Current Press
globalFEST 2016
Remixed World: globalFEST Provokes, Surprises, and Entertains at its Annual Flagship Festival
“Worlds and Music meet, in Euphoric result” – NY Times
Cultural guardians and ebullient party bands. Soul divas and avant-cabaret performers. Music that addresses current headlines, and sounds that summon age-old traditions.
For one night, New York’s Webster Hall becomes home to all of these ideas and to the many faces and offshoots of world music, as globalFEST returns for its 13th edition on Sunday, January 17, 2016. The annual showcase festival, the flagship project of a rapidly expanding organization that serves the performing arts field, gives an instant entry point into the powerfully diverse, wide-ranging world of global music, from the electronic to the edgy, the beloved to the wonderfully unfamiliar.
The Artists of globalFEST 2016 (globalfest.org)
Astrid Hadad
Extravagant Mexican cabaret with soulful songs and outrageous visuals
Debauche
Russian mafia ballads get a New Orleans punk makeover
Fendika
Masterful dancer Melaku Belay leads Ethiopia’s traditional music revival
Ginkgoa
Vintage Paris chic meets New York cool in swinging electro-beats
Lakou Mizik (NY Debut)
Powerhouse collective invigorating Haitian roots and grooves
Mariana Sadovska
The defiant cry of Ukraine, reinventing traditional songs
Music Maker Blues Revue
Blues that made America famous
Simon Shaheen’s Zafir
A reuniting of Arab Andalucian music and fiery flamenco
Somi
Lush Afrobeat inspired jazz, soul, and pop
Stelios Petrakis Quartet
Inimitable virtuosos from Crete weaving melodies across the Greek islands
The Dhol Foundation:
UK’s leading South Asian bhangra crew
Tribu Baharú (US Debut)
Afro-champeta party from Colombia’s Caribbean coast
“We want to introduce new artists into the market, and reintroduce artists who have had success in some parts of the world, but haven’t toured widely across the US,” explains Isabel Soffer, one of globalFEST’s co-founders and co-directors. “I think we have done that really well this year with some artists who are legendary in certain circles, but unknown in others. This year, we have exciting and fun surprises that we feel will do extremely well on the touring market in North America and even abroad.”
Surprises like Astrid Hadad, a cult figure in performance and cabaret, whose off- the- wall musical appeal and wow-effect show presents a surreal view of Mexican folk and pop culture. Or Fendika, one of the foremost ensembles from Ethiopia, who have reinvigorated the traditional music and dance scene in Addis Ababa, and collaborated with such far-ranging artists as previous globalFEST performers Debo Band, and Dutch post-punk icons The Ex.
Younger artists are reshaping the lineages and well-loved ideas of their native regions, finding radical connections and unexpected resonances. With roots in East Africa, Somi looks to Nigeria to draw on the cosmopolitan attitude of Lagos, with modern jazz and soul grooves. Debauche picks up the raucous Gogol Bordello torch and finds the secret tie binding New Orleans and Odessa. Tribu Baharú re-ups the propulsive Afro-Colombian beats of champeta (sometimes referred to as “Colombiansoukous”) with day-glo glee.
The stories globalFEST artists tell, however, go beyond the musicological or entertaining. From the quiet but bloody war facing Ukraine—a subject that fires Mariana Sadovska’s recent work–to the ongoing struggles of artistic communities in Haiti (Lakou Mizik), globalFEST aims to highlight musicians who can speak profoundly to the trials and joys of a place’s musical culture.
“We’ve always been aware that artists are important ambassadors for their local situation and help contribute to the economic well being of the places they are from,” reflects Bill Bragin, another co-founder and co-producer of the festival. “For example, through the years we’ve focused on artists from the Gulf of Mexico and on Haitian artists to give those artists a chance to speak for themselves, to put other narratives out into new markets.”
To bring less familiar sounds into new markets has always been globalFEST’s goal. The 501(c)3 not-for-profit service organization provides artists support, including funds for touring, curates a national 38-market package tour (produced by CAMI Music), and works with music festivals like Bonnaroo and SXSW to expand the scope of their programming.. As the world changes, and as music from all its corners reaches more and more listeners, the organization has strived to keep opening minds and ears to what “world music” can be.
