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Neon Indian: Summer Tour BRAHMS Remix

NEON INDIAN ANNOUNCES SUMMER TOUR / GETS REMIXED BY BRAHMS

Neon Indian

Neon Indian is Alan
Palomo
, the 21-year-old synth-wizard who first created waves as VEGA. After writing a batch of off-the-cuff recordings that weren’t quite right as VEGA songs, Palomo released them as Neon Indian and what started
as a careless outlet for ideas too offbeat to fit the VEGA mold has since gone on to define a genre. His critically
acclaimed debut album Psychic Chasms, which was released in October 2009, has been featured in
SPIN, Rolling Stone, Wall Street Journal and FADER among others. In February 2010 he
made his late night TV debut with a performance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. “Sleep Paralysist,” the
recent single for Green Label Sound was written by Neon Indian lead-man Alan Palomo; the track was
recorded and produced in collaboration with Chris Taylor of Grizzly Bear in Brooklyn at Taylor’s
elusive musical dungeon, Terrible Studios. Here, Neon Indian is remixed by new outfit BRAHMS, which features Eric
Lodwick
, Drew Robinson, and Cale Parks.

Click here to listen to the BRAHMS remix of “Psychic Chasms.”

Click here for a recent review of Neon Indian in San Francisco.

NEON INDIAN SUMMER TOUR:

05/12 New York, NY Terminal 5 *

05/13 Boston, MA House of Blues *
05/29 Calgary, AB Hi Fi Club
05/31 George, WA Sasquatch
06/02 San Diego, CA Casbah
06/03 Costa Mesa, CA Detroit Bar
06/04 Los Angeles, CA Natural History Museum / First Fridays #
06/05 Corvalis, OR Flat Tall Music Festival
06/07 Austin, TX Emo’s
06/09 Atlanta, GA The Earl
06/10 Manchester, TN Bonnaroo
06/11 Cincinnati, OH Fountain Square
06/12 Pittsburgh, PA Brillobox
06/13 Baltimore, MD Sonar
06/17 Brooklyn, NY Music Hall of Williamsburg
06/19 Denver, CO Westword Music Showcase
07/17 Milwaukee, WI Turner Hall Ballroom

* = w/ Massive Attack

# = w/ Peanut Butter Wolf

Neon Indian Tour Dates :: Neon Indian News :: Neon Indian Concert Reviews


Savannah Music Fest 2010 Season

SAVANNAH MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2010 SEASON

FEATURING UNIQUE PAIRINGS, ORIGINAL PRODUCTIONS AND INSTRUMENTAL VIRTUOSITY
Highlights include Wilco, Wynton Marsalis, Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi

Wilco

Tickets are now on sale for the 2010 Savannah Music Festival (SMF), which runs from March 18 through April 3. Opening with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chinese superstar pianist Lang Lang. The 21st edition of Georgia’s largest music festival features its most diverse array of acts ever. Called “one of the best events around the world” by The Times of London, SMF’s 2010 season is comprised of original productions, unique pairings, and a focus on instrumental virtuosity, including world-class artists in jazz, classical, bluegrass, blues, gospel, and a wide variety of other American and international musical traditions. Set in the idyllic atmosphere of Savannah in the early spring, these unique programs combine to create a musical arts event with worldwide resonance. Tickets are available here.

SMF Executive & Artistic Director Rob Gibson remarks, “With the ever widening gap between commercial music and the performing arts, we want to serve as a bridge that connects audiences with a wide range of first-class artistry, while also illuminating musical traditions from all over the world.”

Savannah Music Festival Original Productions
For the sixth year, SMF Associate Artistic Director and acclaimed violinist Daniel Hope has curated an original chamber music series called Sensations. Daniel Hope and friends welcome first-time guests and musical collaborators Gabriela Montero, Gautier Capuçon, Mark O’Connor, and Jeffrey Kahane.

Highlights of the series include performances of both sextets written by Brahms, a program entitled Forbidden Music, featuring works by composers incarcerated in the Thereseinstadt concentration camp including Schulhoff, Schull, Klein and Haas performed at Temple Mickve Israel (the third oldest Jewish temple in America), and an American music program featuring an O’Connor String Quartet, Heifetz‘ Gershwin arrangements, and works by Williams, Copland, and Bernstein. Pianists Sebastian Knauer and Jeffrey Kahane will perform a one-time only duo recital.

