled 6- and 12-String Guitar. On it Kottke pioneered an approach to fingerstyle folk and roots guitar that foreshadowed much of what would come to be the acoustic side of New Age. Don’t pin that on Kottke. He’s been all over the folk and blues map in his career, playing in the traditions of mentors like John Fahey and Leadbelly. And he is still going strong. Seven-time Grammy-winner Leo Kottke performs at Club Helsinki in Hudson on Wednesday, June 19 at 8 p.m. Tickets cost $42 in advance, $45 at the door. Club Hel- sinki is located at 405 Columbia Street in Hudson. For more information, call (518) 828-4800 or visit www.helsinkihudson. Freedom then, freedom now com. – John Burdick Bill Brovold performs Teri Roiger sings Abbey Lincoln at the Falcon in Marlboro for Juneteenth at Imogen Holloway Gallery in Saugerties H ere in the Northeast we Marlboro. Lincoln, whose vocal style fell from We Insist: Freedom Now Suite (1960) The Imogen Holloway Gallery at 81 don’t tend to hear much of somewhere in between Billie Holiday and and Straight Ahead (1961), along with oth- Partition Street in the Village of Sau- a fuss made over the holiday Nina Simone, was a major influence on er material from Lincoln’s repertoire. Also gerties will present a live performance known as Juneteenth, even Roiger, who now wants to pay homage performing will be actor Mel Johnson, Jr., in its storefront window on Saturday, though New York is one of the 42 states to her predecessor’s “ability to express presenting scenes from Frederick Doug- June 15 from 7 to 9 p.m. featuring that confer it official observance status. human struggle through the beauty of las: In the Shadow of Slavery, and educa- musician/composer, visual artist and But down South, the 19th of June – also music.” tor and jazz historian Joe Washington will educator Bill Brovold and friends. known as African American Emancipa- Roiger will be performing with her give a talk on the meaning of Juneteenth. Brovold’s current work is mostly instru- tion Day or Freedom Day – has been a quartet, consisting of John Menegon “Teri Roiger Sings the Music of Abbey mental guitar work bordering on Ameri- big deal for on bass, Steve Lincoln Celebrating Juneteenth” begins at cana, but he is known to belt out a cowboy more than a Williams on 7 p.m. on Wednesday, June 19 at the Fal- song or even a Scottish murder ballad. His century. “Juneteenth” marks the drums, Greg con Arts Center, located on Route 9W in love of machinery, found objects and folk The Eman- Osby on alto Marlboro. As always at the Falcon, admis- music is apparent throughout his many arrival of Union soldiers at cipation Proc- sax and James sion is on a voluntary, pay-what-you-can recordings and performances. . He lives lamation may Weidman – ac- basis, but the suggested donation is $20 in the Hudson Valley, working on multiple Galveston in 1865, where have taken ef- companist to per person. If you’ll be having dinner, res- local projects as well as teaching art, mu- fect as of Janu- they informed the last Abbey Lincoln ervations are highly recommended: Call sic and instrument-making to children in ary 1, 1863, but herself for sev- (845) 236-7970. New York City public schools. the rebel states of the slaves that eral years – on – Frances Marion Platt David Budd will join Brovold at the IH- were in no hurry piano. The Gallery on Saturday, playing percussion to get the word they had been freed musical pro- Teri Roiger Sings the Music of Abbey on instruments that Brovold makes. For Lincoln Celebrating Juneteenth, Wednes- out to their en- gram will con- more information, call (347) 387-3212 or day, June 19, 7 p.m., Falcon Arts Center, slaved popula- sist of excerpts visit www.ihgallery.com. 1348 Route 9W, Marlboro; (845) 236- tions that they had been legally freed. It took until June 19, 1865 for Union general Gordon Grang- er to deliver a public reading of General Sat. Jul. 6 Thur. Aug. 1 Sat. Aug. 17 Order No. 3, which announced “an abso- lute equality of personal rights and rights Dwight Sammy Figueroa BROADWAY’S of property between former masters and Yoakam — Latin Ben Vereen slaves,” to the people of