Music

Photo from The Jazz Loft

The Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook presents the following events in December:

Wed. 12/1         Young at Heart: It’s the Holidays                                                  1 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio will perform holiday music at the themed monthly series designed for those who

like their jazz in the afternoon.

Tickets: $10

Wed. 12/1.          Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                                                 7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

Thurs. 12/2        Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker Suite & Holiday Music                      7 PM 12/2, 12/3, 12/4

Fri.     12/3                                                                                                                            & 2 PM  12/4

Sat.     12/4    

The 17 member Jazz Loft Big Band performs Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker Suite.  Allan Harris, a soulful jazz vocalist, recording artist and guitarist joins the Band for holiday music.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Monday 12/6     Stony Brook University Blowage Big Band        7 PM
The SBU jazz band performs under the direction of trombonist Ray Anderson.
Tickets: $10 Free for SBU Staff and Students

Tues. 12/7           Nikhil Bartolomeo, Antonio Ciacca   DMA Recitals                                                   7 PM

The Jazz Loft will host two Doctor Of Music recitals. Nikhil Bartolomeo is a clarinetist and saxophonist. He will perform works of Barber, Blake, Bunch, D’Rivera and Smith.

The Antonio Ciacca Quartet features DMA student Antonio Ciacca on piano, Andy Farber on tenor sax, Jennifer Vincent on bass and Michele Carletti on drums.

Nikhil and Antonio are students in the Stony Brook University Jazz Studies Department.

Tickets are $10 and admission is free for SBU students and staff

Wed. 12/8          Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                                                   7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

Monday 12/13   Stony Brook Graduate Jazz Combos Concert   7 PM
Graduate students in music department of SBU perform in this jazz combos concert.
Tickets: $10   Free for SBU Staff and Students

Wed. 12/15.        Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                                                   7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

Thurs. 12/16       Bad Little Big Band Holiday Show                                                 7 PM

The 12 member Bad Little Big Band led by pianist Rich Iacona will perform music of the season. Vocalist Madeline Kole accompanies the band.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Friday 12/17        Ray Anderson’s Seasonal Solstice Party                                       7 PM

Acclaimed trombonist Ray Anderson is known to push the limits of his instrument. His performances are always spirited and fun.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Sat.  12/18          Interplay Jazz Orchestra’s Family Show                                         1PM

The 17 member Interplay Jazz Orchestra performs a family friendly afternoon holiday show.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Sat.  12/18           Tom Manuel’s Eggnog Romp                                                          6 PM

Cornetist and Jazz Loft founder, Tom Manuel leads his ensemble of musicians in performing music of the season.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Wed. 12/22        Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                                                     7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

Thurs. 12/23      Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker Suite & Holiday Music.                        7 PM

The 17 member Jazz Loft Big Band performs Duke Ellington’s Nutcracker Suite. Grammy winning vocalist Nicole Zuraitis joins the band for holiday music.

Tickets: $35 adults, $30 seniors, $25 students, $20 children, children under 5 free

Wed. 12/29       Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                                                      7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

For tickets, call 751-1895 or visit www,thejazzloft.org.

Please note: The Jazz Loft will be closed in January to line up the great music it will be presenting in 2022.

Have a happy and safe holiday season and listen to a lot of live music!

 

Stock photo

Join the Whaling Museum of Cold Spring Harbor for an online music-themed night of trivia on Nov. 18 at 7 p.m. From whale songs to sea shanties to cricket chirps to Mozart to Broadway to the Beatles to Beyonce, join them for a tune-filled evening with trivia questions about music in film, television, art, nature, and history. For adults. Free to play, $10 donation appreciated. To register, visit www.cshwhalingmuseum.org. For more information, call 631-367-3418.

AN EVENING OF CLASSICAL MUSIC

The Sound Symphony Orchestra opens their 2021-2022 season with a classical music concert at Comsewogue High School, 565 N. Bicycle Path, Port Jefferson Station The Sound Symphony Orchestra on Friday, Nov. 19 at 7 p.m. Directed by Dorothy Savitch, selections include Beethoven’s Fidelio Overture and Dvorak’s powerful Symphony No. 7.

