Tag Archives: live music

Montgomery Symphony Orchestra Concert: Sleighbells and Swansongs

The Montgomery Symphony Orchestra invites you to join us for our Winter concert, “Sleighbells and Swansongs,” on Sunday, December 3rd, at 3pm.  Located at Sligo Seventh-day Adventist Church in Takoma Park, MD, Free admission and parking.

Feeding the Body: Astral and Physical | Bushmeat, On Ka’a Davis, and Jamal Moore in Concert

Bushmeat Sound Presents
A Concert of New Music for Contemporary Jazz Trio
served with Vegan Bushmeat Stew

Featuring Live Painting by Khalid Thompson

suggested donation is $20

yummy stew* is limited to availability

Doors: 5:30pm
Meal: 6:00
Music: 7:00

(We will play one long set or
two shorter ones depending
on how we feel.)

>> Drawing inspiration from outer realms of Blackness, guitarist On Ka’a Davis channels Sun Ra, P-Funk, Hendrix, Fela Kuti and more into the survivalist politics of the East Village underground arts community. Full with cosmic light, his playing rings with lyricism and polyrhythmic complexity. On Ka’a Davis arrived onto the jazz scene in the early 80s, most notably playing with the Sun Ra Arkestra as well as Don Ayler’s Septet. Over the years, Davis has recorded and or worked with a vast array of great artists including Luther Thomas, Charles ‘Bobo’ Shaw, Matt Shipp, Simone Weissenfel, William Parker, Jemeel Moondoc, Kenny Wollesen, Juni Booth, Sabir Mateen, Daniel Carter and as a member of Avram Fefer’s Rivers on Mars, which featured the late Greg Tate on laptop. He is also a bandleader, having created the critically acclaimed Famous Original Djuke Music Players.
>> Multi-instrumentalist Jamal R. Moore is a native of Baltimore Maryland and a composing performer and educator whose imprint on 21st Century jazz has been huge. His educational background includes California Institute of The Arts, Berklee College of Music, the Eubie Blake Jazz Orchestra, and historically acclaimed Frederick Douglass High School where fellow Baltimore notables Thurgood Marshall, Cab Calloway, and Ethel Ennis also went.
Jamal has worked and recorded with are Wadada Leo Smith, Roscoe Mitchell, Nicole Mitchell, Archie Shepp, David Ornette Cherry, Tomeka Reid, Dr. Bill Cole, DJ Lou Gorbea, George Duke, Sheila E, David Murray, JD Parran, Ras Moshe, Hprizm (Antipop Consortium), Tatsuya Nakatani, Hamid Drake and the late Yahyah Abdul Majid (Sun Ra Arkestra). Moore is an affiliate of the late Horace Tapscott’s Pan African Peoples Arkestra, David Boykin’s Black Praxis, a member of Konjur Collective, and co-creator (with Luke Stewart) of Ancestral Duo. Jamal Moore currently leads Akebulan Arkestra, Napata Strings, Black Elements Quartet, Organix Trio, and Mojuba Duo.
>> Thomas Stanley lives a short distance from the Chesapeake Bay where he is co-parenting two school-aged sons. As an artist, author, and activist deeply committed to audio culture in the service of personal growth and noetic (r)evolution, Stanley has performed and curated musical sound for most of his adult life. From 2008-2022, Dr. Stanley hosted Bushmeat’s Jam Session, a weekly FM music show, arguably the world’s first and only blackadelic radio program. Stanley is the author of The Execution of Sun Ra (Wasteland Press, 2014), a critical response to the cosmic prognostications of the late jazz iconoclast. Dr. Stanley has spent three decades exploring the ramifications of Alter Destiny, Sun Ra’s unique construct for an authentically survivable Future. He has written and lectured extensively on emergent musical cultures and their connection to struggles for social justice and psychosocial liberation. He is co-author of George Clinton and P-Funk: An Oral History (1998). His doctoral work at the University of Maryland (2009) examined Butch Morris’s Conduction method as an extended meta-instrument offering unique opportunities for musical pedagogy and ensemble consciousness. Dr. Stanley is currently an associate professor of Sound Art, Sound Studies, and Consciousness at George Mason University.

* Bushmeat Stew is vegan and free of peanuts and tree nuts, but may contain coconut milk.

Hispanic Heritage Concert

Co-sponsored by the Washington Adventist University Department of Music and the WAU Latino Club, come join us for an evening of music celebrating Hispanic Heritage.

Fusing the Music From China To Appalachia and Beyond

Part workshop, part masterclass, the program will give a detailed view of their instrumentation, particularly the lesser known Yanqin (Chinese Hammered Dulcimer), along with five-string banjo, cello banjo, gourd banjo, mandolin, ukulele and percussion. The band will co-show how they fuse their eclectic musical instruments and ideas for both an arranged piece and an improvised piece of music. If people bring instruments, they will teach 1 Chinese tune that easily adapts to American old-time instruments. Q & A to follow and a last tune.

Samoa Wilson Trio

Since she was 12 years old, Samoa Wilson has been captivating audiences with a voice the New York Times calls “sweet, effortless, old-timey”. Raised in the riverbed of traditional North American folk music, she came up in the Boston scene, under the wing of jug band and folk legend Jim Kweskin. Her two duos, the Four O’Clock Flowers, and Fatboy Wilson & Old Viejo Bones, have become staples of the thriving New York City folk community. Additionally, her vintage jazz trio has been filling ears with material from the golden era of 20’s and 30’s musical treasure; a sound at once more bluesy and more contemporary than expected. Her choice of repertoire makes the difference: torchy and honeyed renditions of haunting little-known tunes, from a woman’s perspective. From the source of the traditional and classic material, she poses a modern complaint, salutes the transformation of women’s work and suffering into women’s triumph.