Galveston, Texas. They were just about the last to know. Dance Party The date has been commemorated with parades, street fairs and family reunions Sat. Jul. 13 Fri. Aug. 23 throughout the former Confederacy ever Manhattan Fri. Aug. 2 COMEDY CLUB since, and the term “Juneteenth” has been Harrison used for it since at least 1903. Transfer Pedrito Martinez It’s a fair bet that Juneteenth was what Greenbaum the late, great jazz singer Abbey Lincoln Havana Quartet had in mind when she sang the “Freedom Sat. Jul. 20 Day” section of her husband, drummer Sat. Aug. 24 Max Roach’s epic We Insist: Freedom The Sat. Aug. 3 Now Suite as the ‘60s dawned and the COMEDY SHOW Doobie Paquito Civil Rights movement picked up steam. Rita Rudner Thus it’s more than appropriate that our Brothers D’Rivera own foremost local jazz chanteuse, Terri & the Roiger, should be using June 19, 2013 to Dizzy Gillespie tout her new tribute CD Dear Abbey: The Sat. Aug. 31 Sat. Jul. 27 Music of Abbey Lincoln at the Falcon in Big Band FESTIVAL FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA SAUGERTIES OPERA Belleayre Mountain Fri. Aug. 9 40th Anniversary SENIOR HOUSING Bizet’s of DARK SIDE Route 28 Bill Charlap Trio Subsidized Housing OF THE MOON “Carmen” for Low Income WAITING Highmount, NY The Senior Citizens LIST Sat. Aug. 10 Music of SECURE LIVING 800.942.6904 ext.1344 All concerts Kenny Barron’s Pink Floyd Call or write for an application begin at 8pm www.belleayremusic.org All-Star Quintet at the information below 155 MAIN STREET • SAUGERTIES, NY 12477 — 845-247-0612 — 8 SSSTTTAAA GGG EEE AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY June 13, 2013 6/15 Performed in darkness in Mount Tremper on June 15, lit only by moving LED candles, Distance Measures will borrow elements from mathematical models of chaotic systems VIEW FROM Photographs THE EDGE Clockwise from the top right: Abigail Levine’s Distance Measures and As Sugar Loaves Train Horses; Souleymane Badolo’s Buudou, BADOO, BADOLO; BREAK>Urge>Imprint, a collaborative performance by dancer Michelle Boulé and cellist Okkyung Choreographer Abigail Levine kicks off Lee; and International Contemporary Ensemble – ICE Mount Tremper Arts Summer Festival A ccording to Mathew Vandenbroucke of Mount Tremper Arts forces, where artists can come together pursuit of that boundary-stretching in- Pokoik, photographer, artis- (MTA), “One essential aspect of our mis- to form a community that values dia- cubator environment through the first tic director and co-founder sion is to create a space that questions logue, risk-taking, experimentation and five years of the Mount Tremper Arts with choreographer Aynsley the confines of conventional market mutual support.” The results of the duo’s Summer Festival have attracted, from far and near, a younger and edgier audi- ence than most longer-established Hud- A Night of Jazz son Valley summer performance and ex- hibition series. The Festival’s sixth season gets under- Under the Stars! way this weekend, with two works by cho- reographer Abigail Levine beginning at 8 p.m. on Saturday, June 15. Performed Free Outdoor Concert in darkness, lit only by moving LED can- featuring SUNY Ulster’s Community Band & dles, Distance Measures (2012) borrows elements from mathematical models of Jazz Ensemble under the direction of Chris chaotic systems. This beautiful, highly Earley & Vic Izzo. structured dance improvisation evolved Bring a chair. Have a picnic. (no alcohol) collaboratively alongside Derek Bermel’s Enjoy selections from Jazz greats, Broadway Orbit Design, a musical algorithm in- spired by the three-body problem in ce- shows & March favorites. lestial mechanics. This concert is dedicated to the late Tim As Sugar Loaves Train Horses, a work- Barcone, a huge supporter of music in Ulster in-progress, transposes sections of John County. Cage’s Lecture on Nothing onto bodies in June 19, 7 pm space. The dance houses “movement sen- tences” in which dancers literally mark on the Stone Ridge Campus their movements on the walls and floor. (Rain location: Quimby Theater, The space, in turn, comes to reflect the SUNY Ulster) particulars