Girls in Trouble Alicia Jo Rabins Ben Sidran Dudu Tassa and the
Transcription
Girls in Trouble Alicia Jo Rabins Ben Sidran Dudu Tassa and the
29 March-April 2014 1414 Walnut Street Berkeley, CA 94709 510-848-0237 www.jewishmusicfestival.org Photo by Jason Falchook Tickets: www.jewishmusicfestival.org Dudu Tassa and the Kuwaitis The Afro-Semitic Experience Alicia Jo Rabins Girls in Trouble Anthony Mordechai-Tzvi Russell Ben Sidran 29 A fiscally sponsored project of the JCC East Bay Brochure design and production by Rhatura Bowden ©2014 Anonymous (2), Berkeley Civic Arts Commission, Rita and Irwin Blitt, David Saul Birnbaum Foundation, Consulate General of Israel, Gaia Fund, The Guzik Foundation, Victor and Lorraine Honig Fund of the Common Counsel Foundation, Israel Center of San Francisco, Jewish Community Federation/Foundation of the Greater East Bay, Frederick J. Isaac Philanthropic Fund, Shirley and Michael Issel, Jewish Community Endowment Fund-Bernard Osher Jewish Philanthropies Foundation, The Kurz Family Foundation, The Milton and Sophie Meyer Fund, Tony Phillips, Maxim Schrogin, Seeley Family Foundation, Claire Sherman and Ed Anisman, Tides Foundation on the recommendation of Vincent Worms, and Ilene Weinreb and Sam Mesnick. March 20-April 1, 2014 Info: 510-848-0237 | www.jewishmusicfestival.org The Afro-Semitic Experience Dudu Tassa and the Kuwaitis with special guest Yair Dalal Thursday, March 20, 8:00 p.m. Yoshi’s San Francisco, 1330 Fillmore St. $30 Advance | $32 Door 29th JMF Festival Pass applies This concert has been made possible by the generous support of the Israel Center and the Consulate General of Israel in San Francisco. Dudu Tassa is a bona fide Israeli rock star: one of the nation’s most beloved singer/songwriters and most-called guitarists-on-demand. He has released eight albums, produced numerous others, and composed for television and cinema. In this performance, he and his band sing the songs of Tassa’s Iraqi grandfather and great-uncle, Saleh and Daud. Performing as the Al-Kuwaiti brothers, they were two of the greatest composer-musicians in Baghdad during the first half of the 20th century and acclaimed innovators of modern Iraqi music. They remain highly esteemed in the Arab world. Tassa saluted them in his 2011 album “Dudu Tassa and the Al-Kuwaitis,” singing their songs in Arabic and Hebrew, and integrating them with Iraqi, Middle Eastern, and Israeli rock music. The album, a top seller in Israel, also features archival materials from the Al-Kuwaitis and singer Faiza Rushdie as well as contributions by contemporary oud master Yair Dalal. Dalal will join Tassa and his band – featuring qanun (Middle Eastern zither), violin, cello, keyboards, guitars, bass and drums – as a special guest. With its highly accessible ethnic world music mix and ability to get an audience on its feet, the Afro-Semitic Experience is redefining the jazz concert. This seven-piece band is beyond category. Whether playing gospel, klezmer, nigunim, spirituals or swing, the Afro-Semitic Experience rocks the room with its intricate, infectious melodies and solid grooves. It’s multi-cultural soul. Afro-Semitic Experience concerts are celebrations: the band plays great music, tells stories and offers a positive and meaningful message of unity in the community. Co-founded by African-American jazz pianist Warren Byrd and Jewish-American jazz bassist David Chevan in 1998, the ASE has shared its music at concerts, workshops and worship services across the United States, Canada and Europe. The band has worked with outstanding artists from the jazz and klezmer worlds, including Frank London and Matt Darriau of the Klezmatics, as well as Cantors Alberto Mizrahi and Jack Mendelson. Anthony Mordechai-Tzvi Russell’s “Convergence” with Veretski Pass Sunday, March 23, 7:00 p.m. JCC East Bay 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley $22 Member, Senior, Student | $25 General 29th JMF Festival Pass applies Additional Events “Lilith the Night Demon”: A presentation with musical examples by Joshua Horowitz and Veretski Pass