“We keep reevaluating how to define world music, as it’s a very contentious term,” muses Shanta Thake, globalFEST’s third co-producer and co-director. “We do that by presenting everything from a live Punjabi bhangra crew to a Mediterranean string ensemble. We’re saying, this music can be DJ driven, it can be punk. It’s also jazz and regional music and performance art. It can be all of this.”
About globalFEST
Over the last decade, globalFEST (gF) has become one of the most dynamic global music platforms in North America, growing from an acclaimed festival/showcase into a catalytic non-profit service organization for curators, artists, and the performing arts field. Through its work, gF encourages networking and cultural diplomacy; deepens cultural understanding among its constituents; builds audiences for international music and creates new opportunities for artists leading to a more robust and sustainable ecosystem for world music in the United States. Artists that participate in gF programs represent diverse musical styles from all corners of the globe, ranging from traditional to contemporary, and everything in between. Programs include: the gF Touring Fund, which provides direct support to artists to develop new markets; gF On the Road, a tour that brings creatively programmed lineups to venues nationwide; and guest curating in both commercial and performing arts settings, including such influential events as SXSW, Bonnaroo, Lincoln Center and beyond, that serves to raise the profile and visibility of the artists gF works with, and world music overall.
Combat Vets Showcase Their Art
Veteran Arts Showcase
November 20-22, 2015 at The FDR Presidential Library and Museum, Hyde Park, NY
Combat Vets Showcase Their Art – PDF Article
When Special Operations helicopter rescue team member Justin Otis faced a divorce and wanted custody of his son, he soon learned he would not be able to keep his Special Ops job and be a single dad; it was against military policy. Thus began a whole new chapter in the decorated SSgt’s life, bouncing him out of the military and back into a now foreign civilian life, with a head and body chock-full of unshakeable memories, some that he’s not even allowed to talk about. Alcohol, drugs, self-destructive patterns, self-medicating, failed relationships, anger, arrests, are just some of the dead-end streets many veterans like Justin ran down. Randomly picking up a paint brush and canvas he bought for his son forever changed the Hudson Valley resident’s life, again.
WWII Army Infantryman Jay Wenk tells us: “I saw the ‘tail end’ of the Bulge, not the whole thing. We fought the war and we were in Czechoslovakia when WW2 ended.” Jay Wenk made it back home to the U.S., when many of his comrades did not. Now a Councilman for Woodstock, this master cabinet maker and woodworker turned to writing just two years ago: “I want to leave a memoir for my children and grandchildren,” Jay reveals; “I want them to know what went on in WWII. It could have been avoided.”
When NYC’s Twin Trade Towers were hit on 9-11, Newburgh Free Academy graduate Wolf Critton signed up for the Army Reserves. Four months before his 4 years were up, his squadron was deployed to Iraq. The rigors and realities of war were all around him, always; the mental cost of always being vigilant as Infantrymen always on alert began to take its toll. A friend in the war zone with Wolf just happened to hand the young man a guitar, thinking it might give him something else to think about. Wolf Critton frankly states: “The guitar continues to save my life.”
Jay Wenk, Justin Otis, and Wolf Critton are only three of the over 45 Hudson Valley and NYS veteran artists presenting their works at the Veteran Arts Showcase at FDR’s Presidential Library & Museum in Hyde Park, NY, the weekend of Nov 20-22, 2015. All Showcase events are free and open to the public.
