There are way too many shows to talk about - read the complete press release here: http://lc.lincolncenter.org/2011-09-11-04-44-38/press-room
“Lincoln Center is a huge resource for everyone in the city. I hope you take advantage of it before summer fades away.” - Wendy Perron, Dance Magazine
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Big and Bold at Lincoln Center Out of Doors | West Side Spirit
Bill Bragin, the indefatigable director of public programming at Lincoln Center, makes sure that unexpected and ingenious collaborations are Lincoln Center Out of Doors’ stock in trade.
“I want to bring different artistic and social communities together,” he said. “It’s important for arts organizations to be risk takers and move the culture forward.”
A man of his word, he brings a great mixture of disciplines and performers to this year’s free festival, which runs through Aug. 14. The lineup includes rousing English folk singer Billy Bragg, jazz masters Eric Reed and Don Byron, singers Mavis Staples, Lesley Gore and Steve Cropper, composers/musicians Laurie Anderson, Tan Dun, Todd Reynolds and Malkit Singh, choreographers Eiko & Koma, Trey McIntyre and David Dorfman and the great Preservation Hall Jazz Band, among many others.
Bragg and the Big Busk kicked off the festivities on July 27 at Damrosch Park Bandshell with rollicking music in a sing- and play-along, open to anyone with a voice and/or guitar. Later that night and through July 31, Eiko & Koma climb into the North Plaza reflecting pool in front of the Lincoln Center Theater to perform Water, a collaboration with Native American composer and flutist Richard Mirabel.
“I like the contrast between populist Billy Bragg and quiet and contemplative Eiko, Koma and Robert,” Bragin said. “Also, part of my mission is to get people off the stage onto the Lincoln Center campus.”(To ensure that theatergoers leaving War Horse don’t interrupt the performance, Water will take place during the play’s second act.)
Bragin didn’t suggest that Eiko & Koma and Mirabal collaborate—they worked together on Land in 1991, and Mirabal rearranged the score for their piece Raven in 2010—but he is responsible for bringing them to Lincoln Center for the first time. It’s especially gratifying for the choreographers because a part of their Retrospective Project is on exhibit through Oct. 31 at the Lincoln Center Performing Arts Library near the North Plaza pool.
“Water is an important motif in our works,” Eiko said, explaining that they performed River in various sites in 1995. “After what happened to Japan’s tsunami-affected areas, we also learned the power of water as a moving force.”

Malkit Singh brings his smooth sounds to Lincoln Center Out of Doors.
Mirabal, who lives in Taos Pueblo, N.M., leapt at the opportunity to be with his old friends again. He calls Water “a collaboration of the heart.” At the start of the project, the choreographers asked him to compose something that reflected timelessness.
“I tried different things,” he said, “like floating a log down a river with a microphone to hear the reverberations. Water is time and can’t be held, only experienced. They want a percussive sound but not a drum, and I’m still looking for ways to achieve that. They force me into a non-linear place.
It took a couple of years of talking with Gabri Christa (who directs Burnt Sugar/Danz with Greg Tate and Germaul Barnes) and Don Byron and his New Gospel Quintet for Bragin to see how they might fit together.
A former dancer with Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and Danza Contemporanea de Cuba, Christa brings a varied background to her choreography as well as the influence of avant-garde musician and composer Butch Morris, the originator of conduction, a type of structure-free improvisation.
Her troupe moves among many styles, eras and genres to create interesting hybrids. But only when she told Bragin that she hoped to do a piece inspired by Alvin Ailey’s great Revelations did he see the connection with Byron.
“Who better than Don for her to collaborate with?” he said.
“Gospel is the organizing principal.” Christa added. “Don understood what I was trying to do and I understood what he wanted. This won’t be a version of Revelations—I wouldn’t dream of that—it’s a deconstruction.”
On July 29, besides R. Glitch, her company will also perform Dance Conduction #6: The Trojan Rumba Suite and The Fata Morgana Suite, each work a combination of spontaneously composed music and choreography.
When Bragin saw Sweeter End last February in New Orleans, the second collaboration between the Trey McIntyre Project and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, their sequel to Ma Maison, he knew he wanted both pieces at Lincoln Center. Not only because they were marvelous, he said, but to keep attention on New Orleans after Katrina. In fact, that’s what brought McIntyre, who established his company in 2008 in Boise, Idaho, back to the city. On every visit thereafter he found himself drawn to Preservation Hall. Finally, he asked Ben Jaffe, the band’s creative director and bassist, if they could work together.