Thursday, February 20, 7:00 p.m. Jewish Community Library 1835 Ellis St., San Francisco FREE Photo by Clara Rice Saturday, March 22, 8:00 p.m. Freight & Salvage Coffeehouse 2020 Addison St., Berkeley $30 Advance | $32 Door Get tickets: www.thefrieght.org 29th JMF Festival Pass applies sensitivity and beautifully sung melodies. This solo performance is the California premiere, and features full-length projected animation. The world premiere of operatic bass Anthony Mordechai-Tzvi Russell’s multi-media show combines diverse strains of traditional Jewish and African-American music at points of spiritual, melodic and textual convergence. In collaboration with acclaimed Bay Area klezmer trio Veretski Pass, Russell creates a new repertoire of works exploring exile, spirituality, hope and redemption. The performance is enhanced by the animation work of San Francisco-based artist Meredith Leich. Russell has worked primarily in the field of opera in San Francisco and New York for the past 15 years. Recently he has devoted himself to the recital repertoire of Sidor Belarsky (18981975), one of the 20th century’s most prolific performers of cantorial music, Chasidic nigunim and Yiddish art song. Veretski Pass takes its name from the mountain pass through which Magyar tribes crossed into the land that became the AustroHungarian Empire. The trio – Cookie Segelstein on fiddle, Joshua Horowitz on button accordion and tsimbolon, and Stuart Brotman on cello and percussion – plays old country music with origins in the Ottoman Empire. Alicia Jo Rabins’ “A Kaddish for Bernie Madoff” Thursday, March 27, 8:00 p.m. JCC East Bay 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley $22 Member, Senior, Student | $25 General 29th JMF Festival Pass applies A biblical scholar, poet, singer/songwriter and violinist, Alicia Jo Rabins has created a chamberrock operatic song cycle exploring the intersection of spirituality, finance and responsibility. “A Kaddish for Bernie Madoff” tackles personal and societal issues with thoughtfulness, wit, Illustration by Zak Margolis Alicia Jo Rabins and Girls in Trouble Friday, March 28, 7:00 p.m. Temple Beth Sholom 642 Dolores Ave., San Leandro FREE Saturday, March 29 at 8 p.m. JCC East Bay, 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley $22 Member, Senior, Student | $25 General 29th JMF Festival Pass applies This concert is sponsored as a tribute to the powerful influence of organizations like G-dcast and the Jewish Women’s Archive in bringing women’s voices to the forefront of Jewish life. Alicia Jo Rabins fronts this dynamic indie rock band from Portland, Ore., by way of Brooklyn, with her husband, Aaron Hartman, on bass. Girls in Trouble has performed across the U.S., Canada and Europe, and released two CDs on the JDub Records label, “Girls in Trouble” (2009) and “Half You, Half Me” (2011). The band is working on its third album in a song cycle about the complicated lives of biblical women, the original “girls in trouble.” Ben Sidran’s “Jews and the Great American Songbook” Sunday, March 30, 7:00 p.m. St. John’s Presbyterian Church 2727 College Ave., Berkeley $22 Member, Senior, Student | $25 General 29th JMF Festival Pass applies A jazz pianist and singer, record producer, National Public Radio host and scholar, Ben Sidran presents a concert program based on his critically acclaimed book There Was a Fire: Jews, Music and the American Dream. The show demonstrates the many important ways that Jewish immigrants drove American popular music output and tastes. Sidran has recorded more than 30 solo albums, including the Grammy-nominated “Concert for Garcia Lorca,” and produced recordings for such noted artists as Van Morrison, Diana Ross, Rickie Lee Jones, Mose Allison and Steve Miller (with whom he co-wrote the hit song “Space Cowboy”). He is the composer of the soundtrack for the acclaimed film “Hoop Dreams,” and scored the documentary “Vietnam: Long Time Coming.” Sidran has authored two books on the subject of jazz, Black Talk, a cultural history of the music, and Talking Jazz, a series of conversations