Tickets are $15 for general admission and $10 for seniors and students at the door. Children under 12, Veterans, and Active Military are admitted FREE with identification. Masks are required at all times while in the building. For more information, visit www.soundsymphony.org,

Pianist Nadejda Vlaeva. Photo from Facebook

Ridotto, concerts “with a Touch of Theater,” presents the critically acclaimed Bulgarian-American Pianist Nadejda Vlaeva in Recital at the Huntington Jewish Center, 510 Park Ave., Huntington on Sunday, Nov. 14 at 4 p.m.  The pianist returns to Ridotto with a program of Chopin, Scriabin, Bortkiewicz, Liszt and more.

“…a sense of elegance, a subtle touch, and fleetness of fingers, all of which Ms. Vlaeva displayed with abandon. She has the fluidity and ease to conquer all the difficulties the composer presents.” — Concertonet review of CARNEGIE ZANKEL HALL recital.

“Without doubt, Nadejda Vlaeva is one of those people of extraordinary ability who we hope for but rarely see.”  — Arnold Steinhardt, Violinist Guarneri String Quartet

“Bulgarian pianist Nadejda Vlaeva’s burnishing account bristled with excitement”
“The rapt audience broke its breathless silence with warm applause ”
— Leonard Turnevicius, Hamilton Spectator, Canada

Tickets are  $12 (student), $20 (members), $25 (seniors), $30 (general admission). The hall is handicapped accessible. For reservations, call 631-385-0373, or [email protected]

Ridotto is a non-profit, Long Island based concert organization presenting Concerts “with a touch of theatre” since 1992. For more information, visit www.ridotto.org

Photo from TVSD

Ward Melville High School junior, singer-songwriter and former Broadway actress Ava Della Pietra has been named a winner in the New York State School Music Association’s 2021 Calls for Creators Competition. Ava won with her two original songs, “Moon” and “Optimist” in the Songwriters Showcase category.  

An introspective single about saying goodbye to her brother, a source of comfort and inspiration, “Moon” is a poignant ballad about impermanence and coming of age. “Optimist” is an uplifting and inspiring song about overcoming negativity and keeping a positive mindset. 

For the first time, NYSSMA held three calls for student musicians in three categories — composers, electronic music and songwriters. Students received a written evaluation of their music and each submitted work was also considered for inclusion in one of three concerts at the All-State Winter Conference in Rochester. Student creators were also invited to participate in coaching workshops and a post-concert discussion. 

Above, Ava is pictured with Ward Melville High School Principal William S. Bernhard (on left) and District Director of Music Anthony Pollera. 

Photo caption: Ward Melville High School All-State musicians and alternates are pictured with members of the Three Village Central School District’s music department, Principal William Bernhard and District Director of Music Anthony Pollera. Photo courtesy of the Three Village Central School District

Ward Melville High School student musicians have once again earned high praise from the New York State School Music Association, with seven students being selected to perform at the 85th annual Winter Conference in Rochester. In addition to the students named All-State musicians, 20 students were selected as alternates for the festival.

The event will take place from Dec. 2 to 5, 2021. This year’s conference will include the traditional variety of conference sessions with renowned professional musicians, concert hour performances, statewide recognitions and guest speakers. The district congratulates the following students:

Owen Dong – Symphonic Band

Sofia Mulligan – Symphony Orchestra

Kate Sun – Symphony Orchestra

Jacqueline Wu – Symphony Orchestra

Claire Yang – Symphonic Band

William Yao – Symphony Orchestra

Lillian Zhi – Symphony Orchestra

—————————————-

Dakota Binder – Alternate

Jennifer Cabrera – Alternate

Gabriel Choi – Alternate

Daphne Churgel – Alternate

Justin Durko – Alternate

Emma Fleming – Alternate

Ivan Ge – Alternate

Samuel Gitelson – Alternate

Eren Goral – Alternate

Sahana Gupta – Alternate

David Huang – Alternate

Stella Kahnis – Alternate

Alexander Lin – Alternate

Catherine Ma – Alternate

Shey McCoy – Alternate

Cole Napolitano – Alternate

Joseph Nizza – Alternate

Victor Prchlik – Alternate

Jacqueline Winslow – Alternate

Dora Zou – Alternate

 

A scene from 'Eurydice'
Matt Aucoin
Liv Redpath

Stony Brook University’s Staller Center for the Arts, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook presents a lecture and recital by award-winning composer Matthew Aucoin titled “Primal Loss: Four Hundred Years of Orpheus and Eurydice in Opera” in the Recital Hall on Thursday, Oct. 28 from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Aucoin will discuss his opera Eurydice premiering at the Metropolitan Opera in November 2021, the influences of playwright Sarah Ruhl and the history of Orphic operas. Soprano Liv Redpath will perform selections from the play. Free.

