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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220203T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220203T153000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20211123T225919Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220127T212633Z
UID:10004054-1643895000-1643902200@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Crosstown Arthouse presents Foxes
DESCRIPTION:The Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents Foxes at Crosstown Theater.\nAdrian Lyne / 1980 / 106 minutes / Rated R \nTickets: $5 at the door\nFilms begin at 7:30 pm (sharp!) \nThe story of four teenage girls living in LA in 1980\, mostly doing what they hell they want\, anytime they want\, with hardly any supervision or input by any sensible adult. Foxes takes place in a world and a time when being a teenager was fun\, free\, and DANGEROUS. Directed by Adrian Lyne (Fatal Attraction\, Flashdance)!! With a cameo concert by Kiss proteges and fellow Casablanca Records artist Angel (Punky Meadows!!!). Also with Jodie Foster (Taxi Driver\, Bugsy Malone\, The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane\, Freaky Friday – and that was JUST WHAT SHE WAS IN THAT WAS RELEASED IN 1976!!!!!)\, Cherie Currie (THE RUNAWAYS LEAD SINGER YA’LL!!!)\, Randy Quaid (Midnight Express\, The Long Riders\, Independence Day) in an early\, super-creepy role and HOT LIPS Sally Kellerman (MASH\, A Little Romance)\, as Jodie Foster’s uptight but distant mother!! \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Crosstown Arthouse Film Series showcases a diverse collection of independent\, international\, historically significant\, artistic\, experimental\, cult\, underground and documentary features. \nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. Masks are required.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/crosstown-arthouse-presents-foxes/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/FOXES-03.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220204T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220205T160000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20211209T223109Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220202T183620Z
UID:10004069-1643981400-1644076800@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Mempho Presents Todd Snider at Crosstown Theater
DESCRIPTION:Mempho Presents Todd Snider on the Kemmons Wilson Family Stage at Crosstown Theater on Friday\, February 4\, 2022 and Saturday\, February 5\, 2022. Opening performance by Will Kimbrough. \nTICKETS: Tickets $38-$42 (plus fees)\nDoors at 6:30 pm | Show at 7:30 pm (both nights) \nPurchase Tickets Here \n\n\n*Crosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in.\n \n*Tickets for this event are non-refundable with less than 72 hours before the event.  \n\n\n\n\nYou don’t often hear about an artist reinventing their sound eighteen albums into a celebrated career. But for Todd Snider\, his latest release\, First Agnostic Church of Hope and Wonder\, isn’t so much a sudden change in direction as an arrival after years of searching. \n“After my last album\, Agnostic Hymns\, I felt like I was out of ideas\, and I just didn’t know where to go next\,” Snider says. “So I did a side project with the Hard Working Americans\, and I learned a ton. I tried to study music by other people and come to this record hoping that I’d have something new to say. I wanted to do what I was calling ‘funk in back and busking up front\, with White Album-y shit scattered about.’ I had done a lot of listening to Parliament and James Brown and lots of reggae music\, too. It’s embarrassing to admit\, but I’ve been trying to think of this sound all my life. This is the closest I’ve come to thinking\, ‘Man\, I don’t know that I’ve heard anything like this before.’” \nEspecially within the often too-purist context of Americana\, the record’s sound is refreshingly experimental. More funk than folk\, more Sly Stone than singer-songwriter\, it’s fatback-style grooves\, full of ghost notes and disparate syncopated elements\, slither and slide around Snider’s acoustic guitar with caduceus-like precision. The arrangements are given extra texture and atmosphere by ace mixer/multi-instrumentalist Tchad Blake (Tom Waits\, Elvis Costello). On songs like “Never Let A Day Go By\,” “Stoner Yodel Number One\,” and “The Get Together\,” there is a taut\, dry snap\, an intimacy that invites you inside and best of all\, opens up space for Snider’s husky voice and thought-provoking lyrics to breathe and connect. It’s music that makes you move\, smile and think all at once. \n“My main collaborator on all the grooves was Robbie Crowell\,” Snider says. “He’d played one show with [my band] the Bulldogs\, and he and I started hanging and listening to funk songs. He gave me an education on drummers. Most of the time\, I started with a basic kick and snare pattern\, and I’d sing. Then he would add more groove\, and I’d chisel more melody out of that. Robbie knew that I wanted to do something idiosyncratic\, without any reference to other records. So a snare might not go with the kick drum in a logical way. We were trying to get drum sounds and grooves that made their own kind of sense. We’d build it up\, add parts\, tear it apart\, build it back up. The songs went through a lot of different incarnations. But we had so much fun trying to find the grooves.” \nSince debuting in 1994\, Snider has gone through his own incarnations. His first single “Talking Seattle Blues” was a head fake that might’ve pointed to goofy novelty