this week in music

ARGENTINA

ARGENTINA

El Ballet Nuevo Arte Nativo de Koki & Pajarín Saavedra performs to “Mi pueblo, mi casa, la soledad” in Carlos Saura’s ARGENTINA (photo © Piqui Mandarine)

ARGENTINA (ZONDA: FOLCLORE ARGENTINO) (Carlos Saura, 2015)
Lincoln Plaza Cinema
1886 Broadway at 63rd St.
Opens Friday, June 17
212-757-2280
www.lincolnplazacinema.com
www.firstrunfeatures.com

Spanish writer-director Carlo Saura celebrates the history and tradition of Argentinian music and dance in the joyous documentary Argentina. The eighty-four-year-old Saura, whose previous films include Carmen, Tango, El amor brujo, and Flamenco, Flamenco, and production designer Pablo Maestre Galli built stages in a vast, empty barn in La Boca barrio of Buenos Aires City to honor such local and regional art forms as Zamba, Vidala, Chacarera, Malambo, Copla, and Chamamé. Using archival footage, silhouette-creating scrims, mirrors, and live projections, Saura and cinematographer Félix Chango Monti follow a series of set pieces with no narration or explanation, creating a simple and beautiful record of Argentinian music and dance. Among the lovely performances are pianist Horacio Lavandera playing Carlos Guastavino’s “Bailecito,” “Bagualas” featuring Mariana Carrizo, Melania Pérez, and Tomas Lipan, “La Felipe Varela” with Chaqueño Palavecino and Jimena Teruel, “Añoranzas” by Soledad Pastorutti, Metabombo’s “Ritmo de Malambo” with Carlos “Pajarín” Saavedra and Jorge “Koki” Saavedra, and “En el fondo del mal” by Gabo Ferro and Luciana Jury.

Marcela Vilariño’s costumes add authenticity to the presentations, which also include tributes to Argentinian legends Mercedes Sosa (“Todo cambia,” in front of young students) and Atahualpa Yupanqui (“Preguntitas sobre Dios”). The choreography is by the Saavedra brothers, whose Ballet Nuevo Arte Nativo de Koki & Pajarín Saavedra dances to “Mi pueblo, mi casa, la soledad,” while Lito Vitale serves as musical coordinator (and performs “La Telesita”). Saura, whose films have been nominated for three Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film (in addition to numerous wins and/or nominations at the Venice, Cannes, and Berlin film festivals), occasionally goes behind the scenes, showing dancers warming up and putting on makeup, particularly before “Gato Sachero,” in which women transform into cats. Other highlights include Pedro Aznar’s “Vidala para mi sombra,” Liliana Herrero’s “Luna Tucumana,” Jaime Torres’s “Zamba Alegre,” Juventud Prolongada’s “Endiablado,” and “Volveré siempre a San Juan” and “Póngale por las hileras,” in a happening café. Even the end credits are a treat, displaying some of the colorful preparatory sketches for the sets and costumes.

MUSEUM MILE FESTIVAL 2016

Crowds take to the streets for annual Museum Mile Festival, beginning at the Met

Crowds take to the streets for annual Museum Mile Festival, beginning at the Met

Multiple locations on Fifth Ave. between 82nd & 105th Sts.
Tuesday, June 14, 6:00 – 9:00 pm
Admission: free
www.museummilefestival.org

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, now known as the Met Fifth Avenue with the addition of the Met Breuer in the old Whitney space, is the host of the thirty-ninth annual Museum Mile Festival, in which seven arts institutions along Fifth Avenue between 82nd and 105th Sts. open their doors for free between 6:00 and 9:00. (Met prez Daniel H. Weiss will deliver his opening remarks at 5:45.) There will be live outdoor performances by Dusan Tynek Dance Theatre, DJ Mickey Perez, Sammie & Trudie’s Imagination Playhouse, Mariachi Flor de Toloache, Silly Billy the Very Funny Clown, Miss 360, Alsarah and the Nubatones, Magic Brian, Kim David Smith, and Justin Weber Yo Yo in addition to face painting, art workshops, chalk drawing, and more. The participating museums (with at least one of their current shows listed here) are El Museo del Barrio (“Antonio Lopez: Future Funk Fashion”), the Museum of the City of New York (“Roz Chast: Cartoon Memoirs”), the Jewish Museum (“Isaac Mizrahi: An Unruly History,” “The Television Project: Some of My Best Friends”), the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum (“Beauty — Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial,” “Pixar: The Story of Design”), the Guggenheim (“Moholy-Nagy: Future Present”), the Neue Galerie (“Munch and Expressionism”), and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (“Manus x Machina: Fashion in an Age of Technology,” “Court and Cosmos: The Great Age of the Seljuqs”), along with presentations by the New York Academy of Medicine, the 92nd St. Y, and Asia Society. Don’t try to do too much, because it can get rather crowded; just pick one or two exhibitions in one or two museums and enjoy.

