| Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1
PURIM PARTY with Mariposas Galácticas and West Philly Orchestra 6PM KIDS HOUR FOOD 4 SALE- PUPUSAS SHOW: 7:30PM COSTUME PARTY $18 adv, $20 door, Kids under 12 by donation (NOTAFLOF) Purim is a favorite Jewish holiday for anti-fascists, queer folks, young people, feminists, and people who love to party. The holiday calls for noise making, rule-breaking, binary-blurring and an end to business as usual. Come party with West Philly Orchestra and the Mariposas Galácticas, as they call in the holiday with the raucous and joyful sounds of Klezmer and Cumbia, two vital folk music traditions with deep legacies of resistance. There will be costumes, clowns, Yiddish dancing, pupusas, and even a kid’s hour to start the night, so bring the whole fam! Mariposas Galácticas Kumbia / Klezmer / Punk https://www.instagram.com/mariposasgalacticas Mariposas Galácticas is an 8-piece Cumbia Klezmer Punk band based in Philly. Combining band members’ South American and Jewish ancestries, the band creates a unique diasporic sound that gets audiences everywhere dancing with rebellious joy. By honoring their Indigenous Andean musical heritage, blended together with punkified ancient Jewish melodies, the band plays a mixture of original and classic tunes that span different languages, cultures, and genres. West Philadelphia Orchestra Balkan / Brass / Klezmer https://www.westphiladelphiaorchestra.net/ West Philadelphia Orchestra (WPO) is an avant-village folk brass band founded in 2006, known for explosive, dance-driven live shows. Drawing inspiration from Balkan brass, klezmer, and New Orleans traditions, as well as punk, soul, and free jazz, their original music blends global folk roots with raw street-band energy. With driving percussion, blaring horns, and a yawping tuba, WPO’s sound hits hard and lifts spirits. THIS SHOW MAY SELL OUT! Advance tickets can be purchased HERE |
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
Presented in collaboration with Philly Iranians Niloufar Shiri & Bahar Badieitabar: Kamancheh player and composer Niloufar Shiri began her musical journey at the Tehran Music Conservatory in Iran. She later immigrated to the USA and pursued her studies in composition at the University of California, San Diego, and Integrated Composition, Improvisation, and Technology (ICIT) at the University of California, Irvine. Niloufar’s musical world lies at the intersection of classical Iranian music, contemporary music, and improvisation. Her focus revolves around exploring the concept of displacement in relation to familiar and distant environments. Her music closely examines textural and timbral spaces, drawing inspiration from staggered pitch relations found in the Radif, as well as bird sounds, noise, and feedback. Her unique and radical approach to kamancheh performance significantly expands the sonic capabilities of the instrument and places her at the forefront of its practice. Bahar Badieitabar is an Iranian Oud player and composer, recently graduated on a full scholarship with a double major in composition and performance from Berklee College of Music. At the age of 12, Bahar began her musical training at the Tehran Music School, where she earned her high school diploma in music. She studied under notable oud players, including Siavash Roshan, Negar Bouban, and Yurdal Tukcan. Bahar won first place at the Iranian Youth National Music Festival for two consecutive years at ages 16 and 17. She has performed as both a performer and composer at numerous venues, including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, MCG Jazz, and Groton Hill Music Center, as well as at music festivals in Iran and the United States, collaborating with musicians of diverse backgrounds. In 2017, Bahar began her undergraduate studies in Oud Performance at the University of Tehran before moving to the United States to study at Berklee. She has studied and worked with acclaimed musicians such as Marti Epstein, Kris Davis, and Alain Mallet, and has been a part of Berklee's Institute of Jazz Gender and Justice since 2022. Bahar's background contributes to her authentic composition approach, rooted in Iranian classical music, contemporary concert music, and jazz. Currently, she is a member of Danilo Perez's Global Jazz Messengers. She has shared the stage with Grammy-winning, world-renowned musicians, including John Patitucci, Brian Blade, Danilo Perez and Bruno Raberg. Parsa Ferdowsi: Parsa Ferdowsi is a musician and improviser, born and raised in Karaj, Iran. He is a member of Shiraz Ensemble (with Sina Homaee, Noushin Nowroozi, and Sepehr Pirasteh), and Taarof Duo (with Matt Wellins.) He has regularly worked with artists such as Nat Baldwin, Shawn O’Sullivan, Michael Pestel, and Negar Soleymanifar. His works have been performed by ensembles such as Pamplemousse Ensemble, String Noise Duo, and Wesleyan's Toneburst Laptop and Electronic Arts Ensemble. He also collaborated on some projects with Peter Zummo, David Vantieghem, Alex Waterman (as a part of the Arthur Russell’s City Park project led by Nick Hallet), David Behrman, Nicolas Collins, and Lea Bertucci. He works with sound, space, image, words, expectations, and frames. His works include compositions, photographs, videos, improvisations, performance, poetry, and acting. His compositions usually benefit from use of verbal notations, theatrics, collaborative environments, site-specificity, and collective improvisation. As an improviser, he implements some of his compositional techniques and issues around decision-making alongside the language and affordances of Iranian Dastāghi music. He is currently studying Music Technology in the graduate program at Temple University. He holds an MA in Experimental Music/Performance from Wesleyan University where he worked with Ron Kuivila, Paula Matthusen, and Neely Bruce, and a BA in Composition from the Tehran University of Art. He studied tombak with Mahmoud Balandeh, santur and Radif of dastgahi music with Behnam Mehrabi and Majid Kiani. Admission is FREE, donations appreciated! |
19
|
20
|
21
Join us for readings of excerpts from a collection of full length and short dramatic works by Abrams Artist in Residence Ricardo A. Bracho that cover the gamut from the underground house music scene and underground revolutionary organizations; the AIDS pandemic and George Floyd protests; the conquest of the Americas and what to wear to the afters. Cast will include Penn students and alums. Post-show discussion with the playwright and UC Riverside Associate Prof. Keith M. Harris. Admission is FREEPhoto credit: Andrés González-Bonillas |
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
8:00 PM - 10:00 PM
The Philly Puppet Guild Puppet Slam, rescheduled from January 27more info to come
|
|
29
|
30
|
31
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|