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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220731T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220731T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220709T171612Z
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UID:39051-1659294000-1659297600@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Paradise Laboratory:  Pulses with Maya Angelou and Elsa Nilsson: Thyme
DESCRIPTION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) invites you to join in a unique deep listening experience with the jazz quartet Elsa Nilsson: Thyme and the poetry of Maya Angelou on July 31\, 2022 at 7pm in the award-winning White Room at CRS. \nMany species use sound to communicate. Elsa Nilsson\, Santiago Leibson\, Marty Kenney and Rodrigo Recabarren asked themselves; what is the line that makes sound music? If beauty is in the eye of the beholder\, then isn’t music in the ear of the listener? As they listened to words around them they became enchanted with the subtleties in the sounds of voices. It began with Rodrigo playing rhythms along with speeches where he wanted to accentuate the meanings of what was being said. He sent Elsa Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse Of Morning” full of rocks\, rivers and trees. Elsa fell in love with the deep musicality present in every sound. She listened and heard echoes of Ornette Coleman in how Maya Angelou ended her phrases. She heard thematic development and musical build in the pitch materials. \nTogether this band took the time to hear the musical communication in the sounds of Maya Angelou’s words. They play with her voice\, enhancing the music that is already there and bringing to light the full depth of her sonic brilliance along with her poetic brilliance. \nJohn Cage heard music in every sound. Groove in a tin can. Humor and art co-existing. This band takes a similar approach to communication. Intentionality does not require a plan\, directionality does not imply rigidity. With the wide open space of the music ahead they stand together with their toes over the edge and jump. \nTickets are $10 for students/seniors and $20 general admission and are available through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only\, if not sold out. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted\, no exceptions. In addition\, masks must be worn throughout. \nPARADISE LABORATORY is a playground for sonic and visual experimentation. Conceived of during the pandemic by the renowned Korean traditional multi-instrumentalist\, curator\, and scholar gamin\, Paradise Laboratory provides musical artists with opportunities to rehearse\, record\, film\, and perform with other musical\, visual\, and dance artists in an experimental\, process-oriented\, and artist-centered fashion. \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nFlute Player\, Composer and Educator Elsa Nilsson was born and raised in Gothenburg\, Sweden and currently resides in Brooklyn\, New York. She can often be found playing at The 55 Bar\, Bar Bayeux and other New York Jazz venues. Nilsson approaches music with an attitude of inclusiveness. She believes there is a space to be found in music that gives us the freedom to be exactly who we are. This leads her to make some unconventional choices as an improviser and composer where the lines between styles become blurred and rules get bent in order to serve the ultimate goal of sincere communication. Nilsson draws inspiration from every aspect of life and music that moves her\, combining them through the lens of Jazz to create a deeply personal expression that she hopes is universally relatable. Nilsson is on Faculty at The New School College for Performing Arts. \nhttps://www.elsanilssonmusic.com/ \nSantiago Leibson is a Brooklyn based\, Argentinian born jazz pianist and composer. His music is situated in the frontier of jazz\, improvised music\, classical and contemporary music.  As a bandleader\, he has released five records: Amon (2014)\, Pendular (2015)\, Out of Orden (2016)\, Episodes (2018) and Little Pieces (2020). JazzTrail says about Episodes: “Episodes is a swinging album with abundant evocations of past grandeur. Thence\, the trio of performers lay bare their solid command of time and space to create new narratives.” \nhttps://www.santiagoleibson.com/ \nMarty Kenney has performed with musicians such as Art Lande\, Billy Drummond\, Rich Perry\, Steve Slagle\, Allan Harris\, Rez Abbasi\, Brandon Seabrook\, Brian Krock’s Big Heart Machine\, David Berkman\, and the New York Standards Quartet featuring Tim Armacost and Gene Jackson. He has appeared on recordings by Steve Slagle\, Allan Harris\, Brian Krock’s liddle featuring Matt Mitchell\, Olli Hirvonen featuring Water Smith III\, and toured throughout the United States and Europe with Allan Harris\, liddle\, and New Helsinki\, including performances at the Montreux Jazz Festival\, Pori Jazz Festival\, the Mosaic Festival in Romania\, Umbria Winter Jazz Festival\, Porretta Soul Festival\, and many notable venues around the world including the Bimhuis\, Shinjuku Pit Inn\, Jazzclub Unterfahrt\, Smalls Jazz Club\, Mezzrow\, Dazzle Jazz Club\, Birdland\, Red Rocks Amphitheater\, and Blue Note NYC. \nhttps://linktr.ee/martykenney \nBorn in Santiago de Chile\, Rodrigo Recabarren has been in NYC since 2009. He has worked with