songs. But he quickly showed that his artistic quiver was much deeper and more interesting. A storyteller who works a similar creative soil to John Prine and Shel Silverstein\, Snider’s best songs are both sad and funny\, political and entertaining\, and always written with a poet’s eye and a stand-up comedian’s sensibility about the follies of human condition. While he’s made eighteen fine albums\, it’s on stage where Snider is even more potent\, with between-song banter that weaves subtle emotional threads through his sets. A road dog who loves the road\, Snider has toured with Emmylou Harris\, John Prine\, Jimmy Buffett\, and appeared at festivals like Farm Aid\, Newport Folk Fest\, Lockn’ and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival. \n“I miss banging around America like it’s my yard\,” Snider says of the lost\, last year. “I like to play for people. Staying home\, I gardened\, I got a boat\, I played guitar a lot. But then I usually don’t make up ten songs in one year\, so that’s one good thing about the pandemic.” \nThe other key framing device for the new songs is the album’s colorful title. “If the gods of folk didn’t want no funk\, they shouldn’t have started none\,” Snider says with a chuckle. “2020 was a terrible year\, and it kept taking people that I loved. So I kept feeling funky\, and the church idea came out of that. I’ve always had the First Agnostic Church of Hope and Wonder in mind. Aren’t we always hoping for something and wondering ‘What the fuck?’ We hope there’s a God. We wonder if there is. We hope you’re coming. We wonder if you will.” \n“I started realizing because I had this church\, in my mind\, that I could make up different kinds of songs\,” he continues. “I don’t usually like bossy kinds of songs\, where someone tells you to breathe. Me and Neal Casal used to say\, ‘I don’t have to know when to fold ’em. I don’t have to live like I’m dying.’ I’m always telling the radio when I’m listening to it\, ‘No\, I don’t!’ But this is a reverend thing. I have a reverend license. I married Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires\, and my tour manager and his wife. So it just felt like this natural thing for it to be on Sunday mornings where I can do like these pseudo-sermons.” \nHe playfully undermines typical sermon themes like faith can move mountains – on “Turn Me Loose (I’ll Never Be the Same”)\, he reckons “Mountains can get around just fine on their own – and finding meaning on mystical sojourns – “Oh\, shit\, I quit my job\,” the truth seeker on “The Get Together” realizes in a panic. \n“The record is the story of a preacher who starts this church that is total bullshit\,” Todd says. “People start giving him money anyway\, but then they start asking him questions. So then he prays to God and God helps him. But the moral of the story is that God’s hilarious.” \nLike all preachers\, Snider manipulates language\, riffling and sleight-of-handing it like a deck of cards. “I love lyrics\, but I don’t think the alphabet is this magic thing that I thought it used to be\,” he says. “Mostly\, I think the alphabet was a bad idea. I know\, because I use it. It’s a shell game. It feels okay to use this jive language thing that I’ve been learning over the years on the Sunday shows. There are ways to not say stuff. You can go for a great long chunks of time without saying anything. Politicians do it all the time. I’ve been getting into that. I still like making up lyrics. I don’t know that I think there’s anything to say.” \nAmidst the groovier\, more playful songs are two somber centerpieces that have much to say about mortality – “Sail On\, My Friend” and “Handsome John” – the latter a gorgeous tribute to John Prine. Nobody was as important to Snider as a friend and mentor. \nSnider says. “I started singing that song about him almost right after he died. Nobody had ever been kinder to me\, more vulnerable with me. He’d take the time to sit down and generously explain something that he believed was not serving you. I was young when I met John\, so I’m embarrassed to tell you that the lecture that I got from him was a painful one\, but it saved my life. It changed my songs completely. I remember I was withdrawing on a plane\, and he said\, ‘You’re doing this wrong.’ And I had seventeen songs\, and he was the only who’d heard them\, and he said\, ‘You’ve got two songs here.’ And I said\, ‘What about the others? And he said\, ‘Yeah\, let’s talk about those.’ Those conversations changed everything about the way I approached my life. People don’t want to tell everybody what the therapist said\, so I’ll leave it there. But very compassionately\, he said\, ‘Here’s why you’re not happy.’ Of all the people I know who wrote songs and sang\, he was the happiest and the one who’d most dialed the troubadour life in and made peace with it. I loved him.” \nIt feels appropriate that with his latest album\, Snider may play a similar inspirational role for the parishioners in his church. “I’d like it to feel like a drum circle or a revival for listeners. I’d like it to feel like a hippie summer\, where you take acid and listen to the songs by a beautiful lake. There’s a thing called effervescence – that feeling that you’re present\, alive. I’d like for people to have a moment with this record. I think about records that will come into my life and they’ll help put a little more salt on the moment. That’s what I’m going for. But then\, who knows if anyone will like the record. I dig it. I know it’s a cliché for people to say\, ‘This is how I’ve been meaning to sound forever.’ But I swear\, that’s how it feels.”