of the dancers’ bodies, as well For more information, as an accumulation of the performance call (845) 687-5262 itself. AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 9 June 13, 2013 The Festival continues on June 21 and provide access to all events including the The Columnist, Performing Arts of Wood- treated to the work of 45 visual artists 22, when the award-winning International Art-B-Qs. For more information or to order stock, Friday/Saturday, June 14/15, 8 and 35 bands (150 musical acts applied Contemporary Ensemble (ICE) performs tickets, call (866) 811-4111 or (845) 688- p.m., Sunday, June 16, 3 p.m., Woodstock for these spots). A record $78,000 in care Town Hall, 76 Tinker Street, Woodstock; the world premiere of Mesh, about vulnera- 9893 or visit http://mounttremperarts.org. was given by 85 healthcare providers and (845) 679-7900, www.performingartsof- bility, connection and fundamental aspects – Frances Marion Platt four dentists. woodstock.org. of shared experience. The season’s first Art- Launched in 2010, this three-day event B-Q event on June 29, Pork and Poetry! Abigail Levine’s Distance Measures & As is funded by donations and sponsors. The Sugar Loaves Train Horses, Saturday, O+ Festival expands features spoken-word performances by O+ Festival hopes to open a flagship O+ Craig Dworkin and Mónica de la Torre. June 15, 8 p.m., $20, Mount Tremper reach to San Francisco clinic in the Kingston area in the near fu- Arts Summer Festival, 647 South Plank On July 6, dancer Michelle Boulé and ture, where artists and musicians will be Rd, Mount Tremper; (866) 811-4111, cellist Okkyung Lee push sonic and The community-run O+ Festival – able to barter their talents with art-and- (845) 688-9893, http://mounttremper- choreographic boundaries to the edge arts.org. where artists and musicians barter music-loving health providers on a year- in BREAK>Urge>Imprint, an atmospheric their work for health care services – round basis. Naturally, national expansion work rooted in improvisation. July 12 and is in high gear, fielding submissions will follow as the Festival grows in size Performing Arts of 13 see the world premiere of Poe, com- from musicians and visual artists for and scope. “We’re building and nurturing posed by Marcos Balter and performed Woodstock stages David inclusion in the fourth annual Festi- relationships between artists and health by Claire Chase and Svet Stoyanov. Paul Auburn’s The Columnist val, to take place in Kingston from Oc- care providers that grow stronger each Lazar performs When a Priest Marries tober 11 to 13. day,” says Concra. a Witch: An Artist Talk by Suzanne Bo- David Auburn’s play The Columnist, In addition, organizers have announced canegra on July 20. On July 27, Karinne in the midst of a popular Perform- the launch of O+SF, a second O+ Festival Center for Performing Keithley Syers will perform her work-in- ing Arts of Woodstock (PAW) run at slated for November 15 to 17 in the San progress Another Tree Dance. Woodstock’s Town Hall through this Francisco Mission Creek District. “In the Arts in Rhinebeck On August 3, artist-in-residence Sou- weekend, is a character study of the last three years, we’ve had people write in casting for Spamalot leymane Badolo, from Burkina Faso, 20th-century journalist Joseph Alsop, from all over the US asking to replicate will trace the journey of his great-great- a proud liberal and closeted homosex- what we’re doing,” says Festival co-found- The Center for Performing Arts in grandfather in his dance Buudou, BADOO, ual who slipped into anti-communism er Joe Concra. “Now we’re pleased to say Rhinebeck will hold auditions for male BADOLO. Composer/performer collec- and support for the Vietnam War as that we are ready to extend our reach, and and female adult actors, singers and tive Varispeed will attempt to perform his attempts to balance a complex help other communities – starting with dancers for upcoming performances of composer Art Jarvinen’s “unperform- personal life gradually changed his our new friends and collaborators in San Monty Python’s Spamalot, the hilarious- able” Adult Party Games from the