Tag Archives: music

The Long Bay Symphony Orchestra Presents “Regional Influences” on Sunday, November 8, 2015

Maestro Charles Jones Evans will lead the Long Bay Symphony (LBS) in a performance of Aaron Copland’s Clarinet Concerto featuring award-winning clarinetist Narek Arutyunian [Pronounced: Nah-rehk Ah-roo-tuhyoo-nee-in]. Sunday, November 8 at 4 pm at the Myrtle Beach High School Performing Arts Center.

This concert promises to excite audiences of all ages! Selections include the Overture from Mozart’s Abduction from the Seraglio, Johann Strauss’ Emperor Waltz, Manuel de Falla’s Three-Cornered Hat, Suite, Debussy’s Premier Rhapsody for clarinet and, of course (!) Copland’s jazzy Clarinet Concerto. Audiences will thrill to hear how these composers wove popular musical elements into their compositions.

Tickets range from $25 to $50. Student tickets (21 & under with student ID) are $10. For tickets call the box office 843-448-8379, purchase online at www.LongBaySymphony.com or visit us at 1107 48th Avenue N., Suite 310-E, Myrtle Beach.

Program Details
Dr. Charles Jones Evans, conductor
Narek Arutyunian, clarinet soloist

Narek Arutyunian Shot NYC March 2014

Narek Arutyunian

The Dance!

It’s all about the dance!

Thousands of Baby Boomers, plus many older and younger, leave their hometown dance floors as many as four times each year to gather in the clubs and the streets of North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. The shag is the main attraction, but every dancer will also describe the camaraderie that creates the rich backdrop for SOS events.

The shag is a sort of swing or slow jitterbug dance with specific complex steps co-existing with simple moves for the amateur, set to beach music and evoking nostalgic coastal visits. North Myrtle is considered the home of the shag which was named the South Carolina state dance in 1984 through efforts of Rep. John J. “Bubber” Snow.home of the shag

SOS is actually the Society of Stranders, an organization begun as a reunion of lifeguards, waitresses and friends who had worked at the beach in the 40s and 50s. The term SOS has become synonymous with the events which the group sponsors. The primary events are Fall Migration in September, Mid Winters in January, Spring Safari in April and the Summer Workshop in July. The largest non-commercial parade in the Southeast is presented on Fun Monday during Fall Migration, according to the organization’s president. These Fun Mondays, also expanded to Fun Sunday, are huge street parties with bands on stage and non-stop entertainment. The public is encouraged to join the fun and the fundraising activities during these free events.

Ron Whisenant, president of SOS for 14 years, has been dancing here since the late 50s and recently retired and moved here. “SOS has a life of its own,” he explained. “OD is our Garden of Eden,” he said, of the Ocean Drive section of North Myrtle Beach. “It began as a party. The music and dance were here, and we adopted it when the party came here.”

Whisenant also describes the well-recognized philanthropy of  the Hall of Fame Foundation which has raised funds for Red Cross during the Barefoot fire disaster, for earthquake victims in Haiti and for Camp Kemo as well as often helping individuals in need. As much as $10,000 is raised in a single Fun Monday for the camp. The foundation also donates defibrillators and sponsors classes for club staff which have been credited with saving dancers in a health crisis.

shaggers

Shaggers Trish Brown, Ron Whisenant, Jenny Beckham Johnson

Although it’s a party atmosphere including plenty of booze throughout the town, taxi service is encouraged and the organization provides a shuttle service along the boulevard on weekends.

Jenny Beckham Johnson began working at Duck’s during SOS in spring 1990 when it was a four-day party, and she has never missed the big event which is now ten days, working it twice each year for 24 years. Now she can be seen at OD Arcade mixing some serious margaritas and long island ice teas.

“I grew up with all of these people,” she said, describing the “generosity and love” that surround the gatherings. She remembers an occasion when $1000 was raised in tip jars in one hour for a fellow shagger in need.

The Guinness World Record was claimed two years ago when 750 dancers moved with the same step in unison for 90 seconds.