Now in its third year, the Showcase is a celebration of veterans and the arts and how arts heal, communicate emotions, and compel people to interact with each other. Featuring visual artists, crafters, writers, poets, musicians, and performers who are veterans, family members of veterans, or military connected. Arts and veterans featured in the Showcase range from: NYS Veteran Hall of Fame 2015 Inductee, Needlepointer, and Enigma Machine operator with Top Secret Security Clearance, Kathie Freston (USMCR, ’53-‘64) from Kent Lakes; Mary Alden (Air Force, 1976-2007) a Knitter from Staatsburg who graduated FDR High School, Hyde Park, NY in 1976, entered the Air Force October of that year and 1982-2007 served as First Sargent and Command Chief in the 514th Air Mobility Wing, McGuire AFB NJ; George Wayne Laws (Navy, Cold War) an Underwater Photographer and “Shark Protector” from Mahopac; Ron Ymbras (Air Force, Viet Nam) a Paratrooper in the 101st Airborne 1967-1968 including the Tet Offensive, now turned “Activist for Traveling” and Photographer/Editor from Poughkeepsie; Kim Soper (Army, 1977-80, The Cold War), 22 year Army wife and pencil and acrylics artist living in Montgomery, NY; Bob Bruer (Navy, Cold War: USS Boxer LPH 4 (IC Electrician PO 2 nd Class) and USS Holland AS3 (Polaris Missile Technician), now an accomplished sculptor from Highland Mills who volunteers consistently at the Montrose VA Health Center; and Gil Tarbox who served in Vietnam as Specialist E5 heavy equipment operator, building roads and air fields with 19th Brigade in Plakuo, 20th Brigade in Long Ben, a survivor of 1968 Tet Offensive, a Passamaquoddy, Mic Mac, and Scot, Army Corps of Engineers veteran who with the Nimham Mountain Singers founded one Putnam County, NY’s largest attractions – the (now 16th annual) Chief Daniel Nimham Intertribal Powwow honoring the Wappingers and Hudson Valley Native American veterans in service to the American Revolution.
The Outpatient Art Therapy Program at the VA Hudson Valley Montrose Campus has recruited significant numbers of artists participating in the 2015 Veteran Arts Showcase. This local VA program has a long-standing reputation for providing a safe space for veterans to engage in the creative process of art making as a means for relaxation and/or to help them to understand and heal from difficult military experiences where words are hard to find. There will be a hospitality room with refreshments, a video corner, information on effective therapies for PTSD, and a chance for the audience to speak with artists, organizers, local professionals, and each other.
The Veteran Arts Showcase 2015 free Opening Reception and Ceremony is on Friday Nov. 20th from 5:30-8:30pm and includes refreshments, a Presentation of Colors, opening remarks, and a performance by Infantryman turned musician Wolf Critton (Army, Iraq). The Veterans’ Theater Project: Leaving Theater, a civilian and veteran theatrical troop, performs an interactive play with the audience that focuses on veteran reintegration to close out Friday evening.
The first 20 high school or college students (w/school ID) to attend Sat. or Sun. afternoon performances win free meal or movie tickets. Twenty students Sat. or Sun. signing in from one school enters chances for three school’s student veteran associations, ROTCs, or arts or serviceoriented clubs to win $250 each.
Saturday, Nov 21st is a free Writers Workshop 11am-2pm for veterans and military families, with preregistration required due to limited seating. All community members are encouraged to attend Warriors’ Voices and The Long Road Home from 2:30-4pm Saturday consisting of original poetry and essays, songs, and open discussions with artists about their work. Saturday 4-5pm everyone is invited to bring their instruments and join with veteran musicians, including Newburgh Free Academy’s own Wolf Critton, in an “Open Jam.”
Preregistration is encouraged for Sunday November 22nd’s free (2-4pm) CORE STORIES – a civilian-veteran dialogue on the aftereffects of war, which includes poetry and a community drum circle. This third Veteran Arts Showcase closes with a special performance (4- 4:30pm) by the Nimham Mountain Singers (the Founders of the Chief Daniel Nimham Intertribal Veterans Memorial Powwow), with Native American veteran Gil Tarbox (Army Corps of Engineers, VietNam).
The Showcase is the result of a unique collaboration between the host, the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum, and three Mid-Hudson Valley organizations: the Veteran Family Support Alliance (VETFAMSA), the Orange County Arts Council, and H.G. Fairfield Arts Center for the Environment, with a grant from The Seriti Foundation. Founded on the understanding that the arts are vital to veteran reintegration – for self-expression, recovery from the aftereffects of war, to reconnect with the civilian-veteran community – the civilian community is especially encouraged to attend this celebration and get to know our veterans and Hudson Valley families in a whole new way.