artists as Guillermo Klein\, Brad Shepik\, Melissa Aldana\, Camila Meza\, Claudia Acuña\, Rafal Sarnecki and Andre Carvallo among many others. Has performed in Europe\, the United States\, Asia and Latin-America in prestigious venues like the Blue Note\, 55 bar\, Smalls and Jazz at Lincoln Center\, among many others. He is the founder of Tresillo music School in Santiago de Chile and has produced dozens of albums and tours around the world with this projects. \nhttps://www.rodrigorecabarren.com/ \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \nhttps://crsny.org \nTICKET LINK: \nhttps://bit.ly/3ySEeFY \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter\, no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE LOCATION:\nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York\, NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:   \nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee\, between 12th & 13th streets\, one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6\, N/R/Q\, L trains to 14th St / Union Square \n 
URL:https://crsny.org/event/paradise-laboratory-pulses-with-maya-angelou-and-elsa-nilsson-thyme/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents,Paradise Laboratory
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ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) invites you to join in a unique deep listening experience with the jazz quartet Elsa Nilsson: Thyme and the poetry of Maya Angelou on July 31 2022 at 7pm in the award-winning White Room at CRS. \nMany species use sound to communicate. Elsa Nilsson Santiago Leibson Marty Kenney and Rodrigo Recabarren asked themselves; what is the line that makes sound music? If beauty is in the eye of the beholder then isn’t music in the ear of the listener? As they listened to words around them they became enchanted with the subtleties in the sounds of voices. It began with Rodrigo playing rhythms along with speeches where he wanted to accentuate the meanings of what was being said. He sent Elsa Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse Of Morning” full of rocks rivers and trees. Elsa fell in love with the deep musicality present in every sound. She listened and heard echoes of Ornette Coleman in how Maya Angelou ended her phrases. She heard thematic development and musical build in the pitch materials. \nTogether this band took the time to hear the musical communication in the sounds of Maya Angelou’s words. They play with her voice enhancing the music that is already there and bringing to light the full depth of her sonic brilliance along with her poetic brilliance. \nJohn Cage heard music in every sound. Groove in a tin can. Humor and art co-existing. This band takes a similar approach to communication. Intentionality does not require a plan directionality does not imply rigidity. With the wide open space of the music ahead they stand together with their toes over the edge and jump. \nTickets are $10 for students/seniors and $20 general admission and are available through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only if not sold out. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted no exceptions. In addition masks must be worn throughout. \nPARADISE LABORATORY is a playground for sonic and visual experimentation. Conceived of during the pandemic by the renowned Korean traditional multi-instrumentalist curator and scholar gamin Paradise Laboratory provides musical artists with opportunities to rehearse record film and perform with other musical visual and dance artists in an experimental process-oriented and artist-centered fashion. \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nFlute Player Composer and Educator Elsa Nilsson was born and raised in Gothenburg Sweden and currently resides in Brooklyn New York. She can often be found playing at The 55 Bar Bar Bayeux and other New York Jazz venues. Nilsson approaches music with an attitude of inclusiveness. She believes there is a space to be found in music that gives us the freedom to be exactly who we are. This leads her to make some unconventional choices as an improviser and composer where the lines between styles become blurred and rules get bent in order to serve the ultimate goal of sincere communication. Nilsson draws inspiration from every aspect of life and music that moves her combining them through the lens of Jazz to create a deeply personal expression that she hopes is universally relatable. Nilsson is on Faculty at The New School College for Performing Arts. \nhttps://www.elsanilssonmusic.com/ \nSantiago Leibson is a Brooklyn based Argentinian born jazz pianist and composer. His music is situated in the frontier of jazz improvised music classical and contemporary music.  