Leisure professional demeanor and political Francisco.” ly irreverent parody of the tale of King Planet, a collection of wild performance views. With much expectation riding This year, the nonprofit, volunteer-pro- Arthur and his Knights of the Round Ta- pieces, text scores and musical activities, on its New York City premiere last duced O+ Festival in the Hudson Valley ble whose original Broadway production on August 10. year, with John Lithgow in the central will present nearly 50 performances by was the winner of three Tony Awards, Possibly the highlight of the MTA 2013 role – based on Auburn’s winning of musicians, and approximately 30 visual including Best Musical. All parts are Summer Festival will be Perfect Lives, a the Pulitzer and numerous other priz- artists and filmmakers will be selected open. No appointment is necessary for daylong site-specific opera by composer es for his play Proof a decade earlier to exhibit public art pieces throughout auditions on Saturday, July 20 at 1 p.m. Robert Ashley, adapted by Varispeed, – the work was instantly recognized Uptown Kingston. As always, the musi- and Sunday, July 21 at 7 p.m. Callbacks which will be staged at sites throughout as a classic in its own right, draw- cians and artists gain access to a pop-up will be made on Saturday and Sunday, Woodstock, Boiceville, Mount Tremper ing narrative out of the same brittle O+ clinic in exchange for their contribu- July 22 and 23 at 7 p.m. and Phoenicia on August 17. Admission to brinksmanship of conflicting personal tions to Festival programming, where Auditions will be held at the Center for this innovative event is free. The third Art- and political worlds that Mad Men ex- they will have access to a wide menu Performing Arts on Route 308 in Rhine- B-Q event, on August 24, is titled CATCH plores much more superficially. of services ranging from primary care, beck. Prepare 16 bars of a Broadway- Takes the Catskills. In the PAW production, directed by physical and occupational therapy, psy- style song and bring a copy of your sheet Come experience what Mathew Pokoik Nicola Sheara, Farrell Reynolds is gain- chological screenings and follow-up visit music for the pianist. Production dates means by “an antidote to spectacle.” Admis- ing raves as Joe, along with the equally vouchers to massage, acupuncture, eye will be October 4 through 27, 2013. For sion to most MTA Summer Festival events dedicated troupe. care and dental care. In 2012, the event in more information, call Diana at (845) costs $20. Season tickets, priced at $95, – Paul Smart Kingston drew 2,000 attendees who were 876-5348. RED HOT POPS E 3 “ Bard SummerScape and Bard Music Festival always unearth piles of 01 buried treasures.” — The New Yorker 2 P8, Bard SummerScape 2013 presents seven inspired weeks of opera, music, NORTHERN 1 theater, dance, film, and cabaret. The hub of these offerings is the 24th annual st Bard Music Festival, this year examining the life, work, and cultural milieu of u the 20th-century composer Igor Stravinsky. SummerScape takes place in the gA extraordinary Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts and other venues u on Bard College’s stunning Mid–Hudson Valley campus. – aC5 OUO.pRS.e ESrStaaT gEeI PAremiere July 26 – August 4 DUTCHESSMatt Finley y l Music by Sergey Taneyev u American Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leon Botstein jS Directed by Thaddeus Strassberger Russian composer Sergey Taneyev’s extraordinary but rarely staged opera conveys ucs the searing drama of Aeschylus’ powerful trilogy about the cursed House of Atreus. Sz R Dance/Theater July 6–7 holas SYMPHONY A RITE Nic Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and SITI Company A new work celebrating the centennial of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring. E Theater July 11–21 enart R WTHorEld M PrAemSTieEreR A AdaNpDta tMionA RGARITA ORCHESTRAGarcia- M Directed by János Szász ati Adapted by János Szász and Gideon Lester after the novel by Mikhail Bulgakov K At once a pungent political satire, a magical fantasy, and an unforgettable love story. n Bard Music Festival an m