The New Orleans Blues Party features the Henry Butler Trio joined by several special guests and jazz greats throughout the evening. Additional jazz and blues productions include the annual Piano Showdown, which this year pits Butler, Marcus Roberts, Gerald Clayton, and Dick Hyman at opposite ends of the stage, on different Steinways, performing solos and duets. Ben Tucker at 80, celebrates the birthday of Savannah’s beloved jazz bassist/composer in a program featuring such jazz stalwarts as Marcus Printup, Wycliffe Gordon, and Kevin Bales. The prolific jazz pianist Dick Hyman plays an all-Fats Waller concert. All Star Swing Summit, the culmination of SMF’s Swing Central High School Jazz Band Competition & Workshop, features the Clayton Brothers, the Marcus Roberts Trio, the Ted Nash Ensemble, and the Georgia Horns featuring Chris Crenshaw, Wycliffe Gordon and Marcus Printup.

A multi-generational gathering of great mandolinists featuring Mike Marshall, Chris Thile, and Caterina Lichtenberg reaches back to the origins of the instrument in Italian music from the 1600s, also spotlighting the mandolin’s history up to the present day. The most formidable husband/wife team in the history of southern rock/blues, Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi, perform a set of ’60s and ’70s soul music.

Unique Pairings and Double Bills
· The Big World of Music series pairs innovative American instrumentalists with international virtuosos in Wizards and Gypsies: The Assad Brothers and the Roby Lakatos Ensemble; Mark O’Connor’s Hot Swing! and the Renaud Garcia-Fons Trio; and the Bill Frisell Trio with Bassekou Kouyate & Ngoni Ba.
· Divas of Country Music features two of neo-traditional country music’s biggest talents: Patty Loveless and Kathy Mattea.
· The passionate and gritty blues, rhythm & soul of Ruthie Foster intersects with the intimate and rich sound of Savannah native Kristina Train, whose debut recording is being released this month on Blue Note Records.

· Major Minors: Teenage acoustic music sensations Sarah Jarosz and Sierra Noble share a bill showcasing their youthful virtuosity and their respective trios.
· Jazz elder statesmen Dick Hyman, Ken Peplowski and Howard Alden are paired with the youthful and hard-swinging Gerald Clayton Trio.
· Mike Marshall’s innovative Big Trio and western swing/alt-country rockers The Belleville Outfit perform on the opening night of the festival.
· The “first family of bluegrass,” Cherryholmes, shares the stage with North Carolina singer/multi-instrumentalist Shannon Whitworth.

About the Savannah Music Festival
The Savannah Music Festival presents a world-class celebration of the musical arts by creating timeless and adventurous productions that stimulate arts education, foster economic growth, and unite artists and audiences in Savannah, Georgia. The 2010 festival runs from March 18 through April 3, including more than 100 performances of world-class jazz, classical, blues, bluegrass, gospel and other genres of American and international roots music in intimate venues throughout the historic district of Savannah.

The entire festival line up can be viewed here.


Playing it cool with Mahler in slo-mo

Haitink’s magical Mahler Prom made up for the BBC’s gruesome coverage of the First Night

A dance of death or a song of life? This question, posed but never answered, haunts Mahler’s Ninth Symphony, written in bleak circumstances: his young daughter had died, he had lost his conducting job in antisemitic Vienna, his wife was giving him trouble and he had heart disease. Today he would be called “stressed out”. But the 49-year-old composer doggedly took to his hut in the Tyrolean mountains and drafted, in the summer of 1909, this sprawling, tender masterpiece, his last completed symphony.

It proved the sombre highlight of the first week of the BBC Proms 2009, in a spellbinding account by Bernard Haitink and the London Symphony Orchestra. Slow, majestic and tightly controlled, the performance ran for nearly 100 minutes – longer than average but worth the amplitude for the intensity achieved. This was the Proms at their best: top musicians giving their all in front of a capacity crowd with barely a cough or a fidget. Even without the aid of a fourth plinth, the stalwart Prommers standing in the hot arena turned themselves into statues.

The Ninth has a quality of distillation, as if the emotional flesh and bones of Mahler’s youth has been reduced to music of transparent purity. At times it was like listening in slow motion. Harmonies shift, not abruptly or jaggedly but gradually, like a drop of dye dissipating through water. Often the piccolo (played by the LSO’s animated Sharon Williams) is the instigator, piercing the existing harmony with a long, sour dissonance and forcing change.