NORTHSIDE FESTIVAL 2016 VIDEO OF THE DAY: “SLOOP JOHN B” AND “GOD ONLY KNOWS” BY BRIAN WILSON

Who: Brian Wilson
What: Northside Festival
Where: McCarren Park, North Twelfth St., Lorimer St., and Manhattan Ave. between Bayard St. and Berry St. and Nassau Ave.
When: Sunday, June 12, $35, 8:15
Why: At first, it might be hard to believe that tickets are still available for Brian Wilson’s Northside Festival concert in McCarren Park on June 12, part of his Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary Tour, in which he performs the classic 1966 Beach Boys album. It would seem like a natural for Brooklyn hipsters, especially when it costs a mere thirty-five clams. But as the above video shows, he had a bit of trouble reaching a whole lot of notes on “God Only Knows” in Perth in April. But perhaps that doesn’t really matter, as the chance to see Wilson, joined by former fellow Beach Boys Al Jardine and Blondie Chaplin, play such songs as “Wouldn’t It Be Nice,” “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head on My Shoulder),” “I Know There’s an Answer,” “Here Today,” and “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times” trumps everything else. Hinds and ROSTAM open up.

Five More to Watch on Sunday at Northside
Castle Black, Paper Box, free, 3:00
Mannequin Pussy, Aviv, $10, 7:00
Surf Rock Is Dead, Knitting Factory, $10, 7:45
Dead Painters, Muchmore’s, 8:45
Woodsman, Baby’s All Right, $10, 11:00

NORTHSIDE FESTIVAL 2016 VIDEO OF THE DAY: “I DON’T MIND” BY PSYCHIC ILLS

Who: Psychic Ills
What: Northside Festival
Where: Music Hall of Williamsburg, 66 North Sixth St., 718-486-5400
When: Saturday, June 11, $15, 11:00
Why: Hypno rockers Psycho Ills will be at the Music Hall of Williamsburg on June 11 as part of the Northside Festival, on a bill with Weyes Blood and She-Devils. Led by vocalists Tres Warren on guitar and Elizabeth Hart on bass, the groovy band has just released its fifth album, Inner Journey Out (Sacred Bones, June 3, 2016). The record begins with Mazzy Star’s Hope Sandoval joining in on “I Don’t Mind,” followed by “Another Change,” on which Warren sings, “Don’t know if I can handle what I got coming / I’m going through another change / Spend all my time trying to make sense of my life / Going through another change.” Other tracks include “Back to You,” “Mixed Up Mind,” “New Mantra,” and “Coca-Cola Blues.”

Five More to Watch on Saturday at Northside
The Echo Friendly, Palisades, $5, 3:00
The Felice Brothers, McCarren Park, $35-$40, 6:30
Deradoorian Playing Songs from Black Sabbath’s Master of Reality, Rough Trade, $20, 9:00
King Khan & the Shrines, Brooklyn Bowl, $20, 10:00
Little Racer, Our Wicked Lady, $10, 11:00

THE MUSIC OF STRANGERS: YO-YO MA AND THE SILK ROAD ENSEMBLE

Yo-Yo Ma

Yo-Yo Ma leads the Silk Road Ensemble around the world in Morgan Neville documentary

THE MUSIC OF STRANGERS: YO-YO MA AND THE SILK ROAD ENSEMBLE (Morgan Neville, 2016)
Angelika Film Center, 18 West Houston St. at Mercer St., 212-995-2570
Lincoln Plaza Cinema, 1886 Broadway between 62nd & 63rd Sts., 212-757-2280
Opens Friday, June 10
themusicofstrangers.film

About midway through The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble, the renowned international group performs an exhilarating song in a studio that leaves them just as thrilled as the audience. Renowned cellist Ma might be the heart of the ensemble, but it’s the joy of creating and playing music no matter what that makes this documentary soar. And music is something that director Morgan Neville clearly understands, having previously made the Oscar-winning 20 Feet from Stardom as well as Muddy Waters: Can’t Be Satisfied, Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story, and Johnny Cash’s America. In The Music of Strangers, Neville traces the history of the Silk Road Ensemble, named for the thousands-of-years-old trading route across Asia, from China to the Mediterranean. Born as an improvised gathering of musicians at Tanglewood in 2000, it became a venture that tours the world, promoting collaboration and celebrating international interaction. “The idea of culture is not so much to preserve tradition but to keep things alive and to evolve things,” says Ma, who has had to deal with accusations of cultural appropriation and dilution. Neville focuses on five members of the ensemble: Ma, the Paris-born Chinese-American cellist who has been a star his whole life (archival footage shows him at age seven with Leonard Bernstein, performing for President Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline); Chinese pipa virtuoso Wu Man, the first Chinese artist to play at the White House; Kinan Azmeh, a Syrian clarinetist who is the artistic director of the Damascus Festival Chamber Music Ensemble; Cristina Pato, a rock star on the gaita, the Galician bagpipe; and Iranian Kayhan Kalhor, a three-time Grammy nominee who is an expert on the kamancheh, the Persian bowed lute. Each shares stories of their personal history, focusing on their relationship with their native countries, which have undergone major changes over the last fifteen years.

