Ana Moura

Sunday, February 5, 7pm, Concert Hall

Portuguese vocalist Ana Moura, whose soulful and riveting interpretation of her land’s captivating fado style has made her a star in Europe, brings her gentle, persuasive magic to North American audiences through her albums on World Village. The 25-year-old singer has become a leading exponent of this poetic, deeply expressive idiom which personifies the Portuguese psyche as it explores such universal themes as lost love, separation, and longing. As Ana explains, “It’s very special because it’s all about emotions and feelings. It needs no translation.”

Reserved Seating: $30, $25, $15; FC, GCC, STCC and 17 & under $10

Ana Moura was born in Santarem, the bustling capital of the Ribatejo province in the center of Portugal’s heartland on the Tejo River northeast of Lisbon. The city of half a million souls is also one of Portugal’s most historic cities-an ideal place to develop an appreciation for fado. “I’ve been singing fado since I was little, because grew up listening to it at home,” she recalls of her early home life.

“My parents sang well, and at family gatherings we all would sing.” Like young people everywhere, she soon developed an appreciation for other styles of music. The lure of singing fado, however, never waned. In her late teens, while sing pop and rock music with a local band. Ana always included at least one fado in each performance. Then, one night on a whim, about the year 2000, she and some friends went to one of Lisbon’s storied fado houses-small performance venues where singers, guitarists and aficionados gather to worship the affecting style that’s become Portugal’s most important music export. At the urging of her companions, she sang.

“People liked me,” she recalls of her first foray into a venerated bastion of the fado culture. Later that year, at a Christmas party that was attended by a lot of fadistas (fado singers) and guitarists, she sang again and, as fate would have it, noted fado vocalist Maria de Fe was in the audience and was duly impressed. “She asked me to sing at her fado house,” Ana recalls of the fortuitous moment that launched her career. “My life changed when I began going to the fado houses,” Ana states today. “There’s no microphone-it’s very intimate. New singers learn through a kind of apprenticeship, learning the intricacies of the style from the older, more established singers.” Before long, word of Ana’s rich contralto, stunning looks and innate affinity for the demanding style spread, winning airtime on local television programs devoted to fado and rave reviews in Lisbon newspapers.

Music critic Miguel Esteves Cardoso captured her essence when he wrote of her “rare and primitive quality” and her “natural truth, without effort or premeditation.” Ana has emerged as a leading voice of traditional fado just as the venerable idiom is enjoying a renaissance of popularity.

The singer’s association with composer, producer, arranger and guitarist Jorge Fernando, the former guitar player of Amalia Rodrigues (the undisputed queen of fado, who died at the age of 79 in 1999) has helped stimulate her artistic development and has provided her with an alluring repertoire. “Today,” she explains, “there’s a new generation that sings lyrics related to our time. There are some older fado songs that we, the younger singers, cannot perform, because the lyrics are about a time and themes we don’t identify with. We don’t feel it, and fado is all about feelings. We must feel what we sing, and there are many older fados that don’t belong to our generation. Younger singers use lyrics that speak of today, so young people have begun to get more interested in the music again.”

As with jazz and country music in the U.S., tango in Argentina, samba in Brazil, fado sprang from the culture of working class people. And, as with the aforementioned examples, over the years the style evolved from humble origins to win broad appeal. Today, as Ana proudly proclaims, “In Portugal, fado is for everyone.” Like virtually every aspiring fadista, Ana drew early inspiration from the example of Amalia Rodrigues, the revered singer who most personified the style. “It was her soul and her voice,” she comments of the late vocalist’s singular imprint on the music. “She had everything in her. Some singers have a great voice by no soul, no intensity. Others have feeling but not a suitable voice. She had it all, and, she was a very good improviser.”

Improvising is an under-appreciated part of the fado tradition. One technique, which Ana uses to great effect on the song “Lavava no rio lavava” (I Went to the River to Wash), is what the Portuguese term vocalizes-the expression of words and effects through use of vocal trills. The practice is believed to have been absorbed over centuries of exposure to Spanish flamenco and Moorish styles.