“ … a deep understanding of the early era of recorded pop … a gorgeous, fun sound.” — The Boston Herald

Montgomery Symphony Orchestra: Poems of Pastures and Pranksters

The Montgomery Symphony Orchestra invites you to join us at our Fall concert, “Poems of Pastures and Pranks,” at Sligo Seventh-day Adventist Church in Takoma Park, MD. Free admission and parking.

Richard Strauss, Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 6 “Pastorale”

D.C. Sing-Along at School of Musical Traditions

Sing your heart out, together, with the D.C. Sing-Along!

The D.C. Sing-Along is a hootenanny for the digital age. Combining the communal spirit of ’60s sing-alongs with a modern songbook and rawk ‘tude, the D.C. Sing-Along is a heartwarming, cathartic, and analog good time.

Songbooks and kazoos provided, no musical ability needed. Chords are provided for musicians — feel free to bring acoustic instruments. Free!

Bluegrass & Books: Cane Mill Road from Boone, NC + ‘American Ending’ author

Enjoy music and lore of Appalachia with Cane Mill Road’s brand of NC bluegrass, and Mary Kay Zuravleff reading from American Ending, which made Oprah’s Spring Reading List! This new work of historical fiction takes place in Appalachia making it a perfect match for Cane Mill Road. Their style of music originated alongside the ancestors who inspired American Ending’s story.

This fabulous evening is hosted by Maureen Andary at Takoma Park’s newest venue, Takoma Spark at the School of Musical Traditions. Books will be sold on site by People’s Book – a brand new, woman-owned, book store in Takoma Park.

Join us ! Complementary refreshments will be served. Seating is limited and is first come first serve. KIDS 12 and UNDER ARE FREE – just don’t purchase a ticket for them; they can come on in 🙂

Takoma Park Folk Festival

Reconnect with Your Community at the Takoma Park Folk Festival!!

Sunday, September 10 from 10:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.

• Hear the best musicians in our Region!
• Six Stages, Indoor & Outdoor, Rain or Shine
• Family Friendly
• Live Music, Craft Vendors, Great Food from around the world, Information booths, jamming, children’s activities.

The Takoma Park Folk Festival is a free annual festival featuring music from around the world on six stages in Takoma Park, Maryland. This year features a whole new lineup of performers reflecting our region’s diversity with a wide-range of roots music in a multiplicity of genres.

Location: Takoma Park Middle School & Lee Jordan Field

Details at https://www.tpff.org/

All-Beethoven House Concert

Chamber Music House Concert At BannerArts, 7502 Flower Ave, Takoma Park MD 20912.
Samuel Zhu, violin, Emma Hays Johnson, cello, and Carl Banner, piano
Program:
Piano Sonata in C minor, Op. 13
Sonata No. 5 in F, Op. 24 (“Spring”) for violin and piano
Theme and Variations for piano, Op. 26
Sonata No. 2 in G minor, Op. 5 No. 2 for cello and piano

Admission $20, advance only.

SSTPMA Community Art Fair

Silver Spring and Takoma Park Mutual Aid will be holding a community art fair on July 22nd from 10-2 at the TPSS Co-op! This is meant to be a space that centers art and community with local art and craft vendors, live music, food, chalk art, jewelry making, and more fun activities. All vendors will donate a portion of their proceeds to SSTPMA. Donations will go to direct aid for local individuals and families. You can learn more about our work here: https://sstpmutualaid.wordpress.com/

For event accessibility and up to date information, please check out our instagram and facebook @sstpmutualaid
If you will need any additional accommodations, feel free to email [email protected]

Celebrating Rhizome DC Parade and Film Screening

6 pm – Party at Rhizome at 6950 Maple Street NW

7 pm – Parade to the Takoma Park Community Center at 7500 Maple Avenue

7:30 pm – Film Screening and Concert at the Community Center

Since its founding in 2015, Rhizome DC has offered a home for experimental music, unconventional art, and eclectic performances tucked inside an unassuming house bordering downtown Takoma Park. Now we’re celebrating Rhizome with a multi-media party stretching across the city so bring your walking shoes!

Please join us at 6 pm on June 30 for a free party with music and conversation at Rhizome. Bring some noisemakers (kids can use their outdoor voices) for a festive parade at 7 pm from Rhizome to the Takoma Park Community Center at 7500 Maple Avenue.

At the Community Center, a free film screening will feature the Rhizome Is Home documentary along with a Q&A with film director Tatev Sargsyan. Using interviews and clips of previous performances, the film explores Rhizome’s representation of marginalized voices in the arts and resilience under threat of dislocation from the shape-shifting forces of gentrification.

Following the film screening, the CMW Players will take the stage for a short experimental music concert. Don’t miss it!

This event is part of the Takoma Park Arts series organized by the City of Takoma Park’s Arts and Humanities Division. The series includes free art exhibitions, film screenings, poetry readings, concerts, theater, and dance performances at the Takoma Park Community Center. Please go to takomaparkmd.gov/arts for more info and to sign up for our e-newsletter.

For more info about Rhizome, go to rhizomedc.org.