You'll get invited to our Meetups as soon as they're scheduled!
| Meetup | Location | RSVPs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 8 9:00 PM |
No rating yet Debo Band and Ansambl Mastika at Midway Cafe Sunday 11/8 Jamaica Plain's Ethiopian Groove Collective meets Brooklyn's New Balkan Uproar! Some of the New York Balkan music scene's smokin'est musicians have teamed up to form Ansambl Mastika, playing original compositions by virtuoso clarinetist Greg Squared, and featuring musicians from Slavic Soul Party, Raya Brass Band, and more. They're making a rare trip to Boston to play with Boston's 10 piece Debo Band, bringing back the irresistible sounds of 1960s and 70s Swinging Addis. Midway Cafe, Jamaica Plain (accessible by the Green St station on the Orange Line) 3496 Washington Street, Jamaica Plain $10 cover, 9 pm doors The facebook invite: http://www.facebook. |
Midway Cafe
Jamaica Plain, MA, 02130 42.306288,-71.107670
|
6 Yes |
| Oct 24 6:30 PM |
11 attended (est.) –
Six Styles of Music and Dance from Around the World In Benefit Concert for Climate Change October 24, 2009 is Order here via CCNow Tickets ($20) or On Saturday, October 24, six different Boston-based performers of international music and dance will join together to draw attention to the global climate crisis. Featured artists include: Balkan and European music by members of the internationally acclaimed ensemble Libana; contemporary Indian classical dance with the Aparna Sindhoor Dance Theater; Japanese classical music for koto and shakuhachi with Ayakano Cathleen Read & Elizabeth Reian Bennett; Hindustani classical music with Warren Senders and The Raga Ensemble; middle-Eastern music with Beth Bahia Cohen, and traditional drumming and dance of Ghana with the Agbekor Drum and Dance Society. The music begins at 6:30 pm, at the First Congregational Church of Cambridge, 11 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA. Tickets are $20; $15 students/seniors. All proceeds will go to the environmental organization www.350.org. For information, please call 781-396-0734. About the Performers: Libana is New England’s internationally-tour Now in its 30th season, Libana presents an exhilarating cross-cultural performance that opens windows into diverse, rarely heard, women’s musical expressions from around the world, from exquisite Balkan harmonies to the rooted pulses of Latin American rhythms, from hauntingly beautiful sounds of Hungarian Slav music to a riveting ritual exorcism dance with percussion from Egypt, all woven into a collage of shifting colors and rhythms. They perform with an array of instruments including oud, hammered dulcimer, clarinet, accordion, double bass, dumbek, riqq, and bombo. Libana Aparna Sindhoor Dance Theater (ASDT) has a wide repertoire of solo and group works in classical and contemporary dance and theater. Inspired by Indian classical and folk dance forms, theater (both Western and Indian), world music, martial arts (Kalari ppayattu), aerial dance, yoga, live singing and storytelling, Sindhoor’s work is dynamic, radical, and original in style and content. The company has been touring all over the world including USA, Canada, Germany and India. ASDT is known for its work with themes that deal with human issues in a meaningful way that makes audiences enjoy and be touched at the same time. Aparna Sindhoor Dance Theater Ayakano Cathleen Read began studying Yamada School koto music in 1969. On Jan. 7, 1974 she became the first non-Japanese to join the shachu (musicians guild) of Nakanoshima Kin’ichi, and given the performing name Ayakano. Ms. Read has concertized widely in the United States, Japan and West Africa. She is adjunct professor in the Music Department of Tufts University. The koto is a traditional Japanese instrument with a long neck and rectangular sound box. It has thirteen strings and adjustable bridges to change the pitch of various strings. Elizabeth Reian Bennett is the first woman to play professionally as a Grand Master of the shakuhachi, the Japanese bamboo flute, and stands out as one of only a handful of western players trained in traditional Japanese music. She has studied and performed with Living National Treasure Aoki Reibo, recognized as Japan’s foremost shakuhachi instrumentalist, for 30 years. Elizabeth Reian Bennett Ayakano Cathleen Reade Warren Senders and The Raga Ensemble present “khyal,” the richly ornamented improvisational artsong of North India. Accompanied by the harmonium of Dr. George Ruckert, the tabla of Akshay Navaladi, and the tamboura and supporting vocals of Vijaya Sundaram, Warren Senders weaves a hypnotic tapestry of sound in his rendition of traditional ragas. Acclaimed as the foremost non-Indian performer of this beautiful idiom, Senders lived in India for many years, learning the khyal style from master teacher Pt. S.G. Devasthali. He has performed throughout the world, enrapturing