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/mempho-presents-todd-snider/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/Screen-Shot-2021-12-09-at-4.28.56-PM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220210T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220210T153000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20211123T213647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220127T212552Z
UID:10004050-1644499800-1644507000@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Crosstown Arthouse presents The Apartment
DESCRIPTION:The Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents The Apartment at Crosstown Theater.\nBilly Wilder / 1960 / 125 minutes / Rated M \nTickets: $5 at the door\nFilms begin at 7:30 pm (sharp!) \nRestored in 4K from the 35mm original picture negative and 35mm duplicate picture negative! Park Circus in collaboration with Metro Goldwyn Mayer presents The Apartment. From Park Circus: C.C. Baxter is an office clerk who courts favor with the executives in his office by giving them the key to his small apartment for their extramarital flings. Among them is his callous boss\, J.D. Sheldrake\, who Baxter eventually learns is using his place to sleep with Miss Kubelik\, the sweet elevator operator the clerk has loved from afar. When Sheldrake coldly dumps the vulnerable young woman\, she tries to commit suicide in Baxter’s apartment\, giving the clerk the opportunity to save the woman of his dreams but possibly lose his job. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Crosstown Arthouse Film Series showcases a diverse collection of independent\, international\, historically significant\, artistic\, experimental\, cult\, underground and documentary features. \nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. Masks are required.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/crosstown-arthouse-presents-the-apartment/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/THE-APARTMENT-02-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220211T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220211T143000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220126T195850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220207T023006Z
UID:10003372-1644582600-1644589800@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:The Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents Wagner's Tristan and Isolde
DESCRIPTION:The Memphis Symphony Orchestra presents a program titled Wagner’s Tristan and Isolde\, featuring works by Wagner\, Joseph Boulogne de Chevalier de St. George\, Villa-Lobos\, and Haydn  at Crosstown Theater. Featuring cellist Brant Taylor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. \nTickets: $35  \nRobert Moody\, conductor\nBrant Taylor\, cello \n \nBOULOGNE  Symphony No. 1\nHAYDN  Cello Concerto No. 1\nVILLA-LOBOS Bachianas Brasileiras No. 1\nWAGNER  Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde (arranged for chamber orchestra) \nWagner changed the direction of love music forever with Tristan and Isolde. Joseph Boulogne de Chevalier de St. George was a black French contemporary of Mozart\, who was one of France’s most celebrated composers during his life. Brant Taylor\, a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and an accomplished soloist\, performs Haydn’s First Cello Concerto.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/the-memphis-symphony-orchestra-presents-wagners-tristan-and-isolde/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2-Orchestra1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T150000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220124T231045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220214T174224Z
UID:10004090-1644930000-1644937200@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Shoot & Splice: Case Study of 'The Devil Will Run' w/ Noah Glenn & IMAKEMADBEATS
DESCRIPTION:Indie Memphis & Crosstown Arts are excited to present a case study of the 2021 Indie Memphis Film Festival Jury & Audience award-winning short film\, ‘The Devil Will Run.’ Join writer/director Noah Glenn and producer IMAKEMADBEATS as they share insights and stories from each stage of the production process — from receiving an IndieGrant in 2019 all the way through production and into festival distribution.\n\nThe case study will also feature a screening of the 10-minute film\, ‘The Devil Will Run’.\n\nDoors open 6:30 pm\nBegins at 7:00 pm\n\nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. Masks are required.\n\nShoot & Splice is a FREE filmmaker forum presented by Crosstown Arts and Indie Memphis\, featuring a wide variety of technical\, educational\, and unique topics of interest to the Memphis filmmaking community.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/shoot-splice-case-study-of-the-devil-will-run-w-noah-glenn-imakemadbeats/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/The_Devil_Will_Run_BTS07.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220217T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220217T154500