“I like taking the Preservation Hall Band in directions we’ve never explored artistically,” Jaffe said. “My job was to make Trey aware of the different aspects of our music and what we are capable of achieving.”

Tan Dun will perform at the Lincoln Center Festival.
Months of discussion, listening and observing followed. The band came to the conclusion that the musical centerpiece of Sweeter End should be an extended version of the classic, “St. James Infirmary,” and incorporate ideas developed with another collaborator, the hip-hop DJ King Britt. The arrangement evolves from a dirge to a festive dance piece in the manner of a traditional jazz funeral. The two works will be performed on Aug. 3.
“Among my band there was a lot of curiosity about the collaboration,” he said. “None of us had ever done a dance project on this scale before. It’s been amazing for me to watch the reaction of the older members. They are in as much awe of the dancers as we’ve come to find out they are of us.”
For a complete list of events, visit www.lcoutofdoors.org.
As dancers Eiko and Koma point out, “Water is in our bodies … and our tears.”
From the Star-Ledger: Up to their necks in dance: Eiko and Koma offer the premiere of ‘Water’ at Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors July 27-31
"— http://mobile.nj.com/advnj/pm_104368/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=TCeZnXA5
A choreographer whose more than 20 years of fresh and innovative work has been cheered by audiences and critics—Trey McIntyre—brings his Idaho-based company, Trey McIntyre Project (TMP) to Damrosch Park on August 3. TMP’s rare visit to The Big Apple features an evening of works in collaboration with Preservation Hall Jazz Band, celebrating The Big Easy, including Ma Maison from 2008 and ithe NY premiere of ts recently-created companion piece, The Sweeter End, co-commissioned by Lincoln Center with support from the Boise Convention and Visitor’s Bureau.
Enjoy this making-of documentary about The Sweeter End, then come down to Damrosch Park to see the final product.
via lincolncenter:
Dancers @EIkoandKoma bring their new installation Water to the Millstein Pool on Hearst Plaza for Lincoln Center @LCOutofDoors this summer. Performances of Water (five nights, July 27-31 at 9:30 p.m.) coincide with the July 19 opening of a major exhibition at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts @npl_LPA titled Residue: An Installation by Eiko & Komathat features artifacts collected from the two artists’ 40 years of collaboration. The show includes media works, costumes, sets, and a catalog published by the Walker Art Center. The exhibition is free and open to the public. Visit: eikoandkoma.org/residue for hours and more details.
In the meantime, enjoy this interview, where they discuss a past installation, Naked.
via lincolncenter:
Burnt Sugar / DANZ takes Greg Tate’s adaptation of Butch Morris’ Conduction system and adapts it to a dance company composed of an all-star collection of choreographers. They share the bill with Don Byron’s New Gospel Quintet on July 29 - including a collaboration as they deconstruct Alvin Ailey’s Revelations.
For this week’s Trailer Tuesday, we present a preview of Burnt Sugar/DANZ. Drawing on the cream of New York music, choreographic and dance-performance talent to create innovative, never-before-seen works, live and in real time, they create an alchemical blend of spontaneously composed music and choreography. Burnt Sugar / Danz: Conduction #6 The Trojan Rumba Suite features The Trojan Rumbas, The Fata Morgana Suite, and the world premiere of Revelations Glitch—a new piece inspired by the iconic Alvin Ailey work performed in collaboration with Don Byron—with an expanded group that also features vocalist Dean Bowman, guitarist Brandon Ross, drummer J.T. Lewis and turntablist DJ Logic.
I cannot wait for people to start dancing on our brand new #LCSwing dance floor.
(Source: midsummernightswing.org.org)
One week from tonight!
Long Island’s swing/ballroom orchestra – the 20-piece Swingtime Big Band – brings to life the music of the swing era with authentic recreations of classics from the libraries of Count Basie, Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, Duke Ellington, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey, Harry James, Woody Herman and other legends who made the 30s and 40s the golden age of swing. In December 2007, the Big Band Hall of Fame officially recognized Swingtime as “Ambassadors of Big Band Music” with a special award for the ensemble’s efforts in “perpetuating, promoting & performing with integrity the sounds of the Big Band Era.”
