JAZZ ARTISTS SHARP RADWAY and ANTOINETTE MONTAGUE at HOFSTRA, TUESDAY, 2/18 2:15PM

Sharp Radway
Sharp Radway

 Two outstanding jazz artists, pianist Sharp Radway and vocalist Antoinette Montague, both well known on the New York jazz scene, will be performing on Long Island at the “Artists Without Walls’ Showcase at Hofstra University,” tomorrow, Tuesday, Feb. 18 at 2:15pm in the Helene Fortunoff Theater located in Monroe Lecture Hall.  It’s a free event, thanks to a generous grant from the Hofstra Cultural Center and the great support of the Irish Studies program. 

 

Sharp Radway is composer/arranger/author and self-taught pianist whose roots can be found in the church. As a jazz pianist he has played throughout the country and abroad.  Among the recording artists whom he has worked and/or recorded with are  Bucky Pizzarelli, Yusef Lateef, Benny Golson, Peewee Ellis, Diane Schuur, Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, to name a few.  In addition to playing the piano he is also a prolific composer, arranger and the author of the book Musicianship 101 (What They Don’t Tell You In School).

 

 

Antoinette Montague
Antoinette Montague

Jazz singer Antoinette Montague has a love of humanity and music that brings joy to people. Born and raised in Newark, Antoinette Montague was drawn to the music by her mother–“She was always singing and sounded like Ella Fitzgerald”–and listening to Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington. Antoinette has played most of the major jazz clubs in New York, including Lincoln Center’s Dizzy’s Club Coca Cola, the Lenox Lounge and the Blue Note. 

 

Hope you can make it to Hofstra. It’s going to be a great show.  And there’s no charge for admission!

 

 

 

 

STING and NIAMH

It would’ve have been incredible to have these two great talents perform together at Hofstra, on Feb 18, 2:15pm, but at least we got one, Niamh Hyland.  

 

Niamh Hyland and Sting
Niamh Hyland and Sting

DENI BONET and NIAMH HYLAND PERFORMING TOGETHER at HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY, TUESDAY, 2/18

 

Deni Bonet (left) Niamh Hyland (right) with Ed Romanoff
Deni Bonet (left) Niamh Hyland (right) with Ed Romanoff

Performing together at Hofstra University, in the The Helene Fortunoff Theater, located in the Monroe Lecture Center, on Tuesday, February 18th, 2:15PM, as part of the Artists Without Walls’s Showcase, will be fiddler Deni Bonet and singer Niamh Hyland.  The last time they performed together–to great acclaim–was at the Cell Theater (photo left) in New York City. They’re back together to do it again. 

 

 

Deni Bonet
Deni Bonet

 

 

Deni Bonet has the informal, friendly, storytelling nature of a folksinger and the exciting looks and edgy musicality of a rock star. Her happy, party-ready songs are refreshingly punchy. And while she loves to have fun on stage, there are places in her show where she digs down deep and comes out with breathtaking violin solos worthy of the finest classical concert halls. 

 

 

 

 

 

Niamh Hyland
Niamh Hyland

Niamh Hyland, was born in County Leitrim, Ireland.  Niamh has toured Europe & the US as the lead singer of the original rock band Lily Sparks. Notable band and solo performances include The Ourland Festival at Lincoln Center, Webster Hall and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Niamh is also a cofounder of Artists Without Walls, which allows her to combine her passion for music and business. “I am excited to  create a  laboratory where people can experiment with their ideas in a safe space and collaborate with their peers in new untapped ways.” Niamh says. “And I’m really looking forward to the Hofstra event. I love the vibe when performing on college campuses. And performing with the incredible Deni Bonet is the icing on the cake.”

