Category Archives: Local Entertainment

St. Cecilia’s sneak peak of upcoming season offers chamber, folk and all that jazz

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By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org 

 

The fall is still a few months off but St. Cecilia Music Center is already well along in planning for its 2018-19 music season, with its first folk music concert announcement teasing another great season, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center returning, and a series of special events for Women’s History Month in March 2019 to celebrate the center’s 135th year anniversary.

 

But its complete jazz series line-up is out, and it is nothing short of great.

 

The 4-concert jazz series will feature an impressive lineup of Grammy award winning musicians including trumpeter Arturo Sandoval, the Kenny Barron Quintet, Joey DeFranceso, and the Benny Green Trio with 23-year old jazz sensation Veronica Swift.

 

“This year’s jazz series is also going to be phenomenal with some legends, as well as rising stars, in the mix,” Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director, said in supplied material.

 

“Phenomenal” is not an overstatement when it comes to describing the series, either.

 

The jazz series will begin its season Oct. 11 with 10-time Grammy Award winning trumpeter Sandoval, a Cuban-born artist who burst onto the American jazz scene as a young protégé of the legendary jazz master Dizzy Gillespie, but now has firmly established his place in the jazz world.

 

In addition to his 10 Grammy awards, Sandoval has been nominated 19 times for a n award. He has also received 6 Billboard Awards and an Emmy Award, the latter for his composing work on the entire underscore of the HBO movie based on his life, “For Love or Country” that starred Andy Garcia as Arturo.

 

Following Sandoval on the jazz series will be the Kenny Barron Quintet on Nov. 1. Barron, a pianist, earned the first of his 11 Grammy awards in 1992 for Best Jazz Album with “People Time”, a duet with Stan Getz, and won most recently in 2017 for Best Jazz Instrumental Album.

 

DeFranceso — named as “one of the best B-3 players on the planet” by Jazz Times — will appear with his quartet “The People” on Feb. 7, 2019. DeFranceso will soon be releasing his new album, “Project Freedom”, which features him on the Hammond B-3, along with contributions on keyboards, trumpet and as a vocalist. Accompanying DeFrancesco will be drummer Jason Brown, guitarist Dan Wilson and saxophonist Troy Roberts — collectively billed as “The People.”

 

The final jazz series concert of the season will be the Benny Green Trio, with young jazz singer Swift, on March 7, 2019. Swift will launch her newest album release this year and the recording will feature the pianist Green and his trio. At age 23, Swift is considered one of the top young jazz singers on the scene. In the fall of 2015, she won second place at the prestigious Thelonious Monk Jazz Competition. In 2016, she was asked to perform a concert of her own at the Tribeca Performing Arts Center in New York City and she was a guest artist with Michael Feinstein at Jazz at Lincoln Center.

 

No unknown to jazz fans, Green combines “a mastery of keyboard technique with decades of real world experience playing with no one less than the most celebrated artists of the last half century,” according to supplied material.

 

More news on the 2018-19 season
The Trout Quintet (Supplied)

In upcoming season news for its chamber music series and its Acoustic Cafe series, St. Cecilia has renewed three-year partnership with The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the result will be concerts featuring music from Beethoven, Mozart and Mendelssohn to Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky. An expanded folk series also kicks off with the renowned Brooklyn-now-Nashville-based band The Lone Bellow.

 

“We are very excited about the artists coming for our 135th anniversary season,” Holbrook said. “And, we are so pleased to renew another three-year agreement with The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, securing many seasons of phenomenal chamber music.”

 

And speaking of its 135th anniversary events, St. Cecilia announced two special events during March 2019 Women’s History Month.

 

St. Cecilia Music Center’s history is integrally aligned with women’s history in Grand Rapids, according to supplied material. The organization was founded in 1883 by nine Grand Rapids women and was the only organization of its kind to be run solely by women.  It was through the efforts of the first women of the music center that the historic building on Ransom Avenue was erected in 1894, “and it is their original mission that St. Cecilia continues to uphold today.”

 

St. Cecilia Music Center’s mission is to promote the study, appreciation and performance of music in order to enrich the lives of West Michigan residents. The Center fulfills this mission by presenting visiting world-class artists in concert, providing music education for all ages through our School of Music and preserving a historic building for musical activities and community events.

 

“Celebrating (our) … 135th anniversary with special events during Women’s History Month in March 2019 is extremely meaningful and appropriate,” Holbrook said. “We are thrilled to honor the late Helen DeVos for the amazing vision she had for the arts in Grand Rapids and to keep her legacy alive with the continuation of the Helen DeVos Legacy Award in years to come.”

 

For more information on St. Cecilia and its 2018-19 season, visit scmc-online.org .

 

Artist donates ArtPrize Top 25 finalist ‘Let Go’ to Kent County

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By Kent County

When Pamela Alderman created “Let Go” for ArtPrize in 2017, she was looking to impact the audience with a large interactive piece. Alderman‘s work, an ArtPrize Top 25 finalist, is a beautiful seascape on five large wood panels that includes three Plexiglas figures that transform as you move around the artwork.

 

The creation includes an opportunity to write a note, crinkle it, then throw it “into the sea” – in essence, Let Go. Recently she found a way to continue the impact of “Let Go” – she donated the piece to the Kent County Courthouse, where it has a new life.

 

During her nine years of ArtPrize experience, Pamela’s interactive pieces included works on cancer, bullying, and autism. But it was her work on human trafficking that drew the attention of Judge Patricia Gardner.

 

“I first met Pamela when she presented her 2014 piece “The Scarlet Cord” to the Manasseh Advisory Group at Wedgwood two years ago,” Judge Gardner said. “Following that meeting, Pamela allowed her film about human trafficking to be used by probation staff when working with girls who endured sexual exploitation. She and I discussed my interest in working with delinquent girls and the formation of Girls Court and girl-specific group counseling experience called Girls Truth Group.” 

 

In September 2017, just months after the formation of Girls Court (a multi-disciplinary approach to serving female youth offenders), Judge Gardner took graduates of the program to the Amway Grand Plaza for a celebration dinner followed by a meet-and-greet with Pamela.

 

That meeting helped several participants, as they each wrote notes of what they wanted to let go — then threw the notes into the work. Some of the girls cried as they let go of something that hurt them in the past.

 

“All of the girls were moved by the power of the moment in listening to the artist and letting go of negative behavior and moving on from an intensive counseling experience to successful completion of probation,” Judge Gardner recalled. “It was honestly one of those moments that I thought would be a good educational experience, but it was far more meaningful than I could have imagined.”

 

The work was installed this month on the fifth floor of the Kent County Courthouse.

 

“The work we do in this Courthouse often addresses personal struggles or difficult circumstances faced by good people, families and children,” said Judge T.J. Ackert of the 17th Circuit Court Family Division.

 

Judge Ackert, who has known Pamela Alderman for many years, added, “Pamela’s work expresses a theme of healing and restoration, and this painting symbolizes the challenging work to restore their lives people engage in every day in this Court.

 

“Artistically, the placement of the painting outside our community room looking west over the city appropriately reflects the waves of the Grand River and the undulating architectural roof-line of DeVos Place — accentuating the peaceful movement from difficult times to a thriving existence!”

 

During ArtPrize, 70,000 visitors wrote their own “Let Go” notes and added them to the work.

 

“Artists create pieces for ArtPrize in hopes of speaking to a lot of people,” Pamela says. “This work is emotional. As an artist, my soul is rendered into that work. I hope people connect with the work because it’s relevant. It gives voice to people’s struggles and encourages healing.”

 

More about the piece can be found at Pamela Alderman’s website.

 

5 Local Things You Need to Know: For the weekend, to start next week

By WKTV Staff

victoria@wktv.org

 

Memorial Day ceremonies planned for both Kentwood, Wyoming

Many communities will be honoring those who have given their lives to serve this Memorial Day, set for May 28, including the communities of Wyoming and Kentwood. More details here.

 

Woodland Mall’s ongoing redevelopment includes viewing wall, relocations

The redevelopment of Woodland Mall is in full swing, and shoppers will soon be able to get a front-row seat to the construction at a new viewing wall. Read all about it here.

 

 

West Michigan Tourist Association offers up a few unique summer camps

Some families probably already have their children’s summer camps selected, but in case you do not, West Michigan Tourist Association Marketing Manager Jeremy Witt offered a few suggestions during a recent visit visit to the WKTV Journal. Learn more here.

 

 

Museum school students create new exhibit ‘Revolution: The Story of America’

Check out the new exhibit created by GRPS Museum School students, titled Revolution: The Story of America, at the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM). It opened May 23. (The Museum is closed Monday, May 28th.) More here.

 

 

Register now for June 4 Sibling Class at Metro Health

Have kids and expecting a new addition to your family? Register for this class. Children practice caring for a baby using dolls, make a card for their new baby, and have fun with a short tour, which includes a visit to a mom with her real newborn baby. Next class is coming up fast: June 4th. Go here to learn more and where to register.

World Affairs Council continues ‘Global Trends’ lecture series at Calvin College

 

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

The World Affairs Council of West Michigan will present a discussion led by retired U.S. Ambassador William Garvelink titled “Global Trends Driving International Relations: Pandemics, Corruption, and Failed States” on Thursday, May 31, from 6:30-7:30 p.m., at Calvin College’s Gezon Auditorium.

 

From 2007-2010, Garvelink served as U.S. ambassador to the Democratic Republic of Congo. Prior to his appointment as ambassador, he served as principal deputy assistant administrator in the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance, where his responsibilities included oversight of USAID’s worldwide humanitarian assistance and democracy programs.

 

From 1988 to 1999, he served in the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance, working around the globe to conduct assessments and direct relief operations. Prior to his work in OFDA, he served for two years in the Department of State’s Bureau for Population, Refugees, and Migration with responsibilities for southern Africa.

Ambassador Garvelink now serves as senior adviser for global strategy at the International Medical Corps.

 

He holds a B.A. degree from Calvin College and an M.A. degree from the University of Minnesota.

 

No reservations needed for the discussion. The public invited with a $10 general admission cost. Free is available parking on campus.

 

For more information visit worldmichigan.org/civil .

 

On Tap: Thornapple Brewing plans (own) birthday party; beer and associated activities 

Cascade Township’s Thornapple Brewing Company will celebrate its first anniversary with a party featuring special releases, live music and games. (Thornapple Brewing)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Cascade Township’s Thornapple Brewing Company will celebrate its first anniversary with a party featuring special releases, live music and games on Saturday, June 9, from 11 a.m to late (12 midnight?).

 

The main attraction will be Thornapple’s 36 pours of beers, ciders, and meads on tap. (Thornapple Brewing)

The main attraction, of course, will be Thornapple’s 36 pours of beers, ciders, and meads on tap, as well as a variety of wine and spirits — including, according to supplied information, a resurrected early version of Hoppy Saison, the first batch of Spicy Salted Session Saison and the first batch of Barrel-Aged Brown-Eyed Girl.

 

“There will be a few more surprises, for sure,” Sebastian Henao, head brewer, said in supplied information. “We’re going to have some fun stuff.”

 

The event will take place both inside the pub and outside in the parking lot under a tent. The bands will play 4-10 p.m, and attendees can also play a variety of outdoor games.

 

Thornapple opened June 10, 2017, serving craft beers, wines and ciders. By September of last year, four new 15-barrel fermenters were installed, increasing the brewery’s capacity.

 

“We started out with just a half dozen ales, now we’ve got a great variety of lagers, ales and more experimental styles on tap,” Jeff Coffey, Thornapple Brewing Company co-founder, said in supplied material.

 

In December of last year, Thornapple introduced spirits to their beverage lineup, including rum, gin, whiskey, vodka and brandy.

 

For more information visit thornapplebrewing.com .

 

Things to do with a beer in hand, or waiting

 

Several Greater Grand Rapids breweries, from downtown to north Kent County, offer the opportunity to be active before, during or after sipping a brew.

 

Atwater Brewery in downtown Grand Rapids boasts outdoor seating and the ability to “bring the pups while you grab a pint” — and just in case you think “pups” is some slang term, they mean you can bring your dogs. Atwater Brewery is located at 201 Michigan Street NW. For more information visit atwaterbeer.com .

 

Rockford Brewing Company — need we say “in Rockford”? — offers “Paddles ’n’ Pints” trips where you can fill plastic growlers at the brewery before spending a couple hours floating down the Rogue River. Please have a duty paddler in the group. Rockford Brewing is located at 12 E Bridge St NE. For more information visit rockfordbrewing.com .

 

And, finally, Cedar Springs Brewing Company — you know where — is teaming with Speed Merchants for “Radfahrer: Bike Night at CSBrew”, either leisure or training group bicycle rides on Monday nights through September starting at 6:30 p.m. According to suppled information, the training ride is 28-36 mile gravel ride for fat tire, mountain, gravel, or cx bikes. The 1.5- to 2-hour ride with a minimum pace of 16 m.p.h., and ending at the brewery. For those who like a more leisurely pace, a family friendly group will embark on a shorter paved ride on the White Pine Trail.

 

Oh, ya. And bike night participants receive $2 off appetizers, or refuel with chef’s “Radfahrer Special”, a power packed meal for cyclists.

 

Cedar Springs Brewing Company is located at 95 N. Main. For more information visit csbrew.com .

 

Evolution of Meijer Gardens summer concert series a bit of a surprising success

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By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

There is no plan to change its name to Frederik Meijer Gardens, Sculpture Park & Summer Concert Amphitheater, despite the growth of the Gardens music venue from its modest beginning with modest expectations in 2003 to a 30-concert-a-year, 90-plus percent sellout annual attraction.

 

But there is no doubt that the Fifth Third Bank Summer Concerts at Meijer Gardens is a promotional and financial success story for one of West Michigan’s premier cultural attractions.

 

While David Hooker, President and CEO at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, did not come to his position until three years after the amphitheater opened, he recently told WKTV that few in leadership at the Gardens really expected the venue and the concert series to grow into what it has become.

 

David Hooker, President and CEO at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park. (Supplied)

“By virtue of what has happened since then, it is proof that we didn’t have any idea. We had high hopes … (but) there has been a wonderful reception of our series by the community,” Hooker said. “I forget the exact year, but we did a major expansion on the amphitheater, five or six years ago, by the generosity of Fred and Lena Meijer we were able to do that. … low and behold, a few years later, we outgrew that. So now we are at it again.”