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220214T174854Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220215T164942Z
UID:10004103-1645104600-1645112700@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:The Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
DESCRIPTION:The Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents A Tree Grows In Brooklyn at Crosstown Theater.\nElia Kazen / 1945 / 128 minutes / Rated PG \nTickets: $5 at the door\nFilms begin at 7:30 pm (sharp!) \nWe were originally going to show A Tree Grows in Brooklyn at Christmas as it is is one our favorite Christmas movies here at the Arthouse series!! It was postponed but it is still cold so come see this film and you won’t ever think about Christmas the same way again! A gut punch of a film\,  A Tree Grows in Brooklyn tells the story of an Irish immigrant family\, the Nolans\, living out their lives in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn in 1912. About 100 years before Williamsburg got to be the gentrified Hell hole it currently is\, this story takes place when the neighborhood was filled with thousands of first generation immigrants from all different parts of the world\, crammed together in tenements and hustling every day to put food on the table and maybe a little liquor down their gullet! With Dorthy McGuire (Old Yeller\, Swiss Family Robinson) as stern mom Katie Nolan! Joan Blondell (Glenda in Stay Away\, Joe) as sassy Aunt Sissy!! Come out and get in the spirit with us!!  A Tree Grows in Brooklyn\, CAN’T MISS!!! \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Crosstown Arthouse Film Series showcases a diverse collection of independent\, international\, historically significant\, artistic\, experimental\, cult\, underground and documentary features. \nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. Masks are required.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/the-crosstown-arthouse-film-series-presents-a-tree-grows-in-brooklyn/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/A-TREE-GROWS-IN-BROOKLYN-01.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220219T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220219T150000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20211109T184637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220201T051943Z
UID:10003325-1645277400-1645282800@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:The Barnes Family at Crosstown Theater
DESCRIPTION:Gospel group The Barnes Family presents a special show at Crosstown Theater. \nTICKETS: $30 first-level seating | $20 balcony seating\nDoors at 6:30 pm | Show at 7:30 pm \nPurchase Tickets Here \n*Crosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. \n\nWith more than 30 years in the music industry\, The Barnes Family has been called “one of the most influential Gospel families in Memphis\, TN.” They’re reuniting on-stage after a five year hiatus. \nChris and Courtney of the Sensational Barnes Brothers released their critically acclaimed debut album Nobody’s Fault But My Own in 2019. The following year\, in 2020\, Calvin J. Barnes II and Carla Barnes-Anderson released James Anderson\, an album with more R&B influences centered around inspiration and motivation. The success of these projects were the missing piece in reuniting the family on stage and shifting their time and energy on the revival of the Barnes family. \nThis show gives the family an opportunity to have fun and create music on their terms. Since their time apart\, each member of the family has toured and performed with acts\, such as the Bar-Kays\, and in solo ventures in Las Vegas. However\, this time around they are looking forward to sharing their favorite songs in their own way. And more importantly\, they’ll be revisiting the moments that have gotten away from them over the years. \nThe Barnes family has deep ties to gospel\, often bridging the gap between soul and non-secular music. There is a familiarity in the way this family performs as it teeters the line of both fervid and faithful. Although the Barnes family got its start in gospel music\, this concert will be a melting pot of old and new. It will be a raw look at the life that each of them has experienced individually over the last couple of years and how that translates into the way they will perform together. \nThis holiday production will be an elevation of where the Barnes family left off in 2015 after the release of their family album\, Family Tree.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/the-barnes-family/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Screen-Shot-2021-11-09-at-12.45.15-PM.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220224T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220224T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220120T215714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220216T231759Z