 

 

 

ARTISTS WITHOUT WALLS' MEMBERS ON THE TOWN: WEEK of 2/9/14

 

Tara O'Grady
Tara O’Grady

Singer Tara O’Grady will be at Why Not Jazz Room, 14 Christopher Street, in NYC’s West Village on Sunday, February 9, 9-11pm. $10 at the door. She will be joined by Pete Kennedy on guitar and David Shaich on bass. At the corner of Christopher St and Gay St in the West Village, a lovely coffee shop sits on the corner and plays records on a turn table. And below the turning and churning of Etta James and Colombian beans, nestled below the street, is a tiny jazz club where one can escape the cold and imagine the Village of Bob Dylan’s days.

 

 

Sana Musasama
Sana Musasama

Sana Musasama exhibits her sculptural ceramics, the Unspeakable Series at the Museum of Arts and Design, 2 Columbus Circle, NYC until March 2, 2014. Each work, inspired by a personal incident or symbolic tale, expresses a deep emotional identity, contrasting societal, political, and personal views on themes such as anxiety, bias, mortality and memory.  Entry to the museum is $16.

 

Deni Bonet
Deni Bonet

Fiddler Deni Bonet will be performing with Ed Romanoff at Rockwood Music Hall on Saturday, February 15 at 7:30 PM. 196 Allen Street (Between Houston & Stanton).  Tickets can be purchased here for $10

 
 
Sharp Radway
Sharp Radway

Join Artists Without Walls at their first “Showcase” at Hofstra University, Tuesday, February 18th, 2:15pm in Hempstead, NY . A talented array of artists will be performing: Members of Darrah Carr Dance, Hofstra students including spoken word artist Koro Koroye and dancer Priya Gupta, fiddler Deni Bonet, Irish singer/songwriter Brian Farrell, Brit-Asian stage performer Nadia Parvez Manzoor, jazz pianist Sharp Radway, Irish singer/songwriter Niamh Hyland and jazz singer Antoinette Montague. 

HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY STUDENTS PERFORMING in ARTISTS WITHOUT WALLS' SHOWCASE 2/18/14

Artists Without Walls, in conjunction with the Hofstra University Irish Studies’ program and the Hofstra Cultural Center, will be bringing its “Showcase” to Hofstra University on Tuesday, February 18th, 2:15pm. Over the next two weeks we will be highlighting the performers who will be appearing. We are very pleased to announce that two of the performers are currently studying at Hofstra, Koro Koroye and Priya Gupta. 

 

 

Koro Koroye
Koro Koroye

Nigerian born spoken-word artist Koro Koroye, a Hofstra graduate and current graduate student, imbues the art of storytelling and spoken-word with energy, passion, and strength. Koro has appeared at The Cell Theater, the Living Room and Lehman College in New York City during the past year. Recently, Koro appeared in Charles R. Hale’s production, “Rise Up Singing: Women and the Labor Movement.” Koro both performed and wrote for the show. 

 

 

Priya Gupta
Priya Gupta

Priya Gupta is a dancer and a Dance Education major at Hofstra. She is a student of Professor Darrah Carr, the founder of Darrah Carr Dance, and studied Indian classical dance with Mrugakshi Patel, an accomplished exponent of dance and well known choreographer of Indian folk dances. Priya will be performing a style of Indian classical dance called Bharatnatyam.  

 

We are thrilled to have these two great young talents as part of Artists Without Walls’ Showcase. 

ARTISTS WITHOUT WALLS' "SHOWCASE" at HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY on FEBRUARY 18, 2PM

Artists Without Walls will be bringing its “Showcase” to Hofstra University on Tuesday, February 18th, 2pm.  We hope our Long Island friends will be able to join us. It’s sure to be a great afternoon filled with jazz, fiddling, dance, spoken word, humor and song. More details coming soon. 

 

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"SPOTLIGHT ON" POET CONNIE ROBERTS

 

 

Connie Roberts
Connie Roberts

Who is Connie Roberts? 

 

I am a mother, poet, teacher…….and late-bloomer.

