Posts Tagged ‘Rose Live Music’

Rose Live Music’s 4th Anniversary is Tonight feat. Jason Lindner’s Now vs. Now + All-Star Jam Session

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Jason Lindners Now vs. Now (photo: John Rogers)

Jason Lindner's Now vs. Now (photo: John Rogers)

Tuesday 2/2 9PM – ROSE LIVE MUSIC’s 4 Year Anniversary w/ Jason Lindner’s Now vs Now & All-star Jam Session


It’s Rose Live Music’s 4 Year Anniversary and to help us celebrate, Jason Lindner’s Now vs Now will host an all-star jam session featuring a cast of heavyweights who have performed at Rose in years past. No cover.

Details:

Rose Live Music

345 Grand St (between Havemeyer St and Marcy Ave)
Williamsburg, Brooklyn | Map

718-599-0069

Subway: L to Lorimer St, G to Metropolitan Ave  | Directions

http://www.liveatrose.com

Tickets: FREE

Rose Live Music Announces Drummer Series Lineup For Feb/Mar 2010

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

rose copyRose Live Music Announces Drummers and Details for 4th Anniversary & Drummers Series.

8pm – doors
8:30pm – 1st set
10pm – 2nd set
$10-$12 cover

Schedule:

Feb 2 – Rose 4th Year Anniversary: Jason Lindner’s Now vs Now hosts jam session (No cover)

Feb 9 – Adam Deitch: Adam Deitch, Louis Cato and Yuki Hirano Trio

Feb 16 – New Languages Festival presents: Mike Pride: From Bacteria to Boys

Feb 23 – Dafnis Prieto: Proverb Trio w/Kokayi (vocals), Jason Lindner (keys)

Mar 2 – Search & Restore presents: Bobby Previte’s New Bump

Mar 9 – Billy Martin: Solo & Fang Percussion Ensemble

Mar 16 – Tom Tom Magazine: A Magazine About Female Drummers Presents a Night of Women at the Kit

WED Mar 17 – Jim Black: Pachora

Mar 23 – Search & Restore presents: Ben Perowsky’s Moodswing Orchestra

Mar 30 – Mark Guiliana & Zach Danziger

WED Mar 31 – Ryan Sawyer with Thurston Moore & Daniel Carter

Rose Live Music in Williamsburg, Brooklyn Celebrates Its 4th Anniversary With Who’s Who of New York Drummers

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Rose Live Music kicks off its fourth anniversary celebration with a series of weekly performances featuring some of New York’s preeminent drummers leading their own groups. On February 2, exactly four years since Rose first opened its doors, the club will host an all-star jam session hosted by

Rose Live Music

visionary crossover pianist Jason Lindner’s Now Vs. Now, featuring a cast of jazz heavyweights who have performed at Rose in years past.

Every Tuesday through March, the Williamsburg jazz haunt will turn the spotlight on varied masters of the backbeat — running the gamut from John Scofield Band timekeeper and vaunted hip-hop impresario Adam Deitch to the combustible Latin rhythms of Dafnis Prieto to eponymous Medeski, Martin & Wood stalwart Billy Martin. The series will also feature such kings of the kit as relative newcomer Mark Guiliana, a frequent collaborator of bassist Avishai Cohen, Ryan Sawyer, who has performed with such groups as Stars Like Fleas, Lone Wolf, and TV on the Radio, and high-octane drum maven Jim Black. Guest presenters will include an evening of female drummers curated by Tom Tom Magazine, an international publication devoted to female percussionists, as well as separate events presented by Aaron Ali Shaikh’s New Languages Festival and Search & Restore.

Despite its youth, Rose has already cultivated a storied history of reaching across genre to bring the freshest sounds of the Zeitgeist in jazz, soul, Afrobeat, house, and everything in between to an intimate forum where music lovers and musicians alike find common ground. The club was founded by Carlo Vutera, a classically-trained opera singer of Sicilian descent, and his sister Gina, a

foreign language professor, who shared a vision of creating a welcoming environment geared towards musicians and true lovers of groundbreaking music in all its hybrid forms.

Having consistently played host to mainstays of the contemporary jazz and avant-garde scenes since the club’s inception, among them guitar guru Charlie Hunter, genre-bending sonic wizard and trombonist Josh Roseman, and ambient Afrobeat-dub spinsters Mobius Collective, Rose’s walls spin a rich tapestry of heavy grooves, trance-inducing funksmanship, and mind-blowing improvisation.

Rose Live MusicIn fact, the club’s walls tell a story quite literally — in order to create the European cafe aesthetic of their youth, the owners imported vintage wallpaper from Belgium, a country known for its artistry in, among other things, its wallpaper. Perhaps chiefly, though, Belgium is also known for its beer, and indeed, the libations at Rose flow freely, ranging from a wide array of Belgian cask ales drawn from an imported tap to an extensive variety of organic wines curated by the in-house sommelier. Downstairs from the performance space, Rose also houses Vutera, a gourmet restaurant that serves up home-style new Mediterranean cuisine.

A chicly decorated grotto bathed in iridescent red light and illuminated by well-placed candles, the European-style speakeasy is a cozy space so intimate that listeners can hear musicians on stage catch their breath in between notes. The tight quarters make for a vertiginous call-and-response synergy between performer and audience, creating a musical conversation that drives the delicate fuse that enlivens each performance’s explosive spontaneity, the touchstone of jazz.

“One of the greatest assets of Rose is that musicians really feel comfortable there, that they can do things that they can’t usually focus on,” says Mary Ho, who is in charge of booking for the club.

Though the eclectic musical offerings are prodigious, Rose tends to fly under the radar, a diamond in the rough amid a slew of other live music venues in Williamsburg. Located slightly off the beaten path on Grand Street, Rose has largely established itself as a haven for Brooklyn artists, a local watering hole and musicians’ hang where members of renowned jam band Soulive, Lost Tribe co-founder and in-demand sideman drummer Ben Perowsky, effervescent post-bop trumpeter Avishai Cohen, and numerous other luminaries of the scene regularly gather to commune over good food and good tunes unfettered and unfiltered by the vicissitudes of the broader music industry. These are the musicians’ musicians, convening to lay back and indulge in the music they want to play and the music they want to hear.

“The thing about Rose is that it provides a platform for musicians

who just want to try something new,” says Ho. “It gives them the rare opportunity when they’re not touring or not on the road to work on their own stuff, or just to play with their friends. There’s not the pressure of putting on that performance that other people expect and it gives the audience a chance to see them in an intimate setting.”

For more information, please contact Matt Merewitz at Fully Altered Media matt@fullyaltered.com / 347-527-2527

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