Tag: Kulture Kool

  • N2S RETURNS IN JUNE TO SPOTLIGHT NJ’S CULTURE, CREATIVITY AND DIVERSITY

    N2S RETURNS IN JUNE TO SPOTLIGHT NJ’S CULTURE, CREATIVITY AND DIVERSITY

    • By Mabel Pais

    The North to Shore (N2S) Festival, after its astounding success with hundreds of thousands of attendees and participants at its inaugural N2S in June 2023, returns in June 2024 with a repetition of the three-city, three weekend celebration of the arts and ideas across New Jersey.

    Conceived by Governor Phil Murphy and First Lady Tammy Murphy, the North to Shore Festival was designed to spotlight New Jersey’s culture, creativity, and diversity. The lineup begins this year in Asbury Park June 10-16, swings down the Shore to Atlantic City June 17-23, and concludes in Newark June 24-30 at several locations in each city.

    The North to Shore Festival will feature scores of diverse and talented artists you won’t want to miss, including Kevin Hart, Matchbox Twenty, Gary Clark, Jr., The B-52s, Gabriel Iglesias, Bleachers, Jeezy, Scarface, Barenaked Ladies, Lake Street Dive, Prince Royce & Wisin, Keyshia Cole and Trey Songz, Frankie Valli, Stephen Colbert, as well as film screenings, live podcasts, and engaging panels.

    Performer Jarod Clemons (Credit Jeremy Smith / NJPAC)

    “Our inaugural North to Shore Festival was the beginning of a proud, new annual tradition that brings some of the biggest stars to New Jersey to bolster our tourism industry and boost demand for our local businesses,” said Governor Phil Murphy. “I’m thrilled to announce this year’s lineup features a number of world-renowned acts that will hit the stages in Newark, Asbury Park, and Atlantic City this June. This year’s festival will be even bigger and better than ever before, and we look forward to welcoming those from near and far to experience our unique state this summer.” The announcement was made during a press conference in March 2024 at the iconic Stone Pony in Asbury Park, the heart of the Jersey Shore music scene where festival organizers, state leaders, and the arts community came together to celebrate the next edition of North to Shore.

    “The North to Shore Festival is an opportunity to showcase all that New Jersey has to offer, including some of the best local and global acts, our incredible diversity and unique culture,” said First Lady Tammy Murphy. “As we announce this year’s lineup for the three-city, month-long celebration, I eagerly anticipate another chance to enjoy New Jersey’s music, art and food scene alongside people from all over the state and nation.”

    In its inaugural year, North to Shore was designed to be an economic engine for the state. Organizers’ goals were far exceeded as the newborn festival drew an audience of nearly 250,000 to experience more than 300 artists in more than 100 venues in three of New Jersey’s most arts-rich cities. While most festival events were free to the public, ticketed events brought in $7.6 million in ticket sales.

    “Last year’s inaugural North to Shore Festival proved to be a tremendous success for New Jersey’s communities, cities, and economy. As part of Governor Murphy’s vision to make New Jersey the best place to live, work, and raise a family, this three-week festival celebrates and showcases the strength of our state’s talent and diversity in innovation and arts,” said NJEDA (New Jersey Economic Development Authority) Chief Executive Officer Tim Sullivan. “The NJEDA is proud to take part in this year’s North to Shore Festival, which will not only bring world-class talent back to New Jersey but will help boost the economy at the heart of the summer season by supporting local restaurants, hotels, venues, and main streets.”

    New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC) is producing this three-week extravaganza in collaboration with partners Casinoeed Reinvestment Development Authority, NJM Insurance Group, NJ Travel & Tourism, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, Outfront Media, RWJBarnabas Health, and United Airlines, with leadership support from this year’s title sponsor, Prudential Financial.

    “We are proud to serve as title sponsor for North to Shore and help showcase the creativity and diversity that defines New Jersey and our home city of Newark,” said Shané Harris, Vice President and Head of Social Responsibility, Prudential Financial, President, The Prudential Foundation. “A vibrant cultural scene is key to having thriving communities, and we are excited to continue our long-standing relationship with NJPAC to bring North to Shore’s creative economic engine to Newark and across the state.”