 

The “at it again” Hooker is referring to is the two-year makeover of the amphitheater currently at mid-stage, with upgrades to back stage area and the amphitheater’s distinctive acoustic bandshell, and a complete makeover of the venue’s handicapped, sponsor and VIP seating sections. (After this summer’s concert season is complete, a significant alteration and expansion of the venue’s outside entrance, concession area and restroom layout will begin to be ready for the 2019 season.)

 

While the sponsor and VIP seating area has increased capacity from 242 portable chairs in the past to 410 permanent seats, high and in the back of the amphitheater, and there has been a slight expansion and reconfiguration of the general admission grass seating area, the total general admission capacity has remained at 1,900.

 

The capacity is both intentional on the part of management of the Gardens and important to the concert promoter who has worked with the venue from its first year — when Art Garfunkel and the Charlie Daniels Band headlines a 10-concert series that was not always well attended.

 

A probably sold-out crowd that comes to Meijer Gardens Summer Concert series. (Supplied Meijer Gardens/Tony Norkus)

“What Meijer Gardens has out there is pretty unique,” Chris Mautz, who now runs his own concert promotion company out of Salt Lake City, Utah, said to WKTV. “We have developed based on the success of not just of the attendance numbers but also the success of the connection between audience and artist. We have been very fortunate to develop a positive reputation there as being one of the cool, dynamic places to play on the summer tours.”

 

Mautz, echoing Hooker, points out that the concert series — deciding which acts are booked — is also a unique collaboration between venue and promoter: “In a lot of ways I see myself as part of an overall team at the Gardens where, over the last decade plus, we have formed a connection and a commitment to really trying to present a diverse and compelling lineup of shows,” Mautz said. “It is much more of a collaborative effort.”

 

That collaborative effort includes understanding that the musical venue is, first and foremost, at a family-friendly botanical garden and sculpture park, with residential property nearby — neighborly noise concerns and a mostly rigid early “final encore” requirement are often a consideration in booking.

 

But those requirements have not proved to be an obstacle to either attracting top-talent year after year or prevented the concert series’ growth from its less-than-overwhelming numbers in the early 2000s to being the success it is today.

 

The concert series, over the years

 

From 2003 through 2009, the venue booked between 10-13 concerts, but many years had less than half of concerts being sell-outs, according to information provided by Meijer Gardens.

 

Lyle Lovett is always a favorite. (Supplied)

2010 seemed to be a watershed year as far as popularity, with 10 of the 16 concerts being sellouts and featuring a lineup that opened with a capacity crowd for the Doobie Brothers, and included sellouts from Indigo Girls, Chris Isaak, Lyle Lovett and Garrison Keillor’s Prairie Home Companion.

 

When the series expanded to 22 concerts in 2011, and 25 in 2012, it also added a few more concerts to appeal to a younger audience, including Guster, Fiona Apple, Andrew Bird, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, The Head and the Heart, and OAR.

 

In 2013, the series climbed to 29 concerts and has stayed at 29-31 concerts through this year, with there being sellouts numbering in the mid-20s each year — and each year there seems to be a mix of classic rock, folk, some alt/modern rock, with a jazz or two, as well as something for a more, shall we say, “traditional entertainment” crowd such as Harry Connick Jr., Dancing with the Stars, and the still much-talked-about visit by Tony Bennet in 2015.

 

For a WKTV story on this year’s concert line-up, visit here.

 

Concert series a success on multiple levels

 

The venue and the mix of musical genres and audiences has not only been a success, the summer concert series has benefitted Meijer Gardens on several levels:  promotional, financial and patron inclusiveness.

 

The entrance to Meijer Gardens. (Supplied)

“A couple of really important things that we tried to accomplish with the amphitheater is that we looked at it as portal to the organization,” Hooker said. “A lot of people … may become a member so they get first dibs on the tickets, and then they sit in that beautiful amphitheater and off to the distance they see … (various gardens and works of art) … and they say maybe I should check out the rest of the organization.

 

“The second thing we try to accomplish is that we are very intentional about reaching out to all walks of life, to have them come to Meijer Gardens. We want this to be a place were everybody is welcome. There is some intentionality in the artists we select, to attract people from all walks of life.”

 

And when it comes to the financial benefit to the Gardens, Hooker diplomatically said the concert series has brought in important “cash.” But “that needs to be put into context,” he adds.

 

“As the Meijer Gardens amphitheater was built, and added onto, and added onto, 100 percent of the dollars that has gone into the amphitheater events has been charitable dollars. So we are able to present the concert series without having to pay for the venue, which is really important.

 

“If you have to account for that cost out of ticket (costs) it would add a significant amount of money to the cost of the tickets. … The generosity of the Meijer family and the community has done that. And since we don’t have to do that, we do make what I call cash from the amphitheater, which helps, then, to cover the maintenance costs, depreciation costs, so forth, of the amphitheater.”

 

And the future of the concert series? The 30-concert season seems to be a pretty stable number and, as Hooker said, “We are very committed to the amphitheater and the concert series for the very long term.”

 

5 Local Things You Need to Know:  For the weekend, to start next week

The Meyer May House maybe the most famous house in Grand Rapids, but there are many grand homes in Heritage Hill that you can check out this weekend. (Supplied)

 

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Wyoming: Honor a local hero by attending his statue unveiling

 

Roger B. Chaffee Photo courtesy of the Grand Rapids Public Museum

While the City of Wyoming has a Roger B. Chaffee Boulevard and an American Legion Roger B. Chaffee Post 154, the hero’s home town was Grand Rapids. So, a full-sized bronze statue of Apollo Astronaut Roger B. Chaffee will be unveiled at 1 p.m. on Saturday, May 19, at the corner of East Fulton Street and Sheldon Avenue NE, near the Grand Rapids Children’s Museum.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Kentwood: While you are out having fun, avoid this roadwork in town

 

The City Commission recently approved the city’s resurfacing and maintenance program, which includes improvements to 22 miles of major and local roads. We have your list of where to avoid when you are out and about in the city this week: a tentative road construction and maintenance schedule for the summer.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Grand Rapids: Heritage Hill’s annual open house weekend his here

 

The Annual Heritage Hill Tour welcomes you inside seven restored private houses and three historic buildings. (Supplied)

The Annual Heritage Hill Tour welcomes you inside seven restored private houses and three historic buildings on Saturday, May 19, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday, May 20, from noon to 6 p.m. Tour offers an interior view of stunning turn of the century homes each uniquely styled by current owners.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Wyoming: Big trucks, hotdogs and loads of fun for kids of all ages

 

Public Works employee Carlos Ochoa shows off one of the trucks that collects leaves. (WKTV File)

The City of Wyoming is celebrating National Public Works Week once again on Monday, May 21, at the Wyoming Public Works Department, 2660 Burlingame Ave. SW. The event that attracts more than 1,500 visitors gives the public the chance to learn about the city’s Public Works Department and its services, meet community members and much more.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Entertainment: The Grand Rapids Symphony offers up Beethoven’s Ninth

 

Grand Rapids Symphony, conducted by Marcelo Lehninger, will be in concert this weekend. (Supplied/Stu Rosner)

The Grand Rapids Symphony ends its 2017-18 season with Beethoven’s Ninth at 8 p.m., Friday and Saturday, May 18-19, in DeVos Performance Hall. Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 is one of the greatest achievements, not only in classical music, but in all of Western culture. Beethoven’s last symphony and his only symphony to use voices began as a defiant statement of freedom hurled at the repressive monarchies of Europe. Today,  the finale of Beethoven’sNinth Symphony, is the official anthem of the European Union.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

 

5 Local Things You Need to Know: Headlines for the week

An interview from the latest WKTV Journal Newscast.

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Wyoming: City hires Scott Smith as new city attorney

 

Scott G. Smith

The Wyoming City Council has hired Scott Smith as its city attorney. Smith will serve as the city’s chief legal advisor, responsible for providing legal services to the City Council, city manager, all departments, and city boards and commissions. He will render legal opinions, prepare contracts, ordinances, resolutions, leases and other documents, and assist in drafting proposed legislation on matters of interest to the City.

 

For the complete story, click here.

 

Kentwood: The Vibe parks and rec gala coming this week

 

Katelyn Bush

Community members and friends are invited to attend The Vibe, a Parks and Recreation gala benefiting Kentwood’s Adaptive Sports programs, which provide recreation opportunities for individuals with disabilities. The celebration will take place on Friday, May 18 from 6-10 p.m. at Stonewater Country Club, located at 7177 Kalamazoo Avenue SE in Caledonia.

 

For the complete story, click here.

 

Government Matters: Ballot measures are headed to a voting booth near you, maybe

 

Possible Michigan legislative action driven by probable fall ballot measures on prevailing wage and recreational marijuana use was a key part of the discussion Monday, May 14, as part of the Wyoming-Kentwood Chamber of Commerce’s monthly Government Matters meeting held at Kentwood City Hall.

 

For the complete story, click here.

 

 

WKTV programs: WKTV Journal offers Newscast and in-depth interviews

 

WKTV Journal is not only online/print but video programs as well. On the latest episode of WKTV Journal’s newscast, voters for Godfrey-Lee Public Schools pass a sinking millage for the district and the 28th Street Metro Cruise Dust-Off took place. The local farmers markets are preparing to open with Metro Health Farm Market underway and the Kentwood Farmers Market set to start in June.

 

On the latest episode of WKTV Journal: In Focus is Dr. Rob Davidson, Democratic candidate for Michigan’s District 2 U.S. House seat currently held by Republican Rep. Bill Huizenga. That district includes both the cities of Wyoming and Kentwood.

 

For the complete story on WKTV Journal’s latest Newscast, click here. For the complete story on WKTV Journal: In Focus, click here.

 

 

West Michigan: Meijer Gardens Tuesday evening concerts plays it local
Kathy Lamar and Robin Connell, taken at J D Reardon’s. (Supplied)

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park has announced a nine-show lineup for the Tuesday Evening Music Club with a diverse two-month program of live bands ranging from jazz to indie, rock to folk. Taking place on the Gardens’ 1,900-seat amphitheater stage, the Tuesday concerts are free to Meijer Gardens members and include admission throughout July and August.

 

For the complete story, click here.

 

 

Meijer Gardens Tuesday Evening Music Club spotlights local, regional talents

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WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park has announced a nine-show lineup for the Tuesday Evening Music Club with a diverse two-month program of live bands ranging from jazz to indie, rock to folk.

 

Taking place on the Gardens’ 1,900-seat amphitheater stage, the Tuesday concerts are free to Meijer Gardens members and include admission throughout July and August.

 

The line-up and show dates/times are as follows:

 

Hannah Rose and the GravesTones, with Rachel Curtis; July 3 at 7 p.m. Hannah Rose and the GravesTones offers a combination of funk, blues, country, jazz, and rock & roll, led by a songstress with a voice all her own. Rachel Curtis, a vocalist and 2018 American Idol contestant, will be backed by her band.

 

The Kathy Lamar and Robin Connell Band, and Soul Syndicate; July 10 at 7 p.m. The Kathy Lamar and Robin Connell Band will feature Kathy singing and Robin on the keys, with a blend of R&B, soul and pop and a tinge of jazz. Soul Syndicate is a cadre of the region’s most talented musicians, doing more than justice to the likes of Otis Redding, Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, The Temptations and more.

 

The Eric Engblade Quartet, with Wire in the Wood; July 17 at 7 p.m. The Eric Engblade Quartet, led by award winning singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Eric Engbland, has been called “folk rock with teeth.” Wire in the Wood is an eclectic selection of traditional and modern covers in the style of prog-bluegrass.

 

Valley Girl, with The Hacky Turtles; July 24 at 7 p.m. Valley Girl offers upbeat, indie-pop with reminiscences of 1980s’ synth. The Hacky Turtles offer a unique alternative rock with forays into folk and funk.

 

Lipstick Jodi, with Hollywood Makeout; July 31 at 7 p.m. Lipstick Jodi is an indie, alt-pop trio with a slight punk edge. Hollywood Makeout is an energetic punch of alternative rock, pop, garage and surf.

 

Nessa, with The Moxie Strings; August 7 at 7 p.m. Nessa offer a combination of classical, jazz, and Celtic influences, led by flutist and vocalist Kelly McDermott. The Moxie Strings offer a foot-stomping, rock-influenced, progressive spin on traditional Celtic and Americana classics and originals.

 

Franklin Park, with a Six Pak; August 14 at 7 p.m. Franklin Park, which reunited in 2010, are former classmates from 1969 and perform spot-on renditions of The Beatles, The Birds, The Rascals and more. Six Pak is a legendary all girl band, originally formed in 1967, performing the grooviest hits from that era.

 

Watching for Foxes, with Desmond Jones; August 21 at 7 p.m. Watching for Foxes is an Indie-folk rock driven by powerful, haunting vocals. Desmond Jones is a fusion of funk, rock and jazz, centered around melodic guitar riffs.

 

And the annual finale, will be Ralston & Friends; August 28 at 7 p.m. Local legend Ralston Bowles shares the stage with friends and collaborators from the community and beyond. A perfect end to a summer of musical fun.

 

Concertgoers are welcome to bring a blanket or beach-style chair to sit on. All concerts take place rain or shine (weather delays possible). A selection of sandwiches, snacks, water, soft drinks and alcoholic beverages are available at the concessions counter. All beverages purchased onsite must be consumed inside the amphitheater gates.

 

Concertgoers are also welcomed to bring their own food, bottled water and non-alcoholic beverages. No glass containers are allowed. All beverages must be in their original sealed containers; any liquids in unsealed containers must be discarded at the gate before entering.

 

The amphitheater is currently being expanded and upgraded. The work is taking place over two years. Work on phase one will conclude for the presentation of the 2018 season and then resume to be fully ready for the 2019 season.

 

For more information visit meijergardens.org .

 

On Tap: Gravel Bottom moves in Ada; get smart on beer and beer cooking

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org 

 

Gravel Bottom Craft Brewery will open a new facility as part of the Ada Village redevelopment project on Friday, May 11.

 

“We’ve put a lot of time and effort into making this feel similar to what the other Gravel Bottom was: welcoming and comfortable,” Matt Michiels, Gravel Bottom owner, said in supplied material.

 

The new bar will offers 20 taps, which will allow Gravel Bottom to have more “experimental styles” in rotation.