UID:10004082-1645709400-1645720200@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents WHO WE ARE: A CHRONICLE OF RACISM IN AMERICA
DESCRIPTION:The Crosstown Arthouse Film Series presents  WHO WE ARE: A CHRONICLE OF RACISM IN AMERICA at Crosstown Theater. \nIn advance of the Memphis release of Sony Pictures Classics’ “Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America\,” the focus of the documentary Jeffery Robinson and the directors (Emily and Sarah Kunstler) will be hosting an exclusive showing and Q&A at the Crosstown Theater on Thurs.\, Feb. 24 at 7:30 p.m.\n\nEmily & Sarah Kunstler / 2022 / 118 minutes / Rated PG-13\nTickets: $5 at the door (or purchase presale tickets HERE)\nFilms begin at 7:30 pm (sharp!) \n\nInterweaving lecture\, personal anecdotes\, interviews\, and shocking revelations\, in WHO WE ARE: A CHRONICLE OF RACISM IN AMERICA\, criminal defense/civil rights lawyer Jeffery Robinson draws a stark timeline of anti-Black racism in the United States\, from slavery to the modern myth of a post-racial America. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Crosstown Arthouse Film Series showcases a diverse collection of independent\, international\, historically significant\, artistic\, experimental\, cult\, underground and documentary features. \nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/crosstown-arthouse-film-series-presents-who-we-are-a-chronicle-of-racism-in-america/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crosstownarts.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/WHO-WE-ARE-STILL-03.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220225T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220225T150000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220113T201234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220201T052252Z
UID:10004074-1645795800-1645801200@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Hub New Music
DESCRIPTION:Crosstown Arts presents Boston-based contemporary chamber music trailblazers Hub New Music in Crosstown Theater. This performance is sponsored in part by Concerts International. \nTICKETS: $20 ($10 with student ID at the door)\nDoors at 7 pm | Show at 7:30 pm \nPurchase Tickets Here \n*Crosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. \nCalled “contemporary chamber trailblazers” by the Boston Globe\, Hub New Music – composed of flute\, clarinet\, violin\, and cello – performs on the Kemmons Wilson Family Stage at Crosstown Theater. The ensemble will perform works by Christopher Cerrone\, Takuma Itoh\, Christian Quiñones\, Du Yun\, and Eric Nathan. \nThis concert is presented in collaboration with Concerts International. \n\nAbout Hub New Music: \nCalled “contemporary chamber trailblazers” by the Boston Globe\, Hub New Music – composed of flute\, clarinet\, violin\, and cello – is forging new pathways in 21st-century repertoire. The ensemble’s ambitious commissioning projects and “appealing programs” (New Yorker) celebrate the rich diversity of today’s classical music landscape. Its performances have been described as “gobsmacking” (Cleveland Classical)\, “innovative” (WBUR)\, and “the cutting edge of new classical music” (Taos News). \nHub’s 2021-22 highlights include concerts presented by the Morgan Library and Museum\, Celebrity Series of Boston\, Seattle Symphony\, Soka Performing Arts Center\, and Williams Center for the Performing Arts. Season residencies include visits to Baylor\, Portland State\, Illinois State\, and Georgetown universities. The coming season brings premieres of new works by Nathalie Joachim\, Laura Kaminsky\, and Nina C. Young. In fall 2021\, the Library of Congress presents the “virtual premiere” of Hub’s collaboration with composer Carlos Simon\, Requiem for the Enslaved\, which will tour in 2022-23. Simon’s large-scale work honors the lives of 272 slaves sold by Georgetown University (where Simon serves on the faculty) in 1838\, and features spoken-word artist Marco Pavé\, trumpeter Jared Bailey\, and Simon on piano. \nHub’s debut album\, Soul House\, released on New Amsterdam Records in 2020 was called “ingenious and unequivocally gorgeous” by the Boston Globe. The ensemble’s upcoming recording with Silkroad’s Kojiro Umezaki (shakuhachi) and Asia-America New Music Institute (AANMI) will be released on Tōrō Records in 2022. Other upcoming recording projects include Carlos Simon’s Requiem for the Enslaved\, and Michael Ippolito’s abstract- expressionist inspired work\, Capriccio. The group will also be featured on Eric Nathan’s portrait album\, Missing Words\, to be released on New Focus Recordings. \nHub New Music is a group of passionate educators whose approach to teaching melds the artistic and