Music .

0

From Your Easy Chair

You don't have to leave home to enjoy the best of music.

Enjoy the best of music right from your own easy chair.

Austin City Limits – Saturdays at 10pm
AUSTIN CITY LIMITS continues its longstanding tradition of showcasing the best of original American music. Musical styles range from contemporary and traditional pop to rock, country, blues, bluegrass, Latin, folk, roots and more. All find a home on the AUSTIN CITY LIMITS stage.

Infinity Hall Live – Saturdays at 11pm
Celebrates the music and energy of groundbreaking American artists. The acoustically perfect Infinity Music Hall, a historic 130-year-old venue in Norfolk, Conn., provides an intimate setting for engaging, authentic and heartfelt performances by an eclectic group of musicians.

Live From the Artist’s Den – Sundays at Midnight
The Emmy®-nominated music series LIVE FROM THE ARTISTS DEN features a remarkable line-up of icons and emerging stars performing in unique and historic venues. The groundbreaking new season features Norah Jones, Rufus Wainwright, Mayer Hawthorne and The Wallflowers.

Tags:
0

Musical Menagerie: KC Symphony Petting Zoo

We tag along at the Kansas City Symphony Instrument Petting Zoo which travels to area classrooms to give elementary students the opportunity to see and hear the different instruments of the orchestra.

You’ve heard of a petting zoo, but what about an instrument petting zoo? It’s one of the Kansas City Symphony’s outreach projects designed to get younger kids up close and personal with the instruments of the orchestra.

Area Schools can sign up for the Kansas City Symphony Instrument Petting Zoo.

Children gathered around a woman as one girl tries using a clarinet

Because of extensive demand for this engaging program, it is preferred that second, third, and fourth grade students have the first opportunity to receive its benefits. Visits to classrooms are available for either morning or afternoon during one of the seven weeks listed.

Zoos will be filled in the order requests & signed contracts are received, with no request considered less than one week prior to the Zoo date. A maximum of three 45-minute sections may be held during one visit, with each section ideally consisting of no more than 80 students.

Your Classroom | $150
October 8-11, 2012
November 5-9, 2012
December 3-7, 2012
January 21-25, 2013
February 25-28, 2013
March 11-15, 2013
May 6-10, 2013

To take advantage of this exciting educational opportunity, please contact Education Manager Stephanie Brimhall at (816) 218-2639.

0

Les Miserables 25th Anniversary Concert

25th anniversary celebration of the legendary musical Les Miserables.

This epic story, taken from the Victor Hugo masterpiece, explores all conditions of the human heart in soaring music on a magnificent stage set.

0

BROADWAY: The American Musical

Watch Episode One: <strong>Give My Regards to Broadway (1893-1927)</strong> Sunday, October 7, 2012 at 9pm.

This six-part documentary series chronicles the Broadway Musical throughout the 20th century and explores the evolution of this uniquely American art form. The series draws on a wealth of archival news footage, lost and found television moments, original cast recordings, still photos, feature films, diaries, journals, intimate first-person accounts and on-camera interviews with many of the principals involved in creating the American musical.

Episode One
When Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. first hits New York in 1893, the intersection of Broadway and 42nd is nobody’s idea of “the crossroads of the world.” But by 1913, “The Ziegfeld Follies really were an amalgamation of everything that was happening in America … at that time,” says writer Philip Furia. “Flo Ziegfeld was like the Broadway equivalent of the melting pot itself.” Ziegfeld’s story introduces many of the era’s key figures: Irving Berlin, a Russian immigrant who becomes the voice of assimilated America; entertainers, such as Jewish comedienne Fanny Brice and African-American Bert Williams, who become America’s first “crossover” artists; and the brash Irish-American George M. Cohan, whose song-and-dance routines embody the energy of Broadway. This is also the story of the onset of a world war and the Red Summer of 1919, when labor unrest sweeps the nation — and Broadway. The episode culminates in Ziegfeld’s 1927 production of Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II’s far-sighted masterpiece, Show Boat. “The history of the American musical theater is divided quite simply into two eras: everything before Show Boat, and everything after Show Boat,” says writer Miles Kreuger. With the Great Depression, the Ziegfeld era becomes a memory. The episode features interviews with Irving Berlin’s daughter Mary Ellen Barrett, Ziegfeld Follies girls Doris Eaton and Dana O’Connell, New Yorker critic Brendan Gill, theater artist Al Hirschfeld, composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim and Ziegfeld’s daughter Patricia Z. Stephenson. Highlights include newly restored color footage of The Ziegfeld Follies and footage of Fanny Brice singing “My Man.”

Watch Episode One: Give My Regards to Broadway (1893-1927) Sunday, October 7, 2012 at 9pm.

Page 6 of 81« First...45678...203040...Last »