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Going to the Cowboy Carter concert? Here's how to do it right.
Going to the Cowboy Carter concert? Here's how to do it right.

Washington Post

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

Going to the Cowboy Carter concert? Here's how to do it right.

Y'all got your Cowboy Carter tickets? Good. That's the first step. Now you've got to prepare for the big show. Lucky for you, I'm here to help. After attending two concerts during major storms (the second night of Renaissance in D.C. and the first night of Cowboy Carter in Chicago), I know my way around this rodeo. Here are some things to keep in mind to maximize your Cowboy Carter experience.

Historical harp to help open Hammond concert series
Historical harp to help open Hammond concert series

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Historical harp to help open Hammond concert series

Jun. 27—HAMMOND — The Yellow Barn Concert Series opens Sunday with a celebration of a historical harp from the Sisters of Saint Joseph's. At 5 p.m. Sunday, the Iva Smith Memorial Gallery of Fine Art, 627 State Route 37, will present renowned harpist Janet Witman, who will commemorate the discovery of a rare harp dating from 1810 that had been in the possession of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Watertown. In April, the sisters decided "it was time to repurpose" the property at 1425 Washington St., and sell it, so it would become an important asset for the community. Some sisters moved to Samaritan Summit Village and others found smaller homes in the area. The rare Erard harp dates from 1810 and is one of the first double-action harps capable of playing flat, natural, and sharp tones in the same piece, according to Evelyn Saphier, gallery director. Throughout the 20th century, the harp was used in the Sisters' musical conservatory by Sister Emmaline. Witman will perform her program on a Camac concert grand harp, Trianon model, made in France. "The harp of Saint Joseph's, too delicate to play, will be on display for its beauty," Saphier said. Witman's harp concert will include sacred works by Grandjany, Catagay Akyol, Bach, Mozart, James L. Bain, John Steiner, Sir John Rutter, Janet Witman and others. The Erard harp will be on display during the concert and throughout the summer at The Iva Smith Gallery. It will then find a new home in the music room of the Paddock Mansion of the Jefferson County Historical Society. Yellow Barn Concerts are $10 at the door, with children 18 and under admitted for free. Parents are encouraged to come 20 minutes early so their children can meet the instrumentalists and their instruments. This project is made possible in collaboration with Chippewa Bay Community Club, with funds from the Statewide Community Regrants Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts, with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and administered by the St. Lawrence County Arts Council.

Dua Lipa at the Aviva review: Confident and often sublime evening of pulsing stomp-pop
Dua Lipa at the Aviva review: Confident and often sublime evening of pulsing stomp-pop

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Dua Lipa at the Aviva review: Confident and often sublime evening of pulsing stomp-pop

