Following their appearance at the Ecstatic Music Festival on February 9 at Merkin Concert Hall, Texas experimental droners This Will Destroy You are hanging around for a few more days, playing with Amen Dunes at the Stevens Institute Babbio Atrium on Saturday afternoon in Hoboken, then trekking over to Brooklyn for a just-announced show at 285 Kent later that night with Wires Under Tension ($8, 8:00). Featuring Jeremy Galindo and Chris King on guitars, Donovan Jones on bass and keyboards, and Alex Bhore on drums, TWDY play long, atmospheric instrumentals, which can be found on their 2008 eponymous debut and their 2011 sophomore effort, Tunnel Blanket (Suicide Squeeze), which ranges from the brief “Osario,” clocking in at a mere 2:40, to the 6:33 “Killed the Lord, Left for the New World,” the 8:13 “Communal Blood,” and the 12-minute-plus epic “Little Smoke,” as well as “Black Dunes” (8:16), the ghostly new video of which appears above. While the band’s music might not quite destroy you, it will take you on one far-out, intense sonic adventure.
Yearly Archives: 2012
CAMPAIGN: LIVE PERFORMANCE
C24 Gallery
514 West 24th St. between Tenth & Eleventh Aves.
Saturday, February 11, free, 4:00 – 6:00
646-416-6300
www.c24gallery.com
On January 12, the C24 Gallery celebrated the opening of its latest exhibit, the group show “Campaign,” with a series of live performances that explored how the female body is depicted in today’s culture. In conjunction with Fashion Week, the Chelsea space will bring back several of the performers on Saturday afternoon for another free show, which serves as a complement to “Campaign,” a display of painting, sculpture, video, and photography that examines image and personal identity and power in current popular thinking. Curator Amy Smith-Stewart has brought together a compelling array of international artists, including Jen Denike, Kate Gilmore, Jill Magid, Aleksandra Mir, Shana Moulton, Laurel Nakadate, Clifford Owens, Mika Rottenberg, and Hank Willis Thomas, each offering unique perspectives on female beauty and empowerment. The Saturday program will feature the Push Pops presenting a remix of their “Bulimic Flow” Yoga Hip Hop Fusion, which seeks to heal the third chakra; Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir (aka Shoplifter), who will continue her exploration of the symbolic nature of hair; and additional performances by Lisa Kirk and Katie Cercone (Diamond of the Push Pops), all of whom have works in the show.
THE SCENE @ TAVERN: ICE FESTIVAL
Courtyard of Tavern on the Green, Central Park
67th St. off Central Park West
Saturday, February 11, free, 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
212-874-7874
www.centralparknyc.org
Central Park celebrates the cold weather, which perhaps has finally arrived, with its annual Ice Festival, being held Saturday afternoon in the Courtyard of Tavern on the Green. Matthew Reiley, the Central Park Conservancy’s associate director of conservation and preservation, will give a talk about the many permanent sculptures that can be found throughout the park, and the Long Island City-based Okamoto Studio will create temporary ice sculptures of Central Park icons. “Purity. Crystalline. Evanescent,” Okamoto explains on its website. “Ice evokes romance…. Forms follow timelines of existence as they gradually change from rigid to organic, eventually disappearing, melting away.” There will also be free hot cocoa on hand to warm your freezing bones.
SAFE HOUSE
SAFE HOUSE (Daniel Espinosa, 2012)
Opens Friday, February 10
www.nooneissafe.com
Swedish director Daniel Espinosa’s English-language debut roars out of the gate with the promise of the best of the Matt Damon / Bourne movies but ends up feeling like an average, dare we say “safe,” episode of 24. Ryan Reynolds stars as Matt Weston, a CIA newbie looking for a better gig than guarding a never-used safe house in Cape Town, complaining to his superior, David Barlow (Brendan Gleason), that he wants a chance to show his stuff. He quickly gets that opportunity when former agency star gone rogue Tobin Frost (Denzel Washington) is brought to the house, having turned himself in to the U.S. Embassy after being hunted by gun-toting villains who are tracking down a microchip with damaging information on it. Frost’s been under the radar making secret, illegal deals for almost a decade, but Weston can’t help but still be in awe of the legendary figure, who is as cool as they come. Soon the two are on the run through the streets of Cape Town and Johannesburg, a sort-of riff on the classic 1958 drama The Defiant Ones but without any social relevance. The film then steadily devolves into an excuse for one inexplicable action scene after another until the last half hour, when Espinosa (Easy Money) slows things down a bit and David Guggenheim’s script — considered one of the hottest in Hollywood a few years ago — takes the easy way out every step of the way, from the revelation of the mole to what becomes of Frost and Weston (as well as CIA operatives played by Sam Shepard and Vera Farmiga). Reynolds (Green Lantern, The Proposal) more than holds his own going toe-to-toe with Washington, who gives a mesmerizing performance until the script lets him, and the audience, down at the end. It’s too bad that the story went haywire, because there was a lot to like through the first half of this well-made but ultimately disappointing espionage thriller.