They also explain how they almost didn’t continue after the events of 9/11, fearful of their Arabic connections and wondering whether proceeding with their mission was the right thing to do. “Everybody in the face of disaster reexamines who they are and their purpose,” Ma says, referring to their decision to go on. But their music transcends genre, history, and politics. “My intention is to represent my culture and the contribution that this very old culture made to human life,” Kalhor, who has been exiled from Iran, notes. And Ma adds, “The clearest reason for music, for culture, is it gives us meaning.” But Wu Man sums it all up: “There’s no East or West; it’s just a globe.”The Music of Strangers opens June 10 a the Angelika and Lincoln Plaza; Azmeh will give a special performance and participate in a Q&A following the 7:05 show on June 11 at Lincoln Plaza and the 5:00 show on June 12 at the Angelika, moderated by World Music Institute artistic director Par Neiburger. The Silk Road Ensemble has also released a companion album, Sing Me Home, which features such songs as “Green (Vincent’s Tune),” “Little Birdie,” “Ichichila,” “St. James Infirmary Blues,” and “Going Home,” featuring such guest artists as Bill Frisell, Abigail Washburn, Toumani Diabate, Sarah Jarosz, Gregory Porter, and Roomful of Teeth.

NORTHSIDE FESTIVAL 2016 VIDEO OF THE DAY: “EASY” BY HELIOTROPES

Who: Heliotropes
What: Northside Festival
Where: Gold Sounds, 44 Wilson Ave.; Bar Matchless, 557 Manhattan Ave.; Black Bear Bar, 70 North Sixth St.
When: Friday, June 10, Gold Sounds, $8-$10, 7:00; Friday, June 10, Bar Matchless, $7, 11:15; Saturday, June 11, Black Bear Bar, 4:30
Why: Heliotropes have gone through some major changes since we first sang their praises at the 4Knots Festival back in June 2013. Only founding member and chief singer-songwriter Jessica Numsuwankijkul remains from the original all-woman foursome; Numsuwankijkul is now joined by guitarist Ricci Swift, bassist Richard Thomas, and drummer Gregg Giuffre. The Brooklyn-based quartet will be featuring songs from its upcoming sophomore album, Over There That Way, which drops June 17 from the End Records. The record has a military theme, with such songs as “Normandy,” “War Isn’t Over,” “Dardanelles Pts. I & II,” and “Goodnight Soldier.” Heliotropes will be playing Gold Sounds at 7:00 and Bar Matchless at 11:15 on June 10 and Palisades at 4:30 on June 11 as part of the Northside Festival.

Five More to Watch on Friday at Northside
The Teen Age, Gold Sounds, $8-$10, 8:00, and Muchmore’s, $10, 10:15
Slonk Donkerson, the Grand Victory, $10, 10:00
The World Is a Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid to Die, Palisades, $15, 10:30
Jeff the Brotherhood, Music Hall of Williamsburg, $16, 11:00
Dead Leaf Echo, Alphaville, $8, 11:15

NORTHSIDE FESTIVAL 2016 VIDEO OF THE DAY: “C’EST LA VIE” AND “FLOATING WORLD” BY WOLF PARADE

Who: Wolf Parade and Land of Talk
What: Northside Festival
Where: McCarren Park, North Twelfth St., Lorimer St., and Manhattan Ave. between Bayard St. and Berry St. and Nassau Ave.
When: Thursday, June 9, free with RSVP, 8:30
Why: Canadian quartet Wolf Parade continues its reunion after a five-year break with a free Northside Festival show at McCarren Park, with fellow Montreal band Land of Talk opening up. Spencer Krug, Dan Boeckner, Dante DeCaro, and Arlen Thompson are out on the road in support of their new eponymous four-track EP, consisting of “Automatic,” “Mr. Startup,” “C’est La Vie Way,” and “Floating World.”

Five More to Watch on Thursday at Northside
Mobile Steam Unit, Sunnyvale, $7, 7:00
Juliet K, Pete’s Candy Store, free, 8:00
Diarrhea Planet, Brooklyn Bowl, $18-$20, 10:15
Grooms, Aviv, $10, 10:40
bunny X, the Grand Victory, $10, 12:15 am