Tag Archives: Judy Collins

Fado and folk: St. Cecilia, again, to take virtual audience to New York for music

Judy Collins, shown in an undated press photo, made her St. Cecilia Music Center debut in early 2018 and will return via a virtual concert from New York in February 2021. (Supplied/SCMC/Judy Collins)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

St. Cecilia Music Center has already taken audiences to New York City this virtual concert season with its Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center series, and this week came the announcement of two streaming concerts presented in collaboration with New York City’s The Town Hall.

Scheduled to be available for St. Cecilia ticketed evenings of music are Portuguese Fado vocalist Mariza in January, 2021, and American folk legend Judy Collins in February, according to a Dec. 2 announcement.

On Jan. 29, 2021, Mariza will be featured in a concert paying tribute to the legendary Fado singer Amália Rodrigues. The concert will be taped in Lisbon, Portugal, as part of The Town Hall series, and will also coincide with the release of Mariza’s new album Mariza sings Amalia.

On Feb. 12, Collins, a folk singing legend familiar to St. Cecilia audiences, will be featured in a virtual concert onstage at The Town Hall in New York City where, according to the announcement, “in 1964 she made her debut that launched her illustrious musical career.” The concert will recreate her 1964 concert at The Town Hall which was her very first solo appearance on one of the great concert stages in New York City.

“We are delighted to feature two outstanding performers in these two concerts aired through The Town Hall in New York City,” Cathy Holbrook, SCMC executive and artistic director, said in supplied material. “We remain committed to keeping music alive in West Michigan with virtual concerts over the next several months until we can host live performances again … We truly appreciate the public’s support as we strive to keep these wonderful events available for all to experience”

St. Cecilia Music Center is one of only five U.S. venues showcasing these concerts, according to the announcement, and “the cost of each ticket reflects the desire to keep the performers’ band, crew and technical support teams employed during this global crisis. A portion of the ticket sales will also help benefit SCMC during this unprecedented time.”

Tickets for each of the virtual concerts are $40 now on sale through St. Cecilia Music Center at this ticket link.

More on Mariza, Amália and Fado

Mariza’s tribute to Amália Rodrigues will highlight the unique, yet echoing relationship of one to the other. The late “Amália”, as she was known, sang her last concert at The Town Hall in New York City in 1994. Now, Mariza has now become the ambassador of Portugal’s Fado music in the 21st century, just as Amália had been in the 20th century.

Mariza. (SCMC)

Mariza has also now recorded an entire album of Amália classics to commemorate her own 20th year of her musical career, as well as celebrate the 100th anniversary of Amália’s birth. The album will be released a few days before the January concert.

Fado music, according to supplied material, is a form of Portuguese singing that is often associated with pubs, cafés, and restaurants. It originated in Portugal around the 1820s, although it is thought to have much earlier origins. Fado is renowned for its expressive and profoundly melancholic character. The singer in Fado music often is accompanied by one or two 12-string guitars, one or two violas, and sometimes a small 8-string bass.

And speaking with singing with guitar …

Judy Collins, often performing with simply an acoustic guitar in her hands, is scheduled to film a show onstage at The Town Hall to be broadcast Feb. 12. For this show, according to supplied material, Collins will recreate her legendary 1964 New York City concert hall debut at The Town Hall.

Judy Collins (SCMC)

“What a time that was 1964,” Collins said in supplied material. “I was very nervous since my record company decided to record this concert and put it out as an album. I had just been to a Bob Dylan concert, heard the Lonesome Death of Hattie Carol, and knew I had to record it.

“Making (the 1964 album) album and concert at The Town Hall … was a relief and joyous event. It feels right to go back to the material and time period now with the knowledge and life lessons learned in 2020.”

The concert that Collins is performing at The Town Hall will be recorded for a new vinyl album.

For  more information on St. Cecilia Music Center visit scmc-online.org.

Incomparable Judy Collins, undefinable Rhiannon Giddens coming to St. Cecilia stage

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiM23iff5lk

 

By. K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

The visit to St. Cecilia Music Centers folk series stage by Judy Collins — no adjectives or background needed —  has been circled on the calendar by local folk/pop/classic rock fans since the concert was announced last year.

 

It is astounding, in fact, that there may still a few tickets available a week before Sweet Judy Blue Eyes comes to town Thursday, Feb. 1, for a 7:30 p.m. concert.

 

But then to make a good week even better, St. Cecilia announces the final Folk Series concert of the season will be the return to Royce Auditorium of Rhiannon Giddens — Grammy winning singer/songwriter, Carolina Chocolate Drop, part of the New Basement Tapes super(folk)group; in case you need adjectives and background.

 

            

Giddens will return to St. Cecilia on May 17. And, like her April 2015 first visit to the state, this show will likely be sold-out as well. Her return will likely focus on her newest album “Freedom Highway”, which was nominated for Album of the Year at the 2017 Americana Music Honors & Awards.

 

While Giddens is the co-founder of the Grammy-winning string band Carolina Chocolate Drops, she began work as a solo artist when she stole the show at the T Bone Burnett produced “Another Day, Another Time” concert in 2013, and followed that up in 2014 by stealing the show again on T-Bone’s “New Basement Tapes” project — sealing it from the likes of Elvis Costello and Marcus Mumford — with her version of Bob Dylan’s “Spanish Mary”. Oh, ya, she followed that up with her critically acclaimed solo debut, the Grammy nominated album “Tomorrow Is My Turn.”