While a dancer can shag anywhere, the official SOS events require a membership card, when the SOS organization buys the dance floors of the clubs affiliated: Ducks, Pirate’s Cove, Ocean Drive Resort and Spanish Galleon, OD Arcade and Fat Harold’s Beach Club. Admission includes live entertainment at each club nightly, such as the Catalinas or Jim Quick & Coastline, among other popular groups appearing this year at Fat Harold’s, and a couple of buffet dinners. It’s easy and inexpensive to join SOS at a tent on the street during an event. You don’t even have to dance to be welcomed to membership.

“It’s a multi-generational meld and blend of people from every walk of life,” Whisenant described the “fun, benevolent and generous” group who gather regularly.” It’s not about politics or controversy, just fun and “good medicine for what ails you.”

“It’s spring break for adults,” Whisenant and many other shaggers define SOS. The dance floors and clubs are crowded during the events, but local dancers enjoy these floors every day.

The friendships developed over the years of shagging at the beach bring joys and sorrows and pepper any conversation about the event. After all, the dance doesn’t need discussing. It’s what keeps us all together!

It’s a North Myrtle Beach phenomenon, however it’s defined. A single 10-day event in September recently generated an economic impact of $10.5 million, according to a study by Coastal Carolina University.

A dance and so much more!

Eclectic Asheville Musician Kevin Lorenz Performs Sundays Unplugged in Spartanburg, SC

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Chapman Cultural Center in Spartanburg, SC, offers opportunities for free, casual, and cultural entertainment every Sunday, 1-5 p.m., during its Sundays Unplugged program. Art galleries and the history museum are open, and regional singer-songwriters perform, 2-4 p.m., to showcase the breadth of musical talent of the Upstate. OnAug. 30,2015,eclectic Asheville-based musician Kevin Lorenz plays.
Lorenz is a classically trained musician with experience in public performance, conducting, composition, teaching, and arranging. He studied classical guitar at UNC-Greensboro while earning his doctorate in music education. In addition, he attended master classes with Michael Lorimer and Jesus Silva among others. Citizens and visitors of Western North Carolina are likely to have heard Lorenz perform with the Asheville Symphony and the NC Pops Orchestra and as a soloist, or in churches, theaters, hotels, colleges, universities, and country clubs. His style is a mixture of jazz, pop, ragtime, bossa nova, Irish, and classical. As a well versed guitarist, he plays several different guitars to match the instrument to the genre. Samples of his work, as well as additional biographical details, can be found on his website KevinOnGuitar.com.KevinLorenz4
Artists Guild of Spartanburg, Spartanburg Art Museum, Spartanburg Regional History Museum, and the Student Galleries will be open with free admission, 1-5 p.m., to complement Lorenzs performance. Spartanburg Science Center will be open for a small fee.
Sundays Unplugged is a program of The Arts Partnership of Greater Spartanburg, the administrative non-profit agency that owns and operates Chapman Cultural Center and provides cultural leadership throughout Spartanburg County. For more information on Sundays Unplugged, call (864) 542-ARTS or visit ChapmanCulturalCenter.org.

Two Pianists Perform Benefit Concert in Spartanburg, SC, Aug. 29

John Cobb and Christoper Tavernier photo by Carri Bass

 

Freeburg & Perzina Pianos presents A Night at the Opera: A Rare Two-Piano Fantasy in Chapman Cultural Center’s theater on Saturday, Aug. 29, beginning at 7 p.m. This concert will feature pianists Dr. John Cobb and Christopher Tavernier. Proceeds will benefit Spartanburg Philharmonic Orchestra’s youth education program.

 

Patrons can expect the mesmerizing musical fantasies of 19th century Hungarian composer Franz Lizst, to be performed by 15-year-old pianist Tavernier and international performer and recording artist Dr. Cobb. Other musical selections will include Bellini’s Reminiscences of Norma and Reminiscences of Don Juanfrom Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Broadcast journalist Michael Cogdill of WYFF News 4 will emcee the concert; Jennifer C. Evins, President and CEO of Chapman Cultural Center, will be the keynote speaker.

 

“Our last two benefit concerts were complete sellouts at the Diana Wortham Theater in Asheville and the Tryon Fine Arts Center in Tryon,” Bob Tavernier, organizer of the concert and father of Christopher, said. “We’re expecting a great crowd at Chapman, too.”

 

Christopher Tavernier made his debut as the youngest concert pianist in North Carolina at the age of 13, performing Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concert No. 1 in B Flat minor with the Tar River Philharmonic Orchestra. This year, he was named the First International Perzina Artist by Perzina Pianos, the first to receive the distinction since the company’s founding in 1871.