    Producing partners this year include Montclair Film and Newark International Film Festival, which together will add a curated film component to the festival; TechUnited:NJ, which will join North to Shore by hosting more than 5,000 attendees at the Propelify Innovation Festival, showcasing tech leaders, emerging startups, and cutting edge technology; Stockton University, which will manage a series of E-Games competitions and soccer programming in Atlantic City; and Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey (Horizon BCBSNJ), which in collaboration with NJPAC and the NJEDA will host virtual discussions on maternal health, the arts as a catalyst to health, and food insecurity.

    A portion of ticket sales to select events will support Growing Healthy Pantries — a partnership among Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, Community FoodBank of New Jersey, FoodBank of South Jersey, Fulfill, Mercer Street Friends, Norwescap, and Feeding America — which addresses food security statewide. Growing Healthy Pantries helps 900 food pantries in all 21 counties promote healthy food choices to improve the overall health of New Jerseyans.

    “Thousands of families rely on New Jersey’s 900 community pantries and the major food banks that provide the healthy foods they distribute,” said Jonathan Pearson, Horizon’s Director of Corporate Social Responsibility and Executive Director of The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey. “Good health begins with good nutrition. Support for Growing Healthy Pantries adds an important social mission to the North to Shore Festival that expands the impact of this event to every corner of the State.”

    NJPAC once again provided direct grants to artists, nonprofits, small businesses, and art organizations based in each host city to self-produce performing and visual art events during the festival. The grants, which total $367,000 this year, support the creative economy of each city, and give a platform to artists and arts organizations that call New Jersey home. A full list of grant recipients is available at northtoshore.com.

    Additionally, for the first time, grants have been provided to artists interested in performing on the North to Shore Festival Community Showcase Stages, centrally located performance venues in each city, including the Audible Showcase Stage in Newark.

    “We are thrilled to bring North to Shore back to the Garden State this summer to celebrate the vast diversity and top-notch talent that is quintessential New Jersey,” said NJPAC CEO John Schreiber. “In its inaugural year, North to Shore proved to be an economic driver for the businesses and downtown districts that serve our state’s residents day-in and day-out. I’m proud to bring that support back to three of our most iconic cities this summer.”

    This year, festival goers can maximize the festival experience with the North to Shore app, where they can plan their schedule, explore artists, buy tickets, get access to exclusive content and giveaways, and more.

    “Asbury Park is ready to shine for a second year as one of the host cities of the North to Shore Festival,” said Asbury Park Mayor John Moor. “We are eager to share the talent and energy that makes our small city so captivating with the rest of the state and beyond. 

    “It is an especially proud moment for us as the iconic Stone Pony is celebrating its 50th Anniversary in 2024,” Moor continued. “North to Shore is tapping the expected and unexpected venues in town and will be presenting a wide variety of acts and activations. We are honored to kick off this year’s festival and look forward to seeing everyone in Asbury Park in June.”

    “The Great City of Atlantic City got to showcase why we’re among the entertainment capitals of the country during last year’s North to Shore Festival, and we’re looking forward to getting another opportunity this time around,” said City of Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small, Sr. “Everything that makes our city special and unique, particularly in the arts and culture scene, will once again be on full display as we promise this festival will be even bigger and better in year number two.

    “Newark has long been a hotspot for talented artists, entrepreneurs and innovators to grow, perform and master their craft,” said Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka.  “With dozens of entertainment venues- including New Jersey Performing Arts Center – as well as authentic restaurants, boutique shops and recreation facilities available, Newark is a perfect location to host North to Shore.

    TICKETS

    Tickets to this year’s festival are available now at NorthtoShore.com.

