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Empire State Youth Orchestra Takes A Magic Sleigh Ride Dec. 19

SCHENECTADY — Empire State Youth Orchestra, known regionally and nationally for engaging young musicians from upstate New York and western Massachusetts in a joyful pursuit of musical excellence, announced its 2021 Holiday Spectacular, Sleigh Ride. The family-friendly holiday concert, scheduled for 3 P.M. on Sunday, Dec. 19, at Proctors in Schenectady, features a sleigh full of talent, including ESYO’s flagship ensemble Symphony Orchestra conducted by former ESYO Music Director Helen Cha-Pyo, the newly formed ESYO Chamber Orchestra, and the ESYO Youth Jazz Orchestra. National recording artist and 2019 American Idol finalist Madison VanDenburg returns home for the holidays to premiere the orchestral version of her new single, “The Light of Christmas,” with ESYO.

The concert program weaves together a seasonal story by Children’s Moonbeam Book award-winning author Vicki Addesso Dodd with sparkling holiday favorites, Christmas carols, and inspired Symphonic classics.. After finding themselves aboard Santa’s sleigh, audiences travel the world seeing the holidays through the eyes of a child and the sounds of music. Accompanying each scene is music like Leroy Anderson’s iconic Christmas jingle Sleigh Ride, Waldteufel’s Skaters Waltz, “Troika” by Prokofiev, and a jazzy arrangement of We Wish You a Merry Christmas. Also featured on the program is the famed holiday classic (There is No Place Like) Home for the Holidays by Glenville-native Robert Allen. Exhausted from their sleigh ride, the children fall asleep and wake up on Christmas morning to hear the orchestral premiere of Madison VanDenburg’s new hit single.  In the finale, the audience is invited to join VanDenburg for a traditional carol sing-along. 

For tickets to Sleigh Ride/ An ESYO Holiday Spectacular, call Proctors Box Office at 518-346-6204 or buy online at esyo.org/tickets. Tickets are $25. 

Styx at SPAC with REO Speedwagon

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Styx and REO Speedwagon co-headlining U.S. summer tour with Loverboy will stage their show Aug. 17 at Saratoga Performing Arts Center.  Tickets for the “Live & Unzoomed” show go on sale Friday, Dec. 10 at Livenation.Com

In the Name of Doing It Differently: Artists Hosts “A Gifted Art Show” Dec. 11

SARATOGA — Rhianna Leigh will host an art show 5 – 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11 at Fish Creek Marina, located at Saratoga Lake. 

“In the name of doing it differently,” she says, the show is titled “Reciprocity,” which the artist defines as: a cultivation of genuine interaction and love rather than the old story of consumerism.

“It’s an opportunity to come see if anything moves you, and engage with the art and myself in the unusual dance of finding an amount that feels good, rather than me choosing a price and you deciding if you want to pay that price. Together we will leave the scarcity behind, in favor of a more co-created and interesting way of interacting with art, money, and each other. Let’s reclaim what we value in a more authentic way.” 

For more information about the happening and the artist, go to: rhiannaleigh.com. 

Santa’s Letter to Saratoga

Well hello Boys and Girls both young and old. Greetings from the North Pole!

I will soon be seeing you at your annual Victorian stroll this Thursday to light your Christmas tree. I hear it is over 27 feet tall this year! The biggest one that you have ever had.

I always look forward to this special visit to this lovely little city in the country as the caring and giving season of the year begins. I really like your city which is why I have been coming here in person for more than 30 years.

Some of you sat on my knee when you were just a little child and I’ve watched you grow and now your little ones are sharing in this memory.

And, as we started a new tradition last year and in this time of being safe, I will also again be visiting your neighborhoods on a big King’s fire truck with its big extension tower to say hello to boys and girls young and old throughout your city.

I am so happy that you are still trying to be good little boys and girls and I am looking forward to seeing you on Thursday night, December 2 to once again to light your big city Christmas tree the biggest one you’ve ever had – and then once again visit you throughout your neighborhoods.

Remember children:
Don’t be sad, don’t wear a frown.
Check your streets, look them up, look them down.
Because Santa Claus is still coming to your town!

Merry Christmas and I’ll see you as you wave to me and as I waved back to you you. Think happy thoughts, hug your parents, hug your children, and be nice to each other.

Check the Downtown Business Association website to see where I will be and when: www.saratogaspringsdowntown.com

Merry Christmas! 
– Santa

Foo Fighters Slate Saratoga Date for Summer 2022 at SPAC

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Nestled between performances at Citi Field in Queens, and the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Foo Fighters’ 2022 North American Tour will stage a show at Saratoga Performing Arts Center on July 19.