TSwTRenAtyV-fIoNuSrtKhY S eAaNsoDn HIS WORLD Beck M Two weekends of concerts, panels, and other events bring the musical world of en e Russian composer Igor Stravinsky vividly to life. hl WEEKEND ONE August 9–11 Kat Becoming Stravinsky: From St. Petersburg to Paris will trace Stravinsky’s path from his early Russian years to his first great successes in Paris writing for Sergei Diaghilev’s (cid:43)(cid:54)(cid:47)(cid:38)(cid:1)(cid:18)(cid:22)(cid:1)(cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:24)(cid:27)(cid:20)(cid:17)(cid:1)(cid:49)(cid:46) legendary Ballets Russes, most notably the scandalous premiere of The Rite of Spring. U WEEKEND TWO August 16–18 RHINEBECK HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Stravinsky Reinvented: From Paris to Los Angeles will explore Stravinsky’s creative output during the interwar years and the music he composed in the United States, where he settled in 1939. The Girl from Ipanema La Vida Breve Film Festival July 12 – August 3 S Featuring Spanish Dancer STRAVINSKY’S LEGACY AND RUSSIAN ÉMIGRÉ CINEMA Brazilian Wish Kati Garcia-Renart Spiegeltent July 5 – August 18 Featuring Matt Finley and Rio JAZZ España, waltz op. 236 D CABARET, MUSIC, FINE DINING, AND MORE Carmen Fantasy Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 Featuring Violinist Nicholas Szucs Danzas Fantásticas R NORTHERN TICKETS AND INFORMATION DUTCHESS www.ndsorchestra.org A SYMPHONY [email protected] ORCHESTRA 845-635-0877 Kathleen Beckmann Music Director 845-758-7900 B We bring classical music home. fishercenter.bard.edu Annandale-on-Hudson, New York Photo: © Peter Aaron ’68/Esto Made possible through funding from the Dutchess County Arts Council. 10 MMM OOO VVV III EEE AAALLLMMMAAANNNAAACCC WWWEEEEEEKKKLLLYYY 511 June 13, 2013 No Place on Earth tells the story of the 38 members of the Stermer and Wexler families who spent 511 days in 1943 and 1944 living literally underground Stills from No Place on Earth Notes from the underground No Place on Earth unearths incredible story of Holocaust survivors’ ordeal in Ukrainian caves T he year is nearly half-over great flick. One for the list!” coming about their less-than-heroic his- director Janet Tobias begins to interweave already, and this movie re- The movie that I urge everybody to see, tory, but was intrigued to find evidence a reenactment of what life must have been viewer was getting nervous, anyplace that you can find it, is called No of protracted human habitation in one like for that group of Jews who found ref- thinking ahead to the time Place on Earth. In it we meet a cop from of the caves. We’re not talking about Ne- uge from the Nazi occupation, first in the when I’ll have to compile my Ten Best Queens named Chris Nicola, an amateur anderthals here: The artifacts were from Verteba Caves and then the Priest’s Grotto. list for 2013. Then I went to see a quirky spelunker who spends his vacations ex- relatively recent times, and included a No Place on Earth tells the story of the 38 little low-budget docudrama at Upstate ploring the world’s great caving desti- 1940s-style woman’s dress shoe. So the members of the Stermer and Wexler fami- Films in Rhinebeck that’s getting no nations. In 1993 he decided to visit the cave wasn’t just a teenage gang hangout, lies who spent 511 days in 1943 and 1944 liv- hype at all, and walked out of the the- Ukraine to do some research about his either, or a spelunking expedition’s base ing literally underground, until the advance atre feeling much more hopeful. In fact, Eastern Orthodox ancestors, and while camp. There were obvious remains of of Russian troops made it safe for them to it was the first time this year that I’ve he was there, check out an extensive cave several hearths; a sizable group of people emerge again into the blinding daylight. walked out just saying, “Wow. What a system that is unusual for being hollowed had clearly resided there for an extended The caves in question are not the sort of out of gypsum deposits rather than the period of time. It took an awful lot of ask- openings in a cliff face that you can just MUD (cid:116)(cid:1)FRIDAY 6/13 through