    The North to Shore (N2S) Festival

    The North to Shore Festival, launched in 2023, features all the talent, diversity and creativity that New Jersey has to offer, packed into three extraordinary weekends of performances, screenings, parties and conversations in three of the state’s most iconic cities. Hosted by Atlantic City, Asbury Park, and Newark, the North to Shore Festival brings together events at more than 100 venues for an over-the-top showcase of Jersey excellence, aligned with Governor Phil Murphy and First Lady Tammy Murphy’s vision of a celebration worthy of the Garden State’s long legacy of innovation in the arts, film and technology. For the latest updates on festival concerts, screenings and more, visit northtoshore.com and follow the festival on Instagram, X, Facebook, and TikTok.

    The New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC)

    Visit njpac.org for more information.

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Cuisine, Spirituality, Health & Wellness, Business, and Education)

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    KULTURE KOOL HONORS AAPI MONTH  WHILE CELEBRATING 15 YEARS

    • By Mabel Pais
    Archana Athalye, Founder-Artistic Director (Credit: kulturekool.com)

    Kulture Kool, North Jersey’s leading South Asian Cultural Center, is thrilled to celebrate its 15-year anniversary show, ‘Utsav: Celebrations of India,’ at the Memorial Auditorium, Montclair State University, June 1, 1-4 pm.

    The event, perfectly timed to honor Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month, promises to be an extraordinary journey through the vibrant festivals celebrated in India throughout the calendar year, featuring cultural immersion, entertainment, and a grand audio-visual spectacle. More than 200 performers, ranging in age from 3 to 50, will take the stage to bring the rich traditions and colorful celebrations of India to life. Attendees can expect a captivating showcase of Indian performing arts, including dance, music, and storytelling.

    The theme, ‘Utsav,’ embodies the spirit of joy and unity found in Indian festivals, making it an unforgettable experience for audiences of all backgrounds.

    Kulture Kool dancers (Credit: kulturekool.com)

    Kulture Kool has been serving the South Asian community in New Jersey for 15 years, offering classes and workshops in the Indian performing arts, languages, and cultural immersion. As the largest institute of its kind in the region, Kulture Kool has become a vital part of the community, hosting over 2,000 school assemblies and countless public events.

    COLLABORATION WITH NJ SYMPHONY

    The Center recently made history by organizing the first-ever full Indian music concert with the New Jersey Symphony, further demonstrating its commitment to promoting South Asian culture.

    Archana Athalye, Founder and Director of Kulture Kool, shares her excitement for the upcoming event: “Utsav is more than just a show—it’s a celebration of our journey over the past 15 years. We’ve grown from a small group of passionate individuals to a thriving community that embraces the beauty and diversity of South Asian culture. This grand celebration is our way of sharing that journey with everyone. We can’t wait to see you there!”

    The ‘Utsav’ show at Montclair State University is open to the public, and tickets are available for purchase on Kulture Kool’s website. Don’t miss this opportunity to experience a vibrant cultural event filled with dance, music, and the lively spirit of India’s festivals.

    TICKETS

    For more information or to purchase tickets, visit kulturekool.com or contact Archana Athalye @ 203-558-7868.

    Kulture Kool

    The Kulture Kool South Asian Cultural Center offers a wide range of programs in Indian performing arts, languages, and cultural immersion. Founded in 2009, Kulture Kool has become a cornerstone of the community, providing quality education and enriching experiences that celebrate the diverse traditions of South Asia.

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Cuisine, Spirituality, Health & Wellness, Business, and Education)

  • ENJOY SUMMER WITH NJS PARK CONCERTS

    ENJOY SUMMER WITH NJS PARK CONCERTS

    Summer Concert, Chamber Music, Nimbus Dance. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)

    By Mabel Pais

    The New Jersey Symphony (njsymphony.org) invites you to its free outdoor concerts in Newark, Jersey City, Toms River, South Amboy and Red Bank and a performance at the Giralda Music and Arts Festival in Madison.

    The family-friendly program features John Williams’ Theme from ‘Jurassic Park,’ selections from Leonard Bernstein’s ‘West Side Story,’ William Grant Still’s ‘Festive Overture’ and more.