 

“This was the opportunity to upgrade our equipment so we can brew more styles and be even more creative,” Michiels said. “And we’re able to brew bigger batches of some of those mainstays.”

 

And Gravel Bottom is certainly considered to be part of the Ada community.

 

“Gravel Bottom has become a well-known pillar of the Ada business community and we’re excited about their move,” George Haga, Ada Township supervisor, said in supplied material. “Their new home and highly-visible location on Ada Drive are another example of the transformation that is taking place in the Envision Ada project.”

 

“It’s very important for us to be a part of this community. This is where we started. And it’s exciting to have this chance for renewal,” Michiels said.

 

There will also be a new kitchen serving meals designed by Chef Eric Benedict. The menu will feature locally sourced, seasonally influenced dishes, including small plates designed to pair with Gravel Bottom beers.

 

The brewery is also acquiring a vintner’s license, meaning customers can look forward to wines, meads, and ciders both made by Gravel Bottom and others.

 

For more information visit gravelbottom.com .

 

Experience Beer continues free beer-education series at Harmony Hall

 

Harmony Brewing Company. (Supplied)

Experience Beer West Michigan has already launched its 8th annual free beer education classes but there are still four of the five sessions planned for Mondays from 7-9 p.m. at Harmony Hall in Grand Rapids. This series will be hosted by beer education specialist Ben Darcie.

 

The May 14 discussion will focus on sour maturation in sour beers from a representative of Speciation Ales. The May 21 discussion will feature a field trip to Gray Skies Distillery with representatives from Gray Skies, Long Road Distillers, Bier Distillery and Thornapple Brewing Company speaking about distilling.

 

The classes will wrap up on June 4 and will feature a brewer’s round table with 10 area brewers answering questions and dropping knowledge.

 

To learn more about Experience Beer WM, visit facebook.com/groups/ExperienceBeer .

Lindsay E. Papciak

 

Downtown Market offers cooking with beer class

 

The Grand Rapids Downtown Market will offer a class called “Cooking with Beer” on Tuesday, May 15 from 6-8 p.m.

 

The class, for ages 21 and older, will be allow for the making of a beer-inspired menu including a refreshing summer salad with beer vinaigrette, delicious beer-braised chicken, and chocolate stout cupcakes — yes, beer in dessert!

 

And you can complement your meal with your favorite brew, available for purchase from a curated list.

 

The cost is $95 per person. The market is located at 435 Ionia Ave. SW. For more information visit downtownmarketgr.com .

 

Up (early) for a Royal Wedding Party? 20 Monroe Live hosts viewing event

Prince Harry and Megan.

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Where will you be for the Windsor Castle wedding of Great Britain’s Prince Harry and Meghan Markle? Probably not on the invite list, we assume. But you can still watch the pomp and circumstance in style at a local Royal Watch Party.

 

20 Monroe Live, located at 11 Ottawa Avenue NW, in downtown Grand Rapids, will be hosting an early morning party — and you can get on that invite list!

 

Royal Wedding of William and Kate was an event, so will the wedding of Harry and Megan. (Jens Rost)

20 Monroe Live’s Royal Wedding Party will be held Saturday, May 19, with doors open at 6 a.m., the show begins at about 6:20 a.m. as guest arrive, and the wedding set to start at 7 a.m. It will end at about 8 p.m.

 

Tickets are still available, and the box office will open at 5:45 a.m. that morning for last minute decisions.

 

The all-age event is sponsored by Channel 13’s My West Michigan. There is no dress code, but “fancy hats” are encouraged.

 

Admission includes and English breakfast buffet and one mimosa (or tea if its is a little too early for some champagne).

 

The breakfast will be provided by Applause Catering, cakes by Connie’s Cakes, chocolate party favors by Chocolates by Grimaldi. There will also be photo-booth style photos available from Mod Bettie Portraits.

 

Tickets are $40 and can be purchased at livenation.com.

 

If you go, dress up and sound smart

 

A few facts you should know if you go (and want to sound smart):

 

Prince Harry’s real name — Prince Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor of Wales.

 

A Royal Wedding parade.

Where Prince Harry falls in current royal pecking order — Sixth in the line of succession to the British throne; after Queen Elizabeth II is her son Prince Charles, then Charles’ son Prince William, then William’s three children (Prince George, Princess Charlotte and the just born Prince Louis). Yes, there is another possible queen in the royal mix.

 

Megan Markle’s acting career — Starting in 2011, she portrayed Rachel Zane on the legal drama series Suits for seven seasons; her film credits include Remember Me and Horrible Bosses.

 

The witnesses to the wedding — there will be about 600 invited guests at St. George’s Chapel.

 

Where do the newlywed couple go after the wedding — A reception hosted by Queen Elizabeth II at St. George’s Hall in the castle.

 

Ya, and you will not get an invitation to that either.

 

Wyoming ‘Concerts in the Park’ is back this year, on Tuesdays, from June 5-Aug. 7

Courtesy City of Wyoming

By City of Wyoming

 

The Wyoming Community Enrichment Commission is back again this year with an outstanding line-up of concerts for the 2018 Concerts in the Park series at Lamar Park. Concerts begin at 7 pm.

 

For more detailed information, check out the WCEC here, or on Facebook (search WyomingCEC).

  • Dates: June 5-Aug. 7, 2018
  • Day: Tuesdays
  • Time: 7 pm
  • Location: Lamar Park

Concert line-up (subject to change):

  • June 5 — The Porters (Children’s interactive music)
  • June 12 — Delilah DeWylde (Rockabilly)
  • June 19 — Adams Family (’50s and ’60s)
  • June 26 — Valentiger (Charismatic Pop Rock); Kari Lynch Band (Country); FIREWORKS after concert
  • July 10 — Cabildo (Alternative Latin Rock)
  • July 17 — Soul Syndicate (’60s, ’70s Soul and R&B)
  • July 24 — Blue Soul Express (Blues)
  • July 31 — Matt Gabriel (Folk and Blues)
  • Aug. 7 — Yellow Brick Road (Dueling Pianos featuring the music of Billy Joel and Elton John)

Intrigued by Masayuki Koordia’s ‘Existence’ at Meijer Gardens? Prepare to be stunned by new exhibit

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park announced Monday that its next featured exhibit will be Masayuki Koorida: Beyond Existence — an exhibit which will both build compliment the partially carved and polished boulders of the artist’s “Existance”, a focal point of the The Richard & Helen DeVos Japanese Garden, and will expand on the artist’s emerging genius.

 

Masayuki Koorida’s “Existence”, in Japanese Garden setting. (Supplied/Dean Van Dis)

“As one of his first gallery presentations in the United States, (Koorida’s) repertoire will reach and inform a broad audience,” Joseph Antenucci Becherer, Meijer Gardens chief curator and vice president said in supplied material. “Our relationship with Koorida is very important to Meijer Gardens and dates to the commission of his acclaimed piece ‘Existence’ in our Japanese garden. His use of materials and form is both elegant and contemplative.”

 

The exhibit, opening May 25, showcases Koorida’s work with a wide range of materials and his broader repertoire, which includes highly geometric pieces in a variety of scale and materials, but maybe most interesting will be a series of large, never-before-seen drawings created specifically for this exhibition. This exhibition runs through Aug. 19.

 

In the last decade, according to material supplied by Meijer Gardens, Koorida has emerged as “one of the most elegant voices in contemporary sculpture.” While his work has been exhibited in China, Japan and Europe, he is still relatively unseen in the United States.

 

And the artist has expressed his appreciation for the opportunity the Meijer Gardens exhibit will afford.

 

Masayuki Koorida. (Supplied/courtesy of the artist)

“Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park is the first sculpture park that has collected my work in the United States,” Koorida said in supplied material. “Since the first time that I visited for the (‘Existence’) project in 2013, I have been to Meijer Gardens several times. I always find something new to discover; including great sculptures, exhibitions, beautiful flowers and gardens.

 

“I feel that the park is loved by people very much. It has been a great honor to be part of the collection. I am very glad to hold this solo exhibition at Meijer Gardens in 2018, it is exciting to have people experience it.”

 

Koorida (b. 1960, in Kyoto, Japan) lives in and works from a studio in Shanghai, China. According to supplied information, the artist placed his studio in China so that he is in close contact with abundant stone quarries in south China, and also allows him an opportunity to have a large industrial space for carving and polishing. He operates a very hands-on studio with few assistants and is physically engaged with his work. He is most well known for his sculpture in stone that range in scale from table top to the monumental, from single forms to small groups of related images. Koorida travels widely in search of the right stones for the right projects; granite is preferred, but he also works in black and white marble.

 

To show how little he has been shown in the United State’s, the only YouTube videos of his shows are from Europe. Visit here for an video in Italian.

 

The exhibit will include special programing including:

 

A discussion titled “Between a Rock and a Hard Place: When is a Stone Just a Stone and When is it Art?”, by Dr. Craig Hanson, on Sunday, June 3, from 2-3 p.m. The talk will explore the questions of sculpture or structure? Artform or accident? Decorative art or garden decor? “For millennia, stone has been used for decidedly unartistic purposes as well as the material of choice for many sculptors. This lecture explores how stone takes on new meaning as an art form while highlighting ‘Existence’.”

 

There will also Japanese Garden Sculpture Walk, with Anna Wolff, Meijer Gardens curator of arts education, on both Sunday, July 15, at 2 p.m., and on Tuesday, Aug. 7, at 6 p.m. The free with admission walking tour of the sculpture in The Richard & Helen DeVos Japanese Garden will focus on what “makes this garden one of the most unique in the nation as we explore themes of tranquility, permanence and the relationship of humanity and the natural environment.”

 

For more information visit meijergardens.org .

 

On Tap: KBS/CBS takeover in Caledonia, Beer Explorers’ bread & ale, French wines at six.one.six

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Founders Kentucky Breakfast Stout (KBS).

If you missed out on your fair share of the 2018 Founders Kentucky Breakfast Stout, Uccello’s Ristorante in Caledonia will offer a KBS tapping as part of its planned Founders Tap Takeover on Wednesday, May 2, starting at 3 p.m.

 

The range of Founders pours available at the takeover, in addition to the KBS, will include the 2017 Canadian Breakfast Stout (CBS), Oatmeal Stout, All Day IPA and Red Rye. What do you want to bet the KBS is the first tap tapped out? Still, for fans of the dark, the CBS is a good fallback.

 

According to Uccello’s advertising, the range of Founders beers will be offered at $8 for 8 ounce pours.

 

Uccello’s in Caledonia is located at 8256 Broadmoor Ave. SE. For more information visit the event’s Facebook event page here.

 

Yeast anyone? GRPM’s Beer Explorers pairs artisan ales with breads

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum, as part of the Museum’s Beer Explorers program, is partnering with Speciation Artisan Ales for a beer tasting with Field & Fire breads on Thursday, May 17. The class will give the opportunity to taste 3 different artisan ales from a brewery currently putting out beer once a month on a special Saturday releases dates.

 

This Beer Explorers will be presented by Mitch Ermatinger, Speciation co-founder, and Shelby Kibler, Field & Fire owner and chef.

 

Speciation Artisan Ales will be demonstrating their “house culture” with a jar of yeast and bacteria slurry, as well as demonstrating the different pH of beer before and after fermentation and acidification. Bread from Field & Fire will also be made from the yeast and bacteria of the ales.

 

Class begins at 6:30 p.m., and will be held on the first floor of the museum. Admission to class includes three beer samples, bread samples and access to the museum’s first two floors to explore. A cash bar will be available.

 

Tickets for the event are $10 for museum members and $20 for non-members. Participants must be 21 and older. GRPM is located at 272 Pearl Street, NW. For information and tickets to Beer Explorers, visit www.grpm.org.

 

For more information about Speciation Artisan Ales, visit speciationartisanales.com .

 

Boatyard Brewing plans ‘Friends’ brew as Alzheimers Association fundraiser

 

Kalamazoo’s Boatyard Brewing Company will hold the release party of its New Friends Brew on Friday, May 11, and it will also be a benefit for a September “Walk to End Alzheimers” fundraiser.

 

The beer release and tapping party will be Friday, May 11, 5-8 p.m., at the Boatyard Brewing Company, 432 E. Patterson St. The event will include live entertainment from Delilah DeWylde and Lee Harvey.

 

For more information visit boatyardbrewing.com .

 

Makeover at six.one.six at Downtown JW Marriott boasts French wine cellar

 

As part of the “re-concept” of JW Marriott’s six.one.six restaurant into what they are calling a “casual French bistro”, the restaurant has announced it will now have the largest selection of French wines in Grand Rapids.

 

six.one.six’s expansive wine list will now include feature labels such as Domain Jean Louis Chave L’Hermitage Rouge and Blanc, Chateau Pichon Comtesse de Lalande Grand Cru, Henri Prudhon, Les Chambres, Chassagne Montrachet, Domaine Tessier, Les Genevrieres, Meursault premier cru. (Never had any of them, but if I had I bet I would be impressed.)

 

The expanded wine list is accompanied by a focus on French cuisine and the arrival of a new chef.

 

“With newly appointed Chef Alessandro Guerrazzi, classically trained in French cuisine and at the helm of the restaurant’s refresh, our team will deliver the highest level of French taste profiles to discerning diners interested in culturally distinct experiences,” Brian Behler, general manager of JW Marriott Grand Rapids said in supplied material.

 

For more information on the JW Marriott Grand Rapids and six.one.six, visit ilovethejw.com.

 

Get Lost: Green Door Distilling wins award for new vodka offering

 

Kalamazoo’s Green Door Distilling Company announced late last month that it’s Get Lost Vodka, first released in August 2017, has won a silver medal from the American Distilling Institute. The ADI Judging of Craft Spirits is the largest and most respected judging devoted to craft spirits, according to supplied material, and the judges tasted over 1,000 spirits and decided which spirits stood out in their respected categories.

 

Green Door Distilling Company is located in Kalamazoo’s River’s Edge District, and is  proud to be Kalamazoo’s first modern distillery and represent the rich distilling history that Kalamazoo possessed in the 1800’s.

 

For more information visit greendoordistilling.com .