more typical limestone. ing around before Nicola got a Ukrainian stroll into: The entrances are holes in the TUESDAY 6/17, 7:15 pm & He found the locals less than forth- neighbor to admit, with great reluctance, ground, narrow, nearly vertical chutes that WEDNESDAY 6/19, $5 Matinee, 1 pm La Scala’s L’ORFEO ORPHEUM that “maybe some Jews” had spent time require considerable squirming. The expe- OPERA IN CINEMA: in the cave. rienced spelunker Nicola was dumfound- SUNDAY 6/16, $20, 2:00 pm Saugerties • 246-6561 Switching from Nicola’s point of view, ed that anyone would try to enter without MONEY AND LIFE FErtih a&n S Haat watk e7,: 2J0u l&ie 9D:e30lp,y Sun thru Thurs at 7:30 top-ropes and other professional caving Before TUESDAY 6/18, 7:15 pm Midnight gear; but the desperate people who fled GIRL RISING (R) here to hide during World War II ranged Fri & Sat at 7:20 & 9:30, Sun thru Wed at 7:30 in age from a toddler to a woman in her THURSDAY 6/20 & FRIDAY 6/21, $10, 7:15 pm Jesse Eisenburg, Morgan Freeman NOW YOU SEE ME 70s. AN EVENING OF WORLD CLASS JAZZ (PG-13) Much of the film is devoted to dramatic A Benefit Concert for the Rosendale Theatre Thurs 6/13 at Midnight, Fri & Sat at 7:15 & 9:45, Sun reenactment of the two families’ plight, us- thru Thurs at 7:30 SATURDAY 6/22, $15 in advance/$20 at the door, 8:00 pm M(cid:2)AN(cid:2) OF S(cid:2) TEEL (PG-13) “I’D SEE IT TWICE!” IN 3D AND 7.1 SOUND ($2.00 ADDITIONAL FOR 3D) Movies: $7 408 MAIN ST, ROSENDALE, NY 12472 MON & THURS AT 7:30: ALL SEATS $5.00, $7:00 FOR 3-D. $5 members www.rosendaletheatre.org (845) 658-8989 STARTS THURS 6/20 AT 8:00: WORLD WARZ -Mary Pols, TIME MAGAZINE “GRADE A!” RHINEBECK WWW.UPSTATEFILMS.ORG -Owen Gleiberman, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY BEFORE MIDNIGHT Ethan Hawke & Julie Delpy’s characters who 1st met in 1995 Fri Sat 4:15 6:45 9:15 rediscovered each other in BE- Sun 3:15 5:45 8:15 R FORE SUNSET... Now they’re EEtthhaann HHaawwkkee JJuulliiee DDeellppyy Mon - Thurs 5:45 8:15 back in Richard Linklater’s BBeeffoorree MMiiddnniigghhtt latest film THE Fri Sat 4:20 7:00 9:20 Thriller stars co/writer Brit FINAL WEEKEND PERFORMANCE! ARICHARDLINKLATERFILM EAST Sun 3:20 6:00 8:20 Marling as a former FBI’er WRITTBENYRICHARD LINKLATER & JULIE DELPY & ETHAN HAWKE DIRECTBEYDRICHARD LINKLATER Mon - Thurs 6:00 8:20 who infiltrates an Earth WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM First revolutionary group WOODSTOCK 132 TINKER ST 845 679-6608 STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 14TH! STORIES WE TELL FRANCES HA FLORIN CREATIVE UPSTATE FILMS Sarah Polley’s film about the Funny, flirty stars co- ORPHEUM SAUGERTIES 246-6561 RHINEBECK 876-2515 secrets and lies of her mother’s life writer Greta Gerwig Sony Pictures Classicsand Costa Navarinoinvite you to enter the “Great Greek Giveaway.”Grand Prize Fri Sat 5:45 Fri 8:15 Sat 3:45 8:15 includes a trip for 2 to Costa Navarino in Greecewhere the film was shot. To enter and to view complete rules, visit www.beforemidnightmovie.com.NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. “The Before Midnight Great Greek Giveaway” Sun Mon Tues 8:00 Sun Mon Tues 6:00 (“Sweepstakes”) starts at 12:00 midnight ET on 5/19/13 and ends at 12:00midnight ET on 7/26/13 for email entry and on 7/27/13 for postmarking mail entry. Sweepstakes open only to legal residents of contiguous Continental U.S. (“Eligibility Area”) 21 and older. Subject to complete Official Wed Thurs 5:45 Wed Thurs 8:15 Rules available at www.beforemidnightmovie.com. Void outside Eligibility Area and where prohibited or restricted by law.Sponsors: Sony Pictures Classics Inc., 10202 West Washington Blvd., Culver City, CA 90232 and TEMES S.A. - Costa Navarino, 5 Pentelis S., 17564, Athens, Greece. SHOWTIMES FOR FRI JUNE 14 THURS JUNE 20 WWW.UPSTATEFILMS.ORG VIEW THE TRAILER AT WWW.BEFOREMIDNIGHTMOVIE.COM

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Jun 19, 2013 Sponsored by Mary Collins Real Estate, Inc; .. Partition Street in the Village of Sau- gerties will present a .. The Girl from Ipanema. Brazilian
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