    For the first time this season, the New Jersey Symphony will perform in Liberty State Park in Jersey City and Raritan Bay Waterfront Park in South Amboy. The Symphony will also return to Marine Park in Red Bank, as well as Ocean County College in Toms River and Essex County Branch Brook concert in Newark. The Essex County Branch Brook Park concert includes fireworks.

    The Chamber Players of the New Jersey Symphony are scheduled to perform a series of chamber music concerts at Hamilton Park in Jersey City. These concerts are free of charge and will feature a variety of repertoire, including a celebration of the best of Bollywood’s Hindi-language film genre and an exhilarating program curated by the orchestra’s Resident Artistic Catalyst, Daniel Bernard Roumain.

    Free concerts take place:

    Sunday, June 25, 6 pm at the Giralda Farms, Giralda Music and Arts Festival, Madison

    Tuesday, June 27, 8 pm at Ocean County College in Toms River

    Wednesday, June 28, 7:30 pm at Raritan Bay Waterfront Park in South Amboy

    Friday, June 30, 7:30 pm at Essex County Branch Brook Park in Newark (includes fireworks!)

    Saturday, July 1, 8 pm at Marine Park in Red Bank

    Sunday, July 2, 7:30 pm at Liberty State Park in Jersey City

    Free Chamber Series at Hamilton Park in Jersey City

    Thursday, July 13, 7 pm: Sounds of the Summer with Nimbus Dance

    Thursday, July 27, 7 pm: The Music of Bollywood with Kulture Kool

    Thursday, August 10, 7 pm: A Summer Evening with DBR

    Clarinetist Timothy Lien, winner of the New Jersey Symphony Youth Orchestra’s 2023 Henry Lewis Concerto Competition, joins the Symphony for the first movement of Ludwig Spohr’s Clarinet Concerto In C Minor, Op.26. for the Giralda Farms, Branch Brook Park, Marine Park and Liberty State Park concerts. José Luis Domínguez, the New Jersey Symphony Youth Orchestra Artistic Director, conducts.

    UPDATES

    For more information, updates, and changes owing to weather conditions, visit njsymphony.org/summer.

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    WINNING COMPOSERS GET FEEDBACK  FROM CONE INSTITUTE, NJ SYMPHONY AND OTHERS

    Cone Institute ‘New Scores’ Concert (Poster): NJS Orchestra, Host Steve Mackey, & Conductor Case Scaglione. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)
    ‘New Scores’ Winners. (Photo credit : njsymphony.org)

    By Mabel Pais

    The New Jersey Symphony (njsymphony.org) announces the composers for the ninth Edward T. Cone Composition Institute. The 2023 Institute will take place from Sunday, July 9 to Saturday, July 15 in Newark, culminating in a performance of the composers’ works on Saturday, July 15, 2023. This year’s winning composers include Tom Morrison with his work ‘Messages in the Ground,’ Kory Reeder with his work ‘Walls of Brocade Fields,’ Sam Wu with his work ‘Hydrosphere’ and Yangfan Xu with her work ‘Bya.’

    The four composers will hear their music rehearsed and performed by the Symphony and participate in in-depth feedback sessions with Institute Director Steven Mackey, guest conductor Case Scaglione, New Jersey Symphony musicians and industry leaders.

    The Symphony and Maestro Case Scaglione will present the participants’ works along with the final movement, ‘Sphere,’ from Steven Mackey’s ‘Concerto for Curved Space’ in concert at NJPAC’s Victoria Theater in Newark on Saturday, July 15 at 8 pm.

    The Edward T. Cone Institute Experience

    By the conclusion of the Institute’s comprehensive experience, participants will have gained invaluable musical and practical feedback about composing for orchestra. They will also have participated in critical discussions about best practices for getting contemporary classical music funded, published and performed.

    The New Jersey Symphony Edward T. Cone Composition Institute grew out of musical score-reading sessions the Symphony has held with Princeton University graduate students biennially for more than a decade. The Institute celebrates its namesake Edward T. Cone’s legacy as both a composer and a Princeton University professor. This is a collaboration between the New Jersey Symphony and Princeton University Department of Music. Learn more at njsymphony.org/institute.