As ever with Haitink, analytical precision won the day. No fudging, no blurry wash of sound, no feverish swell. Each orchestral solo was vivid. The ever-prominent second violins ushered in the opening Andante and the subsequent Ländler with shining resonance. Haitink plays it cool and bare. This can frustrate those who give themselves up to a Mahler symphony as if entering a purple tunnel of love and pain, hoping for empathy and therapy. This would be anathema to Haitink. He demands that you leave your ego at home and use your ears: the wordless elegy is the more memorable for it. At 80, this Dutch maestro begins to look frail. We must treasure him.

Wednesday’s Cambridge University at 800 Prom had bad advance publicity. What was it for? Why not celebrate more of the current wave of excellent Cambridge-trained composers – George Benjamin, Julian Anderson, Thomas Adès, Jonathan Dove? When is Loughborough or Warwick getting its own Prom? Why was it so late starting and ending and what the heck was Saint-Saëns’s swaggering and sentimental “Organ” Symphony doing there? If you gave the answer “because he has an honorary degree” in your Tripos exams, you’d end up with a Third.

Certainly the concert was a rum event, a triumph of lost opportunity but not without its glories. Five combined Cambridge choirs, including King’s and St John’s, performed Vaughan Williams’s Five Mystical Songs with Simon Keenlyside as the ardent soloist. Short, ethereal choral works by Jonathan Harvey (Come, Holy Ghost) and Judith Weir (Ascending into Heaven) were reminders of the importance of this university’s vital, unparalleled tradition of teaching compo sition, now apparently – according to the current professor Robin Holloway – under threat.

The poetic Harvey, fiercely difficult but outstandingly sung, was conducted by Andrew Nethsingha. Weir’s piece, directed by Stephen Cleobury and with organ accompaniment, had delicious buoyancy, as if the heavenly ascent was powered by a celestial waltzing Wurlitzer. A new work by Ryan Wigglesworth – an Oxford graduate; who ever said this event was not eclectic? – made a powerful impression, incisively played by the BBC SO. The Genesis of Secrecy demonstrated this young conductor-composer’s gift for exquisite orchestral colour. Wigglesworth is also, I am duty bound to report, a bit of a dish.

More choral pleasure was offered by Monday’s first lunchtime Chamber Music Prom at Cadogan Hall, when the Cardinall’s Musick excelled in unaccompanied works from the time of Henry VIII. But the season had opened messily, at least for those of us who watched the First Night on BBC2. The experience was gruesome. Neither the adorable Clive Anderson, presenting, nor his “celeb” guest Stephen Fry in the red-plush Albert Hall box, can do wrong. Yet their discussion of Fry’s weight-loss, with the orchestra tuning up in the background, was downright surreal. Why not get Jordan along to discuss her embonpoint? No knowledge of music required.

Ailish Tynan and Alice Coote, attractive and spirited soprano and mezzo, were soloists in Bruckner’s Psalm 150 and Brahms’s Alto Rhapsody. Shooting in close-up from under their chins made them look like sweaty all-in wrestlers. If a camera angle can be classified as actionable, this is surely it. Elsewhere the lens showed exhausting signs of OCD, flicking and darting as if hunting the ball on Centre Court. The harder you try to make music on the small screen “interesting”, the more tedious it gets. I checked with my usual TV-watching, music-loving research team: a teenager and an octogenarian. What did they think? They’d both switched off in squirming embarrassment.

Telly detritus – cameras, furry microphones, trailing cables – filled the stage for Opera Holland Park’s updating of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera. We were in contemporary America – the work is set in Boston – with stars and stripes and power-dressing women. Director Martin Lloyd-Evans and designer Jamie Vartan alas seem to have forgotten what they learned two years ago in OHP’s stunning L’amore dei tre Re. Whereas there the action was disturbingly concentrated, here it was strewn confusingly across the wide stage. Despite Peter Robinson’s focused and perceptive conducting and, on a chilly night, the resilient skills of the City of London Sinfonia, the twains rarely met.