Proof of vaccine or valid exemption required for all attendees.

See stallercenter.com/contact/Covid for details.

Sponsored by the English Department, the Office of the Provost, the Music Department, the Humanities Institute at Stony Brook, The Hellenic Center, the Graduate Student Organization, the Women’s Gender, and Sexuality Studies Department, the Walt Whitman Birthplace, and the Walt Whitman Initiative.

For more information, www.stonybrook.edu/hisb

The cast of 'A Kooky Spooky Halloween' at Theatre Three. Photo by Peter Lanscombe/Theatre Three Productions, Inc.

Two more performances left! Children’s theater continues at Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson with A Kooky Spooky Halloween, a merry musical about a ghost who’s afraid of the dark, on Oct 23 and Oct. 30 at 11 a.m. Recently graduated spirit Abner Perkins is assigned to the Aberdeen Boarding House — known for its spectral sightings and terrific toast. Here, Abner finds himself cast into a company of its wacky residents. When his secret is revealed, he is forced to leave his haunted home and set off on a quest with his newly found friends and learns the power of helping others. All seats are $10. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.

The Jazz Loft

The Jazz loft will be presenting the following events in November 2021:

 

Wednesday 11/3    Young at Heart: The Music of Burt Bacharach.         1 PM

Young at Heart is a monthly themed afternoon jazz series. This month The Jazz Loft Trio

will present the music of Bert Bacharach.

Tickets: $10

 

Wednesday 11/3    Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                             7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jazz jam at 8 PM

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

 

Thursday 11/4   Marilyn Maye with The Jazz Loft Big Band                 7 PM

The 17 member Jazz Loft Big Band performs jazz standards and original compositions and arrangements written by band members. Marilyn Maye is a highly praised singer, actress, director and Grammy nominated recording artist.

Tickets: Adults $40, Seniors $35, Students $30, Children $25

 

Friday   11/5         Marilyn Maye and Her Trio                                         7 PM

Marilyn Maye is a highly praised singer, actress, director and Grammy nominated recording artist.

Tickets: Adults $35, Seniors $30, Students $25, Children $20

 

Wednesday 11/10  Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                              7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 Pm followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

 

Wednesday 11/17  Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                              7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 Pm $10, Arrive at 8 PM $5

 

Thursday 11/18   Bad Little Big Band                                                    7 PM

The 12 member Bad Little Big Band, led by pianist Rich Iacona, performs music of the Great American Song Book and original compositions and arrangements written by band members. Vocalist Madeline Kole accompanies the band.

Tickets: Adults $25, Seniors $20, Students $15, Children $10

 

Friday 11/19     Drumming Legends                                                    7 PM

Drummers Ronnie Zito, Jackie Wilson, Darrell Smith and Chris Smith will be featured. Houston Person

tenor saxophone, Steve Salerno guitar and Tom Manuel cornet form the rest of the band.

Tickets: Adults $30, Seniors $25, $20 Students, $15 Children

 

Wednesday 11/24    Jazz Loft Trio and Jam                                             7 PM

The Jazz Loft Trio performs at 7 PM followed by a jam at 8 PM.

Tickets: Arrive at 7 PM $10, Arrive at 8 Pm $5

 

The Jazz Loft is located at 275 Christian Ave in Stony Brook Village   phone 631 751-1895

Tickets can be purchased at www.thejazzloft.org and subject to availability, before events.

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A scene from 'Dear Evan Hansen'. Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures
Film adaptation celebrates the essence of an unforgettable musical

By Jeffrey Sanzel

Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour was touted as a play exploring “the power of a lie.” The same could be said of Dear Evan Hansen, the Broadway musical that opened in 2016 and had played over 1,300 performances before the shutdown. It returns to its home at the Music Box on December 11.