 

I was born in County Offaly, Ireland and lived there with my parents until I was five years old, at which time I was admitted to an industrial school in County Westmeath.    Apart from 10 months back at home with my parents when I was eight years old, I remained in the orphanage until I was 17.

 

All of my 14 siblings spent their childhoods in Irish orphanages.

 

Many of my poems were inspired by my experiences growing up in care.

 

When I was 20 years old, I emigrated to the United States and settled in New York. 

I worked as a waitress for many years (Tommy Makem’s Irish Pavilion and the

Pig & Whistle, among other Irish bar-restaurants) before enrolling in college in my

early-30s.  A bachelor’s and master’s degree later, I secured an adjunct position teaching creative writing at Hofstra University, where I’ve been for the past eight years.

 

 

Connie Roberts and Paddy Moloney
Connie Roberts and Paddy Moloney

What honors have you received for your poetry?

 

  • Winner of the Listowel Writers’ Week Poetry Collection Award, 2013
  • Winner of the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award, 2010
  • Winner of the Dromineer Literary Festival Poetry Competition, 2010
  • Awarded a space in the Poetry Ireland Introductions Series
  • Awarded an Irish Arts Council Literature Bursary Award
  • Nominated for the Hennessy X.O. Literary Awards 
  • Finalist in the Strokestown International Poetry Competition
  • Finalist in the Dana Awards
  • Awarded a space at the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, Vermont
  • Recipient of the George M. Estabrook Award at Hofstra University

 

Why have you chosen poetry over other forms of writing such as short stories, memoir or novels?

 

Christmas at the Orphanage, 1970. Connie Roberts, far left.
Christmas at the Orphanage, 1970. Connie Roberts, far left.

To be honest, I don’t think I had much control over what genre I “chose” to work in.  In the mid-90s, when I was an undergraduate in a creative writing class at Nassau Community College, poetry grabbed me by the lapels, and refused to let go.  As Professor Gubernat recited Molly Peacock’s poem “Say You Love Me”, about a drunken father pinning his child to a chair, my heart quickened, my throat tightened; I was in.  Where do I sign up? I said.  Besides the subject matter, which reflected my own background, I found the density of language, the imagery

(the drunken father’s face described as “a ham on a hook”), the rhythm, the sound devices exhilarating.  

 

Now that I’ve been writing poetry for a number of years, I see another possible reason why the genre is a good fit for me.  Most of the fodder for my work

(read: Irish-Catholic misery) was foisted upon me—believe me, I’d rather be writing about the heather on the bog or the windswept hills of Donegal—and it is easier swallowed, by writer and reader alike, in bite-sized pieces.  The eight-line triolet or 14-line sonnet versus the 300-page memoir.

 

 

 

Connie Roberts at the "Listowel Writers' Week"
Connie Roberts at the “Listowel Writers’ Week”

Who are the poets/writers you admire?

 

Irish writers I admire include Seamus Heaney, Patrick Kavanagh, and John McGahern.  I love the sense of place in their work.  To say the least, my background is fragmented, so I find myself drawn to their sense of rootedness.  Heaney’s Derry, Kavanagh’s Monaghan, McGahern’s Leitrim—they seem to know every blade of grass, every highway and byway, every neighbor and straggler on the road.  I envy them their stability, their sure-footedness.

 

Other contemporary Irish poets I admire include Paula Meehan, Eavan Boland, Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, Moya Cannon and Rita Ann Higgins.  Ireland is teeming with talented women poets…

 

I’m also drawn to African-American women poets:  Marilyn Nelson, Gwendolyn Brooks, Natasha Trethewey, Lucille Clifton, Toi Derricotte, among others. I love how they explore and excavate their past, the beautiful and the ugly.  I admire their bravery in taking on important—and oftentimes, provocative—issues.  But besides all that, they are just brilliant poets—verbal acrobats who use language in an exciting and interesting way.

 

 

Connie Roberts on BBC News
Connie Roberts on BBC News

Who is your greatest inspiration and why?