Catch them at Midsummer Night Swing on June 29.
Just got the list of @soultrain dances we’ll be teaching; The Bump, The Robot, The Funky Chicken, The Breakdown and the all-important Loose Booty!
And the set list from Pee Wee Ellis & Fred Wesley is beyond funky…some of your altime faves from James Brown, the JB’s and Lyn Collins.
Midsummer Night Swing pays tribute to Soul Train on June 28. Join Pee Wee Ellis, Fred Wesley, and special guest DJ Biz Markie on the line as they celebrate Soul Train’s 40th anniversary in a night of funk and soul.
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Trey McIntyre, of the Trey McIntyre Project, speaking about the spirit of New Orleans to nola.com.
He’ll be exploring this through dance in Ma Maison and The Sweeter End, presented as a part of Lincoln Center Out of Doors on August 3.
(via lincolncenter)
So exciting to see this partnership between DanceNow and Joe’s Pub continue to grow and flourish. Looking forward to seeing Nicole Wolcott & Vanessa Walters’ Alley of the Dolls tonight.
From CultureBot
Posted on 27 April 2011 by Maura Donohue After six years presenting their Fall Festival at Dance Theater Workshop, DanceNow will bring the Dancemopolitan Festival from October 19 through 22, 2011 at the soon-to-be renovated Joe’s Pub. Since 2003, DanceNow has been presenting showcase format programs at Joe’s that more recently evolved into their Featured Artist Series (with Nicole Wolcott and Vanessa Walters’ premiering Alley of the Dolls: This is not a sequel this week). The Dancemopolitan 2011 Festival will be presented in a similar, but slightly new format for the newly renovated Pub and the best tiny stage in New York City. I recently spoke with Executive Artistic Director and Producer Robin Staff about the shift. Your move makes a lot of sense in so many ways. Your dance programming at Joe’s has offered up something very different from the typical dance presentations around the city. What prompted this? It set us apart. With everything that is changing we had to take a good, hard look at ourselves and had to see what do we do best. We took our own challenge and asked ourselves how to do more with less. During our process working with Kyle Abraham for Heartbreaks and Homies he labored over creating something special for that space and with very little money (a $3,000 stipend and DanceNow paying for the production costs). I realized that this was where we should be focusing Heartbreaks & Homies by Steven Schreiber our energies and once I ran the numbers versus the cost of staying with what we were doing, I realized we can offer artists more to be at Joe’s. This year, for a 5-minute segment artists will get $300 this year and if an artist has more ideas they could do up to three works. I don’t mean to only talk about the shift in numbers terms. It was a perfect storm in many ways with DTW’s shift to New York Live Arts, we had to figure out if we fit within that new identity. It wasn’t easy to move on from DTW and the opportunity we gave many artists to dance on that stage (that they wouldn’t have otherwise). But, I learned about the renovations during Heartbreaks.They showed me the pictures and it’s going to be so elegant at Joe’s. No more standing room, which was a problem for dance when it gets above 150 with people standing at the bar. Now, it will be able to seat 180 people. The dressing rooms will be great and they’re going to work to give us more rehearsal space for the Featured Artists. We’ll have some access to the Public’s rehearsal spaces. We did it in green room for Fraulein and The Whiz, but now there will be renovations to the space and they’ll be able to work in a proper studio. And, Joe’s has been very generous with letting the featured artists get as much time as possible in the Pub. So, we planned to try and do The Festival in synch with their renovations. They’re going to roll us out with them as DanceNow Joe’s Pub. Our plan will be to go back to the September dates once the renovation has been rolled out. Nicole Wolcott in Fraulein Maria Photo by Steven Schreiber Since the beginning, DanceNow (NYC) has thought outside the box and brought new audiences to dance in your own way. You’ve been very successful with your Doug Elkins’ Fraulein Maria, Kyle’sHearbreak & Homies, David Parker’sShowdown and Nick Leichter’s The Whiz.You’ll have David & The Bang Group back for their newest show Misters & Sisters in June and this week you have Nicole Wolcott and Vanessa Walter’s Alley of the Dolls (This is Not a Sequel) on Thursday and Friday. They’re something like Dancemopolitan staples, aren’t they? Back in 2006, Nicole Wolcott and Nicole Berger did a show Thrash N’ Rock and we always wanted to bring it back and develop it. Nicole has been an artist that I’ve wanted to promote and help for a long time. She’s so talented and I’ve been watching her since she started making work while dancing with Larry Keigwin. And, David… Well, he is so suited to the stage to