audiences and critics with a unique combination of authenticity and originality. Warren Senders Beth Bahia Cohen is of Syrian Jewish and Russian Jewish descent and has spent many years exploring the ways the violin and other bowed string instruments are played in Greece, Turkey, Hungary, and the Middle East. She plays several Greek lyras, the Turkish bowed tanbur and kabak kemane, the Egyptian rababa, the Norwegian hardanger fiddle, and more. She was a Radcliffe Bunting Fellow and has been the recipient of many travel and research grants, including an NEA/Artists International grant to study the classical music of Turkey. In addition to performing throughout the U.S., she teaches workshops and ensembles on Middle Eastern, Eastern European, Greek and Turkish music in conservatories and universities throughout the U.S as well as teaching privately in her studio in Watertown. She performs solo concerts of traditional and original music on various bowed string instruments from many countries (The Art of the Bow), as well as concerts exploring traditional Jewish music from all over the world. Beth Bahia Cohen The Agbekor Drum and Dance Society is a group of friends who have been studying, teaching and performing the music and dance of the Ewe tribe of Ghana, West Africa for the past three decades. Under the direction of Tufts Professor Dr. David Locke, the members of ADDS present an energetic and tightly synchronized blend of drumming, singing and dancing. While pieces like the intricate “Adzogbo” and “Yeve” are multi-part suites of extraordinary richness and complexity, “Gahu” and “Kinka” are vibrant and kinetic dance music that gets listeners up and moving. The Agbekor Drum and Dance Society About www.350.org and the number 350: Co-founded by environmentalist and author Bill McKibben, 350.org is the hub of a worldwide network of over two hundred environmental organizations, all with a common target: persuading the world’s countries to unite in an effort to reduce global levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide to 350 parts per million or less. Climatologist Dr. James Hansen says, “If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on Earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm.” (Dr. Hansen heads the NASA Institute for Space Studies in New York City, and is best known for his testimony on climate change to congressional committees in the 1980s that helped raise broad awareness of the global warming issue.) Activists involved in the 350 movement include Rajendra Pachauri (Chairman, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), Vandana Shiva (world-renowned environmental leader and thinker), Archbishop Desmond Tutu (1984 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and a global activist on issues pertaining to democracy, freedom and human rights), Van Jones, Bianca Jagger, Dr. James Hansen, Barbara Kingsolver and many more. (complete list of “350 Messengers here) About the Global Day of Climate Change Action on October 24th, 2009: “Playing for the Planet” is just one of over a thousand actions which will be taking place all over the planet. The organizers explain: “We’re calling on people around the world to organize an action on October 24 incorporating the number 350 at an iconic place in their community, and then upload a photo of their event to 350.org website. We’ll collect these images from around the world and, with your help, deliver them to the media and world leaders. Together, we can show our world and its decision-makers just how big, beautiful, and unified the climate movement really is.” The photographs of 350-themed actions will be delivered to delegates at the December Conference on Climate Change in Copenhagen, in order to underline both the importance of the number and the broad international support for an agreement limiting atmospheric CO2 to 350 ppm. Warren Senders is the contact person for “Playing for the Planet.” He is one of thousands of concerned global citizens hoping to trigger positive change through social action and the arts. He can be reached at warvij@verizon.net or by telephone at 781-396-0734. Here is the action page at www.350.org Here is a discussion of the science behind the number 350. Here is a description of the Day of Action on October 24th. |
First Church in Cambridge
Cambridge, MA, 02138 |
11 Yes |
| Oct 10 9:00 PM |
150 attended (est.) –
