Sentences with phrase «live free jazz»

Not exact matches

Nat Hentoff's lived a full life writing not only about jazz, but about the principles of a free society.
Don't miss Discover West Concord Day with cake and ice cream to celebrate 28 years of Debra's Natural Gourmet, plus face painting, live jazz, a Mini Pumpkin Flower Arrangement workshop, coloring and crafts, local artists, free fudge, popcorn, pies, cider, a wine tasting, and so much more (Concord)
This free outdoor block party features live jazz, Latin, blues, funk, and groove performances, an instrument petting zoo, and a variety of food vendors.
Mr Social will offer alternative settings, including cocktail bar venues, live jazz and free - flowing Champagne, for millennial gay men to meet single people.
The profile you create is uniquely your own, so feel free to jazz it up with pictures and descriptions showing what kind of life you live and what you like to do in your spare time.
I have a great sense of humor, very romantic, a great listener and drama free;) I enjoy live music, smooth jazz, art shows or museuums, plays, comedy clubs, dinning out, traveling and spending time with my family and friends.
is your number one source for free Christian wallpaper, scripture wallpaper, bible verse wallpaper, spiritual wallpaper and Download free Christian Rock Radio and tune in to live radio streams featuring music from rock, pop, hip hop, country, 80s hits and jazz.
Music lovers in New York know that one of the best times in the city to see live music (oftentimes free) is during the summer when the many ongoing music festivals around the city gear up, offering everything from indie rock, classical, jazz and world music on a daily basis.
After disembarking, you are free to enjoy your evening at leisure; perhaps head to Bourbon Street for a nightcap in one of the bars on New Orleans» oldest street, or slip into a jazz bar for a night of live entertainment.
«Hors - Champs», a video filmed «live» by STAN DOUGLAS and one other camera man, records the performance of four American musicians playing a Free Jazz composition.
By choosing four American musicians (George Lewis - trombome; Douglas Ewart - saxophone; Kent Carter - bass, and Oliver Johnson - drums) who either lived in France during the Free Jazz moment or who still reside there today STAN DOUGLAS points to the continuous presence of African - American music in Europe, starting with Josephine Baker and Sidney Bechet and continuing to the present.
The exhibition also includes a recurring live performance entitled 3 -2-1 (2011/16), in which saxophonist André Vida improvises alongside musician Jemeel Moondoc's recorded lamentation in Long Sorrow, expanding on the dynamics of free jazz in a duet that changes with each recital.
The exhibition also includes a recurring live performance entitled 3 -2-1 (2011/16), in which saxophonist André Vida improvises alongside musician Jemeel Moondoc's recorded lamentation in Long Sorrow, expanding on the dynamics of free - jazz in a duet that changes with each recital.
For the duration of their respective Open Plan projects, painter Lucy Dodd and free jazz pioneer Cecil Taylor will be in residence creating unforgettable live experiences on floor five.
Originally from Osaka, Japan but currently living in Eaton, PA, Tatsuya Nakatani has articulated his own percussive style that combines free jazz, rock, noise and traditional Japanese folk music.
In 1963, a group that included Mr. Forakis, Mark di Suvero, Robert Grosvenor and Forrest Myers started exhibiting their work, playing free jazz and discussing the future of public sculpture in a floor at the top of a loft building in Lower Manhattan near Park Place, where several of them lived.
You can sample all the drinks, listen to live jazz, and eat free appetizers all night.
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