Results tagged: Performances

Wendell Harrison: Fighting for the Children

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Friday, Feb 3, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Friday Night Live partners with Neighborly Need, Inc., a non-profit committed to strengthening urban communities and developing projects that address urgent problems and needs.

This performance features a commissioned work, Fighting for the Children, by saxophonist/clarinetist Wendell Harrison. The work features Wendell Harrison leading a large ensemble of rhythm section, horns, and a string orchestra of young artists.  

Black History Month programs are generously supported by the Arn and Nancy Tellem Foundation.

 

A black and white portrait of Wendell Harrison holding a saxophone

Friday Night Live partners with Neighborly Need, Inc., a non-profit committed to strengthening urban communities and developing projects that address urgent problems and needs.

This performance features a commissioned work, Fighting for the Children, by saxophonist/clarinetist Wendell Harrison. The work features Wendell Harrison leading a large ensemble of rhythm section, horns, and a string orchestra of young artists.  

Black History Month programs are generously supported by the Arn and Nancy Tellem Foundation.

 

Igor Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale

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Friday, Jan 27, 2023
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings starts 2023 with a presentation of Igor Stravinsky’s masterpiece The Soldier’s Tale, presented in collaboration with Eisenhower Dance Detroit.

The concert includes choreography by Eisenhower Dance Detroit’s dancers, as well as music and narration provided by Detroit Chamber Winds and Strings. These talents will merge to tell the tale of a soldier who returns from the army and makes a deal with the Devil, trading his old violin for a magic book that can tell the future and make him rich. 

When Stravinsky wrote the The Soldier’s Tale in 1918, he was already revered for his great ballets that brought dance and music together so seamlessly, but World War 1 and the Russian Revolution brought extraordinary financial hardship. Stravinsky’s genius was to create the The Soldier’s Tale as a masterpiece in miniature, with dancers and narration accompanied by only 7 instrumentalists – two strings, two winds, two brass and percussion.

The performance will include three narrators. Singer, award-winning songwriter and actor Lulu Fall, will narrate the role of the soldier. Soprano Jocelyn Zelasko will portray the role of the Devil and Carl Grapentine, long-time host of the morning program on WFMT/ 98.7 FM, Chicago's Classical music station, will take on the role of a narrator.

The concert also includes Bach’s Partita No. 1 with music played by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra’s associate concertmaster, Kimberly Kaloyanides Kennedy, and the world premiere of a new piece for reed quintet by Nathalie Joachim called Radical Revelations. 
 

Three dancers on stage, two standing with their arms up and one sitting on the ground, looking backward towards the camera

Detroit Chamber Winds & Strings starts 2023 with a presentation of Igor Stravinsky’s masterpiece The Soldier’s Tale, presented in collaboration with Eisenhower Dance Detroit.

The concert includes choreography by Eisenhower Dance Detroit’s dancers, as well as music and narration provided by Detroit Chamber Winds and Strings. These talents will merge to tell the tale of a soldier who returns from the army and makes a deal with the Devil, trading his old violin for a magic book that can tell the future and make him rich. 

When Stravinsky wrote the The Soldier’s Tale in 1918, he was already revered for his great ballets that brought dance and music together so seamlessly, but World War 1 and the Russian Revolution brought extraordinary financial hardship. Stravinsky’s genius was to create the The Soldier’s Tale as a masterpiece in miniature, with dancers and narration accompanied by only 7 instrumentalists – two strings, two winds, two brass and percussion.

The performance will include three narrators. Singer, award-winning songwriter and actor Lulu Fall, will narrate the role of the soldier. Soprano Jocelyn Zelasko will portray the role of the Devil and Carl Grapentine, long-time host of the morning program on WFMT/ 98.7 FM, Chicago's Classical music station, will take on the role of a narrator.

The concert also includes Bach’s Partita No. 1 with music played by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra’s associate concertmaster, Kimberly Kaloyanides Kennedy, and the world premiere of a new piece for reed quintet by Nathalie Joachim called Radical Revelations. 
 

Six Letters by Van Gogh

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Friday, Dec 16, 2022
7 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

Location:

In the Museum

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Join us for a dramatic reading of Van Gogh’s Letters presented in conjunction with the Van Gogh in America exhibition now on view at the DIA. The DIA has selected several of Van Gogh’s letters to friends and family that help paint a picture of the artist’s life through his own words.

To bring the letters to life the DIA has partnered with Shakespeare in Detroit, a nonprofit organization that enhances and supports the cultural growth of Detroit with professional theatre created through a conscious lens of equity, diversity and inclusion. The letters will be performed by actors of various backgrounds enhancing the appreciation and interpretation of the correspondences.

This evening of intimate performance will be presented in the DIA’s Lecture Hall. 

A letter from Vincent Van Gogh to John Peter Russell

Join us for a dramatic reading of Van Gogh’s Letters presented in conjunction with the Van Gogh in America exhibition now on view at the DIA. The DIA has selected several of Van Gogh’s letters to friends and family that help paint a picture of the artist’s life through his own words.