Dua Lipa Aviva Stadium, Dublin ★★★★☆ Dua Lipa is seamlessly executing the night's shimmering dance workout when the crowd at the Aviva miss an opportunity. The singer's pandemic hit Levitating belongs to that select group of disco-pop songs blessed with double handclaps, the finest adornment in all of music, and an optimist might have hoped for the magic of an entire stadium clapping in sync. A realist would have known that fans' hands would be occupied, but that their phones would create their own special effect during the occasional moments in the English-Albanian star's set when she slows down. During the portion of the show reserved for a tribute to a local artist, torches are switched on as a reward for her smart choice of Sinéad O'Connor 's Nothing Compares 2 U. The song becomes more of a stage-school product in this context, but she doesn't totally overcook it, and when she blows a kiss to the crowd at the end, satisfied, you think, 'Yes, that worked.' Tonight, the last date in the European leg of her Radical Optimism tour, we've got steam jets, jewelled collars and joy. She kicks off the celebration with Training Season, a typically relentless Lipa song beloved of sadistic exercise-class instructors, and she's soon running on the spot and shoulder-rolling in silver corsetry. READ MORE Later, Physical, off superior second album Future Nostalgia , is preceded by a mock aerobics video, and that's the sort of regimented, disciplined shape of things with Lipa. She excels as a purveyor of super-honed bops that, at their best, lean into robotic elements, huskily voiced confidence and Eighties-infused brashness, while exuding their own likable, propulsive groove. After third song Break My Heart, in which she contemplates the dire consequences of falling in love after a single 'hello', she laps up the Aviva's adoration, then we're straight on to the similarly themed One Kiss, her tropical-house smash with Calvin Harris and the first real banger of the set. Among the evening's standouts is Love Again, another slice of Future Nostalgia, in which Lipa, resigned to the whole love thing by now, exclaims 'goddamn' at the inevitability of it all beneath giant rings of fire while somehow acquiring a faux-fur coat to match her cobalt blue lace dress and stockings. But the best thing about Love Again is the vintage sample that propels it – a muted trumpet line originally recorded in 1932 for the composition My Woman, with a 'vocal refrain' by Al Bowlly, has wended its way through musical history to reach the Aviva in the year 2025. That's objectively delightful, and a reminder of how rich the textures of pop music can be. [ The 10 best Irish albums of 2025 so far Opens in new window ] When Lipa indulges in overt crowd orchestration, she pulls that off, too, and nowhere is this more effective than on Be the One, from her debut – it's like a manual for euphoria. Not everything attains such heady heights and there's a patience-testing segment where she interacts with an emotional front row, but she still does more than enough tonight to make us know we're never more than seconds away from something fun, something cool. She's got this. London-born Lipa's next listed concert is a performance at a festival that she and her family organise in Pristina, Kosovo – from where her Kosovo Albanian parents emigrated to the UK – and then there's the small matter of turning 30 to do before she embarks on her North American tour. [ The Music Quiz: Rufus Wainwright once played himself an episode of which classic TV comedy? Opens in new window ] But, for now, on this sultry night in Dublin, she just has her kaleidoscopic final stretch to complete. It starts with infectious early breakthrough New Rules, in which she reminds herself and us how to swerve a man who doesn't love her back. (In real life, she recently announced her engagement to British actor Callum Turner.) The artist also known as Mermaid Barbie then slips into an all-too-short snippet of Dance the Night from the soundtrack to Greta Gerwig's Barbie film before injecting what's left of her professional energy into 2019 mega-hit Don't Start Now and rumbling Radical Optimism track Houdini. With the confetti cannons working overtime, she extricates herself from the stage, wrapping up what has been an efficient and often sublime two hours of pulsing stomp-pop, and her replenished fans leave so high they might as well be levitating.

Ireland event guide: Lana Del Rey, Alanis Morissette and the other best things to do this week
Ireland event guide: Lana Del Rey, Alanis Morissette and the other best things to do this week

Irish Times

time12 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Times

Ireland event guide: Lana Del Rey, Alanis Morissette and the other best things to do this week

