Preservation Hall Jazz Band Celebrate
50th Anniversary With Show at Carnegie Hall
January 7th
Click HERE to Watch a Brief Video About Pres Hall
photo credit: Shannon Brinkman
New Orleans jazz legends Preservation Hall Jazz Band are
celebrating their 50th anniversary by performing with some of their
musical friends at one of the most legendary venues in the world. On January 7th they will grace the Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage at Carnegie Hall, with special guests to be announced soon. Tickets for what is bound to be an unforgettable night go on sale December 2nd and are available at www.carnegiehall.org, by calling CarnegieCharge at 212-247-7800 or at the Carnegie Hall box office at 57th street and 7th avenue.
The Preservation Hall Jazz Band has been carrying the distinctive sound
of New Orleans jazz around the world on behalf of Preservation Hall, a
unique venue that embodies the city’s musical legacy. With a cast of
musicians schooled through first-hand experience and apprenticeship into
the music’s historic traditions, the PHJB has served as an
irreplaceable, vital link to the earliest days of one of America’s most
beloved forms of popular music.
The group manages to evoke the spirits of times past in an
ever-evolving modern context that has found them traveling around the
world. Along the way, they have brought in collaborators of all musical
stripes to play, honor, and reinterpret America’s first true art form.
The PHJB have played and recorded with artists like Tom Waits, Pete Seeger, Ani DiFranco and My Morning Jacket. Their most recent collaboration has been with the Grammy-winning bluegrass outfit, the Del McCoury Band, with whom they released a joint album earlier this year titled American Legacies.
The Louisiana State Museum also just launched a major exhibition celebrating Preservation Hall’s 50th anniversary at the Old U.S. Mint. Co-curated by Preservation Hall and the Museum, Preservation Hall at 50,
tells the story of the venue’s history through artifacts, photographs,
film and audio clips, as well as interviews and oral histories. The
exhibit is open now and will run through 2012.
No comments:
Post a Comment