CINEMATIC GODDESS: THE FILMS OF RAQUEL WELCH
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. at Amsterdam Ave.
February 10-14
212-875-5601
www.filmlinc.com
Chicago-born actress Raquel Welch was the embodiment of the Hollywood superstar, the supreme sex symbol of the late 1960s and 1970s. A tougher, more physical version of Marilyn Monroe and Brigitte Bardot, Welch made a series of films in multiple genres, from the sci-fi cult classic Fantastic Voyage to the shoot-’em-up Western 100 Rifles, from the literary bomb Myra Breckinridge to the caveman stomp One Million Years B.C., from the period comedy Mother, Jugs, and Speed to the sports favorite Kansas City Bomber. Her costars included Burt Reynolds, Bill Cosby, Jim Brown, Christopher Lee, James Coburn, Oliver Reed, and Harvey Keitel — in addition to Dyan Cannon, Mae West, Barbara Stanwyck, and Farrah Fawcett — but when Welch was on-screen, her impressive assets took over. Welch made more than three dozen movies, ten of which will be shown at the Film Society of Lincoln Center for the long-deserved tribute “Cinematic Goddess,” including all of the above works in addition to Hannie Caulder, The Last of Sheila, The Three Musketeers, and The Wild Party, with Welch on hand for several Q&As before or after the screening, moderated by the likes of Simon Doonan and Dick Cavett.
VIDEO OF THE DAY: JOSÉ JAMES
Future Now — José James from Simon Benjamin
Born and raised in Minneapolis but now settled in New York, José James combines jazz, hip-hop, and spoken word in his work, which includes a stint in Ancestor Energy and his widely hailed solo debut, 2008’s The Dreamer, followed by the 2010 double shot of Blackmagic and For All We Know. James, who has been heavily influenced by John Coltrane and has played with such legends as Junior Mance, Chico Hamilton, McCoy Tyner, and Wynton Marsalis, has spent the last year and a half writing and recording his latest project, due in September, No Beginning, No End, songs from which he’ll premiere Friday and Saturday night as part of the Harlem Stage Uptown Nights series at the Gatehouse. He’ll be performing two shows each evening (7:30 & 9:30, $25) with a lineup consisting of Takuya Kuroda on trumpet, Corey King on trombone, Grant Windsor on keyboards, Solomon Dorsey on bass, and Nate Smith on drums, along with special guests Taylor McFerrin and Emily King. “Come get the world’s first view of my new journey,” he writes on his website, “and share Valentine’s weekend with us.”
LAR LUBOVITCH DANCE COMPANY: HISTOIRE DU SOLDAT / CRISIS VARIATIONS
Manhattan Movement & Arts Center
248 West 60th St. between Amsterdam & West End Aves.
February 10-12, $15-$45
212-787-1178
www.manhattanmovement.com
www.lubovitch.org
Last March, an all-star lineup teamed up for a one-night-only presentation of a new English-language production of Igor Stravinsky’s Histoire du Soldat (The Soldier’s Tale) at Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO. The production is now back for three shows this weekend at the Manhattan Movement & Arts Center, running February 10-12. The 1918 work, based on a parable about a Russian soldier who makes a deal with the devil, will be conducted by flutist Ransom Wilson for his Le Train Bleu ensemble, with choreography by Lar Lubovitch. The production features Lar Lubovitch Dance Company members Reid Bartelme as the soldier, Nicole Corea as the princess, and Attila Joey Csiki as the devil, with Reed Armstrong acting the part of the devil and Corey Dargel the soldier; Marni Nixon will serve as narrator. The evening will also include Lubovitch’s Crisis Variations, which plays off the word “crisis,” with dancers Katarzyna Skarpetowksa, Brian McGinnis, Corea, Csiki, Reed Luplau, Jason McDole, and Laura Rutledge along with five musicians performing a commissioned score by Yevgeniy Sharlat. The Lar Lubovitch Dance Company will then head farther uptown for the Harkness Dance Festival at the 92nd St. Y, where Stripped/Dressed will feature The Legend of Ten and various demonstrations, with Lubovitch discussing the creative process with dance writers Anna Kisselgoff (February 17), Deborah Jowitt (February 18) and Gus Solomons Jr. (February 19).