A key track from her debut album exquisitely sums up the magnetic pull fado has exerted on Ana. “Sou do fado, sou fadista” (I Belong to Fado, I Am a Fadista) by her mentor and primary collaborator, guitarist Jorge Femando, eloquently explains Ana’s total surrender to the style: “I know my soul has surrendered, taken my voice in hand, twisted in my chest and shown it to the world. And I have closed my eyes in a wistful longing to sing, to sing. And a voice sings to me softly, and a voice enchants me softly, I belong to fado, I belong to fado, I am a fadista.”

In June of 2008, Ana Moura made her triumphant debut at two of Portugal’s legendary venues – the Coliseu do Porto and Lisbon’s Coliseu dos Recreios. Her performances were termed unforgettable by the audience and the press. Special guests included two leading figures in the history of fado – Beatriz da Conceição and Maria da Fé – as well as Moura’s music producer and collaborator, Jorge Fernando. World Village released an album with material from those two live performances in 2011, titled Coliseu.

To hear samples or purchase music check out her itunes store.

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The Color Purple

Special Presentation

Tuesday, January 31 & Wednesday, February 1, 7:30PM, Concert Hall

From the classic Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Alice Walker and the moving film by Steven Spielberg comes a soul-stirring new musical and landmark Broadway event. The Color Purple is an inspiring family saga that tells the unforgettable story of a woman who, through love, finds the strength to triumph over adversity and discover her unique voice in the world. Set to a joyous score featuring jazz, ragtime, gospel, and blues, The Color Purple is a story of hope, a testament to the healing power of love, and a celebration of life.

Reserved Seating: $45, $35, $20; FC, GCC, STCC and 17 & under $20

(Special Event: No Discounts)

This production of The Color Purple, produced by Phoenix Entertainment ~ Joyful Noisemakers LLC, helmed by Stephen Kane and Michael McFadden, is the next phase in the life of the ground-breaking Broadway hit musical produced by Scott Sanders. The original Broadway musical opened on December 1, 2005, and was nominated for eleven Tony Awards®, including Best Musical. The Color Purple ran for over two years on Broadway followed by a three year First National Tour.

The Color Purple is based on the classic Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Alice Walker and the moving film by Steven Spielberg. It is the unforgettable and inspiring story of a woman named Celie, who finds the strength to triumph over adversity, and discover her unique voice in the world. With a joyous, GRAMMY®-nominated score featuring gospel, jazz, pop and the blues, The Color Purple is about hope and the healing power of love.

Michael Kuchwara of the Associated Press described The Color Purple as “a Roof-Raising story of triumph.” And Richard Corliss of TIME Magazine said, “[it is] a soaring, epic tale. It made a joyful noise in my heart.” Elysa Gardner from USA Today raved, “Pure heart! It celebrates the inspiring relationships of faith and love, A Broadway hit!”

The Color Purple is directed by Gary Griffin and features a libretto by Pulitzer Prize-winner Marsha Norman, music and lyrics by Grammy Award®-winning composers/lyricists Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray, and choreography by Donald Byrd. Rounding out the creative team are Tony Award®-winner John Lee Beatty (sets), Paul Tazewell (costumes), Tony Award®-winner Brian MacDevitt (lighting), Craig Cassidy (sound design), Steven M. Bishop (Orchestrations/Arrangements), and Jasper Grant (Music Director).

Stephen Kane and Michael McFadden have long been principal partners of Phoenix Entertainment and collectively share theatrical touring credits spanning nearly three decades on four continents. Their production repertoire includes: Grease starring Frankie Avalon, The Will Rogers Follies starring Larry Gatlin, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Gypsy, Man of La Mancha, The Pajama Game, Fame, Godspell, The Vagina Monologues, The King & I, Smokey Joe’s Café, Singin’ in the Rain, Buddy, Ring of Fire and Late Nite Catechism, among others.

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Günter “Baby” Sommer/Wadada Leo Smith Duo

A deep breath after dropping Wadada Leo Smith at the airport (too) early on Saturday morning.

The UMass Fine Arts Center and the DEFA Film Library have just concluded an extended residency with the great trumpeter and composer, along with his counterpart from half-way across the world: percussionist Günter Baby Sommer.