    Winning Composers

    Tom Morrison

    Tom Morrison is a composer of acoustic and electroacoustic music. Morrison is a graduate of The Juilliard School (MM); also a graduate of the University of Montana (BM) in Missoula where he cultivated his love for nature and the environment. He holds an MFA and Ph.D. from Princeton University, where he will be a Post Graduate Researcher in the fall 2023 semester. He won the 2016 Thailand International Composition Festival Competition and first place in the 2021 Symphonia Caritas Competition for first-generation college students. His work can be found at tom-morrison.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: ‘Messages in the Ground’

    ‘Messages in the Ground’ is inspired by Richard Power’s novel ‘The Overstory’ and the complex nature of trees and humanity’s complex relationship with them. The work is a meditation on the nature of trees and how they communicate with each other. The governing structural idea is simple: the piece begins at the higher end of the orchestra’s register and ends at the lower end—it goes from the leaves to the roots.

    Kory Reeder

    Kory Reeder is an American composer and performer whose music draws inspiration from the visual arts and political theory.

    Reeder is from Nebraska and currently resides in Texas where he is an active performer. He received his Ph.D. from the University of North Texas and holds a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Nebraska at Kearney and a Master of Music from Bowling Green State University. Learn more at koryreeder.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: ‘Walls of Brocade Fields’

    In Lincoln, Nebraska, there is the International Quilt Museum and while walking through, I couldn’t help but feel a sense of duality: the richly decorated and ornate patterns combine with the somewhat nostalgic quality that can come with the medium. I’m particularly drawn to flowers and brocade fabrics; the fields of intricately designed flowers lining the walls and filling your vision. This piece is full of overlapping, repeated patterns laid across each other, at times interacting and sometimes more exposed. There are moments in the piece where sounds are encompassing and warm, wrapping the listener in a blanket of sound, others are sparse, open and nearly still. The overlapping tones and phrases create subtle, perhaps fleeting cadences and nearly tonal reminisces, but underneath all this harmonic wrapping is a unifying pulse that connects the material and keeps the threads together.

    Sam Wu

    Sam Wu’s music deals with the beauty in blurred boundaries. Many of his works center around architecture, urban planning, climate science and the search for exoplanets that harbor life.

    Besides receiving numerous awards and recognitions, Wu has also won an ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award, First Prize at the Washington International Competition, Harvard’s Robert Levin Prize and Juilliard’s Palmer Dixon Prize.

    From Melbourne, Australia, Sam holds degrees from Harvard University and The Juilliard School, and is currently a DMA candidate in composition at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music. His teachers include Tan Dun, Anthony Brandt, Pierre Jalbert, Chaya Czernowin and Richard Beaudoin. Learn more at samwumusic.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: Hydrosphere

    ‘Hydrosphere’ is inspired by the water cycle—a macroscopic, planetary process that shapes oceans and continents.

    Water is the source of life as we know it; its eternal cycle nourishes generations across the aeons. Despite its ubiquity, water is precious—we must protect Gaia’s lifeblood.

    Yangfan Xu

    Yangfan Xu is a Chinese-born US-based composer who comes from a musical family in Lanzhou, Gansu province. Xu was the winner of the Society for New Music’s 2021 Israel/Pellman Award. She won the 2021 New Juilliard Ensemble (NJE) Composition Competition, and her commissioned work Fantastic Creatures of the Mountains and Seas premiered at the Lincoln Center in a concert by NJE in 2022.

    Xu received a bachelor’s degree in composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music studying with Mason Bates. Before her undergraduate studies, she studied musicology at the high school affiliated with the Central Conservatory of Music in China. Xu earned her master’s degree in composition at The Juilliard School, studying under Robert Beaser. She is a current DMA candidate at the New England Conservatory of Music studying under studio teacher Kati Agócs. Learn more at yangfanxu.com.