As a bandleader he has released five records: Amon (2014) Pendular (2015) Out of Orden (2016) Episodes (2018) and Little Pieces (2020). JazzTrail says about Episodes: “Episodes is a swinging album with abundant evocations of past grandeur. Thence the trio of performers lay bare their solid command of time and space to create new narratives.” \nhttps://www.santiagoleibson.com/ \nMarty Kenney has performed with musicians such as Art Lande Billy Drummond Rich Perry Steve Slagle Allan Harris Rez Abbasi Brandon Seabrook Brian Krock’s Big Heart Machine David Berkman and the New York Standards Quartet featuring Tim Armacost and Gene Jackson. He has appeared on recordings by Steve Slagle Allan Harris Brian Krock’s liddle featuring Matt Mitchell Olli Hirvonen featuring Water Smith III and toured throughout the United States and Europe with Allan Harris liddle and New Helsinki including performances at the Montreux Jazz Festival Pori Jazz Festival the Mosaic Festival in Romania Umbria Winter Jazz Festival Porretta Soul Festival and many notable venues around the world including the Bimhuis Shinjuku Pit Inn Jazzclub Unterfahrt Smalls Jazz Club Mezzrow Dazzle Jazz Club Birdland Red Rocks Amphitheater and Blue Note NYC. \nhttps://linktr.ee/martykenney \nBorn in Santiago de Chile Rodrigo Recabarren has been in NYC since 2009. He has worked with artists as Guillermo Klein Brad Shepik Melissa Aldana Camila Meza Claudia Acuña Rafal Sarnecki and Andre Carvallo among many others. Has performed in Europe the United States Asia and Latin-America in prestigious venues like the Blue Note 55 bar Smalls and Jazz at Lincoln Center among many others. He is the founder of Tresillo music School in Santiago de Chile and has produced dozens of albums and tours around the world with this projects. \nhttps://www.rodrigorecabarren.com/ \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \nhttps://crsny.org \nTICKET LINK: \nhttps://bit.ly/3ySEeFY \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE \nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:   \nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee between 12th & 13th streets one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6 N/R/Q L trains to 14th St / Union Square \n ;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220828T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220828T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220801T224415Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220801T224506Z
UID:39092-1661702400-1661706000@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Four Seasons in NY: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 24 — Summer
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for the summer installment of Four Seasons in New York: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 24 featuring the acclaimed vocalist and koto and shamisen player Yoko Reikano Kimura with special guest Elizabeth Brown (shakuhachi). This concert is presented by CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) and Yoko Reikano Kimura and is supported by Hogaku Journal and Mar Creation\, Inc. \n“…Yoko Reikano Kimura\, playing the shamisen and singing\, is superb….” — New York Times\n“…Kimura’s voice was rich and full-bodied ….” — KC METROPLIS \n[𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦】 \nShiki no Tomo (by Hisamura-kengyo)\nChidori no Kyoku (by Yoshizawa-kengyo)\nA piece for shamisen on the theme of Chidori (by Kin’ichi Nakanoshima) \n[𝐓𝐢𝐜𝐤𝐞𝐭𝐬】\n$𝟑0\n*𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐞𝐚𝐭𝐬 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐢𝐧-𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐜𝐨𝐧𝐜𝐞𝐫𝐭 𝐚𝐫𝐞 𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐢𝐭𝐞𝐝\, so please make reservations in advance. \n[Ticket reservation]\nE-mail: info@yokoreikanokimura.com\n*Please include your name and the number of tickets you wish to purchase.\n*Payment will be at CRS. (Cash only) \n◉safety protocol◉\n*𝗢𝘂𝗿 𝘁𝗼𝗽 𝗽𝗿𝗶𝗼𝗿𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝗶𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗵𝗲𝗮𝗹𝘁𝗵 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘀𝗮𝗳𝗲𝘁𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗖𝗥𝗦 𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗶𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗲\, 𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗶𝘀𝘁𝘀\, 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘀𝘁𝗮𝗳𝗳. We 𝗿𝗲𝗾𝘂𝗶𝗿𝗲 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝘃𝗶𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘀 𝘀𝗵𝗼𝘄 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗼𝗳 𝗼𝗳 𝗳𝘂𝗹𝗹 𝘃𝗮𝗰𝗰𝗶𝗻𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗽𝗵𝗼𝘁𝗼 𝗜𝗗 𝘁𝗼 𝗯𝗲 𝗮𝗱𝗺𝗶𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗱. 𝗗𝘂𝗲 𝘁𝗼 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗰𝘂𝗿𝗿𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝗿𝗮𝗽𝗶𝗱 𝘀𝗽𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗱 𝗼𝗳 𝗢𝗺𝗶𝗰𝗿𝗼𝗻 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗶𝗻𝘁𝗶𝗺𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝗻𝗮𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗿𝘁\, 𝘄𝗲 𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗮𝗹𝘀𝗼 𝗿𝗲𝗾𝘂𝗶𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗶𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗺𝗲𝗺𝗯𝗲𝗿𝘀 𝗮𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗻𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗻𝘁 𝘀𝗵𝗼𝘄 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗼𝗳 𝗼𝗳 𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗱 𝗮 𝗯𝗼𝗼𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝘀𝗵𝗼𝘁 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘄𝗲𝗮𝗿 𝗮 𝗺𝗮𝘀𝗸 𝗮𝘁 𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝘁𝗶𝗺𝗲𝘀. \nAbout Four Seasons in New York – Gems of Japanese Music \nNew York’s music scene reflects the diverse and vibrant culture of the city. Kimura began this concert series in the fall of 2015. As a Japanese instrumentalist\, she hopes to introduce