Atlas Soul is playing Ryles Jazz Club Saturday October 10 2009 at 9:00 PM Atlas Soul a cross-cultural music experience group- is performing songs from their 2008 Independent Music Award finalist CD: “Maktoub” (destined) at Ryles Jazz Club Saturday October 10 at 9:00 PM. "Atlas Soul's blend of jazz, funk and Middle-Eastern/Arabi World Music journalist Banning Eyre (Afrobeat worldwide) writes: Atlas Soul’s music bridges the gap between Eastern and Western cultures. This is why they have been described as “cross-cultural-musi Atlas Soul sings in Spanish, French, Italian, Arabic, Hebrew and English. The lyrics speak of love, natural wonders, oppression, poverty, and of the melancholy of immigrants longing for their homelands. Their motto is world-music-for-worl Philosophically and politically, Atlas Soul hopes to inspire world peace through a fusion of music and culture that gets people to the dance floor. Effortless cross-cultural blend with enticing results! The hallmark of the North African musical tradition is an openness to others. Musicians from this culture effortlessly blend centuries-old rhythms, instruments and melodic concepts with modern ideas and innovations from the world over, creating a constantly changing panorama of styles. Jacques Pardo and Atlas Soul exemplify this spirit. In their second CD, Mabrouka, the group serves up a tantalizing stew of musical styles. The delighted listener hears the influences of jazz, Latin, flamenco, French hip-hop and the traditional North African music, all blended with the deft and sure hand of a master chef. Great vocals top off the warm and savory instrumental mix. Mike Crager - CDbaby.com Thank you for sending on this C.D. This is to use the old "cliche " something totally different. It is an exciting cornucopia of world music, and cultural rhythms blended and fused together to produce a sound which is both melodic and exciting. Superbly played, arranged, and produced this recording is highly innovative and listenable, and conjures up vivid images of exotic and far away places. I would certainly like to hear other work by Jacques Pardo and his group of talented Musicians. Great rhythms. John Reid - Keith Community Radio 102.8 FM Keith Fantastic Album. Great stuff for our Radio Station Alex Pijnen - BRTO Radio Kate Martinelli - Ozcat Radio 91.5 James Cervantes - KWVA Dr. StrangeDub (Michael Rose) - KFAI-FM Graham J Barclay - Soundwave FM |
Ryles Jazz Club
Cambridge, MA, 02139 42.373211,-71.100499
|
10 Yes |
| Sep 23 8:00 PM |
2 attended (est.) –
MUSANER & Garo Papazian and Paul Erlich Duo MUSANER Musaner is a uniquely evocative musical project directed by composer & pianist Ara Sarkissian. The band's music includes original compositions as well as arrangements of folk music from Armenia, the Caucasus, and the Balkans. Drawing on influences ranging from American jazz to European post-modernist composers, Sarkissian's work deftly explores exciting new rhythmic and harmonic territory while remaining true to its original folk roots. Todd Brunel, clarinet Garo Papazian & Paul Erlich Duo Opening will be Garo Papazian and Paul Erlich, performing musical improvisations inspired by Indian, Mid-Eastern, and American traditions on acoustic guitar and doumbek, with an emphasis on exploring odd time signatures. |
Ryles Jazz Club
Cambridge, MA, 02139 42.373238,-71.100240
|
1 Yes |
| Sep 15 7:30 PM |
1 attended (est.) – No rating yet Sorry for the short notice.. This meeting was suggested by Diane Amelia Read. No cover charge. Samba, Baiao & Traditional Brazilian music by members of Sonho Meu Sonhozinho, a trio of players from Sonho Meu will perform in Basha Cafe's new Brazilian Music Tuesdays series. This Tuesday it's Sonhozinho, the trio version of Diane Amelia Read's Sonho Meu septet. Diane's infectious energy and great repertoire may just have you up and dancing on a Tuesday night!" September 15, 2009; 7:30-10:30 PM Basha Café 26 New Street (behind the Fresh Pond Mall) |
Basha Café
Cambridge, MA, 02138 |
1 Yes |
| Sep 2 9:00 PM |
21 attended (est.) –
Avantrio - Sofia Rei Koutsovitis, Jorge Coqui Perez-Albela and Jorge Roeder will play Wednesday night at Ryles to present Afro-Peruvian music from their new recording project. Peruvian percussionist Jorge “Coqui” Perez-Albela came up with the idea of forming a trio with two good musician friends: Argentinean vocalist, Sofia Rei Koutsovitis and Peruvian bassist, Jorge Roeder. The initial goal was to perform the music of Peruvian composers such as Chabuca Granda, Felipe Pinglo, Nicomedes, Santa Cruz; introducing it to a new audience. Their new goal is to complete a series of original compositions that will be part of Avantrio’s first recording project. |
Ryles Jazz Club
Cambridge, MA, 02139 42.373238,-71.100240
|
20 Yes |
| Aug 21 7:30 PM |
2 attended (est.) –
Description FRI, August 21, 7:30 PM GONZALO GRAU & LA CLAVE SECRETA Gonzalo Grau has collaborated with many ensembles in traditional and contemporary Latin styles, and leads his own band named La Clave Secreta (formerly known as "La Timba Loca"). He has also been part of vanguard Venezuelan projects like Maroa, Aquiles Baez Group and the Gonzalo Grau Quintet as well as the US based Maria Schneider Orchestra (Grammy Winner 2005) and Timbalaye on the Latin jazz front. Gonzalo made his way into flamenco as a multi- instrumentalist on percussion, cello and piano. He has worked with renowned artists from Spain and the US such as Antonio Granjero, La Tania, La Conja, Pedro Cortés, Jesus Montoya, Edwin Aparicio, Chuscales, Omayra Amaya, and Alejandro Granados. Regattabar at the Charles Hotel One Bennett Street Cambridge www.regattabarjazz.c 617-395-7757 |