 

Cobb is an international performer and recording artist known for his broad interpretive range and technical command. He studied with Claudio Arrau, whose teacher was a pupil of Franz Liszt. Throughout his career, Arrau (1903-1991) was renowned throughout the world as one of the supreme keyboard masters of the century. Liszt was a student of Carl Czerny, who was a pupil of Ludwig van Beethoven.

 

Tavernier and Cobb are set to begin the program with an eclectic prelude of some of Liszt’s most loved solo pieces. The two pianists will alternate, each playing parts of the composer’s powerful works, ending with a performance of Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, a composition arranged exclusively for two pianos.

 

In connection with this concert, the public has the opportunity to win a painted Perzina piano valued at $10,000 through a raffle. Perzina pianos, sold locally by Freeburg Pianos of Asheville, are among the world’s finest instruments, known for excellent quality and sound. Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg orchestrated having the piano painted by renowned visual artist Mark Anderson, who titled this original artwork, “Visions After a Sermon.” Raffle tickets are $25 each and may be purchased through Chapman Cultural Center’s Ticket Office, Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg, and Spartanburg Philharmonic Orchestra. They can be bought online at ChapmanCulturalCenter.org. Raffle tickets are sold separately from concert tickets.

 

“People will hear two of the most spectacular two-piano compositions ever written, starting with Liszt’s pieces that make listeners feel like they’re dreaming almost,” Tavernier said. “From classical piano to to sacred choral and orchestral music, these pianists will have you savoring each sensation and maybe giving into your darker side. This music is powerful.”

 

Tickets are $15 for general admission and $12 per senior and student, available both online at ChapmanCulturalCenter.org or in the Center’s Ticket Office. Groups of 10 or more will receive a 10 percent discount.

Singer-Songwriter Performs Newgrass Music in Spartanburg, SC Free to Public

Ary1

 

Chapman Cultural Center supports regional singer-songwriters during its weekly Sundays Unplugged program, featuring casual and cultural entertainment every Sunday, 1-5 p.m.  The center will feature “newgrass” and folk artist Ary Jeau Aug. 23, 2015. Art galleries and the history museum will also be open, 1-5 p.m., offering free admission for all ages.
 
Spartanburg resident Rachel Fleming, also known by her stage name Ary Jeau, describes herself as “fairly new to the music scene,” but has already been signed to McFearlis Music, LLC, a locally based label that specializes in original and cutting-edge sounds. Jeau is a guitarist and vocalist who performs folk and “newgrass,” or progressive bluegrass. She is a resident of Chesnee and student at Converse College.
“The warm encouragement I have received from Spartanburg is humbling,” Jeau said. “[I] am beyond excited to be on this journey.”
 
Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg, Spartanburg Art Museum, Spartanburg Regional History Museum, and the Student Galleries will complement Jeau’s performance with free admission. Spartanburg Science Center will be open for a small fee.
 
Sundays Unplugged is a program of The Arts Partnership of Greater Spartanburg, the administrative non-profit agency that owns and operates Chapman Cultural Center and provides cultural leadership throughout Spartanburg County. For more information on Sundays Unplugged, call (864) 542-ARTS or visit ChapmanCulturalCenter.org.

 

Bluegrass Artist Craig Owen Performs Live in Downtown Spartanburg SC

Chapman Cultural Center supports local singer-songwriters through its Sundays Unplugged program, providing a venue to showcase regional musical talent every Sunday, 2-4 p.m. These concerts are but one part of Sundays Unplugged, which also features free admission to art galleries and the history museum, 1-5 p.m.  Sunday, Aug. 16, bluegrass and folk artist Craig Owen performs in Zimmerli Plaza, weather permitting.Craig Owen
Having performed in the Spartanburg/Greenville area for years, Owen has played both bluegrass covers and folksy originals in many local venues. He plays bluegrass on fiddle, but plays his own modern folk and easy listening songs on acoustic guitar, pairing his instrumentals with great vocals. Owen has also produced several CDs, including The Smallest of Things and Daydreams and Memories.
 
Patrons may also enjoy free admission to Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg, Spartanburg Art Museum, Spartanburg Regional History Museum, and the Student Galleries. Spartanburg Science Center will also be open with a small admission fee.
 