But there’s an urgent reason to see this show: the cast, which includes Olafur Sigurdarson, Gail Pearson and Rafael Rojas, indisposed on the first night but heroically replaced (from the pit) by David Rendall, has exciting style and panache. Together with the small, lusty chorus, they bring Verdi’s masterpiece to passionate life. The jewel is the assured, gleaming Amelia of Amanda Echalaz. Holland Park has nurtured this South African soprano, who was last year’s Tosca. She has power, looks and charisma. With work scheduled for houses throughout the world, Echalaz surely heads for stardom. Any performer who can make you forget your freezing extremities deserves the highest reward. An honorary degree maybe.

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Havana welcomes Royal Ballet

Visits will be among most high-profile cultural exchanges since Fidel Castro took power in 1959

Cuba has blended diplomacy and art by inviting two flagship western cultural institutions, Britain’s Royal Ballet and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, to perform in Havana.

The visits will be among the most high-profile cultural exchanges with the west since Fidel Castro’s guerrillas seized power in 1959, turning the island into a communist outpost which has outlasted the cold war.

Royal Ballet dancers are due tomorrow to start a five-day programme which the Cuban government has billed as a landmark cultural event. Tickets are sold out and at least three of the performances will be shown on big screens outside the Gran Teatro in central Havana. Officials from the New York Philharmonic visited the city in recent days to investigate performance venues and logistics following an invitation from the culture ministry, a rare opening to a high-profile US institution.

“With these invitations the Cuban leadership is indicating a desire to expand the field of contact with musical and cultural leaders from the US and EU, which may lead to greater diplomatic contact down the road,” said Dan Erikson, author of the Cuba Wars and an analyst at the Inter-American Dialogue.

The Obama administration has responded in kind by granting the orchestra an exemption from the draconian US embargo, a four-decade old policy designed to isolate the island. Vice-president Joe Biden said the proposed trip was a “wonderful project”, Zubin Mehta, the orchestra’s president, told the New York Times.

That marked a departure from the Bush-era policy of “squelching” cultural contacts and could presage further relaxations, said Erikson. “There is likely to be a reopening of cultural exchanges as occurred during Bill Clinton’s presidency. Obama will certainly be more open to initiatives with ‘ping-pong’ diplomacy, and we may soon see the administration support basketball diplomacy.”

Cuba, once an international pariah, has been welcomed back into the diplomatic fold by Latin America and has been courted by Chinese, Russian and European governments and corporations, not least because of its offshore oil reserves.

Since succeeding his ailing older brother last year President Raúl Castro has mooted economic reforms and cultural openings to break the Caribbean island’s sense of stagnation. Economic reforms have stalled and renewed austerity mean less fruit, vegetables and electricity for an impoverished population.

But European diplomats in Havana said there was marginally more cultural tolerance. “It’s a bit more relaxed,” said one. Despite the financial crunch arts subsidies still support selected performers and keep opera, cinema and theatre available to almost all. The irony is that Fidel Castro has a tin ear and is one of the few Cubans who cannot sing or dance.

The Royal Ballet’s 150-strong team of dancers and technicians is reportedly the first ballet company to visit Havana since the Bolshoi, emissaries from the government’s Soviet ally, performed almost three decades ago.

The shows, three in the Gran Teatro, two in the Teatro Karl Marx, are part of a tribute to the legendary grand dame of Cuban dance, Alicia Alonso, who at 88 remains head of the National Ballet of Cuba.

Carlos Acosta, Cuba’s globetrotting ballet star, helped broker the visit and will perform alongside his British colleagues. The programme will include Swan Lake, Don Quixote, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma and Kenneth MacMillan’s Manon.

With Havana and Washington both giving the green light the New York Philharmonic said it hoped to accept Cuba’s invitation within weeks after inspecting concert halls and nailing down details such as budgets and equipment storage.

Mehta said there were provisional plans to perform on 31 October and 1 November at the 900-seat Teatro Amadeo Roldan, with the philharmonic’s incoming music director, Alan Gilbert, conducting.

The institution made history last year by performing in Pyongyang, one of the most striking examples of “orchestra diplomacy”.

Relations between the US and North Korea did not then improve – actually they nosedived – but the visit continued a tradition of classical music leaping political barriers.

In 1956 the Boston Symphony Orchestra became the first major US ensemble to visit the Soviet Union during the cold war. The New York Philharmonic, under conductor Leonard Bernstein, followed three years later. London’s Philharmonic Orchestra brought Beethoven, Brahms, Dvorak and Haydn to capacity crowds in Mao’s China in 1973.

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