If Wadada’s visit from California, where he teaches at CalArts, seemed extravagant, Baby Sommer’s trip from his native Dresden was simply over the top. The master drummer was visiting Massachusetts for the first time, spending the better part of a week interacting with artists, students and academics, culminating Friday’s historic concert. And other than a concert in Worcester, and a small performance with Marion Brown in Boston many years ago, Wadada was also a stranger to Massachusetts.

Also in town was the acclaimed German filmmaker, Jürgen Böttcher and visual artist, Strawalde, (who are one and the same), and his son Lucas Böttcher, a celebrated video artist. The elder Böttcher, who turned 80 earlier in the year, was celebrated with screenings of his films at Pleasant St and Amherst Cinema, interviews, Q & A’s with the public and interaction with curators and the collections from Mass MOCA, Clark and UMass University Museum.

The idea that Smith and Sommer could come together from such disparate backgrounds and communicate so deeply, so intuitively through sound, is one of the things that attracts me to this music. Throughout their time together, both on stage and off, theirs was a mutual admiration society; the respect they had for each other was clear. But they actually spent precious little time together during the visit. Other than the hour they spent on-air with me at WMUA-FM, and their 70-minute performance, they were with their respective entourages.

With his drumming and his open-minded and open-hearted demeanor, I have a feeling Günter Sommer made a lot of friends in the Pioneer Valley last week. On Thursday, he captivated UMass music students with his knowledge and humanity. He began with a sketch of his musical development. He talked about the seminal role Willis Conover and his Voice of America broadcasts had on him (and he said every jazz musician he had ever met from Soviet Union and Socialist Europe). He talked of his love affair with American jazz, his mastery of the rudiments.

He told them the story of his nickname: By 1964, Günter was starting to get restless. As much as he loved American jazz, and as much as he understood the cultural, racial and political dimensions of the music, he also understood that if he was going to put his whole being into this music, he had to find his unique contribution, something that reflected who he was. One day in band rehearsal, as he was adding new elements to his drumming, the director stopped the proceeding and started to yell at Sommer, “what are you doing! Do you think you are an innovator like Baby Dodds.” At which point the trombonist in the band says to everyone, “that is not Baby Dodds, that is Baby Sommers!” Since that day, he has carried the name, proudly, he says. And he started to accumulate antique and obsolete European instruments, creating a deeply personal variety of sounds.

The workshop featured some solo playing from Baby and improvised duets with three different students. The students were amazed and enthused to see a musician being creative, using a couple of disembodied pipes from an organ fitted with foot-operated air pedals for instance, or vocalizing in an uninhibited way. He told the students there are no wrong notes, that they are having a conversation, getting to know each other. The students later raved about the hour to their professor, Tom Giampietro.

Baby also played a half-hour solo set at Amherst Cinema on Wednesday, before a screening of “A Place in Berlin”, Böttcher’s look at the evolution of a massive statute of Marx and Engel, that features Sommer and saxophonist Dietmar Desner. Baby’s solo is perfect and a revelation to the audience, none who had seen him perform and just a handful who had ever heard of him. Filled with humor, technical skill, and a fertile imagination, the recital featured an endless variety of sounds and textures, deep grooves and ethereal resonances. Masterful.

The Solos & Duos Series concert was a home run. After the first piece, the audience just kept clapping and clapping, about two minutes longer than anything I had experienced in my 23 years of presenting on campus. The standing ovation they received at the end was spontaneous and heart-felt. Wadada and Baby have been performing together since the late 1970s, when the much-missed German bassist, Peter Kowald brought them together. After Kowald’s passing in 2002, Wadada and Baby decided to leave the bass chair empty. Most of their work has been in Europe. This was their fourth U.S. concert. The concert, including an encore, was about 70 minutes, but felt much shorter. Sommer was a constant bubbling presence, moving from sound to sound, alternating grooves and textures, making music (harmony, melody, rhythm) from a small percentage of his vast array of devices. Wadada, on the other hand played nothing but trumpet, but that was quite enough. Delicate stabs of melody, shards of conversations and accents provided a perfect counterpoint for Baby’s morphing bed of percussion.