For artist bios, program details, ads, donations, or pre-register for free for Saturday’s Writer’s Workshop or Sunday’s CORE STORIES, contact: Dr. Lori Arella 845-226-4218 drloria@gmail.com www.VETFAMSA.org -///-
Free Public Event Location: 4079 Albany Post Rd Route 9 Hyde Park, NY 12538 Opening Reception: Friday November 20 5:30-8:30pm Exhibits Open: Friday 5:30-8:30 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 10-4 Workshop: (Preregistration Required): Saturday 11-2 Performances: Friday 5:30-8:30pm Saturday 2:30-5 Sunday 2-4:30 (845) 363-1559 (845) 469-9168 (845) 486-7745 (845) 226-4218
VETERAN ARTS SHOWCASE
November 20-22, 2015
At The FDR Presidential Library and Museum, Hyde Park, NY
PDF Article
The Veteran Arts Showcase, now in its third year, is a celebration of veterans and the arts and how arts heal, communicate emotions, and compel people to interact with each other. The Showcase was founded on the understanding that the arts are vital to veteran reintegration – for self-expression, recovery from the aftereffects of war and to reconnect with the civilian-veteran community. The Showcase features visual artists, crafters, writers, poets, musicians and performers who are veterans, family members of veterans, or military connected. The Showcase will be held at the FDR Presidential Library/Wallace Center on Route 9, Hyde Park, New York, November 20, 21 and 22. The entire weekend event is free and open to the public.
The Opening Reception and Ceremony is on Friday from 5:30-8:30pm; refreshments will be served. A Presentation of Colors and opening remarks will be followed by The Veterans’ Theater Project: Leaving Theater, a civilian and veteran theatrical troop performing an interactive play with the audience that focuses on veteran reintegration.
Saturday there will be a free Writers Workshop (11am-2pm) for veterans and military families, with preregistration required due to limited seating. All community members are encouraged to attend Warriors’ Voices and The Long Road Home from 2:30-4pm: veterans, including Everett Cox and Jennifer Pacanowski of Warrior Writers, as well as members of military families, will read original poetry and essays, and perform original songs. This segment includes opportunities for open discussion with the presenters about their work and the importance of the arts for individual and community healing. Civilian community members are invited to an “Open Jam” with Veteran musicians from 4-5pm.
Preregistration is encouraged for Sunday November 22nd’s (2-4pm) CORE STORIES – a civilian-veteran dialogue on the aftereffects of war, which includes poetry and a community drum circle. The 2015 Veteran Arts Showcase closes with a special performance (4-4:30pm) by the Nimham Mountain Singers, with Native American veteran Gil Tarbox.
All weekend, visitors will experience a unique and powerful co-mingling of multiple arts that touch our deepest connections to war and community. There will be a hospitality room for anyone with questions or wishing to just speak about their experience during The Showcase. Information on effective therapies for PTSD will be on display.
A very special thanks to the Outpatient Art Therapy Program at the VA Hudson Valley Montrose Campus for their recruiting nearly half of participating Showcase artists. This local VA program has a long-standing reputation for providing a safe space for veterans to engage in the creative process of art making as a means for relaxation and/or to help them to understand and heal from difficult military experiences where words are hard to find.
The combined works featured at The Showcase affirm that the creative arts offer a non-threatening modality that benefits artists and audiences alike. The Showcase is the result of a unique collaboration between our host, the FDR Presidential Library and Museum, and three local organizations: the Veteran Family Support Alliance (VETFAMSA), the Orange County Arts Council, and H.G. Fairfield Arts Center for the Environment, with a grant from The Seriti Foundation. We especially encourage the civilian community to join us in this vital conversation with veterans and their families.
For artist bios, program details, ads or donations, or pre-registration for workshop or CORE STORIES, contact: Dr. Lori Arella (845) 226-4218 drloria@gmail.com www.VETFAMSA.org
Press contacts: Lori Arella (845) 226-4218; drloria@gmail.com Kim Blacklock (845) 363-1559; kim.blacklock@hgfairfieldarts.org