Evan Hansen is a high school senior with social anxiety. His therapist has assigned him to write self-encouraging letters (thus the title). The school outcast, Connor Murphy, steals one. When Connor commits suicide, the letter is found in his pocket. The boy’s family finds solace in the idea that he had a close friend in Evan. Instead of explaining the mistake, out of a mix of sympathy, sensitivity, and fear, Evan goes along with the misunderstanding. However, the situation becomes a bigger issue when Connor’s memory becomes a cause. And while his intentions are initially good, the lie ultimately becomes destructive.

Ben Platt and Julianne Moore in a scene from ‘Dear Evan Hansen’. Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures

Benj Pasek, who wrote the score with Justin Paul, based the idea on an incident that occurred in his Philadelphia high school. Collaborating with book writer Steven Levenson, they created a smash hit that received critical accolades and garnered dozens of awards. Its six Tony’s included Best Musical, Best Book of a Musical, Best Original Score, and Best Actor in a Musical for Ben Platt’s star turn as the titular character. 

Platt is the sole member of the stage company to recreate a role in the screen version. Much has been said (predominantly online) about Platt being too old to play Evan, but this is unfounded carping. His portrayal of the tormented teen is nothing short of devastating. He has skillfully adapted his stage persona for the screen, finding depth and subtlety, with his voice soaring from first to last. Platt’s Hansen is a gift, and a reminder of the countless stage performances lost to Hollywood productions featuring bigger names of far lesser skill.

Levenson has fashioned a smart and effective screenplay, opening it up just enough but maintaining the stage version’s intimacy and integrity. Steven Chbosky’s direction ably captures Evan’s isolation, especially in the opening “Waving Through a Window,” but there is a sense of repetition in the endless panning shots. In addition, Chbosky and Levenson rely a bit too heavily on quickly inserted fantasy shots that don’t quite land. But, overall, they have transformed the musical into a satisfying cinematic experience, and the expanded ending is richer and more fulfilling than the original.

The driving force in the musical was the score, a unique and melodious contemporary Broadway sound. Four songs have been cut for the film, so Platt now carries about eighty percent of the music. The elimination of “Does Anybody Have a Map?” clearly emphasizes Evan’s journey, which somehow marginalizes the families (or at least the adult singers). And while there is logic to the change, the choice is a loss of a perfect song and establishing the story’s larger world.

Ben Platt and Amandla Stenberg in a scene from ‘Dear Evan Hansen’. Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures

One of the early highlights is the cleverly realized “Sincerely Me.” Evan recruits a family friend, Jared (the hilariously deadpan Nik Dodani), to create fake backdated emails to show Evan’s friendship with Connor (Colton Ryan, who shows great range and dimension). Platt makes every song work, but none as indelibly as his confession to Connor’s family in the devastating “Word’s Fail.”

Amy Adams and Danny Pino are honest and raw as Connor’s parents. Kaitlyn Dever is both believable and heartbreaking as Connor’s sister, Zoe, the object of Evan’s affections. The family’s “Requiem” trio shows their distance and struggle. Dever and Platt’s duet “Only Us” genuinely captures their unlikely burgeoning romance. Julianne Moore is fully present as Evan’s mostly absent mother. But her vocal skills are limited, and while there is an adjustment in her one number (“So Big/So Small”), the tentative vocal quality doesn’t fully suit the strength of the character.

The creators have expanded and softened the role of Alana Beck (Amandla Stenberg), the overachiever who heads up the Connor Project. In the play, there is a mercenary quality to Alana. Here, she is given a revelation of her issues with anxiety and depression, somehow diluting Evan’s isolation. Stenberg stunningly presents a new number—“The Anonymous Ones”—but there is something generic about both its sound and sentiment.

There is a general underplaying of the social media aspect that was hyper-present in the stage production. Film is an opportunity to explore cyberspace in a big (or even bigger) way. Instead, the creators opted for two brilliant, pivotal moments: the beautifully realized anthem “You Will Be Found” and later the online posting of the “Dear Evan Hansen” letter. However, there is a strange—and inaccurate—absence of cell phone use among the students.

But in the end, all are minor cavils. Dear Evan Hansen is a powerful, emotional, and, ultimately, important adaptation, celebrating the essence of a unique and unforgettable musical.

Rated PG-13, ‘Dear Evan Hansen’ is now playing in local theaters.