Regattabar
Cambridge, MA, 02138 42.372297,-71.121820
|
2 Yes |
| Aug 8 6:30 PM |
4 attended (est.) –
Description I want to try something a little different! Do you tango? I don't but I love to watch. I just talked to Vickie the president of the Tango Society of Boston and she is setting-up a little picnic at 6:30 PM. The Tango lessons and demonstration start around 7:30 PM and it's all free. This is her way to give back to the community! (of course you will have to bring your picnic basket) I don't know if you are like me but I love to seat outside and have a slice of cheese and a good glass of wine..shhhh. Anyway I think that it would make a nice setting for a meet-up and a good way to meet all the new and not so new members. the weatherman says it'll be nice and it is a very awesome spot at the Charles river! What do you think? Tango by Moonlight 13th Season Time: 7:30 pm - 11 pm Location: Weeks Memorial Footbridge, Memorial Dr & DeWolfe St, Harvard Sq Event Description: By the light of the full moon shimmering over the rippling waters of the Charles River From 7:30 pm till about 11 pm, or until the moonlight and inspiration wanes … FREE On the Weeks Pedestrian Bridge near Harvard Square (at Memorial Drive, just East of JFK Street, Impromptu 15-minute mini-lessons and demos! 617 721-4872 or 617 413-2981 Vicky@bostontango.or Clifton@bostontango. www.bostontango.org www.bostontangofesti |
Weeks Pedestrian Bridge
Boston, MA, 02129 42.373015,-71.062754
|
2 Yes |
| Aug 2 9:00 PM |
3 attended (est.) –
This meet-up is suggested by Karl. Biography Qadim is a word found in both Arabic and Hebrew meaning 'ancient' as well as 'that which will come.' Their repertoire includes Arabic, Jewish, Turkish Sufi, Hebrew-Yemenite, Armenian, Greek and Moroccan music, celebrating the common musical and spiritual heritage of the region's cultures, while honoring the great diversity found within them. Acclaimed for their passionate performances, Qadim is comprised of an ensemble of accomplished and acclaimed musicians. The San Francisco Bay Area-based group has attracted a growing global audience who are responding to their authentic musicianship and timely message. Qadim was recently featured on NPR "All Things Considered" and are currently #7 on the Billboard World Music Chart. Thanks! Hope to see some of the group there! Best, Karl Haas |
Johnny D's
Somerville, MA, 02144 42.397194,-71.123123
|
2 Yes |
| Jul 29 8:30 PM |
3 attended (est.) –
Wed., July 29 @ 7:30 PM: Newpoli at Regattabar, One Bennett Street, Cambridge (Carmen Marsico and Angela Rossi - lead vocals, Bjorn Wennas - guitar, Roberto Cassan - accordion, Megumi Sasaki - violin, Geni Skendo - flutes, Brian O’Neill – percussion, Fabio Pirozzolo – percussion/vocals, with special guest Mike Rivard from Club d'Elf on bass) Newpoli is a group of exceptionally talented musicians, all alumni from Berklee College of Music and New England Conservatory, that performs Southern Italian Folk Music, mainly from the regions of Campania and Puglia, integrating a wide variety of styles such as Tarantella-Pizzica, Tammuriata, Villanella and the Neapolitan Canzone, encompassing music from the Middle Ages to the 19th century. Because Italian Folk music, with the exception of a small number of Neapolitan songs, has not received its deserved attention and recognition, neither in Italy nor abroad, Newpoli, guided by their passion for playing and researching these seldom played traditional styles, introduces to the audience, often for the first time, the joy and beauty of this music while recounting the ancient stories and rituals described in the lyrics. The group has been enthusiastically received everywhere, as the audience, notwithstanding the language barrier, is mesmerized by the vitality, energy and spice of their music. They have performed throughout New England, at venues such as the Berklee Performance Center, Ryles Jazz Club, The Middle East, Dante Alighieri Society of Cambridge and First Night. They have been interviewed and featured twice, in 2006 and in 2008, by RAI International, the Italian International public television. They released their debut CD in March 2008. Formed in October of 2003, the group consists of two singers, Carmen Marsico and Angela Rossi, a Tamorra player (traditional Italian percussion), Fabio Pirozzolo, a percussionist, Brian O'Neill, an accordion player, Roberto Cassan, a classical guitarist, Bjorn Wennas, a double bass player, Kendall Eddy, a flute player, Geni Skendo, and a violinist, Megumi Sasaki. |
Regattabar
Cambridge, MA, 02138 42.372297,-71.121820
|
3 Yes |
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