with inspirational musicians. He holds a PhD. in American Studies from Sussex University, Brighton, England, but has studiously avoided the academic life, preferring to spend his time performing, producing and writing. Ben Sidran Performance / Lecture on “Jews and the Great American Songbook” Tuesday, April 1, 6:00 p.m. San Francisco Public Library 100 Larkin St., San Francisco FREE See March 30 Joshua Horowitz and his colleagues in the klezmer trio Veretski Pass give a behindthe-scenes presentation of their new work, based on the Jewish mythological alternate story of creation. Co-presented by the 29th Jewish Music Festival, KlezCalifornia, and Lehrhaus Judaica. This dramatic composition will be presented in May (see below). “Di Megileh of Itzik Manger,” A Yiddish Purim musical with English supertitles Thursday, March 6, 8:00 p.m. Saturday, March 8, 8:00 p.m. Sunday, March 9, 3:00 p.m. $22 Member, Senior, Student | $25 General Monday, March 10, 1:00pm $12 Member, Senior, Student | $15 General JCC East Bay, 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley “Di Megileh” is a witty, romantic musical Purim shpiel with book and lyrics by one of the 20th century’s finest Yiddish poets, and music by one of Israel’s most important composers. This staged concert production will be the West Coast premiere of the musical, long beloved by Israeli and New York audiences for its catchy songs, sparkling humor, palace intrigue, political satire and story of star-crossed lovers. Itzik Manger’s magical words and Dov Seltzer’s majestic music spring to life in the Yiddish Theater Collective’s production, staged and choreographed by Bruce Bierman, with musical direction by Achi Ben Shalom. The cast features Bay Area theater and Jewish music stars Berel Alexander, Linda Hirschhorn, Heather Klein, Eliana Kissner, Joan Mankin, Naomi Newman and Gerry Tenney. All of the spoken and sung Yiddish will be supertitled in English. The production is fiscally sponsored by KlezCalifornia. premiere of “Mame Loshn,” an art song cycle in Yiddish by composer Miriam Miller, with text by her grandmother, Sarah Traister Moskovitz. The program also presents Yiddish songs written by other living composers, including David Botwinik and Steven Greenman. Heather Klein is a classically trained Bay Area soprano who specializes in Yiddish song. Shir Hashirim Song of Songs Minyan Friday, March 14, 7:30 p.m. JCC East Bay 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley FREE Uniting the musical liturgies of the Sephardic, Mizrachi and Ashkenazic traditions, these monthly spiritual gatherings are led by Rabbi Michael Ziegler and Hazzan Richard Kaplan, with musical accompaniment by John Erlich, oud; Lila Sklar, violin; Jano Bogg, percussion; and vocalist Eliana Kissner. This spring’s Jewish Music Festival edition will feature members of the remarkable Qadim ensemble: Rachel Valfer, vocals and oud; Eliyahu Sills, vocals and ney; and Faisal Zedan, percussion. Heather Klein's Inextinguishable Trio and Veretski Pass “Yiddish Songs by Living Composers” Thursday, April 24, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, April 27, 2:00 p.m. with pre-concert talk, 1:30 p.m. Contemporary Jewish Museum 736 Mission St., San Francisco Get Tickets: www.cjm.org Heather Klein presents the Bay Area Illustration by Phil Blank “Lilith, the Night Demon, in One Lewd Act" Veretski Pass and San Francisco Choral Artists Saturday, May 3, 8:00 p.m. JCC East Bay 1414 Walnut St., Berkeley $25 Member, Senior, Student $28 General Hear a world premiere of a composition by Joshua Horowitz of the Bay Area ensemble Veretski Pass. The work is a choral mystery drama based on Jewish superstitions that makes use of multilingual texts and ancient sources, and combines homemade instruments with poly-choral avant-garde gestures to create a fantastic, hysterical, bizarre and often moving musical extravaganza, complete with the trio’s improvisations. Joining the trio is San Francisco Choral Artists, a 24-voice chamber ensemble specializing in innovative programming and performance excellence.