    Composer’s Program Note: Bya

    “Bya”(བྱ) is from the Tibetan language. It means “birds.” The piece is inspired by my trip to Tibet in 2016. When the pandemic first broke out, the city was put on lockdown, and I started to have recurring dreams about my trip to Tibet. It is the most wonderful land I have ever seen; Tibet is said to be the closest place to heaven on earth. When I saw it with my own eyes, I couldn’t agree more. The landscape is so stunning that it feels like a place that is unreal. Yamdrok Lake was the name of the lake I visited. There’s a bird island in the middle of the lake where you can see hundreds of different kinds of birds—it was magnificent and mind-blowing.

    Bya’s opening section is about the general shock I felt when I first arrived in Tibet. The middle slow section, where you can hear the trumpet’s extended technique imitating a bird’s call, depicts the bird’s island and the Yamdrok Lake. The final section of the piece is about a Tibetan tradition known as the sky funeral. When people die, their bodies are placed on top of a temple and the birds eat them. I find the ritual very special to me because it represents an eternal bond between humans and nature.

    Steven Mackey

    Bright in coloring, ecstatic in inventiveness, lively and profound, Steven Mackey’s music spins the tendrils of his improvisatory riffs into large-scale works of grooving, dramatic coherence.

    As a teenager growing up in Northern California obsessed with blues-rock guitar, Mackey was in search of the “right wrong notes,” those heart-wrenching moments that imbue the music with new, unexpected momentum. Today, his pieces play with that tension of being inside or outside of the harmony and flow forward shimmering with prismatic detail.

    Today, Steven Mackey writes for chamber ensemble, orchestra, dance and opera—commissioned by the greatest orchestras around the world. He has served as professor of music at Princeton University for the past 35 years, and in fall 2022, he joined the composition faculty at the Curtis Institute of Music. He has won several awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Kennedy Center Friedheim Award. He continues to explore an ever-widening world of timbres befitting a complex, 21st-century culture, while always striving to make music that unites the head and heart, that is visceral, that gets us moving. Learn more at stevenmackey.com.

    Case Scaglione

    Case Scaglione is currently in his fifth season as a Chief Conductor of the Württembergisches Kammerorchester Heilbronn in Germany and in his fourth season as a Music Director of Orchestre national d’Île de France. He has previously served as Associate Conductor with the New York Philharmonic and as Music Director of the Young Musicians Foundation Debut Orchestra of Los Angeles. Case was the driving force behind the artistic growth and diversification of the organization, founding their educational outreach initiative ‘360° Music.’

    Previously in North America, Case successfully collaborated with the New York Philharmonic and the Houston, Dallas, Detroit, San Diego and Baltimore symphony orchestras. In Asia, he has led concerts with the China Philharmonic Orchestra as well as the Shanghai and Guangzhou symphony orchestras, in addition to regular returns to the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra.

    Case enjoys close relationships with many of the world’s leading soloists, including Joshua Bell, Yulianna Avdeeva, Jean-Efflam Bavouzet, Behzod Abduraimov and Khatia Buniatishvili. Case has been mentored by some of the most prominent conductors on the world stage today, including Alan Gilbert, Jaap van Zweden and David Zinman. Learn more at casescaglione.com.

    SAFETY MEASURES

    All New Jersey Symphony performances follow safety measures in partnership with the venues and based on the guidance provided by the CDC and the State of New Jersey.

    TICKETS & INFORMATION

    For more information about the New Jersey Symphony, visit njsymphony.org or email information@njsymphony.org.

    Tickets are available for purchase by calling 1.800.ALLEGRO (255.3476) or at njsymphony.org.

    New Jersey Symphony

    The Emmy and Grammy Award-winning New Jersey Symphony, celebrating its Centennial Season in 2022–23, is redefining what it means to be a nationally leading, relevant orchestra in the 21st century.

    Connect with New Jersey Symphony

    njsymphony.org

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    Email: information@njsymphony.org

    (Mabel Pais writes on The Arts and Entertainment, Social Issues, Health & Wellness, Education, Cuisine, Spirituality, and Business)