 

5 Local Things You Need to Know:  For the weekend, to start next week

Wyoming’s annual Spring Carnival will open this weekend at Lamar Park. (Supplied)

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Wyoming: City’s family-friendly Spring Carnival at Lamar Park opens 

 

It’s time to celebrate spring as the City of Wyoming hosts its annual spring carnival at Lamar Park, with the carnival opening on Friday, April 27 and running through Sunday, May 6, at Lamar Park, 2561 Porter St. SW. Carnival times are Monday through Thursday from 4-8:30 p.m.; Fridays from 2-8:30 p.m.; and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 8:30 p.m.

 

The carnival will feature entertainment for all ages, including games, prizes, and carnival fare favorites. Proceeds from the carnival support City of Wyoming parks and recreation services and the Greater Wyoming Community Resource Alliance or GWCRA.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Kentwood: Police department’s Drug Take Back day planned for Saturday

 

The Kentwood Police Department will be part of a region wide Drug Take Back day Saturday. (Supplied)

The Kentwood Police Department also will be offering Drug Take Back services Saturday, April 28, from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at its department offices, 4742 Walma Ave. SE. Only pills or patches will be accepted at this location.

 

Those looking to get rid of sharps — the term for medical devices with sharp points or edges that can puncture or cut skin such as needles — should contact the Kent County Health Department about the Sharps program.

 

Kentwood’s event is part of a region-wide; for the full story, click here.

 

WKTV sports: Golden Gloves boxing, high school ball games, available

 

WKTV will rebroadcast its coverage Michigan Golden Gloves state finals this weekend. (WKTV)

If you are fans of local Golden Gloves boxing, WKTV will rebroadcast its coverage of this week’s action on Saturday, April 28, on Comcast WKTV Channel 25 and on AT&T U-Verse Community 99.

 

But if you are more in the mood for something outdoors, we have your schedule of local high school baseball and softball action around the Wyoming and Kentwood area.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Grand Rapids: GRPM hosts annual cocktails and collections event

 

Grand Rapids Public Museum will host Collections & Cocktails May 2. (Supplied)

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will once again host Collections & Cocktails, a new annual fundraiser focusing on the museum’s collections, their stories and the preservation and education with these artifacts, on Wednesday, May 2.

 

This year, Collections & Cocktails will focus on the museum’s transportation collection, featuring dinner and signature cocktails to go along with the exciting stories of artifacts such as Grand Rapids’ own 1949 Herpolsheimer Child Passenger Train, the Austin Model 60, and a 1913 Indian Model E Motorcycle.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Lake Michigan: MSU study looks at recreation, climate change on lakeshore

 

According to scientists and some users, Lake Michigan is seeing an impact from global warming. (Supplied)

Coastal communities and sensitive coastal ecosystems experience a variety of weather-related impacts that are influenced by changing climatic conditions, but Michigan State University researchers have found that Michigan residents’ opinions about climate change vary for many reasons.

 

For example, the authors found that greater involvement in outdoor recreation activities, higher levels of education, and lower levels of income were key factors. And, males and older individuals tended to be more dismissive of or disengaged with climate change than their counterparts.

 

For the full story, click here.

 

Audiophiles, vinyl fans eagerly await Record Store Day releases 

Pink Floyd’s The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, a remastered re-release of the band’s 1967 debut release, is expected to be one of the hot vinyl sellers this week.

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

This Saturday, April 21, is the annual Record Store Day in the Grand Rapids area and, quite literally, around the world. It is a day to celebrate small music stores but also to celebrate records — music on vinyl.

 

And if you ask those in the vinyl know, record store owners and all-around audiophiles, they say the day has become one of the most anticipated music release dates of the year.

 

“I understand that Jack White’s label will be having a surprise release on that day,” Steve Williamson, owner of Corner Record Shop in Grandville. “Not sure what it will be, but I am looking forward to that. It is always interesting when you do not know.”

 

Not that Williamson expects there to be a run on the surprise from Third Man Records, which is based out of Detroit, not like there may be on what he said is likely to be the “hot release” on vinyl on that day: Pink Floyd’s The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, a remastered re-release of the band’s 1967 debut release.

 

“Not sure how many of those (Pink Floyd) we will be getting in,” he said. “But that should sell quickly.”

 

Herm Baker, store manager of Vertigo Music in Grand Rapids, says his store is expecting a busy day Saturday and points out three releases he expects to sell well: David Bowie’s 1978 Welcome to the Blackout (Live in London ’78), a three-record set; Wilco’s 1990 Live at the Troubadour 11/12/96, a two-record set; and Grateful Dead’s 1969 Fillmore West, San Francisco, Ca. 2/27/69, a four-LP boxed set.

 

WKTV’s own Bill Jung has his opinion on releases he’s most anticipating — and if you’d ever seen his audio set-up and vinyl collection, you’d know he knows for what he speaks.

 

“There are a couple Van Morrison things, there is this alternative Moondance (LP) and this 7-inch vinyl (with the songs ‘Close Enough for Jazz’ and ‘Things’,” Jung said, when pushed to do so. “And this U2, ‘The Lights of Home’, a 12-inch vinyl.

 

Tom Waits (Norma Crux)

“But Tom Waits, Bawlers, that would be the number one,” he said. “He released those a couple years ago. They were sort of like the sweepings of all of his studio stuff. There was a set called Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards. On Bastards, Tom does this thing of screaming into the distorted microphone, but Bawlers is more his reflective piano stuff. … There is some excellent things on that.”

 

(Don’t tell my wife, but I’m getting her the 7-inch vinyl of Florence + The Machine’s “Sky Full of Song”, a single off her upcoming new full length release, backed by “New York poem (for Polly)”.)

 

Corner Record Shop is located at 3562 Chicago Dr SW. Other local stores sure to have a rush of vinyl releases and vinyl fans are Schuler Books & Music, on 2660 28th Street SE, and Vertigo Music, 129 South Division. Google their websites for Record Store Day specials.

 

If you are looking for a new, used or repairs for turntables, check out Wayback Audio, now located at 3980 Chicago Drive, Suite 130. Google the business for contact info.

 

For more information on Record Store Day and a list of vinyl releases expected, see recordstoreday.com .

 

Michael Franti & Spearhead replaces Huey Lewis at Meijer Gardens this summer

Michael Franti & Spearhead will be performing at the Meijer Gardens Amphitheater on Sunday, July 8. (Supplied)

By Meijer Gardens 

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park announced today that Michael Franti & Spearhead will be performing at the Meijer Gardens Amphitheater on Sunday, July 8, replacing Huey Lewis & The News, who recently canceled their summer tour, including a concert at Meijer Gardens.

 

Huey Lewis and the News has cancelled this summer shows. (Supplied)

In a statement from Lewis at the time of the cancelation of his summer concert schedule, he said: “Two and a half months ago, just before a show in Dallas, I lost most of my hearing. Although I can still hear a little, one on one, and on the phone, I can’t hear music well enough to sing. The lower frequencies distort violently making it impossible to find pitch. I’ve been to the House Ear Institute, the Stanford Ear Institute, and the Mayo Clinic, hoping to find an answer. The doctors believe I have Meniere’s disease and have agreed that I can’t perform until I improve. Therefore the only prudent thing to do is to cancel all future shows. Needless to say, I feel horrible about this, and wish to sincerely apologize to all the fans who’ve already bought tickets and were planning to come see us. I’m going to concentrate on getting better, and hope that one day soon I’ll be able to perform again.”

 

This year’s lineup includes a special show with Alabama on Aug. 23 to benefit the “Welcoming the World: Honoring a Legacy of Love” capital campaign. All net proceeds from this show will be contributed to the campaign.

 

On-going upgrades to the terraced lawn seating of the 1,900-seat amphitheater is will be completed for the season (with more upgrades coming for the 2019 season).

 

For highlights of the remainder of the concert season see a WKTV Journal here.

 

For more information visit meijergardens.com .

 

‘Classical Evolution’ the theme of finale St. Cecilia chamber music season concert

Pianist Vonsattel Gilles will be a featured performer at the final chamber music concert at St. Cecilia Music Center. (Supplied photo by Marco Borggreve)

By St. Cecilia Music Center

St. Cecilia Music Center will present the season finale of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center season, a program titled “Classical Evolution, Showcases Mozart, Weber and Brahms”, on Thursday, April 19, at 7:30 p.m.

 

The performance will feature pianist Gilles Vonsattel, violinists Ida Kavafian and Erin Keefe, violist Yura Lee, cellist Nicholas Canellakis and clarinetist Tommaso Lonquich.

 

“The final concert of this season with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center (CMS) will bring some of our favorite chamber music artists back to SCMC and introduce us to a few new artists as well,” stated Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director. “The title of this concert, ‘Classical Evolution’ showcases these stellar musicians performing works by Mozart, Weber and Brahms. Every chamber music concert with CMS is an exciting musical experience and this will be another night of magic.”

 

The Program will include Trio in E-flat major for Clarinet, Viola, and Piano, K. 498, “Kegelstatt”, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Quintet in B-flat major for Clarinet, Two Violins, Viola, and Cello, Op. 34, by Carl Maria von Weber; and Quintet in F minor for Piano, Two Violins, Viola, and Cello, Op. 34, by Johannes Brahms.

 

The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center is known for the extraordinary quality of its performances, its inspired programming, and for setting the benchmark for chamber music worldwide. No other chamber music organization does more to promote, to educate and to foster a love of and appreciation for the art form.

 

CMS brings together the very best international artists from an ever-expanding roster of more than 150 artists per season, to provide audiences with the kind of exhilarating concert experiences that have critics calling CMS “an exploding star in the musical firmament.”

 

St. Cecilia Music Center and CMS have an ongoing partnership that brings the group to Royce Auditorium each season.

 

Concert tickets are $38 and $43 and can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at www.scmc-online.org.  A pre-concert wine / hors d’oeuvres event for $15 is available and begins at 6:00 p.m. (Reservations are required.)

 

There will also be a pre-concert talk with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center artists on Royce Auditorium stage beginning at 7 p.m. to discuss the music selection for the evening and any other questions that pertain to the artists themselves. All ticket holders are welcome to attend the artist talk. A post-concert party is open to all ticket-holders giving the audience the opportunity to meet the artists and obtain signed CDs of their releases.

 

Local jazz quartet plays American Songbook at The Block in Muskegon

The Block in Muskegon will host a jazz concert this weekend. (Supplied/The Block in Muskegon)

By WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

Pianist Robin Connell plays with many jazz groups in many venues in West Michigan, but she is particularly looking forward to playing with a quartet at The Block in Muskegon Saturday, April 14.

 

“This is a wonderful, intimate (150 seat) venue in downtown Muskegon,” Connell said in supplied material. “I’m looking forward to playing a real piano, (it is) so much more expressive than a keyboard.”

 

Connell will be playing, and singing, with Paul Brewer on trombone and vocals, Tim Froncek on drums and Chris Kjorness on bass, with the music starting at 7:30 p.m. Doors and the bar open at 7 p.m., with tickets at $25 and up, student tickets at $10.

 

While the set list is, in jazz, always fluid, it is expected to include Cole Porter, Duke Ellington, Rodgers & Hart, The Beatles, and Joni Mitchell. For a short video with some of the music likely to be performed, visit here.

 

For a special WKTV volunteer video on the local jazz scene, visit here.

 

For more information on music at The Block in Muskegon, visit here.

 

Meijer Gardens summer concerts feature something old (school), something new (wave)

The Decemberists’ June 4 visit to the Meijer Gardens concert series will likely be on the list of “hot” concerts this season. (Supplied photo by Holly Andres)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, in announcing their 2018 Fifth Third Bank Summer Concerts at Meijer Gardens series of 31 concerts, use words like “eclectic” and “diverse” to describe the spectrum of artists coming to town.

 

We could not agree more, or come up with better adjectives.

 

The series includes — to steal a line from another series of annual events held on the grounds of Meijer Gardens, weddings — something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue.

 

Taking them out of the wedding-rhyme order, while there will be some familiar returners coming back to the Gardens, the new school and New Wave acts may be the most impressive group.

 

Toad the Wet Sprocket and The Verve Pipe (shown) will be at Meijer Gardens Aug. 19. (Supplied)

With the likes of alt-nation favorites the Decemberists, Fitz and Trantrums and Jason Mraz on the bill, those who think compact discs are archaic will have their day, or night. With the likes of Blondie, Joe Jackson, and the Toad the Wet Sprocket teaming with The Verve Pipe, the older-alt crowd will get their 1980s and ‘90s flashbacks.

 

My anticipated favorite of the new school/New Wave alt grouping will be +LIVE+, the 1990s alt-rock (post punk) powerhouse whose 1994 “Lightning Crashes” is still one of favorite songs ever, and who recently reunited and put out new music.

 

Lyle Lovett keeps coming back to Meijer Gardens, and we sure do appreciate it; this time with his Large Band on Aug. 27. (Supplied)

The “old school” rock and country acts on the bill include the always worth-the-money annual visit by Lyle Lovett (this time with his Large Band), Jackson Browne’s return (check out a WKTV review of his 2017 show here), Huey Lewis and the News, Styx and TOTO. And can you get any more old school than The Beach Boys?

 

We’ll skip the “something borrowed” category because, well,  it sounded good but I got nothing. The something (sort-of) blues and soul concerts will include Gladys Knight, Seal, Patti LaBelle and — what may be my second most anticipated concert of the season — the blues kings of Taj Mahal and Keb’ Mo’ together.

 

Under the somewhat undefinable but, also unmissable concerts include Alison Krauss, Herbie Hancock and the summer party provided by Lake Street Dive.

 

The concert series includes a special show with Alabama, the classic American country and Southern rock band, on Aug. 23 to benefit the Garden’s ongoing “Welcoming the World: Honoring a Legacy of Love” capital campaign. All net proceeds from this show will be contributed to the campaign.