To bring the letters to life the DIA has partnered with Shakespeare in Detroit, a nonprofit organization that enhances and supports the cultural growth of Detroit with professional theatre created through a conscious lens of equity, diversity and inclusion. The letters will be performed by actors of various backgrounds enhancing the appreciation and interpretation of the correspondences.

This evening of intimate performance will be presented in the DIA’s Lecture Hall. 

The Grossman Family: Musical Journey Through Time

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Friday, Nov 18, 2022
7:30 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland, and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Virtuoso violinist and Juilliard Instrument Curator, Eric Grossman (violin) is joined by Lida Lopez Mancheva (piano) and Cecelia Grossman (cello) for this musical journey.

The performance will feature time travel through the world of classical music, which takes us from Italy to France, England, Germany, Spain, Poland, Ukraine, Cuba, the United States, and beyond.

 

Eric Grossman pictured playing the violin in a tuxedo

Virtuoso violinist and Juilliard Instrument Curator, Eric Grossman (violin) is joined by Lida Lopez Mancheva (piano) and Cecelia Grossman (cello) for this musical journey.

The performance will feature time travel through the world of classical music, which takes us from Italy to France, England, Germany, Spain, Poland, Ukraine, Cuba, the United States, and beyond.

 

Puppet Performance: With Stars Above

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Saturday, Nov 26, 2022
2 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Seth Eberle uses large, hand-carved marionettes, hand puppets and a beautiful original score to explore how families and friends can find warmth together in the deepest winter in With Stars Above. Follow Elvis Otter as he manages the feelings of loneliness and sadness that often come with the long nights of winter. For families with children of all ages. 

Two wooden puppet bears sat next to each other on a wooden bench as if in active conversation.

Seth Eberle uses large, hand-carved marionettes, hand puppets and a beautiful original score to explore how families and friends can find warmth together in the deepest winter in With Stars Above. Follow Elvis Otter as he manages the feelings of loneliness and sadness that often come with the long nights of winter. For families with children of all ages. 

New Standards Jazz Crawl: Charenée Wade

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Thursday, Oct 20, 2022
7:30 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*At the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, 315 E Warren Ave, Detroit, MI 48201

In celebration of the opening of a new performance space in Midtown Detroit’s Carr Center, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History will participate in New Standards Jazz Crawl, a series of performances by women composers curated by Terri Lyne Carrington.

Charenée Wade is a singer, composer, arranger, educator and professor at the Aaron Copland School at Queens College, and was just recently appointed to the Peabody Institute. Known for expert vocal improvisational ability and her seriously swinging groove, Wade evokes a classic jazz sound akin to Betty Carter and Sarah Vaughan, two of her musical touchstones. While she has earned many accolades – first runner-up in New York’s Jazzmobile Vocal competition; a participant in Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead program and starring role in the off-Broadway show Café Society, her performances are always an authentic tour de force of jazz vocal performance traditions.

A Black woman poses on a busy street lined with homes, wearing a black and white printed jacket.

In celebration of the opening of a new performance space in Midtown Detroit’s Carr Center, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History will participate in New Standards Jazz Crawl, a series of performances by women composers curated by Terri Lyne Carrington.

Charenée Wade is a singer, composer, arranger, educator and professor at the Aaron Copland School at Queens College, and was just recently appointed to the Peabody Institute. Known for expert vocal improvisational ability and her seriously swinging groove, Wade evokes a classic jazz sound akin to Betty Carter and Sarah Vaughan, two of her musical touchstones. While she has earned many accolades – first runner-up in New York’s Jazzmobile Vocal competition; a participant in Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead program and starring role in the off-Broadway show Café Society, her performances are always an authentic tour de force of jazz vocal performance traditions.

New Standards Jazz Crawl: Tia Fuller

Attend:

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Friday, Oct 21, 2022
7:30 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

In celebration of the opening of a new performance space in Midtown Detroit’s Carr Center, the DIA will participate in New Standards Jazz Crawl, a series of performances by women composers curated by Terri Lyne Carrington.

When Grammy-nominated recording artist, composer, and bandleader Tia Fuller picks up her saxophone, amazing things happen. Blending technical brilliance, melodic creativity, and the performing precision drawn from both her academic and stage experience, Fuller is a force within the worlds of jazz, pop and R&B, and balances the roles of a touring and recording artist with that of a full-time professor at the Berklee College of Music in Boston.

An accomplished solo artist, she has recorded five full-length projects with her quartet, and her most recent album Diamond Cut, produced by Terri Lyne Carrington, received a Grammy nomination in the Best Instrumental Jazz category.  Fuller can be seen touring regularly with several bands. She has appeared with Carrington to perform her Grammy-winning Mosaic Project and Money Jungle: Provocative in Blue; served as assistant musical director for Esperanza Spalding’s Radio Music Society tour, and recorded and toured with Dianne Reeves for her Grammy-winning Beautiful Life album.  
 

A Black woman poses in an emerald green dress while holding a saxophone on her left shoulder.