 

But not to steal the show from Judy Collins …

 

Judy Collins (Supplied/Brad Trent)

Collins’ most recent recording, “Silver Skies Blue”, earned her another in a long list of Grammy honors, being nominated for Best Folk Album in 2017.

 

Collins’ musical history only started with her firm commitment to social activism in the 1960s. Five decades later her 50-album body of work includes, to only scratch the surface, her rendition of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” from her landmark 1967 album “Wildflowers”, her intimate version of “Send in the Clowns”, as well as several other top-ten hits from gold- and platinum-selling albums.

 

Tickets for Judy Collins are $45 and $55. Tickets and can be purchased by calling 616-459-2224, visiting the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE, or purchased online at scmc-online.org .

 

Judy Collins highlights St. Cecilia’s peek at 2017-18 concert series lineups 

Judy Collins will be making her St. Cecilia Music Center debut in early 2018. (Supplied)

St. Cecilia Music Center

 

The 2017-18 concert season at St. Cecilia Music Center includes the always remarkable Chamber Music of Lincoln Center series and a dynamite lineup for the Jazz Series. But the highlight of the winter may well be a visit  by the incomparable Judy Collins as part of the Acoustic Café Series.

 

“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,” said Cathy Holbrook, St. Cecilia executive director. “We currently have two artists booked who represent generations of great music making … (including) the appearance of renowned and beloved singer Judy Collins.”

 

St. Cecilia’s Royce Auditorium stage concerts begin Oct. 26 and run through spring 2018. Series and individual ticket sales have started.

 

The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center perform three times during the season with CMS artistic directors Wu Han and David Finckel featured in two of the three concerts. Programs include the works of Mozart, Brahms, Dvořák, and Beethovan. Concert dates are Nov. 2, Jan. 18, 2018, and April 19, 2018.

 

The 11th season of SCMC’s Jazz Series is appropriately entitled “The Encore Season” as it brings back favorite performers from the past 10 years. This special season will feature four concerts with performers who have all appeared at SCMC: Grammy-winning bassist Christian McBride on Nov. 16, contemporary jazz pianist Brad Mehldau on Nov. 30, Grammy-winning vocalist Gregory Porter on Feb. 22, 2018, and multi-Grammy nominated baritone vocalist Kurt Elling on March 22, 2018.

 

As part of a still-evolving Acoustic Café Series, singer/songwriter Collins will make her first appearance at St. Cecilia on Feb. 1, 2018. Before that, guitarist Leo Kottke will return to the Royce stage on Oct. 26. The Acoustic Café Series, in partnership with the syndicated radio show of the same name and its host Rob Reinhart, will bring these two legends of folk to the 2017/2018 season, with additional concerts to be announced later in the year.

 

Series subscription tickets are available now — subscription prices represent a 15 percent discount on regular single ticket prices and a reduced $7 fee for the pre-concert reception. The usual cost of the pre-concert wine and hors d’oeuvres reception is $15 per person, per concert for all Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and Jazz Series concerts.

 

Single tickets are also available at this time. A post-party is included with each ticket where patrons are able to meet the artists and obtain signed CDs of their music.

 

For more information and tickets, visit scmc-online.org, call St. Cecilia Music Center at 616-459-2224, or visit the box office at 24 Ransom Ave. NE, Grand Rapids.

 

An Intimate Evening with Judy Collins by Grand Rapids Civic Theater and Music Works

Judy   Tickets on Sale Now. Judy Collins has inspired audiences with sublime vocals, boldly vulnerable songwriting, personal life triumphs and tragedies, and a firm commitment to social activism over a five-decade career.

 

In the 1960s, she evoked both the idealism and steely determination of a generation united against social and environmental injustices. Now her luminescent presence shines brightly as new generations bask in the glow of her iconic 50-plus album body of work. Most recently, Judy Collins filmed a PBS special in Ireland at Dromoland Castle.

 

The show features some classic Judy Collins songs like Chelsea Morning, Cat’s In the Cradle, Bird on A Wire, as well as some of her favorite Irish tunes including, Danny Boy.  JUDY COLLINS LIVE IN IRELAND  is airing on PBS nationwide throughout 2014, and she is incorporating many of these songs into her Intimate Evening concert. A classically trained pianist with a lifelong love of the guitar, she is known for her interpretive renditions of Both Sides Now, In My Life, and Send in the Clowns. This Grammy Award winning singer- songwriter is drawn to music of hope that speaks to the heart. A modern day Renaissance woman, she is also an Academy Award nominated director, author, record label head, children’s book publisher, accomplished painter and speaker for mental health and suicide prevention.

 

The Grand Rapids Civic Theatre and Music Works are partnering to bring An Intimate Evening with Judy Collins on October 17, 2014.   A special post-show meet/greet with Ms. Collins is available.

 

For tickets or information, visit www.grct.org Ticket Prices $29-$125 See events calendar for specific days and times: http://grct.org/eventschedule.html For information on the Grand Rapids Civic Theatre or to purchase tickets, call 616-222-6650 or visit www.GRCT.org. This season is a perfect blend of theatre classics and new favorites.

 

The Civic is proud to kick things off in September with the World Debut of an original work: The BoatwrightMary Poppins takes the stage just in time for the Holidays.  January brings the mystery, The Mousetrap to life, followed by the Rogers and Hammerstein masterpiece, South Pacific.  Children will adore Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, NO Good, Very Bad Day in April.   Making a Civic debut in June, Avenue Q, brings puppets to life and the season closes with Footloose and The Little Princess.