Event of the week Lana Del Rey Monday, June 30th, Aviva Stadium, Dublin, 5pm, €176.75/€126.25/€106.25/€89.50 (sold out) The queen of noir romance and melancholia returns for her biggest headline appearance in Ireland. It's perhaps a risk to bring her predominantly languid, low-key style to as enormous a setting as the Aviva Stadium, which is better suited to banger-oriented pop and rock. But Del Rey is used to big venues: when she played at the 3Arena in Dublin in 2023, it became a full-throttle love-in, the crowd belting out the lyrics to every song she performed. That show, which she announced only 10 days in advance, also featured a swirl of vocalists and backing dancers, there to make it more of a spectacle. So expect something similar on this short tour of Ireland and Britain, plus, with luck, some of the tracks from Del Rey's upcoming album. Gigs Alanis Morissette Sunday, June 29th, Malahide Castle, Co Dublin, 4pm, €69.90/€59.90; Monday, June 30th, Belsonic, Belfast, 4pm, £81/£71, Thirty years ago this month the Canadian singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette released her game-changing third album, Jagged Little Pill. Its explicit confessional thrust is viewed not only as a landmark moment for the music industry but also as a significant influence on emerging female acts, inspiring them to more forcefully voice their opinions. There is still a lot to be angry about, Morissette recently told Elle magazine, 'except now we're conscientious as fuck.' Support comes from the US songwriter Liz Phair (one of Morissette's pivotal early influences) and the ensemble group Irish Women in Harmony. Joe Bonamassa plays Rory Gallagher From Tuesday, July 1st, until Thursday, July 3rd, Live at the Marquee, Cork, 8pm, €82.55/€77.55, Arriving shortly after the 30th anniversary of Rory Gallagher 's death, these three shows pay tribute to one of Ireland's earliest internationally successful rock stars. Gallagher's influence on future generations of guitarists runs from Brian May of Queen and the Edge of U2 to Johnny Marr of The Smiths and James Dean Bradfield of Manic Street Preachers. Joe Bonamassa – 'arguably the world's biggest blues guitarist,' according to Guitar World – also fell under the spell of Gallagher's artistry, and these shows will see the US musician rip through selections from the guitarist's back catalogue. Special guests include Gallagher's long-standing bandmate Gerry McEvoy. Stage The Pillowman From Friday, July 4th (previews until Wednesday, July 9th), until Sunday, September 7th, Gate Theatre, Dublin, 7.30pm, €26.50, Martin McDonagh's Tony-nominated play from 2003 was revived in 2023 for a 12-week run in the West End of London, and the following year at the Lyric Theatre in Belfast. Now it's the turn of the Gate, in Dublin, to tell the sometimes unsavoury story of two brothers, Katurian (Fra Fee) and Michal (Ryan Dylan), and their dysfunctional family background. The Olivier Award winner Lyndsey Turner directs. Aidan McArdle, Julian Moore-Cook and Jade O'Connor also feature. READ MORE Festival Kaleidoscope From Friday, July 4th, until Sunday, July 6th, Russborough House, Blessington, Co Wicklow, 1pm, €97.55/€72.55/€56.25, Jerry Fish Ireland's largest family-friendly summer festival returns with a mix of UK bands (Texas, Ocean Colour Scene), Irish acts (The Coronas, Riptide Movement, Hermitage Green, Jerry Fish), DJs (the Line of Duty actor Vicky McClure, Kelly-Anne Byrne, Calum Kieran) and an abundance of kids-oriented activities. These include a mini disco, children's yoga, movie time, interactive workshops, circus, a reptile zoo, science and design. Literature Happy Ever After: Falling in Love with Irish Romance Fiction From Friday, July 4th, until November, Museum of Literature Ireland, Dublin, Happy Ever After: Falling in Love with Irish Romance Fiction The forgotten history of (and regular snide commentary on) Irish romance fiction is explored in this exhibition, which features work by pioneering writers (including Lady Morgan, Rosa Mulholland, Maeve Binchy and Edna O'Brien) and contemporary authors (including Deirdre Purcell, Kate Kerrigan, Patricia Scanlan, Marian Keyes, Sally Rooney and Cecelia Ahern). The exhibition is curated by Paige Reynolds, professor of English at Holy Cross College, in Massachusetts, and author of Modernism in Irish Women's Contemporary Writing: The Stubborn Mode. Exhibition From Dickie to Richard: Richard Harris – Role of a Lifetime From Friday, July 4th, until Sunday, November 16th, Hunt Museum, Limerick, €12.50/€10 (under 16s free), Drawing on the extraordinary family archive that was donated to University College Cork in 2022, this exhibition celebrates the formidable life and career of the Limerick actor Richard Harris. All key points are covered, from his Oscar-nominated breakthrough performance, in the 1963 kitchen sink drama This Sporting Life, and his roles in Camelot (1967), The Field (1990), Unforgiven (1992), the first two Harry Potter films (2001-2002), to his Grammy-winning career as a different kind of pop singer in the late 1960s. The actor's son, Jared Harris, will take part in a public interview nearby (at Belltable Arts Centre on Friday, July 4th, 6pm, €20) that will be followed by a screening of the documentary The Ghost of Richard Harris . Musical Only Fools and Horses From Tuesday, July 1st, until Saturday, July 5th, Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, 7.30pm, €63.40/€52.30/€24.50, Only Fools and Horses: Paul Whitehouse Del Boy, Rodders and Grandad: one of the most beloved of UK sitcoms of the past 40 years arrives in Ireland from a four-year run in the West End of London. Based on John Sullivan's television series (and featuring a script and original music by Sullivan's son, Jim, and the highly regarded comic actor Paul Whitehouse), it promises to offer Trotter fans a celebratory knees-up and a lovely-jubbly feelgood factor. Still running Hibernacle at Orlagh House From Friday, July 4th, until Sunday, July 6th, Orlagh House, Rathfarnham, Dublin, 5pm, €65, Lisa Hannigan, from Tony Clayton-Lea for The Guide, Saturday, June 28, 2025. This three-day event at Orlagh House, an 18th-century Georgian mansion in the foothills of the Dublin Mountains, is a byword for quality. An outdoor stage and various nooks and crannies will host music acts such as Villagers, Pillow Queens, Lisa Hannigan, Ye Vagabonds, Wallis Bird and Ailbhe Reddy. Over-18s only. Book it this week New Ross Piano Festival, New Ross, Co Wexford, September 24th-28th, Write by the Sea, Kilmore Quay, Co Wexford, September 26th-28th, David McSavage, 3Olympia Theatre, Dublin, October 2nd, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Vicar Street, Dublin, October 7th,

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