the brilliance of traditional Japanese music\, which is still being passed on to future generations after many centuries. Starting with the 2018-19 season\, the series has featured contemporary pieces composed by living composers as well. Since the first concert\, about 50 works from the classical repertoire have been introduced in the concert series. Please come and experience the sounds of koto and shamisen and enjoy the taste of the four seasons here in New York! \nAbout past performances: https://www.yokoreikanokimura.com/projects/fourseasons/ \nAbout the Artists \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto\, shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts\, she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music\, an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama\, Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko\, a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo\, accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki\, NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist\, Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist\, she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works\, such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum\, Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra\, Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi\, Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015\, and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference\, and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019\, the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nElizabeth Brown combines a composing career with a diverse performing life\, playing flute\, shakuhachi\, and theremin in a wide variety of musical circles. She is celebrated both here and in Japan for her compositions combining eastern and western sensibilities. A Juilliard graduate and Guggenheim Fellowship recipient\, her music has been heard in Japan\, the Soviet Union\, Colombia\, Australia\, South Africa and Vietnam as well as across the US and Europe. She has received grants\, awards and commissions from Orpheus\, St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble\, Newband\, the Asian Cultural Council\, the Japan/US Friendship Commission\, Meet the Composer\, the Electronic Music Foundation\, the Cary Trust\, and NYFA. She has two solo CDs: Elizabeth Brown: Mirage (New World) and Blue Minor: Chamber Music by Elizabeth Brown (Albany)\, and her music is also available on CRI\, Innova\, and Music and Arts.\nhttp://elizabethbrowncomposer.com\n \n“…otherworldly…passionately lyric…tenaciously melodic…”  — New York Times\n“…gently spellbinding…”  — Village Voice \n\n\nTRANSLATE with  x\n\n\n  English \n\n\n\n\n\n\nArabic\nHebrew\nPolish\n\n\nBulgarian\nHindi\nPortuguese\n\n\nCatalan\nHmong Daw\nRomanian\n\n\nChinese Simplified\nHungarian\nRussian\n\n\nChinese Traditional\nIndonesian\nSlovak\n\n\nCzech\nItalian\nSlovenian\n\n\nDanish\nJapanese\nSpanish\n\n\nDutch\nKlingon\nSwedish\n\n\nEnglish\nKorean\nThai\n\n\nEstonian\nLatvian\nTurkish\n\n\nFinnish\nLithuanian\nUkrainian\n\n\nFrench\nMalay\nUrdu\n\n\nGerman\nMaltese\nVietnamese\n\n\nGreek\nNorwegian\nWelsh\n\n\nHaitian Creole\nPersian\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n“>”> \n\nEnable collaborative features and customize widget: Bing Webmaster Portal\nBack
URL:https://crsny.org/event/four-seasons-in-ny-24/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents,Gems of Japanese Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/24-square.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220912T230540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220913T214422Z
UID:39666-1664029800-1664035200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Whirling (Sufi Dance) Practice with Live Music by Tomchess & Dan Kurfirst
DESCRIPTION:At long last we invite you back to join our Sufi Dance community for meditative whirling known as Samâ (spiritual listening) with live music by Tomchess and Dan Kurfirst of American Sufi Project. \nTogether\, we create a sacred space for you to free your mind\, transcend your limits\, and share your light. By receiving the divinely inspired vibration of the music and developing our control of the body while surrendering the mind’s worries\, let’s share the ecstasy that arises with repeated whirling. \nPREVIOUS WHIRLING EXPERIENCE REQUIRED \nThis is not a class (i.e. there is no instruction) but an open space where we can come together to practice and is open to people of all backgrounds who whirl and follow the path of oneness. Our instructor\, Sufi dance artist Paola García\, and other experienced whirlers will be present. \nRSVP REQUIRED\nFee: $25 via Venmo to @Christopher-Pelham-1 or cash at the door\nEmail chris@crsny.org to RSVP \nIf you have not already learned whirling from a Sufi dance teacher\, please first attend one of our Sufi Dance classes to learn the basics. Private instruction is also available by appointment. Please contact us for details. \nPlease remember that whirling commonly induces dizziness or nausea. Avoid eating a large meal for two hours prior to class. Over time\, through whirling\, we learn to trust ourselves to go off balance\, to be dizzy\, to surrender control\, allowing us to whirl for longer periods. You do not have to whirl for the entire time\, but you are encouraged to explore whether your perceived limits are immutable or only self-imposed. \nPlease wear comfortable clothing (white\, gray or black color is preferable\, avoiding prints and shiny material which might distract the eye while whirling) safe for dancing in (for women your tops should have straps or cover your shoulders and you should not wear short skirts) and wear socks or soft soled shoes. If you have a whirling skirt\, please feel free to bring it. \nAbout American Sufi Project \nBased in New York City\, the American Sufi Project seeks to transmit through music and art\, a taste of divine love. The term ‘Sufism’ encapsulates hundreds of communities across the globe all united by a simple intention – to elevate consciousness\, purify the heart and connect people with a greater love and higher power.