 

The complete line-up — with date, showtime, and ticket range — includes:

 

Tedeschi Trucks Band, May 30 at 6:30 p.m., $75 presale, $78 member, $80 public
Gladys Knight, June 3 at 7 p.m., $68 presale, $71 member, $73 public
The Decemberists, June 4 at 7 p.m., $52 presale, $55 member, $57 public
Jackson Browne, June 6 at 7 p.m., $72 presale, $75 member, $77 public
The B-52s, June 8 at 7 p.m., $57 presale, $60 member, $62 public
Fitz and the Tantrums, June 10 at 7 p.m., $47 presale, $50 member, $52 public
Brandi Carlile, June 13 at 6:30 p.m., $56 presale, $59 member, $61 public
Alison Krauss, June 17 at 7 p.m., $84 presale, $87 member, $89 public
Seal, June 20 at 7 p.m., $91 presale, $94 member, $96 public
Old Crow Medicine Show, June 25 at 7 p.m., $45 presale, $48 member, $50 public
Herbie Hancock, June 27 at 7 p.m., $57 presale, $60 member, $62 public
Blondie, June 29 at 7 p.m., $82 presale, $85 member, $87 public
Huey Lewis and the News, July 8 at 7 p.m., $90 presale, $93 member, $95 public
Patti LaBelle, July 13 at 7 p.m., $75 presale, $78 member, $80 public
The Temptations & The Four Tops, July 15 at 6:30 p.m., $58 presale, $61 member, $63 public
Joe Jackson, July 20 at 7 p.m., $45 presale, $48 member, $50 public
Dispatch with special guests Nahko and Medicine for the People, July 23 at 5:45 p.m., $55 presale, $58 member, $60 public
Jason Mraz with special guest Brett Dennen, July 25 at 6:30 p.m., $83 presale, $86 member, $88 public
The Beach Boys, July 26 at 7 p.m., $64 presale, $67 member, $69 public
Air Supply, July 29 at 7 p.m., $50 presale, $53 member, $55 public
Styx, Aug. 1 at 7 p.m., $72 presale, $75 member, $77 public
Vince Gill, Aug. 6 at 7 p.m., $62 presale, $65 member, $67 public
TajMo: The Taj Mahal & Keb’ Mo’ Band, Aug. 12 at 7 p.m., $59 presale, $62 member, $64 public
Toad the Wet Sprocket & The Verve Pipe, Aug. 19 at 6:30 p.m., $44 presale, $47 member, $49 public
Trombone Shorty’s Voodoo Threauxdown featuring Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue, Galactic, Preservation Hall Jazz Band, New Breed Brass Band and special guests, Aug. 22 at 6 p.m., $75 presale, $78 member, $80 public
Alabama, Aug. 23 at 7 p.m., $150 presale, $153 member, $155 public (the special fundraising show to benefit the Welcoming the World: Honoring a Legacy of Love capital campaign)
TOTO’s 40 Trips Around The Sun Tour, Aug. 24 at 7 p.m., $53 presale, $56 member, $58 public
O.A.R. with special guest Matt Nathanson, Aug. 26 at 6:30 p.m., $75 presale, $78 member, $80 public
Lyle Lovett and his Large Band, Aug. 27 at 7 p.m., $63 presale, $66 member, $68 public
Lake Street Dive, Aug. 30 at 7 p.m., $48 presale, $51 member, $53 public
+LIVE+, Sept. 3 at 7 p.m., $60 presale, $63 member, $65 public

 

And, in case you were wondering, despite the ongoing renovation and expansion of the Meijer Gardens amphitheater, there will still be the same 1,900 general admission tickets available. The concert venue work is taking place over two years. Work on Phase One will conclude for the 2018 season and then resume to be completed for the 2019 season.

 

And now for the “getting the tickets” details/fine print:

 

Members may buy tickets during the members-only presale beginning at 9 a.m., April 28 through midnight, May 11. There is a limit of 8 tickets per show, per transaction. The preferred method to purchase tickets is online, but multiple options are available. For details see the Meijer Gardens websive’sa concert series page.

 

Sales to the public begin at 9 a.m., May 12. There is a limit of 8 tickets per show, per transaction. Also, see the website for options and details.

 

For more information on the concerts, and all the details on what to bring and not bring to the amphitheater, visit meijergardens.org .

 

WKTV will again cover GVSU Lubbers Cup Regatta, including live coverage April 14

Action from the annual Lubbers Cup Regatta. (Supplied/Lubbers Cup)

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org

 

The annual Don Lubbers Cup Regatta, named after former Grand Valley State University president and rowing supporter Arena D. (Don) Lubbers, features hundreds of athletes and some of the top rowing teams from across the Midwest, all coming to Spring Lake April 13-15.

 

And WKTV will there, filming the best moments. WKTV will be there live Saturday, April 14, 10-noon and 4-7 p.m., on Comcast WKTV Channel 25 and on AT&T U-Verse Community 99. WKTV’s coverage, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV, are available on-demand within a week of the event at wktvondemand.com .

 

Since its origin in 1995, the Lubbers Cup Regatta has grown to an event that attracts over 500 student athletes to Spring Lake to kick off the regatta season, according to the event’s website.

 

The Lubbers Cup is produced in partnership with The Chamber of Commerce Grand Haven, Spring Lake, Ferrysburg, Grand Valley State University Club Sports, Grand Valley Rowing Club, and the communities of Spring Lake and Ferrysburg.

 

Breakaway music festival to return to Grand Rapid’s Belknap Park

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

As if Electric Forest’s annual West Michigan’s Kandi-carrying Woodstock clone is not enough proof of the Grand Rapids region being a hot bed for EDM (electronic dance music), MiEntertainment and Prime Social Group announced last week that its Breakaway Music Festival will return to the heights of Belknap Park later this year, Friday and Saturday, Aug. 24-25.

 

(“Kandi”, BTW, is a term describing the colorful bracelets that kids and/or adults wear at EDM shows, often times being traded or given away as a sign of respect or love.)

 

Zedd, shown at huge festival, was one of the headliners at the 2017 Breakaway Music Festival. (Supplied)

The 2017 festival featured headlining performances of Grammy-nominee Travis Scott and Grammy-winner and EDM powerhouse Zedd, and was attended by more than 16,000 fans.

 

“We started this festival by combining urban living with a carefully curated, multi-genre lineup that festival-goers of all ages and music preferences could enjoy. With the success of the festival’s first year, it was a no-brainer to return to Grand Rapids for its second year,” Adam Lynn, festival managing partner, said in supplied material.

 

Breakaway Music Festival debuted in 2013 in Columbus, Ohio, with names like Kendrick Lamar, Bassnectar, and twentyonepilots. The festival expanded to Grand Rapids in 2017 and was nominated for the first-ever “Grandy’s” Award Show for Outstanding Live Music Event. The festival brand has since expanded to five different markets in Dallas, Grand Rapids, Columbus, Charlotte, and Nashville.

 

“It’s great to have Grand Rapids in such good company with other major Breakaway cities. Our goal is to continue to enhance the outdoor live music scene in West Michigan and we believe the return of Breakaway is a good step in that direction,” Chris Meyer, of MiEntertainment, said in supplied information.

 

More information on the event and musical schedule is forthcoming, but for now, for more information visit breakaway festival.com and/or follow the event using #BreakawayFest or @BreakawayFest.

 

Asleep at the Wheel’s country swing coming to St. Cecilia on April 12

Asleep at the Wheel’s current line-up is a mix o f founding members and new faces. (Supplied)

By St. Cecilia Music Center

 

St. Cecilia Music Center brings American Country Music Group Asleep at the Wheel to the Royce Auditorium stage on Thursday, April 12 at 7:30 p.m. The band will arrive in Grand Rapids directly following six straight concert dates in their home state of Texas.

 

With recent band additions Katie Shore (fiddle, vocals), Dennis Ludiker (fiddle, mandolin) Connor Forsyth (keyboard, vocals) and Josh Hoag (Bass), Asleep at the Wheel’s newest members have given a newfound energy and their own unique style to the band.

 

Asleep at the Wheel veterans Ray Benson (lead guitar and vocals), David Sanger (drums) Eddie Rivers (steel guitar) and Jay Reynolds (saxophone and clarinet) round out the new 8-piece band who will appear at St. Cecilia.

 

“It is St. Cecilia Music Center’s mission to bring great music to Grand Rapids and we are pleased to bring Asleep at the Wheel to the Acoustic Café Series,” Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director, said in supplied material. “With the appearance of Margo Price last season, we opened the door for country music artists to perform in our acoustically-superb and intimate hall. We trust Asleep at the Wheel fans will be excited to hear them up close and personal.”

 

Founding member of the band, Benson, launched Asleep at the Wheel in Paw Paw, West Virginia 48 years agoNow based in Austin, Texas, the band has garnered 10 Grammy Awards, released more than 20 studio and live albums, and charted 20 singles on the Billboard country music charts. 

 

The Grammy Award-winning Still The King: Celebrating the Music of Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys is the band’s most recent release (2015) and marks their third full-length Bob Wills tribute album. Featuring 22 acclaimed collaborations, the all-star lineup over the years has included legends such as Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard and George Strait, The Avett Brothers, Amos Lee, Old Crow Medicine Show and many other fine talents.

 

The Acoustic Café Series, in partnership with the syndicated radio show of the same name, will round out the season with singer/songwriter, banjo and fiddler Rhiannon Giddens co-founder of the Grammy award-winning string band Carolina Chocolate Drops.

 

SCMC formed a partnership three years ago with the syndicated radio show Acoustic Café and its host Rob Reinhart. The Ann Arbor based radio program is syndicated to over 120 commercial and non-commercial stations throughout the country and airs locally in Grand Rapids on WYCE Friday mornings. The series at SCMC features touring singer/songwriter folk/Americana musicians in concert and also presents the opportunity for a live taping with the artists and Rob Reinhart.

 

“Since its inception in the 2015-16 season the Acoustic Café Folk Series has expanded its offerings and brought some of today’s up and coming artists, as well as some of the veterans of the singer/songwriter genre,” Holbrook said in supplied material.

 

Tickets for Asleep at the Wheel tickets are $35 and $40 and can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at scmc-online.org . A post-concert party with a cash bar will be offered to all ticket-holders where the band’s CD’s can be purchased.

 

Emerging alt-folk sounds of Darlingside returns to West Michigan with gig at Seven Steps Up

Darlingside is bassist Dave Senft, guitarist and banjo player Don Mitchell, classical violinist and folk mandolinist Auyon Mukharji, and cellist and guitarist Harris Paseltiner. (supplied/Gaelle Beri)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Anybody who saw the Massachusetts-based alt-folk quartet Darlingside at Meijer Gardens’ summer concert series in 2016 (which I did), knows their return to Western Michigan later this month is maybe the spring’s first must-see concert.

 

Those who didn’t catch them before would be wise to check them out and get in on the emerging musical buzz.

 

At Meijer Gardens, Darlingside was the opening act, but their eight-song, 45-minute set had everybody rushing back from the concession/libation stations to witness an a cappella opening of “The God of Loss” from the band’s 2015 release Birds Say and the quartet had everybody’s attention well before their set-ending statement “Blow the House Down”, from 2012’s Pilot Machines, the band’s debut recording.

 

There is bound to be more surprises Wednesday, April 18, when the band plays at Seven Steps Up, in Spring Lake, in support of their latest release: “Extralife”.

 

Darlingside’s sound, that night at Meijer Gardens, featured single microphone vocal harmonies, sparse percussion sounds sans a drummer, but acoustically superb use of string instruments including but not limited to guitar and banjo. Bassist Dave Senft, guitarist and banjo player Don Mitchell, classical violinist and folk mandolinist Auyon Mukharji, and cellist and guitarist Harris Paseltiner created a sound that reminds one (at least me) of the Avett Brothers or Mumford and Sons, but really sounds like nothing you’ve heard before.

 

According to supplied information, “Extralife” finds Darlingside “looking to the future, mourning the loss of our world with a post-apocalyptic view to address topics ranging from societal issues, politics, environmental concerns and religious tensions. While the subject matter may seem bleak, ‘Extralife’ is not without an underlying sense of hope and optimism.”

 

Like I said, surprises are to be expected. Just ask the band about its new release:

 

“We put our four heads together and created this collective consciousness about bits and pieces from our past and how we saw the world based upon reminiscences,” Paseltiner said in supplied material.

 

Mukharji goes on to describe the “Extralife” concept as “… a life beyond where we are now, whether that’s a brand new thing, a rebirth, or just a new version of ourselves as we move forward. … That future being a completely unknown quantity and the present being a new and bizarre place to be living in.”

 

After a stop in Ann Arbor on Tuesday, April 17, Darlingside will be at Seven Steps Up for a 7:30 p.m. concert (with Henry Jamison opening). Reserved standard seats are $28, and reserved table seats are $38.

 

Seven Steps Up is located in downtown Spring Lake, in a renovated Masonic Temple circa 1919, at 116 S. Jackson Street. For more information on the venue visit sevenstepsup.com . For more information on the band visit darlingside.com .

 

And the 2018 Eclipse Awards nominees are …

Nominees for the 7th Annual Eclipse Awards were announced LIVE on Monday, April 2, and round two of judging has begun!

By WKTV Staff

 

Local personalities Aaron Noble and Jessie Hollett announced the 2018 Eclipse Award nominees on WKTV and Facebook LIVE Monday, April 2.

 

Each year, the Eclipse Awards celebrate West Michigan filmmakers and the films they create. Filmmakers can enter in several main Categories, such as Cinema Trailer, Documentary, and Narrative Short. There are also craft Categories focused on the expertise in creating a film, such as Acting, Directing and Original Score.

 

“The Eclipse Awards is a one-of-a-kind event in Michigan,” said Tom Norton, WKTV general manager. “Now in its seventh year, the Awards continue to recognize outstanding content and content creators right here in our state. The quality of the work submitted continues to be top-notch, proving that the Michigan production community continues to develop and retain incredible talent and skill.”

 

Aaron Noble and Jessie Hollett announced this year’s Eclipse Awards nominees on April 2 (photo courtesy of Jessie Hollett)

After an intense screening process, judges from across the country have narrowed the field down to the nominees listed below.

 

Nominees and their guests may attend the Certification Reception Monday, April 30, and winners will be announced at the Excellence in Craft Eclipse Awards Presentation LIVE, Thursday, May 3, from The Ballroom at McKay Tower in downtown Grand Rapids.

 

CONGRATULATIONS to the 7th Annual Eclipse Awards nominees!

 

Categories

 

Documentary Feature nominees are: Co-Operatively Yours–Kristin Ojaniemi, Jim Kurtti, producers; Newcomer Legacy: A Vietnamese-American Story–Alan Headbloom, producer.

