Tag Archives: jack white

PERMANENT VACATION — THE FILMS OF JIM JARMUSCH: COFFEE AND CIGARETTES

Alfred Molina and Steve Coogan join Jim Jarmusch in COFFEE & CIGARETTES

Alfred Molina and Steve Coogan join Jim Jarmusch in COFFEE & CIGARETTES

COFFEE & CIGARETTES (Jim Jarmusch, 2003)
Film Society of Lincoln Center, Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th St. between Eighth Ave. & Broadway
Thursday, April 10, 1:15 & 9:00
Series runs through April 10
212-875-5050
www.filmlinc.com

Jim Jarmusch’s entertaining, offbeat, and often frustrating Coffee & Cigarettes consists of eleven vignettes, filmed over the course of more than fifteen years, that pair actors at bars, diners, and the like, drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, and talking about drinking coffee and smoking cigarettes. Although the actors use their real names, they are put in fictional situations. While Steven Wright and Roberto Benigni are a hoot, Alex Descas and Isaach de Bankolé are annoying. Alfred Molina and Steve Coogan make the best team, while Iggy Pop and Tom Waits should have been better. So should GZA, RZA, and Bill Murray. Jack White and Meg White, despite a liking for Tesla, show they can’t act. Cate Blanchett with Cate Blanchett is okay but not as good as the riotous team of Joe Rigano and Vinny Vella. The film is a must-see for Jarmusch fans and those who need a nicotine/java jolt. All others beware. Coffee & Cigarettes is screening February 10 with The Garage Tapes, three shorts starring Waits, as part of the Film Society of Lincoln Center series “Permanent Vacation: The Films of Jim Jarmusch,” a tribute to the eclectic writer-director upon the occasion of the release of his latest work, Only Lovers Left Alive. The festival continues through April 10 with all of his feature films, which include such gems as Dead Man, Down by Law, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Stranger than Paradise, Mystery Train, and Night on Earth.

BLACK FRIDAY DEAL OF THE DAY: ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER AT CITY CENTER

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Antonio Douthit-Boyd and Linda Celeste Sims perform in a new production of Alvin Ailey’s THE RIVER (photo by Paul Kolnik)

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Antonio Douthit-Boyd and Linda Celeste Sims perform in a new production of Alvin Ailey’s THE RIVER (photo by Paul Kolnik)

New York City Center
130 West 56th St. between Sixth & Seventh Aves.
December 4 – January 5, $25-$135; 40% off select performances with code ALYFRI
212-581-1212
www.alvinailey.org
www.nycitycenter.org

Next week, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to City Center for its annual holiday season, its twenty-fifth since Alvin Ailey passed away on December 1, 1989. As a special one-day-only Black Friday special, tickets for select performances are being discounted up to forty percent by using the promo code ALYFRI, available online from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, by phone 11:00 am to 8:00 pm, and at the box office 12 noon to 8:00 (where there is no service charge). Running December 4 to January 5, the 2013-14 season, the third under artistic director Robert Battle, is chock-full of company classics and exciting new commissions. Back again are such recent additions as Rennie Harris’s Home, Ohad Naharin’s dazzling Minus 16, Jiří Kylián’s Petite Mort, Kyle Abraham’s Another Night, Ronald K. Brown’s breathtaking Grace, Battle’s Strange Humors and In/Side, and Paul Taylor’s Arden Court. This year’s world premieres include Aszure Barton’s LIFT, Wayne McGregor’s Chroma (featuring music by Jack White), Bill T. Jones’s D-Man in the Waters (Part I), and Brown’s Four Corners, along with new productions of Ailey’s Pas De Duke and The River. Most performances conclude, of course, with the Ailey mainstay Revelations, several with live music.

ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER TIME: CELEBRATING THE MUSIC OF “INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS”

Benefit concert will celebrate music of latest Coen brothers film, INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS

Benefit concert will celebrate music of latest Coen brothers film, INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS

The Town Hall
123 West 43rd St. between Sixth Ave. & Broadway
Tickets on sale Wednesday, August 21, 12 noon
Concert takes place September 29, $75-$150, 7:30
212-840-2824
www.insidellewyndavis.com
www.the-townhall-nyc.org

In 2000, filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen teamed up with producer T Bone Burnett to create an award-winning soundtrack for their hit film O Brother, Where Art Thou? The 1930s-set movie featured a mix of traditional Americana, country, folk, and blues, including such songs as “Big Rock Candy Mountain,” “I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow,” “O Death,” and “Lonesome Valley” performed by such musicians as Norman Blake, Jerry Douglas, Alison Krauss, Ralph Stanley, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, and the Soggy Bottom Boys. In their latest film, Inside Llewyn Davis, which premiered at Cannes in May, the Coens tell the story of a week in the life of a 1960s Greenwich Village folksinger, with Burnett once again on board to steer the soundtrack. On September 29, the music of the film will take center stage at the Town Hall, when “Another Day, Another Time: Celebrating the Music of Inside Llewyn Davis” takes place, featuring an all-star lineup raising funds for the National Recording Preservation Foundation. The roster is unusually impressive, featuring the Avett Brothers, Joan Baez, Rhiannon Giddens, Lake Street Drive, Colin Meloy, the Milk Carton Kids, Marcus Mumford, Conor Oberst, the Punch Brothers, Secret Sisters, Patti Smith, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Willie Watson, and Jack White in addition to cast members Oscar Isaac, John Goodman, Carey Mulligan, and Stark Sands. The concert will include songs from the film in addition to 1960s tunes that inspired them. The film will screen at this fall’s New York Film Festival before opening in December. Tickets are $75 and $150 and go on sale August 21 at noon.