 

I don’t think a day goes by that I’m not inspired by someone.  Two examples from the past week or so:

 

  • The retired (and retiring) truck driver I met in Scribes coffee shop in Listowel who sheepishly pulled a sheaf of poems he’d penned over the years out of his breast pocket to show me.  It was open-mic night; thirty years earlier he might have stepped up to the podium.  That night, he recited them to me.
  • Two days ago, my son and I were working on his “Me-Book” project.  In the “My Future” section he wrote, When I grow up, I want a happy family and a happy home like I have now.  Like most of us, sometimes, I wish I had a bigger paycheck, a nicer house, or a slimmer waist.  But when I’m sitting in that ould rocking chair in the nursing home, the accomplishment I’ll be most proud of is that I brought my son up in a secure, happy, loving home.

 

Connie Roberts receiving the Listowel Writers' Award
Connie Roberts receiving the Listowel Writers’ Award

What are the top five things you’d like to accomplish in the next five years?

 

  • Publish my first poetry collection in Ireland (which will actually happen next year)
  • Record a poet & piper CD with the premier uilleann piper Jerry O’Sullivan (which is on the cards for this summer)
  • Drawing on my own poetry, collaborate with other artists on a multi-media project
  • Secure a full-time teaching/administrative position at a U.S. college
  • Create an (audio/video) oral history of Irish industrial school survivors. 

A massive undertaking I know (hint, hint:  any sponsors in the crowd?), but their individual stories need to be documented.  In their own words, not by scholars and intellectuals.  Yes, there’s the Ryan Report.  Yes, there are a handful of film documentaries.  But the majority of survivors are still voiceless.  And with each passing day, the chance of these elderly inmates (in Ireland, the UK and beyond) being heard grows slimmer.

 

What was the best gift that someone gave you that inspired or facilitated an interest in your art?

 

When I was in secondary school in Ireland, my English teacher, Mr. Costelloe, encouraged me to enter a Credit Union essay competition.  I won at the local level and went on to the Leinster final, which I subsequently won.  My first validation—I’d dipped my bucket in the writing well.  But Mr. Costelloe’s gift to me wasn’t merely his encouragement.  He also gave of himself.  No parental figure from the orphanage accompanied me to the awards ceremonies.  But he did.  It was Mr. Costelloe who stood behind me for the newspaper photograph; it was Mr. Costelloe who took my friend and I for a celebratory bag of Tayto crisps and bottle of red lemonade in the local pub.  It was Mr. Costelloe who took time out of his busy schedule as a teacher and father to reach out, to care.

 

Another gift I was given is a bit more tangible, and one that I’ll treasure for a lifetime:  a handwritten note from Seamus Heaney.  A few years after he won the Nobel Prize in Literature, on a visit to NYC, he happened to walk into the Irish bar-restaurant where I waitressed.  Unfortunately, I was off duty that evening, but my friend, knowing how much I admired the Great Poet, asked him if he would write me a note (I had just won a prize for poetry at Hofstra U.).  He obliged.

 

Connie,

 

It is a far, far better thing you do now than you have ever done.  Stick with it…Congratulations.  Keep digging for the good turf…

 

When you’re a Nobel Laureate, everybody wants a piece of you.  Doubtless in the years after Seamus Heaney’s trot over to Sweden, he must’ve been pulled in a 100 different directions.  I’m sure on that visit to New York in 1998, SH would’ve liked nothing better than to slip anonymously into a nondescript bar downtown and enjoy a pint in peace.  Instead, he took the time to write a note of encouragement (on an American Express reservation card) to an insecure, fledgling poet.

 

Great note. Great poet. Great man.

 

What is your favorite quote?

 

Since I turned 50 last December, Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape has been spooling in my ears:

 

Perhaps my best years are gone….But I wouldn’t want them back. Not with the fire in me now. No, I wouldn’t want them back.