 

Music Video nominees are: Nottingham–Jacob de la Rosa, Kathryn Postema, Joshua E. White, producers; Never One Thing–John Hanson. May Erlewine, DJ Viernes, producers; Small Town–Zachary Clark, Nick Turske, Andy Westra, producers; Flight School: Don’t Know–Chris Mac, producer

 

Narrative Feature nominees are: Into A Dark Mind–Harley Wallen, producer; Moving Parts–Harley Wallen, producer; Return of the Scarecrow–Adam Mikrut, Walt Lodes III, producers; Kid Brother–Bryce Cameron producer; The Incantation–Dan Campbell, producer; Thaw of the Dead–David Marek, Matthew Von Dayton, producers.

 

Narrative Short nominees are: Model No. Human–Harper Shecter, producer; Mino Bimaadiziwin–Carese Bartlett, producer; Drilling Dad–Jeff Vega, producer; Frankie— Josh Martin, producer; Four-Ninety–Scott Magie, producer; The House on Oak Street–Kyle Misak, Don Chase, Jesse Charles, producers; Deadbolt–Michael McCallum, William C. McCallum, Patric J. Arnold producers.

 

Promotional segment in television or online nominees are: Challenge Day 2017–Caleb Carson, producer; Memphis the Musical–Angela Peavey, producer; Benjamin’s Hope – Welcome Home–Eric Schrotenboer, Sara Hogan, producers.

 

Television and online Programming (30 min) nominees are:  Mind Games – Tea & Sympathy–Jeff Vega, producer; The Michigan Experience: Vietnam Veterans–Rodney Brown, William Redwine, producers; Verify--Eric Schrotenboer, David Bailey, Emma Nicolas, producers; The Chaplain–Rhodes Short, Heather Fairbanks, producers.

 

Cinema Trailer nominees are: Death Island Paranormal retribution–Chris Penney, producer

 

Documentary Short nominees are: Stories of Us–Angela Peavey, producer; Ten Years Later–Nathan Roels, producer; Everything Happens Somewhere-Joppa–Eric Schrotenboer, producer

 

6th Annual Eclipse Awards ceremony

Crafts

 

Acting in a Supporting Role nominees are: Amanda Buhs–Dylan; Peter Herold–Kid Brother;  Dean Cain–The Incantation; Michael McCallum–Deadbolt; Johnny DeMarc —Deadbolt; Brie Roper–Deadbolt; Matthew Dennis–White Hair; Rico Bruce Wade–Four-Ninety; Michael Gordon–Finding Home; Heather Fairbanks–Thaw of the Dead.

 

Screenplay Feature Length nominees are: Bryce Cameron, Devin Cameron–Kid Brother; Ryan Webber, Brett Christiansen–Finding Home.

 

Screenplay Short Subject nominees are: Scott Magie–Four-Ninety; Kyle Misak, Jesse Charles, Don Chase–The House on Oak Street; Justin Muschong–Deadbolt.

 

Direction in Narrative short nominees are: Kyle Macciomei–Closeted Hemispheres; Shane McSauby–Mino Bimaadiziwin; Nabil Nona–Consequences; Josh Martin–Frankie; Scott Magie–Four-Ninety; Kyle Misak–The House on Oak Street; Michael McCallum–Deadbolt.

 

Cinematography in Documentary nominees are: Angela Peavey–Stories of Us;  DT Kofoed–REACH Teen Open Studio 2016 Spring Mural Project

 

Animation nominees are: Garrett Bleshenski–Clearing the Smoke; Josh Reed–DoseDr.

 

Sound Design nominees are: Adam Mikrut–Return of the Scarecrow; Roy Wallace–Frankie; Andre Bottesi–Four-Ninety; Roy Wallace–Deadbolt.

 

Direction in Narrative Feature nominees are: Devin Cameron–Kid Brother; Jude S. Walko–The Incantation; Ryan Webber, Brett Christiansen–Finding Home.

 

Original Score nominees are: Gregory De Iulio–The House on Oak Street; Eric Schrotenboer–Cultures in Conflict.

 

Acting in Lead Role nominees are: Rhodes Short–The Chaplain; Michael McCallum–Angela; Jimmy Doom–Four-Ninety; Michael Empson–Finding Home; Elizabeth Moore–Deadbolt; Brad Stocker–Deadbolt.

 

Cinematography in Narrative Feature nominees are: Derek Street–The Incantation; Matthew Von Dayton–Thaw of the Dead.

 

Cinematography in Narrative Short nominees are: Dane Covey–Frankie; Travis Hayward–Four-Ninety; Erin Hughes–The House on Oak Street;  Andrew K. Tebeau–Deadbolt;  Dane Covey–Small Town.

 

Editing in Narrative nominees are: Kyle Misak–The House on Oak Street; Scott Baisden, Michael McCallum–Deadbolt; David Marek–Thaw of the Dead.

 

Hyperion Award — Mark Adler. The Hyperion Award acknowledges the contributions of unique individuals who maintain high standards in their craft while inspiring others to do so as well. At the same time, that individual works to expand the opportunities that benefit the entire creative and production community.

 

Winners will be announced live on Thursday, May 3rd on WKTV, Comcast channel 24, starting at 7:30 pm, hosted by Joe Anderson. The Eclipse Awards show also will be streamed live at theeclipseaward.com. WKTV News will be providing complete coverage of the entire event.

 

The annual Eclipse Awards are made possible by Sony, Key Code Media, Ferris State University, Compass College of Cinematic Arts and WKTV Digital Cinema. The Eclipse Awards seek to elevate content creators throughout Michigan by honoring their works through regional, national and international voting on entered works in film, television and on-line production. The Eclipse Award is given for story telling and production excellence in the production community.

 

Listen to the nominee announcements here:

 

GVSU will  host 20th annual pow wow April 7-8

The 20th annual Celebrating All Walks of Life Traditional Pow Wow will be at GVSU’s Fieldhouse on the Allendale campus. (Supplied)

Grand Valley State University

 

Grand Valley State University will host a series of events to celebrate, and learn about, Native American traditions and culture through dance and song on Saturday and Sunday, April 7-8 at GVSU’s Allendale campus.

 

The 20th annual Celebrating All Walks of Life Traditional Pow Wow will take place in the Fieldhouse on the Allendale campus. Hundreds of people are expected to attend, including many traveling from Native American communities in the Upper Peninsula and Great Lakes region.

 

The event will celebrate traditional Native American dancing and music with Grand Entry performances at 1 p.m. and 6 p.m., on April 7, and at noon on April 8. Doors open at 11 a.m., both days. There will be Native American handmade crafts and food vendors, as well as a silent auction to raise funds for Grand Valley’s Native American Student Association.

 

This year, the co-coordinator of the first Grand Valley pow wow will attend the celebration. Scott Herron, a Grand Valley alumnus and biology professor at Ferris State University, coordinated the first pow wow in 1998.

 

The celebration is free, family friendly and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Native American Student Association, Office of Multicultural Affairs and Division of Inclusion and Equity at Grand Valley.

 

For more information, visit gvsu.edu/oma/powwow or contact NASA at gvsu_nasa@yahoo.com or the Office of Multicultural Affairs at 616-331-2177.

 

On Tap: Strong beer in Cedar Springs, fine wine at St. Cecilia, fundraiser at Boatyard

Whether it is a pint of beer or a glass of wine, your tastebuds can fine what they want in the Grand Rapids area in April. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Looking for something local to cap off your spring break week? Cedar Springs Brewing Company will host its third annual Starkbierfest — strong beer fest — on Saturday, April 7, with a heated tent with live music, limited beer releases, and a sausage party. And you know how well German beer goes with German sausages.

 

Never heard of Starkbierfest? According to the brewery, besides the famous Oktoberfest, Starkbierfest (“Strong Beer Festival”) is the second big German beer festival time during the year. Historically, monks brewed strong beer (Bockbier), which was higher in calories and a bit stronger to substitute for food during Lenten fasting. This “liquid bread” and annual brewing specialties have survived the times and re-emerged … at Cedar Springs Brewing.

 

Four beers are set to be released: Küsterer Maibock, a spring strong lager in collaboration with North Channel Brewing; Küsterer Pale Bock, a traditional Bavarian pale lager bock; Big Sid Rides a Buffalo, a Buffalo Trace Bourbon barrel aged barley wine; and Tim the Enchanter, a strong Belgian golden ale.

 

There are various party packages available, including the Starknaked Package (we will not delve further into the name) for $20 per person, and the four-person Sausage Party Package (again, no comment) for $60.

 

Live music will be provided from 2:30 p.m. until sometime after 8 p.m. or when the beer runs out, by Dave Salvinski (German/folk music), Fauxgrass (progressive bluegrass), and Delilah DeWilde (rockabilly).

 

The Starkbierfest will be held Saturday, April 7, from 3-9 p.m., at Cedar Springs Brewing Company, 95 N Main, Cedar Springs. For more information visit csbrew.com .

 

St. Cecilia fundraiser to feature Martha’s Vineyeard wine tasting

 

More of a fine wine palette? The “Eat. Drink. Be Merry!” Martha’s Vineyard Wine Tasting Annual Fundraiser to benefit St. Cecilia Music Center will be held on Saturday, April 14.

 

Wine more your taste? Check out the wine tasting event at St. Cecilia Music Center. (Supplied)

Grand Rapids fine wine purveyor Martha’s Vineyard will supply the wine and food at the music center’s annual fundraiser, to be held from 6-10 p.m., on two floors at St. Cecilia’s historic building. The night will feature more than 100 wine varietals at various price points, we are told. Some of the wines to be featured are specific to the event and will only be available through special order at the event. Discounts on all wine orders at the event will be offered.

 

The event will include hors d’oeuvres from Catering by Martha’s and Nantucket Baking Company, as well as musical entertainment and a silent auction with many unique wines, wine-tasting trips, vacations, entertainment packages and  dining packages up for bid.

 

St. Cecilia Music Center is located at 24 Ransom NE, downtown Grand Rapids. The cost is $40 per person and advance tickets can be purchased at Martha’s Vineyard, 200 Union Ave NE, Grand Rapids, online at scmc-online.org or by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224. Tickets are limited.

 

Boatyard Brewing plans ‘Friends’ brew as Alzheimers fundraiser

 

It is still a month away, but summer weekend schedules fill up quickly so you may want to mark your schedule for Kalamazoo’s Boatyard Brewing Company release party of its New Friends Brew on Friday, May 11, which will benefit a September “Walk to End Alzheimers” fundraiser.

 

“I am the captain of our walk team and every year in September there is a big walk,” Corie Shireman said to WKTV. “So all year long we do fundraising as a company to raise funds for our walk team. Last year we made our goal of $5,000. So, every year, it becomes more of a challenge for me to think of new ways to raise funds and awareness for the Alzheimers Association. So because of my love for craft beer I took it upon myself to ask a local brewery if they would consider naming a beer after us and the possibilities of any of the proceeds going to us.”

 

The result: New Friends Brew, the sales of which will benefit $1 for each draft beer purchased to the New Friends Walk team, and a party.

 

The beer release and tapping party will be Friday, May 11, 5-8 p.m., at the Boatyard Brewing Company, 432 E. Patterson St. The event will include live entertainment from Delilah DeWylde and Lee Harvey. For more information visit boatyardbrewing.com .

 

Grey Skies Distillery releases first straight bourbon whiskey

 

Grand Rapids’ Gray Skies Distillery released its first straight bourbon whiskey on March 22 and while its initial sales will be exclusively at their downtown Grand Rapids tasting room subsequent releases beginning fall of this year will be available through licensed retailers, bars, and restaurants around Michigan, according to the distillery.

 

Michigan Straight Bourbon Whiskey was aged in charred new, oak barrels for over two years and bottled at 90 proof, we are told. Following their Breakfast Rye and Single Malt Whiskey, Michigan Straight Bourbon Whiskey is the third American whiskey Gray Skies Distillery has released.

 

“Michigan Straight Bourbon Whiskey is simply named to highlight what it is – straight bourbon distilled and aged in Michigan,” Steve Vander Pol, co-owner of Gray Skies Distillery, said in supplied material. “The straight designation signifies the bourbon was aged at least two years and has no additional flavors added.”

 

Grey Skies Distillery is located at 700 Ottawa Ave NW, Grand Rapids. For more information visit grayskiesdistillery.com .

 

WKTV featured games schedule takes break until baseball, softball available

WKTV offers on-demand viewing of high school sports. (WKTV)

WKTV Staff

ken@wktv.org 

 

The high school boys and girls basketball season is in the state championship playoff stretch, but due to Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA) rules the WKTV sports truck is done for the winter season.

 

However you can still get out and see some action as this year’s girls Semi-Finals and Finals will be held on the campus of Calvin College at Van Noord Arena and the boys Semi-Finals and Finals will once again be on Michigan State’s campus at The Breslin Center.

 

The early start to spring high school seasons is also on the horizon as the first pitches will soon be thrown in boys baseball and girls softball, along with girls soccer, boys lacrosse, boys and girls track, boys golf, girls tennis and soccer, and girls water polo.

 

While the spring broadcast schedule for the WKTV sports crew is still being completed it it expected to include boys baseball, girls softball, and girls water polo.

 

In general, all games will be broadcast the night of the event on WKTV Comcast Channel 25 at 11 p.m. and repeat later in the week. The games can also be seen on AT&T U-verse 99. All games, as well as other high school sports and community events covered by WKTV, are available on-demand within a week of play at wktvondemand.com .

 

The complete schedule of all local high school sports for the remainder of March is as follows. For any changes to the WKTV feature sports schedule, and features on local sports, visit wktvjournal.org/sports/ .