The show will mark the 30th anniversary summer since Nirvana – with Grohl as its drummer – famously topped the bill at the 1992 Reading Festival, which Grohl later described as a “genuinely magical moment.”  The band’s major label debut, ‘Nevermind’ had been released the previous September and along with it their single “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” which brought so-called “alternative” music to mainstream America and played a role in fellow tour-mates Sonic Youth to title their tour film “1991: The Year Punk Broke.”   

The Reading Festival show would be the last time Nirvana performed in England. “The memory is somewhat triumphant but melancholy, because we never came back,” Grohl – who joined Nirvana in 1990 – recently told Sam Moore of the New Musical Express. 

Nirvana ceased to exist following the death of Kurt Cobain in 1994. Grohl subsequently formed the Foo Fighters, whose debut album was released in 1995.

The 2022 dates will mark Foo Fighters’ most extensive North American run since the February release of the band’s 10th album, “Medicine at Midnight.”   

Tickets on sale Friday, Dec. 3 at www.livenation.com.

Tang Museum Public Invitational for Saratoga Springs Satellite Reef; Online Workshop Tuesday

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College invites the public to contribute to the Saratoga Springs Satellite Reef, a community-created coral reef composed of hundreds of crocheted specimens that will go on view as part of the exhibition Radical Fiber: Threads Connecting Art and Science, which opens Jan. 29, 2022.

For the Saratoga Springs Satellite Reef, anyone can participate by crocheting structures with coral-like ruffles, which represent hyperbolic geometry, an area of mathematics, either on their own or through upcoming events. The Satellite Reef is part of the worldwide Crochet Coral Reef project by Christine and Margaret Wertheim and the Institute For Figuring. 

To inspire crafters, the Tang will conduct an online workshop at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 7. Hosted by Associate Curator Rebecca McNamara, this program introduces the Saratoga Springs Satellite Reef and includes instructors who will lead beginners in the single crochet stitch. People are invited to register via Zoom. 

In addition to the workshops, the Tang offers weekly drop-in Zoom craft circles on Wednesdays through Dec. 15 from 12 to 12:30 p.m. Registration is required.

The deadline for the Museum to receive crochet corals is Friday, Jan. 15. Participants can mail them with their name and email address and phone number to: Elizabeth Karp, Senior Museum Registrar, Tang Teaching Museum, Skidmore College, 815 N. Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866. 

The Zoom events are free and open to the public. For more information, visit tang.skidmore.edu or email tang@skidmore.edu or call the Tang Visitors Services Desk at 518-580-8080. 

Albany Symphony Haul Out The Holly with The Magic Of Christmas and Selections From The Nutcracker

ALBANY — Music Director David Alan Miller and the musicians of Albany Symphony are set to deck the halls of the Palace Theatre on back-to-back weekends. 

On Sunday, Dec. 5, at 3 p.m., Miller and the Symphony musicians will perform The Magic of Christmas. The program includes guest appearances including singers from the Capital District Youth Chorale and the Macedonia Baptist Church Choir, dancers from Myers Ballet School and the Boland School of Irish Dance, and an appearance from Santa Claus.

On Saturday, Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m. at the Palace and streaming live online, the festivities continue with selections from Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker with the orchestra at centerstage. The concert also includes Richard Strauss’ dynamic Don Juan, and two pieces from late Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Christopher Rouse: Bassoon Concerto featuring guest soloist Peter Kolkay, and Heimdall’s Trumpet featuring Albany Symphony Principal Trumpet Eric Berlin.

Tickets to both The Magic of Christmas and The Nutcracker start at $20. Livestream access is also available for The Nutcracker. Order tickets at 518-694-3300 or albanysymphony.com 

Local Blues Act: The Road To Memphis Blues Fundraiser

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Two of Saratoga’s best blues acts perform a night of blues at 7 p.m. on Saturday Dec. 4 at the VFW Post 420, located at 190 Excelsior Ave. 

The George Fletcher Blues band and Jill and Mark sing the Blues – winners of the regional qualifier to represent the Capital Region Blues Network (CRBN) at the International Blues Challenge – an annual worldwide Blues compilation – held in Memphis, Tennessee.  A $10 donation is suggested to help support their journey to Memphis. 

Tickets will be available at the door. The event is open to all, and food will be available for purchase.   

