Le Boeuf Brothers + Jack Quartet
“imaginist” CD Release
Wednesday, November 16th @ 7:00pm
The Le Boeuf Brothers + JACK Quartet celebrate the release of their latest project, imaginist, on New Focus/Panoramic Recordings. Interpreting the works of pianist Pascal Le Boeuf and saxophonist Remy Le Boeuf, the hybridized 9-piece chamber ensemble includes JACK Quartet, Grammy-nominated tenor saxophonist Ben Wendel (Kneebody), alternating bassists Ben Street (John Scofield, Billy Hart) and Martin Nevin (Albert “Tootie” Heath), and alternating drummers Justin Brown (Ambrose Akinmusire, Thundercat) and Peter Kronreif (Thana Alexa).
Meredith Monk and Ani Choying Drolma
Thursday, November 17th @ 7pm
Thursday, November 17th @ 9:30pm
A one of a kind event! Meredith Monk and Nepalese Buddhist nun and singer Ani Choying Drolma. Performing a special evening of works. Each offering an engagement with art as spiritual practice.
Memory/Nostalgia/Somesuch Thing
Ellen Reid
Friday, November 18th @ 7pm
AdHoc Presents:
Xylouris White
Friday, November 18th @ 10pm
With support by Marisa Anderson
When Xylouris White recorded their second album, this most intuitive and inquisitive of duos did what comes naturally to them: expanded their horizons. For George Xylouris, the Cretan lute player who partners here with the Dirty Three’s preternaturally fluent Australian drummer Jim White, one aim was to extend a core metaphor of their ruggedly visionary debut album, 2014’s Goats. “Like goats walking in the mountain” is Xylouris’ poetic analogy for their approach: “They may not know the place, but they can walk easily and take risks and feel comfortable. Really, the goats inspired us.”
AdHoc Presents:
wild Up | Ascension
Saturday, November 19th @ 7pm
With John Coltrane as a guide we explore celestial music, religious music, free jazz, and the avant garde in this opening concert of our season as Group in Residence at National Sawdust. Using the seminal 1966 work Ascension as inspiration and architecture we walk into rooms filled with the reverberations of ten or more genres of music, all of which have themselves become what they are, in some part, due to Coltrane’s influence.
Jodie Landau
You of All Things
Saturday, November 19th @ 10pm
Landau’s voice is a most unusual instrument. At once raw and exposed, pure and unerringly precise, his vocals are able to veer between choirboy cantillation, torch-singer croon, and full-throated bellow without losing a character that is unmistakably his own. And his compositional aesthetic—which manages to encompass both the unpretentious bounce of popular song and moments of ominous stasis, setting his own, emotionally intimate lyrics or penning purely instrumental interludes—demands that elasticity.
Brooklyn Youth Chorus Presents:
Silent Voices
Sunday, November 20th @ 3pm
Brooklyn Youth Chorus’ latest project, Silent Voices, harnesses the power of young people to be instruments of change, giving voice to those who have been silenced or marginalized by social, cultural or religious circumstances. The Chorus has commissioned a diverse group of innovative artists to interpret rich historical narratives and personal stories and create music that explores race and identity, inequity and social disparity—music that matters.
counter)induction + Eric Moe:
Welcome to Phase Space
Sunday, November 20th @ 8pm
Eric Moe has been a friend of counter)induction since about forever. He’s also a seriously legit pianist (not always true with composers.) So, I thought we could share a program with him. c)i is playing three newer works by Eric, What Instruments We Have Agree (also written for c)i)), Uncanny Affable Machines (commissioned by our violist Jessica Meyer), and the New York premiere of Welcome to Phase Space. Eric will perform three works of my choosing: some preludes by Ruth Crawford Seeger, Sofia Gubaidulina’s Chaconne, and a piece I have written for him, called Shards from an Amphora Depicting the Goddess Athena at War.
-Kyle Bartlett