 

Monday, March 12

Boys Basketball

TBD @ Grandville – Class A MHSAA Regionals

TBD @ West Catholic – Class B MHSAA Regionals

TBD @ Climax-Scotts – Class D MHSAA Regionals

Tuesday, March 13

No local contests scheduled

Wednesday, March 14

Boys Basketball

@ Grandville – Class A MHSAA Regionals

@ West Catholic – Class B MHSAA Regionals

@ Climax-Scotts – Class D MHSAA Regionals

 

Thursday, March 15

Girls Basketball

@ Calvin College – Class C MHSAA Semi-Finals

@ Calvin College – Class D MHSAA Semi-Finals

 

Friday, March 16

Girls Water Polo

East Kentwood @ East Grand Rapids

Girls Basketball

@ Calvin College – Class A MHSAA Semi-Finals

@ Calvin College – Class B MHSAA Semi-Finals

 

Saturday, March 17

Girls Basketball

@ Calvin College – Class D MHSAA State Finals 10:00 AM

@ Calvin College – Class A MHSAA State Finals 12:15 PM

@ Calvin College – Class C MHSAA State Finals 4:00 PM

@ Calvin College – Class B MHSAA State Finals 6:15 PM

 

Girls Water Polo

East Kentwood @ East Grand Rapids

 

Monday, March 19

No local contests scheduled

 

Tuesday, March 20

Boys Basketball

@ Lansing Eastern – Class A MHSAA Quarter Finals

@ Big Rapids – Class B MHSAA Quarter Finals

@ Portage Northern – Class D MHSAA Quarter Finals

Girls Water Polo

Grand Haven @ East Kentwood

 

Wednesday, March 21

Boys Baseball

Wyoming @ Lowell

Girls Softball

Wyoming @ Lowell

Boys Track

East Kentwood @ GVSU Laker Challenge

 

Thursday, March 22

Boys Basketball

@ MSU – Class C MHSAA Semi-Finals

@ MSU – Class D MHSAA Semi-Finals

Girls Softball

Wyoming @ Zeeland West

Girls Track

East Kentwood @ GVSU Laker Challenge

Girls Water Polo

Grandville @ East Kentwood

Boys Baseball

East Kentwood vs Christian @ Davenport

Boys Lacrosse

South Christian @ Northview

Girls Soccer

Zion Christian @ Fennville

 

Friday, March 23

Boys Basketball

@ MSU – Class A MHSAA Semi-Finals

@ MSU – Class B MHSAA Semi-Finals

Boys Golf

Lowell @ Wyoming

Girls Tennis

Zeeland West @ Wyoming

Boys Baseball

Wyoming @ Comstock Park

Grand River Prep @ Zion Christian (DH)

Girls Softball

Wyoming @ Comstock Park

Boys/Girls Track

Wyoming Lee – @ GVSU Laker Challenge

Kelloggsville – @ GVSU Laker Challenge

Girls Water Polo

East Kentwood @ Grand Haven

Girls Soccer

East Kentwood @ FH Central

 

Saturday, March 24

Boys Basketball

@ MSU – Class D MHSAA Finals – 10:100 AM

@ MSU – Class A MHSAA Finals – 12:15 PM

@ MSU – Class C MHSAA Finals – 4:30 PM

@ MSU – Class B MHSAA Finals – 6:45 PM

Girls Soccer

Kelloggsville @ Allendale

Girls Water Polo

East Kentwood @ Grand Haven

Girls Tennis

Grandville @ South Christian

 

Monday, March 26

Boys/Girls Track

Godwin Heights @ Wyoming

Wyoming Lee @ Wyoming

Kelloggsville @ Wyoming

Girls Soccer

Zion Christian @ Godwin Heights

Union @ Wyoming

Boys Baseball

Wyoming @ Covenant Christian

South Christian @ Byron Center

Martin @ Potter’s House (DH)

Girls Softball

Wyoming @ Covenant Christian

 

Tuesday, March 27

Girls Softball

Byron Center @ Wyoming – DH

Wyoming @ Caledonia

East Kentwood @ Zeeland East

Grandville @ South Christian

Girls Tennis

Wyoming @ Byron Center

Middleville T-K @ Kelloggsville

Boys Baseball

Wyoming @ Caledonia

Zion Christian @ Wyoming Lee

Grandville @ South Christian

West Michigan Aviation @ Kalamazoo Cougars

Girls Soccer

Wyoming @ Sparta

Zion Christian @ Wyoming Lee

Tri-Unity Christian @ Barry County Christian

Boys/Girls Track

East Kentwood – @ Aquinas Invite

Girls Water Polo

East Kentwood @ Hudsonville

Boys Lacrosse

South Christian @ Comstock Park

 

Wednesday, March 28

Girls Soccer

Kelloggsville @ Saugatuck

East Kentwood @ Plainwell

Boys Baseball

South Christian @ West Ottawa

Girls Softball

South Christian @ West Ottawa

 

Thursday, March 29

Boys Lacrosse

Byron Center @ South Christian

 

Friday, March 30

No local contests scheduled

 

Saturday, March 31

No local contests scheduled

 

Sign of spring: Meijer Gardens opens annual butterfly exhibition

Lena Meijer Tropical Conservatory. (Photo by Dean Van Dis)

By Meijer Gardens

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park’s annual “Fred & Dorothy Fichter Butterflies Are Blooming” exhibition will bring more than 7,000 tropical butterflies to West Michigan beginning Thursday, March 1.

 

Butterflies Are Blooming is the spring’s most anticipated exhibition and is the largest temporary tropical butterfly exhibition in the nation. This year’s exhibition highlights the butterflies’ unique journey from butterfly farms around the world to their emergence and release in the Lena Meijer Tropical Conservatory.

 

“Our exhibition this year celebrates the journey that these amazing creatures take to reach us here,” said Steve LaWarre, director of horticulture. “These butterflies begin their life cycle in the tropics and travel from thousands of miles away before making their appearance in the Lena Meijer Tropical Conservatory. This exhibition provides a wonderful opportunity for our guests to learn more about this journey and view the diverse beauty of these winged wonders first hand.”

 

Blue Colombia butterfly, (Supplied)

Approximately 60 colorful species of butterflies and moths journey from butterfly-rich regions of Costa Rica, Ecuador, the Philippines and Kenya to fly freely in the 5-story tall, 15,000 square-foot Tropical Conservatory. At 85 degrees and 70 percent humidity, this balmy environment mimics the tropical regions that the butterflies call home.

 

Species of butterflies expected to arrive include the blue Common Morpho, whose iridescence impresses in flight, as well as Brushfoot varieties such as the Clearwing, Lacewing and Zebra Mosaic. Likewise, the Longwings captivate with distinctive wing patterns as seen on the Small Blue Grecian, Doris, Postman and Tiger butterflies. Gliders like the Emperor, Ruby-Spotted and Orchard Swallowtails will also add to the diverse assortment.

 

Chrysalides in the Butterfly Bungalow. (Supplied)

More than 1,000 pupae arrive at Meijer Gardens weekly from around the world. Guests can watch as delicate chrysalides and cocoons are placed in the Butterfly Bungalow, where adult butterflies and moths emerge and spread their wings for the first time.

 

The Caterpillar Room, located within the Grace Jarecki Seasonal Display Greenhouse, features Monarch caterpillars. Guests can watch as caterpillars feed on milkweed plants and after two weeks of tremendous growth, the caterpillars will look for a suitable place to form their chrysalides.

 

This much-loved exhibition attracts 185,000 visitors from all over the world each year.

 

Exhibition Activities:

 

“Who Am I?” A Butterfly Ballet 
Saturday, March 17, 10 a.m., 12:30 p.m. or 3 p.m.
Sunday, March 18, 1 p.m.
Fee: $5 members/$8 non-members; Free for ages 2 years and younger

 

Choreographed by Attila Mosolygo, performed by members of the Grand Rapids Ballet Junior Company and narrated by Errol Shewman.

 

Developed in collaboration with Grand Rapids Ballet, this unique performance highlights characteristics of butterflies through dance. Don’t miss this thoroughly delightful butterfly ballet. Told through the eyes of a newly emerged butterfly, the story will captivate young and old alike. With colorful costumes, spectacular music and exquisite choreography, this enchanting performance will provide a unique and memorable experience.

 

Participate in interactive dance activities before the performance and take advantage of photo-ops on stage with the dancers afterward. Register online at MeijerGardens.org or call 616-975-3184. Who Am I? A Butterfly Ballet is generously sponsored by Karl & Patti Betz and Jesse & Gia Budrick.

 

An American Sign Language interpreter will be provided for the 10 a.m. performance on March 17. Reservations for this service are required. To reserve your space, call 616-975-3184 or 616-975-3147, or email classes@meijergardens.org by March 10.

 

Children’s Activities:

 

Saturday, March 3-Wednesday, April 30, daylight hours only
Lena Meijer Children’s Garden
Included with admission

 

Once you have observed caterpillars in the Seasonal Display Greenhouse and butterflies in the Tropical Conservatory, come out to the Children’s Garden for engaging outdoor educational events. Fly like a butterfly, wrap up like a chrysalis, curl up like a caterpillar, or crawl out of an egg using life cycle costumes and your imagination.

 

Perform your own butterfly-themed puppet show or read about moths and butterflies in the Log Cabin. Search for butterfly and moth life cycle stages in a special Treehouse Village hunt. Ring the bell after successfully navigating through the Butterfly Maze.

 

Become a butterfly in the Monarch’s Migration game. Enjoy a springtime puppet show or story-time; days and times vary. There is something for all ages. Activities vary daily; check the Information Center for times.

 

Tuesday Night Lights:

 

Included with admission.
Bring your flashlight on Tuesday nights until 9 p.m. to see the nightlife in the Tropical Conservatory.

 

Volunteers:

 

Wanted. Needed. Appreciated. Various jobs and shifts. Mid-February through mid-May. Contact Amber Oudsema at aoudsema@meijergardens.org or 616-974-5221.

 

Meijer Gardens’ Beverly Pepper exhibit highlights growing artistic research collection

A model of Beverly Pepper’s monumental sculpture “Galileo’s Wedge”, center, is one of the objects featured in the exhibit “Drawn Into Form: Sixty Years of Drawings and Prints by Beverly Pepper”. (WKTV)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

There is a progression of development for an artistic institution, in some ways gaining a particular piece of art is only the beginning of an institution’s relationship with an artist and that artist’s legacy — often, the institution becomes part of the artist legacy.

 

Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park’s 2009 acquisition of Beverly Pepper’s monumental sculpture “Galileo’s Wedge” — a soaring steel object of visual beauty and, simultaneously, engineering mastery which rises nearly 40 feet into the sky and an undefined depth into the ground — led directly to it gaining more than 900 artistic items associated with the artist.

 

Some of those associated artistic items, part of a trove of prints and models and photos donated by the artist to Meijer Gardens, form the focus of the current featured exhibit at Meijer Gardens, “Drawn Into Form: Sixty Years of Drawings and Prints by Beverly Pepper”, which opened Feb. 2 and will run through April 29.

 

Those items, many of which are and will in the future will be of great interest to scholars and researchers delving into Pepper’s art and artistic process, are also an example of the ongoing progression of of Meijer Gardens from being a showcase of art to being an institution of art.

 

Joseph Antenucci Becherer, chief curator and vice president of Meijer Gardens, on the opening day of the exhibit. (WKTV)

“I think it is a natural progression,” Joseph Antenucci Becherer, chief curator and vice president of Meijer Gardens, said to WKTV. “We are a young organization, in many ways, but we are aging well and we are aging with some rapidity. And the idea that we have this enormous permanent collection, there is more than 300 sculptures in our permanent collection, that it is supplemented by prints and drawings is a natural progression.”

 

And that progression fits in naturally with the mission of Meijer Gardens.

 

“The mission of Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park has been its commitment to sculpture, and gardens and horticulture, and the arts,” Becherer said. “We are very fortunate because the vast majority of our permanent collection is out on display, all times of the year, all seasons, in the park. However, from the very beginning, we have also collected two-dimension works, prints and drawings, as long as that person was primarily recognized as a sculptor.

 

“We have prints by Henry Moore, we have prints by Louise Nevelson, we have prints by many of the other sculptors who are part of this collection,” he said. “But this group is incredible as a gift from Beverly Pepper, more than 900 works. This collection will be here permanently. It can be accessed with advance notice, by scholars, by people that are doing research. I would say that in the future, when our new building opens, it will be much easier for scholars to come in, to access the collection.”

 

And, of course, the Pepper collection also gives Meijer Gardens “the opportunity to work with sister organizations across the country, around the world, to loan objects,” he added. “So these prints and drawings would be available to them if they would want to show them, to participate in come kind of exhibition. So really it is a great resource for us, but it is a great resource for the world.”

 

 

Meijer Gardens, with acquisition, forms relationship with artist

 

Pepper’s donation, and the current exhibit, are also an example of both a unique opportunity for Meijer Gardens and a not-uncommon opportunity when an artist and an artistic institution have established a trusting relationship.

 

“What you see often time happening with major artists that don’t have their own museum or establish a big estate, or something along those lines, is that they make major gifts to cultural organizations,” Becherer said. “So we are sort of following in a time-honored tradition.”

 

And that relationship, that tradition, was touched upon in a statement by the artist herself.

 

“Frederik Meijer Gardens and Sculpture Park has clearly demonstrated a strong commitment to my sculpture and I am enthusiastic to now have this major body of my work there.” Pepper said in supplied material. “To have in one location a space to study, compare and sequence my drawings and prints is an exceptional opportunity.”

 

Pepper  was born 1922 in Brooklyn, N.Y., and now lives and works in Italy. Her works have been exhibited and collected by major arts institutions and galleries around the world, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., Les Jardins du Palais Royal in Paris, and The Museum of Modern Art in Sapporo, Japan.

 

Pepper is world-renowned for her “monumental” works — such as “Galileo’s Wedge” — which often incorporate industrial metals like iron, bronze, stainless steel and stone into sculpture of a monumental scale.

 

Associated with the exhibit will be several special events including a March 18 discussion on “Five Great Women Sculptors” by Suzanne Eberle, Professor of Art History at Kendall College of Art & Design. The talk will focus on important female artists — including Pepper, Magdalena Abakanowicz, Louise Bourgeois, Barbara Hepworth, and Louise Nevelson — who have worked in large scale.

 

For more information visit meijergardens.org .

 

St. Cecilia to host jazzy John Proulx’s CD release concert, ‘Welcome Home’ party

Recorded September 2016 at Grand Valley State University, “I Love Being Here with You” with singer Libby York, John Proulx on piano and vocals, Paul Keller on bass, and Pete Siers on drums.

 

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Grammy winning jazz pianist and singer John Proulx — Grand Rapids native recently returned from the La La Land — will soon release his new CD, “Say It”, to his national audience. But he will hold a little concert and release party for his hometown friends and fans at St. Cecilia Music Center this week.

 

Proulx, along with a trio which includes Paul Keller on bass and Pete Siers on drums, will hit St. Cecilia’s Royce Auditorium stage Sunday, Feb. 25, at 2 p.m. Tickets are still available.

 

The St. Cecilia concert is also being called a “Welcome Home” event as Proulx recently returned to Grand Rapids with his wife and family after living in Los Angeles for 16 years, and the musician used to play piano recitals at the venue as a child.