This whole project was a true cultural exchange. Everyone involved seemed to sense the profundity of the moment. During a reception at my house on Thursday, in his halting English, Jürgen Böttcher presented me with a beautiful signed catalogue of his work. He told me how meaningful it was to him, to have lived through the war and the Nazi regime, and to be accepted into an American home and shown such love and respect. The feeling was mutual.

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Gunter “Baby” Sommer/Wadada Leo Smith Duo

Friday, December 2, 2011, Bezanson Recital Hall

The Solos & Duos Series, produced by the Fine Arts Center at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, concludes its 10th season with a concert by the Wadada Leo Smith/Günter ‘Baby’ Sommer Duo.

General Admission: $10; Students $5

Günter ‘Baby’ Sommer is one of the master musicians of contemporary European jazz, a percussionist of enormous originality and humor, who has recorded with Cecil Taylor, Peter Brötzmann and Günter Grass. Trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith is a hugely influential trumpeter and educator, who has worked with every major improviser of the last 40 years.

There is a small tradition of trumpet and drums duos in jazz: Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell in 1969, and Bill Dixon and Tony Oxley in 1997. Smith and Sommer, who have been playing together since the late 1970s, add to this legacy. “The cinematic effect of this music is absolutely uncanny,” writes Thom Jurek.

“This duo has established its own abstract-concrete musical space,” writes Oliver Schwerdt in the liner notes to Wisdom in Time (Intakt, 2006). “In a mature dimension, magic can be produced like this, using spurs to ramble to a cosmic organon: essential fruits of a long life. As demanding as they are pleasing. World-class calm.”

Born in Dresden, East Germany, in 1943, Sommer studied at the Hochschule für Musik “Carl Maria von Weber” from 1962-66. (He now teaches at the University.) He was soon performing with masters like saxophonist Ernst-Ludwig Petrowksy and pianist Ulrich Gumpert, and has released over 100 recordings with Peter Kowald, Evan Parker, Derek Bailey and Barre Phillips.

Born in Leland, Mississippi, in 1941, Wadada Leo Smith has been a celebrated teacher at CalArts since 1993, a life-long member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Music, winner of numerous grants and awards from the NEA and Guggenheim Foundation, and collaborated with Muhal Richard Abrams, Anthony Braxton, Leroy Jenkins, Roscoe Mitchell, Lester Bowie, Joseph Jarman, George Lewis, Cecil Taylor, Oliver Lake, Anthony Davis, Carla Bley, David Murray, Don Cherry and Jeanne Lee, among many others. “Leo Smith is one of the most vital musicians on the planet today,” writes Bill Shoemaker. “To say that Smith is a highly original player would be an understatement.”

In collaboration with the University’s DEFA Film Library, a screening of Juergen Boettcher’s celebrated 2001 experimental documentary, “A Place in Berlin”, which features “Baby” Sommer, will take place, Thursday, Dec. 1 at the Amherst Cinema. Sommer will also perform a short solo set.

To hear samples from or to purchase their newest collaboration check out the itunes store.

The Solos & Duos Series is produced by the UMass Fine Arts Center. Thanks to the UMass Hotel at the Campus Center. Amherst College and WMUA, 91.1FM

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Satyagraha

Spirit & Soul: Escorted Bus Tour

Saturday, November 19, Metropolitan Opera House, New York City

Composer: Philip Glass, Librettists: Constance de John & Philip Glass

The Met’s visually extravagant production is back for an encore engagement. Richard Croft once again sings Gandhi in Philip Glass’s unforgettable opera, which the Washington Post calls “a profound and beautiful work of theater.” Sung in Sanskrit with English supertitles

Tickets: $175 each, all inclusive. Subscriber’s special: $160 each before July 1.

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Arlo Guthrie

Boys Night Out

Friday, November 18, 8pm, Concert Hall

Three generations of Guthrie boys on stage! Arlo Guthrie is gearing up for the Guthrie “Boys’ Night Out” with Abe and Krishna. For over four decades, Arlo Guthrie has toured the world winning a broad and dedicated following. In addition to being an accomplished musician, Guthrie is a natural-born storyteller whose hilarious tales and timeless anecdotes are woven seamlessly into his performances.