In celebration of the opening of a new performance space in Midtown Detroit’s Carr Center, the DIA will participate in New Standards Jazz Crawl, a series of performances by women composers curated by Terri Lyne Carrington.

When Grammy-nominated recording artist, composer, and bandleader Tia Fuller picks up her saxophone, amazing things happen. Blending technical brilliance, melodic creativity, and the performing precision drawn from both her academic and stage experience, Fuller is a force within the worlds of jazz, pop and R&B, and balances the roles of a touring and recording artist with that of a full-time professor at the Berklee College of Music in Boston.

An accomplished solo artist, she has recorded five full-length projects with her quartet, and her most recent album Diamond Cut, produced by Terri Lyne Carrington, received a Grammy nomination in the Best Instrumental Jazz category.  Fuller can be seen touring regularly with several bands. She has appeared with Carrington to perform her Grammy-winning Mosaic Project and Money Jungle: Provocative in Blue; served as assistant musical director for Esperanza Spalding’s Radio Music Society tour, and recorded and toured with Dianne Reeves for her Grammy-winning Beautiful Life album.  
 

CutTime Simfonica: Music for Interesting Times

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Friday, Oct 7, 2022
7:30 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

In the Museum

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Music For Interesting Times is the sobering new pandemic-era program by bassist-composer Rick Robinson (Mr. CutTime), exploring existential themes of drastic collective and personal changes, newfound love, and the bittersweet challenge of enjoying life around increasing climate devastation.

Written for his soulful ensemble of strings and drums, CutTime Simfonica, the program includes deep insights into the lives of Sandy Hook shooting families, and a farewell from beloved WSU Ecumenical professor Dr. Percy Licardo Moore, who passed away in 2018.

This program will conclude with Chaconne: For Interesting Times, its own film by Kresge Artist, filmmaker Brandon Walley.

This program may not be suitable for children under 12. 

Bassist-composer Rick Robinson sitting and playing an upright bass with a bow

Music For Interesting Times is the sobering new pandemic-era program by bassist-composer Rick Robinson (Mr. CutTime), exploring existential themes of drastic collective and personal changes, newfound love, and the bittersweet challenge of enjoying life around increasing climate devastation.

Written for his soulful ensemble of strings and drums, CutTime Simfonica, the program includes deep insights into the lives of Sandy Hook shooting families, and a farewell from beloved WSU Ecumenical professor Dr. Percy Licardo Moore, who passed away in 2018.

This program will conclude with Chaconne: For Interesting Times, its own film by Kresge Artist, filmmaker Brandon Walley.

This program may not be suitable for children under 12. 

Ballet Folklorico de Detroit

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Saturday, Oct 15, 2022
2 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

Detroit Film Theatre

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Travel across varied regions of Mexico with Ballet Folklorico de Detroit, a community-based and multi-generational dance company dedicated to preserving rich Mexican culture with dance and music.  

After the performance, be sure to see the 10th installment of Ofrendas: Celebrating el Día de Muertos, running through November 6, 2022. Free with museum admission. 

Members of Ballet Folklorico de Detroit posing together in front of the DIA's Detroit Industry Murals

Travel across varied regions of Mexico with Ballet Folklorico de Detroit, a community-based and multi-generational dance company dedicated to preserving rich Mexican culture with dance and music.  

After the performance, be sure to see the 10th installment of Ofrendas: Celebrating el Día de Muertos, running through November 6, 2022. Free with museum admission. 

Susie Ibarra Illuminous Forests with Daniel Dona and Alex Peh

Attend:

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Friday, Oct 28, 2022
7:30 p.m.

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Free with general admission

*General museum admission is FREE for residents of Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.

Location:

In the Museum

5200 Woodward Ave
Detroit, MI 48202
United States

Susie Ibarra is a Filipinx composer, percussionist, and sound artist. Her interdisciplinary practice spans formats, including performance, mobile sound-mapping applications, multi-channel audio installations, recording, and documentary.

Her compositions have been described as “calling up the movements of the human body; elsewhere it’s a landscape vanishing in the last light, or the path a waterway might trace” (New York Times). Her sound is “like no other’s, incorporating the unique percussion and musical approach of her Filipino heritage with her flowing jazz drum set style” (Modern Drummer Magazine). 

Commissioned by DIA for Asian American Heritage month and performed for Filipino American Heritage Month.

Susie Ibarra, wearing a suit with plaid pants, sits and plays a set of drums

Susie Ibarra is a Filipinx composer, percussionist, and sound artist. Her interdisciplinary practice spans formats, including performance, mobile sound-mapping applications, multi-channel audio installations, recording, and documentary.

Her compositions have been described as “calling up the movements of the human body; elsewhere it’s a landscape vanishing in the last light, or the path a waterway might trace” (New York Times). Her sound is “like no other’s, incorporating the unique percussion and musical approach of her Filipino heritage with her flowing jazz drum set style” (Modern Drummer Magazine). 

Commissioned by DIA for Asian American Heritage month and performed for Filipino American Heritage Month.

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