From Ballroom to Festivals – New Book Highlights History of “The Rock Concert”

SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Rock Concert. It has served as both rite of passage and meeting place for the gathered tribes. 

In his new book, titled “Rock Concert,” interviewer Marc Myers explores the history of rock and roll over a period of four decades as a live, publicly staged art form. 

Drawing on original in-depth interviews with nearly 100 sources, Myers re-visits some of the more notable performances of the 20th century, and offers a cautionary conclusion about the future of the art form. Breaking its initial promise as a space for inspiration, the rock concert has been drifting into a dangerous territory of becoming an endangered species. 

“From the beginning, live music’s purpose was to transform a gathering into a community by altering their minds,” writes Myers, who chronologically traces rock’s roots from the end-of-World War II emergence of independent record labels sharing the sounds of boogie-woogie and jump blues, up through the mid-1980s era of stadium rock.

“Rock Concert: An Oral History as Told by the Artists, Backstage Insiders, and Fans Who Were There,” is split into four parts – one dedicated to each of the decades between the 1950s and ‘80s. 

Joan Baez recalls singing with Martin Luther King as a crowd gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963 joining in a rendition of “We Shall Overcome.” Ronnie Spector remembers the early gigs of The Ronettes at New York’s fabled Peppermint Lounge, and several dozen music industry notables weigh in, Todd Rundgren and Ian Anderson, Marshall Chess, Roger Waters and Seymour Stein, among them. 

The intricate spool that was the concert experience of the 1960s is unraveled to reveal a linear progression from the early inspiration provided by a young Bob Dylan to the landing of The Beatles in America; It forges a path through Bill Graham’s opening of the Fillmore and the staging of massive pop festivals nationwide, accented by the affirmation that was the summer of Woodstock and crashing at Altamont by decade’s end. 

Moving forward, Myers portrays the 1970s as the era that ushered in large arena shows and sired the corporate influences and the MTV age of the 1980s.

Myers’ own first concert was as a 15-year-old, watching Santana perform at New York City’s Felt Forum  a theater nestled alongside the then-new most recent incarnation of Madison Square Garden. “Rock Concert” comes to a full stop after the 1985 staging of the global jukebox that was Live Aid. 

“The rock concert didn’t disappear the day after Live Aid ended,” explains Myers in the book’s epilogue – although it had significantly changed. Strategies first developed by industry pioneers were leveraged by live-entertainment companies, the emerging youth culture grew enamored with social media and digital access to recorded music, electronics cast an increasing shadow over live performers, and the cost of concert tickets climbed to greater and greater heights. 

“Along the way, the rock and the rock concert became less of an agent for social change and more of a nostalgia business for legacy artists,” writes Myers, a frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal where he writes about music and the arts.

The voices and memorable concerts that comprise the oral biography provide an illuminating retrospective of cultural happenings that meant so much to so many. Many of the major happenings are covered, although the stimulating energy taking place on club stages – and the movements of glam, punk, metal and funk it ignited, are largely ignored.

“For rock to survive in its original form as an art form of outrage and pushback, the music and rock concert will have to connect meaningfully with the youth culture’s current concerns and agenda,” Myers surmises. “Otherwise, rock and the rock concert risks fading away with the generation that was most inspired by its rise.”     

“Rock Concert: An Oral History as Told by the Artists, Backstage Insiders, and Fans Who Were There,” by Marc Myers. Published by Grove Atlantic, $30. Available at Northshire Bookstore Saratoga. 

Live At The Egg – David Bromberg/John Sebastian, Richard Thompson Weekend; 2022 Concert Slate: Cowboy Junkies, Bela Fleck

ALBANY — The David Bromberg Big Band will perform at The Egg at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 4.

The Bromberg Big Band celebrates his “Spirit of 76” Birthday Bash concert with special guests John Sebastian (Lovin’ Spoonful), Jimmy Vivino (Al Kooper, Fab Faux, Conan O’Brien), Andy Falco (Infamous Stringdusters), Larry Campbell (Bob Dylan Band 1997-2004) and Teresa Williams (Midnight Ramble Band). Tickets are $49.50, $39.50, $34.50. 

At 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 5, iconic British folk rock legend Richard Thompson performs at The Egg. Tickets are $49.50. 

The venue this week announced that Cowboy Junkies (March 6) and Bela Fleck (April 8) will be performing in 2022 as part of the American Roots & Branches concert series.

Tickets for all shows are available at The Egg Box Office at the Empire State Plaza, by telephone at 518-473-1845 or online at www.theegg.org.