Reserved Seating: $35, $30, $15; FC, GCC, STCC and 17 & under $10

One of the great 20th century American folk singers—and consummate storytellers—comes to the Center with his son Abe Guthrie, grandson Krishna Guthrie, and longtime collaborator, Terry a La Berry for a highly entertaining evening of folk favorites, amusing stories, and witty anecdotes. “A hour and a half in the presence of Guthrie is like receiving the most enjoyable and authoritative master class on 20th century American folk music one could possibly have.” (The Independent, London) The son of singer-songwriter and activist Woody Guthrie, Arlo’s career exploded in 1967 with the release of his highly original “Alice’s Restaurant,” a satirical anti-war anthem. The record spun off a hit movie and Guthrie became a cultural hero to a new generation espousing social consciousness and activism. A gifted musician on the piano, six and twelve-string guitar, harmonica and a dozen other instruments, Guthrie has equal talent for clever repartee, promising an event the whole family will enjoy.

If you’ve been to an Arlo Guthrie concert in the past 20 years, it’s likely you’ve seen Abe and heard his adept and tasteful keyboard accompaniment along with his powerful supporting vocals. It was rare to see an Arlo show without Abe by his side. Arlo, who has just completed a year-long Solo Reunion Tour, said, “Abe is just a great musician. I can’t wait to get back to playing together.” Krishna Guthrie, at only 17, is already an accomplished musician playing drums and guitar. He got his first drum set at two; by three he had already made his first appearance with his father and grandfather on stage. Since then, he has occasionally joined the family on stage playing drums. This summer Arlo travels with his son and grandson for the Guthrie Boys’ Night Out. The name says it all. This is a ‘must-see’ show for fans of all ages.

Arlo Guthrie was born with a guitar in one hand and a harmonica in the other, in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York in 1947. He is the eldest son of America’s most beloved singer/writer/philosopher Woody Guthrie and Marjorie Mazia Guthrie, a professional dancer with the Martha Graham Company and founder of The Committee to Combat Huntington’s Disease.

He grew up surrounded by dancers and musicians: Pete Seeger, Ronnie Gilbert, Fred Hellerman and Lee Hays (The Weavers), Leadbelly, Cisco Houston, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, all of whom were significant influences on Arlo’s musical career. Guthrie gave his first public performance in 1961 at age 13 and quickly became involved in the music that was shaping the world.

Arlo practically lived in the most famous venues of the “Folk Boom” era. In New York City he hung out at Gerdes Folk City, The Gaslight and The Bitter End. In Boston’s Club 47, and in Philadelphia he made places like The 2nd Fret and The Main Point his home. He witnessed the transition from an earlier generation of ballad singers like Richard Dyer-Bennet and blues-men like Mississippi John Hurt, to a new era of singer-song writers such as Bob Dylan, Jim Croce, Joan Baez, and Phil Ochs. He grooved with the beat poets like Allen Ginsburg and Lord Buckley, and picked with players like Bill Monroe and Doc Watson. He learned something from everyone and developed his own style, becoming a distinctive, expressive voice in a crowded community of singer-songwriters and political-social commentators.

Arlo Guthrie’s career exploded in 1967 with the release of “Alice’s Restaurant”, whose title song premiered at the Newport Folk Festival helped foster a new commitment among the ’60s generation to social consciousness and activism. Arlo went on to star in the 1969 Hollywood film version of “Alice’s Restaurant”, directed by Arthur Penn.

With songs like “Alice’s Restaurant”, too long for radio airplay; “Coming into Los Angeles”, banned from many radio stations (but a favorite at the 1969 Woodstock Festival); and the definitive rendition of Steve Goodman’s “City of New Orleans”, Guthrie was no One-Hit-Wonder. An artist of international stature, he has never had a ‘hit’ in the usual sense. He has usually preferred to walk to his own beat rather than march in step to the drum of popular culture.

Arts Give Back: Please bring non-perishable food items to donate to the Amherst Survival Center.

For more information about Arlo Guthrie and the Guthrie Boys’ Night Out Tour, visit www.risingsonrecords.com.

To hear samples or purchase music check out the itunes store.

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The Tia Fuller Quartet