entrepreneurial facets of modern musicianship. The ensemble was recently in residence with the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Nancy and Barry Sanders Composer Fellowship program\, working with 10 outstanding high school aged composers. Other residency activities include those at New England Conservatory\, Princeton\, Harvard\, \nUniversity of Michigan\, University of Texas-Austin\, UC Irvine\, and University of Nebraska- Lincoln. In 2021-22\, the ensemble continues its K-12 program\, HubLab\, that uses graphic scores and improvisation to create group compositions with students of all levels. \nHub New Music owes thanks to its supporters including Chamber Music America\, the Cricket Foundation\, Boston Cultural Council\, the Florence & Joseph Mandel Family Foundation\, Johnstone Fund for New Music\, Amphion Foundation\, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation\, and Alice M. Ditson Fund for Contemporary Music at Columbia University. The ensemble’s name is inspired by its founding city of Boston’s reputation as a hub of innovation. Hub New Music is exclusively represented by Unfinished Side.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/hub-new-music/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220227T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220227T150000
DTSTAMP:20260626T155206
CREATED:20220104T225013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220201T052445Z
UID:10004070-1645968600-1645974000@crosstownarts.org
SUMMARY:Mahogany Chamber Performances: Vocal Juggernauts
DESCRIPTION:Crosstown Arts presents an evening of show-stopping vocal music across multiple genres\, featuring works by HT Burleigh and María Grever\, musical theater pieces by Kurt Weill\, and famous arias by Puccini and Wagner. Featuring local artists Paulina Villareal (U of M vocal professor)\, Gavin Wigginson (PRIZM Executive Director)\, and guest artist dramatic soprano Takesha Meshé Kizart-Thomas. They will be joined by pianists Jonathan Tsay and Artina McCain.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Mahogany Chamber Performances is a series of three chamber music concerts curated by Dr. Artina McCain\, spotlighting Black and other underrepresented composers and performers. \nTICKETS: $15 ($5 with student ID at the door)\nDoors at 7 pm | Show at 7:30 pm \nPurchase Tickets Here \nCrosstown Arts is requesting proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test for this event. Please be prepared to present your vaccination card or a negative Covid test taken within 72 hours at check-in. Masks are required. \n\nTakesha Meshé Kizart-Thomas\, soprano \nMultidisciplinary creative performing artist and founder of SWAP’ra North America\, Mrs. Takesha Meshé Kizart-Thomas is a vocally and visually stunning force on stage and screen. From leading roles with many storied institutions such as the Metropolitan Opera and Sydney Opera House\, to sharing the stage with the likes of Yo-Yo Ma and Wynton Marsalis\, to collaborating with Broadway in Chicago and HBO\, she also brings her global worldview to building community\, education\, and innovation. This is evidenced by her recent partnerships with Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in Dallas and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra\, as well as her 15+ years of experience as a Master Vocal Technician\, Coach\, Songwriter\, and Arranger who specializes in holistically integrating and freeing the Mind\, Body\, and Spirit to effectively communicate one’s clarity and purpose. A performer since the age of two\, and counting music legends McKinley “Muddy Waters” Morganfield and Tina Turner among her relations\, she consistently propels her vision of uniting tradition with innovation in all she creates. In so doing\, Mrs. Kizart-Thomas recently launched “The Meshé Legacy” with her husband\, Dr. D. Vincent Thomas Jr. and infant daughter\, Little Miss Joëlle Meshé. As marriage and family advocates who believe in the immense power of partnership\, they are collectively driven by their mission to promote Love\, Life\, and Legacy initiatives for families and their children. \nPaulina Villarreal\, mezzo-soprano \nMexican mezzo-soprano Paulina Villarreal is a prominent recitalist\, cabaret\, operatic\, and musical theater singer around the United States and Mexico. A graduate of the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music\, Dr. Villarreal has been a soloist and resident artist in important companies and orchestras around the United States like Opera Saratoga\, Cincinnati opera\, Opera Fusion: New Works\, the Tanglewood Music Center\, the Boston Pops (Boston\, MA)\, Opera Memphis\, Opera Steamboat\, Princeton Symphony Orchestra\, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra\, Kentucky Symphony Orchestra\, Appalachian Symphony Orchestra\, and the Decatur Millikin Symphony Orchestra. Trained as a