DEX ROMWEBER DUO

Sibling punkabilly duo will be at Bowery Ballroom and Music Hall of Williamsburg this weekend (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Friday, November 12, Bowery Ballroom, 6 Delancey St., $15, 8:00
Saturday, November 13, Music Hall of Williamsburg, 66 North Sixth St., $15, 8:00
www.myspace.com/dexterromweberduo

In Tony Gayton’s 2006 documentary TWO HEADED COW, such musicians as Neko Case, Jack White, Chan Marshall (Cat Power), and Exene Cervenka shared their love of Dexter Romweber, one of music’s best-kept secrets despite his wide influence over the course of several decades. In 1983, guitarist Romweber formed the experimental roots-rock outfit Flat Duo Jets with drummer Crow Smith, based out of Athens, Georgia, and Carrboro, North Carolina. Romweber went solo in the late 1990s before hooking up with his sister, Sara, who had previously played drums in Let’s Active and Snatches of Pink. Touring as the Dex Romweber Duo, last year the siblings released RUINS OF BERLIN (Bloodshot), a blast of good old-fashioned punkabilly featuring guest appearances by Case (“Still Around”), Marshall (“Love Letters”), and Cervenka (“Lonesome Train”). They later recorded the chestnut “Last Kind Words Blues” and the Dex original “The Wind Did Move” with White, whose Third Man Records released the duo’s LIVE AT THIRD MAN vinyl-only LP this past April. Nearly twenty years ago, we caught Flat Duo Jets at Wetlands, then saw the Dex Romweber Duo at last year’s Bloodshot Records fifteenth anniversary bash at the Bell House, where they powered through such songs as “Mexicali Baby,” “If You Love Me,” “Cigarette Party,” and “Grey Skies,” and wondered just what the hell we were waiting for all those years in between, when we should have been following Dex a lot more closely. The Dex Romweber Duo will be at the Bowery Ballroom on November 12 and the Music Hall of Williamsburg on November 13, on a bill with Nightmare Waterfall and Man or Astroman?

UNDER GREAT NORTHERN LIGHTS

THE WHITE STRIPES UNDER GREAT NORTHERN LIGHTS (Emmett Malloy, 2009)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at Third St.
Wednesday, March 10, 8:00, and Thursday, March 11, 7:00 & 9:00
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.whitestripes.bside.com

In the summer of 2007, Jack White and Meg White, better known as the White Stripes, celebrated their tenth anniversary as a band by touring Canada for the first time, intent on playing every province. Their cross-country journey was documented by video director Emmett Malloy, with guitarist Jack and drummer Meg often setting up their instruments in offbeat, surprising venues, including their infamous one-note show. Although the film is having its official U.S. premiere this week at the SXSW festival in Austin, there will be sneak peeks at theaters across America, including three screenings at the IFC Center, in advance of its March 16 release on Blu-ray and DVD and as a live CD. One of the best bands in the world, the White Stripes recently saw several of their records (ELEPHANT, GET BEHIND ME SATAN, ICKY THUMP) named to numerous best-of-the-decade lists; now you can see them before everyone else does in what promises to be one damn cool concert film.

IT MIGHT GET LOUD

Jack White, Jimmy Page, and the Edge come together in music doc

Jack White, Jimmy Page, and the Edge come together in music doc

IT MIGHT GET LOUD (Davis Guggenheim, 2009)

Landmark Sunshine Cinema

143 East Houston St. between First & Second Aves.

212-330-8182

http://www.landmarktheatres.com

Davis Guggenheim follows up his Oscar-winning AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH with the awe-inspiring IT MIGHT GET LOUD, an intimate look at three guitar heroes and the instrument that has made them famous. On January 23, 2008, Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page, U2’s the Edge, and the White Stripes’ Jack White held a summit on an L.A. soundstage, where they shared stories about their love of music and, more specifically, the guitar — and, yes, they do eventually make beautiful music together. But IT MIGHT GET LOUD is much more than that; Guggenheim traces each six-string slinger’s personal history, joining them as they take fascinating, revealing forays into their past, returning to childhood places that influenced their career directions. White discusses how having a van led to his receiving his first guitar, the Edge goes back to the school where he, Bono, Adam Clayton, and Larry Mullen Jr. formed a band as young teens, and Page invites the cameras into his home, where he puts on old LPs and even plays air guitar (!) to Link Wray’s “Rumble.” In addition, White writes and records a song in a Tennessee farmhouse on the spot; the Edge, whom Page calls a “sonic architect,” explains his use of technology to arrive at his unique, expansive sound; and Page talks about how John Bonham’s drumming in the hallway of Headley Grange revolutionized rock-and-roll records. Guggenheim supplements the film with amazing archival footage of the three guitar heroes, including extremely early performances that have never been seen by the public before. But at its heart, IT MIGHT GET LOUD is about the creative process, as three generations of very different, massively talented musicians — the ultracool Page, the techno-geek Edge, and the cynical White — share their secrets, their inspirations, and their deep, profound love of the guitar. Oh, and make sure the theater turns the speakers all the way up to 11.