Sundays Unplugged is a program of The Arts Partnership of Greater Spartanburg, the administrative non-profit agency that owns and operates Chapman Cultural Center and provides cultural leadership throughout Spartanburg County. For more information on Sundays Unplugged, call (864) 542-ARTS or visit ChapmanCulturalCenter.org.

Young Pop Musician Abbey Elmore Performs Free

Chapman Cultural Center in Spartanburg, SC, puts local singer-songwriters in the spotlight during its weekly Sundays Unplugged program, providing casual and cultural entertainment every Sunday, 1-5 p.m. Art galleries and the history museum are open with free admission while musicians perform in Zimmerli Plaza, weather permitting, 2-4 p.m. Genres and musicians vary from week to week, and Sunday, July 26, young pop artist Abbey Elmore will perform.
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A Gaffney resident and lead of The Abbey Elmore Band, which formed in July of 2012, Elmore writes songs about love and angst. Her style is a blend of acoustic and rock sounds with pop elements. Guitarist and vocalist Elmore will be joined this Sunday by the band’s drummer Tyler Tullis, who will play the cajón, a box-like percussion instrument from Peru that is played by slapping the front and back sides. Other members of the band include Donnie Elmore and Nick Wells. The Abbey Elmore Band released a music video for “Us Undaunted” early in 2015, available for viewing on YouTube. Elmore’s influences include Ed Sheeran, Green Day, Taylor Swift, A Great Big World, Arcade Fire, and Imagine Dragons.AbbeyElmore1
 
Artists’ Guild of Spartanburg, Spartanburg Art Museum, Spartanburg Regional History Museum, and the Student Galleries will complement the concert with free admission. Spartanburg Science Center will be open for a small fee.
 
For more information on Sundays Unplugged programming at Chapman Cultural Center, call (864) 542-ARTS or visit ChapmanCulturalCenter.org.

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Myrtle Beach Ocean Boulevard’s St. Patrick’s Day Celebration

Downtown Myrtle Beach, SC, is the place to be Saturday, March 14, for Ocean Boulevard’s 2015 St. Patrick’s Day Celebration, featuring music, fun and authentic Irish food and beverage!DSC_0074

Activities include live performances, kids’ zone, games and more, from noon until 11:00 p.m.

Ocean Boulevard will be closed to vehicles from Eighth Avenue North to Ninth Avenue North.

For more information, contact Sherri Loomis at 843-421-9848.

North Carolina Jazz Festival Scheduled

The North Carolina Jazz Festival (a Southeast Tourism Society Top 20 Event) brings world-class artists to Wilmington, North Carolina. On February 5th through 7th, fifteen traditional and swing jazz musicians will take the stage for three days in an intimate setting at the Hilton Wilmington Riverside’s ballroom. Cabaret-style seating and All-Star musicians distinguish this as one of the largest traditional jazz festivals in the Southeast.

Celebrating its 35th year, the 2015 North Carolina Jazz Festival kicks off on Thursday night with a 3-hour “Styles of Jazz” concert featuring The Benny Hill Quartet (jazz standards), Molly Ryan with the Dan Levinson Quartet (swing), Rossano Sportiello (tribute to George Shearing), and Ed Polcer’s All-Star Jam.

Friday and Saturday evening features an All-Star musician lineup in a traditional presentation of seven sets, each with different leaders. This year’s artists include: Adrian Cunningham and Dan Levinson (reeds), Ed Polcer (cornet), Nate Najar (guitar), Nicki Parrott (bass, vocals), Vincent Gardner (trombone), Rossano Sportiello and Mark Shane (piano), Kevin Dorn and Chuck Redd (drums), Herman Burney (bass), Bria Skonberg (trumpet/vocals), Molly Ryan (vocals), Benny Hill (sax) and the highly anticipated return of Jonathan Russell (violin).

Other highlights include workshops, master classes and a Patron’s brunch and jam with the All-Stars (for Patron ticket holders). Events take place at the Hilton Wilmington Riverside (301 N. Water Street, Wilmington). Admission charge. For N.C. Jazz Festival tickets and details, call 910-793-1111 or visit www.ncjazzfestival.com. Tickets can also be purchased at Audio Lab, 5732 Oleander Dr., Wilmington.