 

“I am thrilled to be celebrating two life milestones,” Proulx said in supplied material. “  After living in Los Angeles for 16 years, my family and I have recently moved back to Grand Rapids … and we’re grateful to be closer to our family here in West Michigan.”

 

Talking about his new release, Proulx said: “The new album, produced by Judy Wexler, features a great lineup of musicians including Chuck Berghofer, Joe LaBarbera, Larry Koonse, Bob Shepard, three string quartet arrangements by Alan Broadbent, and a duet with Melissa Manchester. The songs are a mixture of jazz standards, folk tunes, and one original song.”

 

Grammy winning jazz pianist and singer John Proulx, along with a trio which includes Paul Keller on bass and Pete Siers on drums, will hit St. Cecilia’s Royce Auditorium stage Sunday. (Supplied)

Proulx began his formal musical education at the age of three in Grand Rapids on Suzuki violin, but quickly switched to classical piano lessons, according to his website. His late grandfather, Clyde Proulx, was a jazz guitarist who introduced him to the world of jazz. After graduating from Catholic Central High School, he studied at Roosevelt University’s Chicago School of Performing Arts, where he received a Bachelors of Music degree in 1999.

 

One of the reasons for his return to Western Michigan is to continue his education and an pursue a Master’s degree from Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo.

 

Starting in 2001, Proulx moved to Los Angeles to further his musical pursuits. He emerged as a young talent on the Los Angeles jazz scene, according to his website, and he also spent four months in 2009 at the prestigious Feinstein’s at the Loews Regency hotel in New York City playing a nightly solo piano/vocal engagement. He has appeared on Michael Feinstein’s radio show on NPR, “Song Travels” as well as on Marian McPartland’s radio show, “Piano Jazz”.

 

Proulx won a Grammy as a composer when Nancy Wilson recorded “These Golden Years”, a song he co-wrote with lyricist D. Channsin Berry, for her 2006 Grammy-winning CD, “Turned to Blue.” Proulx also co-wrote a song called “Stained Glass” with Melissa Manchester for his new album, “Say It”. Proulx and Manchester also co-wrote a song called “Big Light” for her 20th studio album, “You Gotta Love The Life”, featuring a duet with Manchester and Al Jarreau.

 

For more information about John Proulx, visit johnproulx.com .

 

Tickets for the John Proulx CD release concert are $20 and $30, with a copy of Proulx’s new release included with the $30 A section ticket. A post-concert CD signing party will also be included with each ticket. Tickets are now available by calling 616-459-2224 or visiting St. Cecilia Music Center at 24 Ransom NE, Grand Rapids, 49503. Tickets can also be purchased online at scmc-online.org .

 

‘King and Queen of Banjo’ to visit St. Cecilia Music Center’s Acoustic Café 

 

By St. Cecilia Music Center

 

St. Cecilia Music Center will bring husband and wife duo Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn to Royce Auditorium on Friday,  Feb. 23. as part of the center’s Acoustic Café Series. This will be the duo’s first appearance together in Grand Rapids.

 

Tickets are still available.

 

Fleck and Washburn have been called “the king and queen of the banjo.” On stage, they will perform pieces from their 2016 Grammy-winning self-titled debut album, as well as their new record, Echo in the Valley.

 

Fleck is a 15-time Grammy Award winner who has taken the instrument across multiple genres, and Washburn is a singer-songwriter and clawhammer banjo player who re-radicalized it by combining it with Far East culture and sounds.

 

Echo in the Valley is the follow up to Fleck and Washburn’s acclaimed, self-titled debut that earned the 2016 Grammy for Best Folk Album.  “This time around, the mission was to take our double banjo combination of three finger and clawhammer styles to the next level and find things to do together that we had not done before,” says Fleck.  “We’re expressing different emotions through past techniques and going to deeper places.”

 

The Acoustic Café Series, in partnership with the syndicated radio show of the same name, will round out the season with the band Asleep at the Wheel on April 12, as well as singer/songwriter, banjo and fiddler Rhiannon Giddens on May 17.

 

Béla Fleck and Abigail Washburn tickets are $45 and $50 and can be purchased by calling St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224 or visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE. Tickets can also be purchased online at www.scmc-online.org.  A post-concert party with a cash bar will be offered to all ticket-holders.

 

Review: GR Ballet’s MOVEMEDIA offers diversity in theme, presentations

 

 

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

MOVEMEDIA 1, Feb. 11, at Grand Rapids Ballet’s Peter Martin Wege Theater

 

60-second Review

 

The titled theme of the Grand Rapids Ballet upcoming MOVEMEDIA: Diversity two-installment dance program was “differences make the world more beautiful”. So it seemed appropriate that the premier of three new dances, choreographed by three raising stars in the field, offered differences of interpretation and execution.

 

The program opened with Norbert De La Cruz III’s “The Return of Balance”, a frenetic yet, somehow, traditional offering which begins with a look back at traditional gender relationships and closes with a look toward a future without distinctions — the first highlighted by a male dancer being rebuffed as he seems to demand the attention of a female, who only accepts any advance when she invites; the second made clear when a male/female pas de deux (a dance duet) ends with the two separating and exiting the stage with dancers of their like gender.

 

After a break, Jennifer Archibald’s “Vapor” offered not only the most polished of the three works, in my novice opinion, but also the most aggressive and confrontational take on the theme of diversity. Archibald, in a short introductory video which included rehearsal footage, explained that she urged her dancers to fully and physically engage with their dance partners. That engagement made clear that diversity — in gender, in social hierarchy, in the limited racial spectrum the Ballet’s company could offer — is often not an easy task.

 

To close the program, Loughlan Prior’s “They/Them” made a stated point of costuming the dancers in a gender neutral if not gender-confused way. And, fittingly, his dance was highlighted in one way by the dancers moving forward and back over the stage’s usual backdrop, where some dancers joined the audience as spectators to the personal drama’s being played out on-stage. Inviting, accepting a world without gender, however laudable and desirable, is often a confusing to outsiders — and insiders.

 

Overall, from a presentation standpoint, the introductory videos by the each of the choreographers helped the audience to better understand where each offering was going as far as their artistic statements. And clearly the Ballet’s presentation of modern ballet — modern dance — by three rising stars in the dance world was welcomed by the near-sellout of a snowy Sunday matinee.

 

Overall, from the thematic standpoint of diversity — understanding and accepting diversity — a recurring theme from all three dances, maybe unintentionally recurring, was that the often the best connection was made between dancers when they simply, gently, touched their foreheads together.

 

May I have more please?

 

Grand Rapids Ballet upcoming second installment of the MOVEMEDIA: Diversity dance program will conclude March 23-25 at the Ballet’s Peter Martin Wege Theatre in Grand Rapids. Tickets are available.

 

The second MOVEMEDIA: Diversity will feature work by Olivier Wevers, Uri Sands and Danielle Rowe.

 

As part of the two-program MOVEMEDIA installment, Grand Rapids Ballet will partner with several local organizations in order to create “wrap-around” programming to help extend the messages to the public, according to supplied material. Those organizations include Spectrum Health, Grand Rapids Children’s Museum, Be Nice, Arbor Circle, and Out on the Lakeshore.

 

Tickets for MOVEMEDIA: Diversity can be purchased at the Grand Rapids Ballet box office at 341 Ellsworth Avenue SW, online at grballet.com or Ticketmaster.com, or by calling 616-454-4771 x10.

 

Can’t wait for summer? Neither can Meijer Gardens concert series fans

21st Century Blondie in concert, courtesy of the band’s website. (Supplied/Linus Dessecker)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Two bands familiar to the audiences at Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park summer concert series will be returning to the now partially upgraded amphitheater, as well as one familiar to listeners of ’80s American New Wave if not Lower East Side (NYC) Punk, are the first three announced acts at 2018 Fifth Third Bank Summer Concerts series.

 

Just announced today, the Tedeschi Trucks Band with Charlie Parr will kick off the series on May 30, Blondie will be in town on June 29, and O.A.R.’s “Just Like Paradise Tour” with special guest Matt Nathanson will visit on Aug. 26. The complete 30-show lineup will be announced in mid-April, according to Meijer Gardens.

 

Blondie will be at Meijer Gardens Blondie June 29. (Supplied)

While both Tedeschi Trucks Band and O.A.R. are local fan favorites and, as with almost all of the Gardens’ concerts, usually sell-out shows, the appearance of Blondie and lead singer Debbie Harry may well be one of the must-see shows of the summer — especially if you are of a certain age and now have children you want to prove to that you had your wild side when you were their age.

 

“Here comes the 21st Century … it’s gonna be so much better for a girl like me,” Harry sang nearly three decades ago on her solo release Def Dumb And Blonde, the band’s website proudly repeats.

 

And life, and music, has been pretty good to singer-songwriter Harry, guitarist and co-writer Chris Stein, powerhouse drummer Clem Burke and their band-mates in Blondie who first burst on the scene in the late 1970s. But they have not lived in the past, as evidenced by their newest project, 2017’s Po11inator, the band’s 11th studio album and one featuring collaborations with Sia and Charli XCX.

 

For more information on Blondie visit blondie.net .

 

Not only will Blondie be new to Meijer Gardens audiences, but the 1,900-seat amphitheater will also have some changes as the venue is currently being expanded and upgraded. The work will take place over the next two years, according to Meijer Gardens, with the first year’s work to conclude for the presentation of the 2018 season, then resume, and be fully ready for the 2019 season.

 

While there will be some seating expansion after the second year of work, it will maintain “the intimacy of the venue”, according to Meijer Gardens. It will also increase the sponsor seating area, add new support areas for visiting artists, add a new support and concessions building (set to ready by the 2019 season).

 

Tedeschi Trucks and O.A.R. return with friends

 

Tedeschi Trucks Band with Charlie Parr will kick off the series on May 30. (Supplied)

Grammy-winning Tedeschi Trucks Band is a powerhouse, 12-piece ensemble led by the husband-and-wife team of guitarist Derek Trucks and guitarist-singer Susan Tedeschi. A touring juggernaut, the band is a jam band second to none, usually being on the road more than 200 days a year and reputed to having never played the same set list twice.

 

 

For more information on Tedeschi Trucks Band visit tedeschitrucksband.com .

 

O.A.R. (short for Of a Revolution) transformed itself from an independent college band to a Billboard chart-topper over the course of a long, varied career. The roots-and-reggae band has transcended jam band clichés to become one of the most popular live acts touring today. Joining them will be San Francisco’s Nathanson, who is rapidly gaining a reputation for his songwriting and his live performances.

 

For more information on O.A.R. visit ofarevolution.liveoar.com . For more information on Matt Nathanson visit mattnathanson.com .

 

And now the details …

 

Members of Meijer Gardens will be able to purchase tickets during an exclusive members-only pre-sale, April 28 through May 11. During the pre-sale, members receive a $5 discount per ticket. To join or renew before April 28 visit MeijerGardens.org/Membership .

 

Tickets will go on sale to the general public on May 12. More information on prices and purchasing locations will be available following the release of the full lineup in mid-April.

 

On Tap: Museum Beer Explorers, Ann Arbor brews and Valentine’s Day darks

A sampling of beers at the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Beer Explorers program — yes there is glasses of what you like available for purchase. (Supplied)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

The days are getting longer but we are still in the dark days of winter, despite Valentine’s Day looming. But there are plenty of events on tap on the local beer scene, including some tasty dark brews being poured all over the greater Grand Rapids area.

 

Starting with the next installment of the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Beer Explorers program, this time partnering with Brewery Vivant and Pilot Malt House, on Thursday, Feb. 8, when beer fans can take a closer look at malts, and how malt variations affect the flavors of beer.

 

Pilot Malt House is an artisan craft malt house who produces and supplies malts to local craft breweries and distilleries, including Brewery Vivant. (FYI: Malt is beer’s main fermentable ingredient, providing the sugars that yeast use to create alcohol and carbonation. Malt is converted barley or other grains that have been steeped, germinated, heated, kilned, cooled, dried and then rested. So we are told in supplied information.)

 

The Beer Explorers class begins at 6:30 p.m. and will be held on the first floor of the museum. Admission to class includes three beer samples, as well as access to the museum’s first two floors. A cash bar will be available; doors open at 6 p.m.

 

Tickets for the event are $10 for members and $20 for non-members. Participants must be 21 and older. For tickets and more information visit grpm.org/calendar .

 

Dark days, dark brews before and after Valentine’s Day

 

Brewery Vivant will celebrate Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14, for those of you not married/dating/smart) with the release of its Fat Packzi beer on Tuesday, Feb. 13, at the  brewery in East Town area. This beer is available only for a limited time, according to the brewery. Also on tap is the return of Love Shadow, Brewery Vivant’s bourbon barrel aged Imperial stout — just in time for Valentine’s Day.

 

For more information visit breweryvivant.com .

 

And speaking of dark days … B.O.B.’s Brewery downtown will host its Dark Days events during Grand Rapids Beer Week highlighted by a Stout Out on Friday, Feb. 16, featuring 12 Michigan-made stouts on tap, including The B.O.B.’s own Tiramisu Stout, Founders Canadian Breakfast Stout and New Holland’s Dragons Milk Mexican Spice Cake — me, I’d go for Dark Horse Brewing’s Plead The 5th, before and after the dark day.

 

The Stout Out will include live music and smoked meats in addition to a tap takeover of the Michigan-made stouts. Beer sample tickets are $3 each, with $1 of each ticket sold being donated to Grand Rapids White Water.

 

For more information, visit thebobsbrewery.thebob.com .

 

And for those of you needing to make up for a bad Valentine’s Day …

 

Ann Arbor’s Wolverine State Brewing will be the featured beer selections at a special beer dinner at Blue Water Grill, located on Northland Drive, on Tuesday, Feb. 20.

 

The four-course dinner, with each course paired with a beer, includes: first two courses paired with Wolverine’s Pastoral Winter Lager and Tundra King West Coast IPL, a main course paired with a brew called Massacre 2015, and a desert course of an espresso chocolate torte paired with a brew called, of course, Barista.

 

The cost of the beer dinner is $45 per person.

 

For more information on the dinner and Blue Water Grill, visit thegilmorecollection.com .

 

 

For more information on Wolverine State Brewing, visit wolverinebeer.com .