the cabaret format. Also, in thinking about the shift for the Festival, I wanted to be sure the Pub would embrace us. They pretty much let us do our thing. Back in the Thrash N’ Rock days we were doing Dancemopolitan almost every month and it got to be too much. Then we cut it down to about 3-4 a year. So you’re strengthening your partnerships. You’ve got other partnerships in the works outside of NYC. This is so valuable for your artists. You’re able to offer more than just one-off shows now. What else do you have in going on? While we’re trying to up the partnership with Joe’s I’m also now curating the tiny dance program at Steelstacks Showdown Photo by Steven Schreiber in Pennsylvania and it’s the same thing. It’s a music venue with some dance. That will be DanceNow SteelStacks. With a connection between Joe’s and Steelstacks, we’ll be able to take some things that premiere at Joe’s and take it out to PA and other times I’d like to try things out at Steelstacks and bring it here. Once Joe’s was on board for the switch for our Festival, the next thing was whether our funders would embrace this shift. Most of our money comes in for the Festival and later for the Dancemopolotan Series. NYSCA, Mertz, Jerome – they all said this was fantastic and would be great for our organization. We will continue accommodating an equal sized audience and eventually it could serve more, if it flies and we will be able to present more artists and give each artist more. We have all been begging for another Frauleinor something that could run, as a holiday series, for a couple weeks. In addition to fee, Featured Artists get a residency at Silo (at Kirkland Farm in Pennsylvania) for a couple weeks, and some are on the guest teaching roster at DeSales University and they might get a commission from DeSales to set work on the students. So, we’re shifting into increasing opportunities for artists in multiple venues. We’re thinking about developing new avenues for teaching and developing and maintaining long-term relationships with artists. You’ve been able to foster new voices and to support some of these long-term relationships. How does this shift enable you to do that better? So, the festival as it was at DTW was always a testing ground for what we might want to put up or grow at Joe’s. It also simply let us see what everybody was up to. So the Aha! moment came when I realized that if we’re looking for work to bring TO Joe’s why didn’t we look at it AT Joe’s. For instance, I’m looking at an artist’s work that she’s done it out of the city in another cabaret space. I have the DVD, but I’d rather see it on the Pub stage. We’re also talking to Monica Bill Barnes about her SnowGlobe piece. She had all this stuff on the cutting board that she wanted to put up at Joe’s so she’ll probably be doing some of that during the festival in the fall she’ll show another segment. So the structure of the festival, because it’s Joe’s and we only get55 minutes a show, is that we narrowed the time limit down to 5 minutes a work. We need to make sure we can get 10 artists in there and artists are always not working within the time limits. We believe in this editing process. Pieces get so wordy and sometimes work goes on and on and it kills the piece. Less is more is a challenge for someone; to make it say something in short time. We’re keeping the DanceNow Challenge again. We want it to be suitable to the space and the winner will get the $1,000 fee and a Silo residency and Gina Gibney will provide another 20 hours of rehearsal space. Like Ellis Wood, last year’s challenge winner, she’s been working on that for a couple years and she’s been developing it out here into a full-length work. The Whiz Photo by Steven Schreiber And, you’re making some changes to your RAW program, which provides newer artists with their first entry into DanceNow. Yes, we did do the Raw events and we’re shifting that to be more of a mentoring project. This is a response to a difficult situation when you’re seeing work that year after year isn’t ready for the stage and the artists continue to come back year after year. How could we help them? We brought several mentor artists, including Hilary Easton in to work with them to develop their work. It was great to sit with them and listen to them and ask them questions. Most of them asked how do I create a network and get more than a couple people they know and love to see their work. So we took a handful of artists from Raw and asked them to send proposals for Joe’s this year, so that we can continue funneling new faces and familiar ones and see work that we’re considering to develop. There’s one more thing I wanted to say. My Aha! moment after Kyle’s show was pretty similar to the Aha! moment I had when joking around with Doug about doing a modern dance version of The Sound of Music. Sometimes, it’s the whim of an idea – this is crazy fun and maybe we could do this – that proves very fruitful.Five Questions for Robin Staff