classical vocalist\, Villarreal is now additionally in demand for her singing versatility in musical theater\, and commercial music genres. \nIn the entrepreneurship and administrative world\, Dr. Villarreal is the founder and artistic director of the annual concert series Cantos para Hermanar al Mundo (Songs to Unite the world) devoted to the promotion of classical vocal genres hosted in Northern Mexico. She currently holds the rank of Assistant Professor of Voice at the University of Memphis Rudi E. Scheidt School of Music and serves as the Young Singer Program Director at the Hawaii Performing Arts Festival\, a prestigious summer training program in the United States. \nGavin Wigginson\, tenor \nGavin Wigginson has devoted his career to inspiring youth to explore their musical abilities and open their eyes – and ears – to the countless elements of music. \nWith a bachelor’s and master’s degree in music and in vocal performance from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville\, Gavin has fused his classical training to raise awareness and uplift victims of social injustice. Currently\, Gavin serves as executive director for PRIZM Ensemble and director of concert choir instructor of voice at LeMoyne-Owen College. Previously Gavin has served as a fellowship coach for Memphis Music Initiative\, where he partnered with dozens of local schools and managed a team of music fellows who taught more than 750 students each semester. \nAs PRIZM’s executive director\, Gavin oversees all operations and strategic direction for the nonprofit\, manages development\, drives programming\, recruits mentors\, and fosters community partnerships to support PRIZM’s vast youth outreach efforts. He also leads PRIZM’s largest program\, the Summer Music Camp and International Chamber Music Festival\, and the PRIZM in the Schools (PITS) program\, which provides high-level introductory music classes and orchestral instruction at various schools. \nArtina McCain\, piano \nDescribed as a pianist with “power and finesse” (Dallas Arts Society)\, “beautiful and fiery” (KMFA Austin)\, and having a “sense of color\, balance and texture” (Austin Chamber Music Center)\, Artina McCain has a built a three-fold career as a performer\, educator\, and speaker. Recent performance highlights include guest appearances with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra\, Oregon East Symphony\, and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra. As a recitalist\, her credits include performances at the Mahidol University in Bangkok\, Hatch Recital Hall in Rochester\, and in 2022\, her debut at Wigmore Hall in London. \nDedicated to promoting the works of Black and other underrepresented composers\, McCain curates Black Composers Concerts for multiple arts organizations and is an American Prize winner for her solo piano recordings of these works. Recently\, she won a Gold Global Music Award for her recent solo album project Heritage. Currently\, she is Coordinator of Keyboard Studies at the University of Memphis. Artina McCain is a Yamaha Artist. \nJonathan Tsay\, piano \nPrior to his appointment as Assistant Professor of Piano at the Rudi E. Scheidt School of Music at The University of Memphis\, Jonathan Tsay served numerous roles in the music community including Head of Collaborative Piano at Conservatory Music in the Mountains\, Head of Piano at the Chloé Trevor Music Academy\, Presenter and Artist for Cliburn in the Classroom (which serves over 50k under-served 2nd-4th graders in the DFW area per year) and Artistic Director of Ensemble75\, a chamber music series based in the North Texas area. \nA sought-after collaborator\, Jonathan has also performed alongside some of the world’s premier musicians\, including Chee-Yun\, David Cooper (Principal Horn\, Chicago Symphony)\, Jing Wang (Concertmaster\, Hong Kong Philharmonic)\, dramatic soprano Alessandra Marc\, the Cézanne Quartet\, and Nathan Olson (Concertmaster\, Dallas Symphony Orchestra). As a solo recitalist\, Jonathan has performed throughout the United States\, Canada\, and Taiwan. \nJonathan earned a Bachelor’s of Music under the tutelage of Dr. Carol Leone at Southern Methodist University and his doctorate at l’Université de Montréal with Marc Durand. \nJonathan’s performances have been broadcast on WRR Classical\, KMFA Classical\, and are featured in the companion CD to “Brahms – A Listener’s Guide: Unlocking the Masters Series.” Jonathan’s album\, “Harmonic Allusions\,” was named in the “Top 5 Albums of 2017” by TheaterJones\, and his YouTube collaboration with Chloé Trevor performing “Danse Macabre” has garnered over 1.3 million views.
URL:https://crosstownarts.org/calendar/mahogany-chamber-performances-a-night-of-song/
LOCATION:Crosstown Theater\, 1350 Concourse Ave.\, Memphis\, TN\, 38104\, United States
CATEGORIES:Crosstown Theater
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