\n‎American Sufi Project on Apple Music \nAbout Musician Tomchess \nTomchess (oud\, ney\, morsing) is a New York City–based multi-instrumentalist\, improviser\, and composer who has played and recorded with some of the most esteemed players in the improvisational scene (Dewey Redman\, Butch Morris\, Pharoah Sanders\, Drew Gress\, Ronald Shannon Jackson) as well as Moroccan sintarist Hassan Hakmoun. He has performed around the world and at New York City venues like Lincoln Center\, the Turkish and Pakistani embassies\, the Metropolitan Museum of Art\, and the United Nations He has played on Grammy-nominated recordings and was awarded grants from the Turkish American Society and the Maryland Council for the Arts. In 2012 he was nominated for an Independent Music Award.\nhttps://tomchess.bandcamp.com/ \nAbout Musician Dan Kurfirst \nDan Kurfirst is an NYC based percussionist\, composer and improviser. Born and raised in Brooklyn\, NY\, his music is a product of his good fortune to have been brought up amongst people of all different cultures and master practitioners of varying musical styles. \nHe has performed extensively in the New York City world music and improvised music scenes for years and has performed with various groups throughout Europe\, India and the Middle East. Venues performed at include The John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts\, The Stone\, OkeeChobee Festival\, Roulette\, Alwan for the Arts\, Nublu\, Rabindra Sadan Cultural Center of Kolkata\, Barbes and The Vision Festival.\nhttp://dankurfirstmusic.com/bio/
URL:https://crsny.org/event/whirling-sufi-dance-practice-with-live-music-by-tomchess-dan-kurfirst/
LOCATION:Anahid Sofian Studio\, 29 W 15th St FL6\, New York\, NY\, 10011\, United States
CATEGORIES:CRS Presents,sufi
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220924T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220817T001300Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220910T183800Z
UID:39130-1664047800-1664053200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:INTERWOVEN Ensemble:  Ami Concert Series Vol. 1
DESCRIPTION:CRS is pleased to present the first of three concerts of AMI\, a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The first concert will take place on Saturday\, September 24 at 7:30 pm and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto/shamisen) with Keiko Tokunaga (violin) and Hikaru Tamaki (cello) performing compositions by Japanese and western composers: \n\n\nDaron Hagen: “Cavatina\,” the second movement of “Cantabile”\nElizabeth Brown: “The Secret Life of Birds”\nKen Ueno: “Tsuki no Uta” (Song of the Moon)\nMichael Ippolito: “Strange Loops: IV. The Stonecutter”\nSeihō Kineya: “Tsuki no En” from the Noh play Mii-dera Temple\nThomas Osborne: Tumbling From the Ninth Height of Heaven\n\n\nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga\, INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry\, woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins\, traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music\, traditional and contemporary\, side by side\, we likewise hope to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions\, to inspire new friendships\, and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only\, if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted\, no exceptions. In addition\, masks must be worn throughout. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service\, we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you\, that we may let go of what we know or think\, and simply experience. \nThe second concert in the series will take place on October 8 and will feature the Korean wind player gamin with two violins and viola performing the music of Ki Young Kim\, Theodore Wiprud\, William Cooper\, and gamin. The third concert will occur on October 29 and will feature Andy Lin (erhu/viola)\, performing Chen Yi’s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet and other compositions. \nABOUT THE PROGRAM \nDaron Hagen‘s “Catavina” is the second movement of “Cantabile\,” a portrait of the historical figure\, Taira no Tokuko’s years as a recluse and Buddhist nun. “Cantabile” is one of a long song cycle\, “Heike Quinto” which was composed by Daron Hagen and commissioned by Duo YUMENO in 2015 – 2022. The recording of Heike Quinto will be released from Naxos in 2022-23. \nElizabeth Brown‘s “The Secret Life of Birds” (1992) was commissioned by the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs for Shirley Yamamoto\, flute\, and Yoko Awaya\, koto\, and is inspired by Brown’s love of the different ways birds use their voices: the ‘song’\, the ‘call’\, the ‘note.’ The koto part uses a traditional tuning\, though offset by a half step for the upper half of the strings. \nKen Ueno‘s “Tsuki no Uta” was composed for koto and voice and premiered in 2010. \nMichael Ippolito‘s “Strange Loops” (2018)\, for violin and cello\, takes its title from the concept developed by Douglas Hofstadter in his books Gödel\, Escher\, Bach and I Am a Strange Loop. Strange loops arise when one moves through a system in one direction\, yet somehow ends up back at the beginning. \nSeihō Kineya‘s “Tsuki no En” (1959) is a contemporary Hôgaku\, which is a composition written in the post-war era after the style and/or instrumentation of Japanese traditional music but influenced by western music\, composed for the Noh play Mii-dera Temple. \nThomas Osborne‘s Tumbling From the Ninth Height of Heaven (2007) takes its title from a poem by Li Bai (c. 700-762)\, a Chinese poet from the Tang dynasty. The poem\, “Viewing the Waterfall at Mount Lu\,” describes an enormous waterfall at Mount Lu in Jiangsi province. Osborne’s composition also draws inspiration from Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai woodcut depicting Li Bai at the edge of a cliff gazing upon the immense falls while his two young attendants try to keep the inebriated poet from tumbling over the edge. \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ami-1-tickets-403776054047\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter\, no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE LOCATION:\nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York\, NY 10003\n212-677-862 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee\, between 12th & 13th streets\, one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6\, N/R/Q\, L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nHIKARU TAMAKI concertizes regularly as a soloist\, chamber musician and orchestral player in the US and Japan. He served as the principal cellist of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic and was a member of the Freimann String Quartet from 2001 until 2013. Solo performances with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic have included numerous major concertos in the cello repertoire. Tamaki was a prizewinner in the prestigious All Japan Viva Hall Cello Competition in 2000. \nTamaki is the founder of Duo YUMENO and regularly collaborates with koto/shamisen player\, Yoko Reikano Kimura. The duo was awarded the Chamber Music America Classical Commissioning Program grant in 2014\, and received the Aoyama Baroque Saal Award in the following year. \nFrom 2016\, he has served as the principal cellist of the Berkshire Opera Festival and is also a member of the Albany Symphony Orchestra and the Allentown Symphony Orchestra. He has performed in such venues as Carnegie Hall\, Symphony Space\, Town Hall and Fisher Performing Arts Center. \nBorn in Kyoto\, Tamaki’s studies in Japan were with Noboru Kamimura and Peter Seidenberg. Studies in the United States began at the Eastman School of Music\, where he was named a George Eastman Scholar\, and continued at Rice University and Northwestern University for his graduate degree. His teachers were Paul Katz and Hans Jorgen Jensen.\nhikarucello.com | duoyumeno.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance\, violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed\, toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019\, and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure\, pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra\, Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021\, Keiko founded an online concert series\, Jukebox Concerts\, in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers\, but also to residents of nursing homes\, hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year\, she created INTERWOVEN\, a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians\, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet\, the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance\, First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013\, and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road\, Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past\, she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute.\ninterwovenmusic.org \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto\, shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts\, she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music\, an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama\, Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko\, a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo\, accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki\, NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist\, Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist\, she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works\, such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum\, Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra\, Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi\, Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015\, and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference\, and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019\, the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions.\ncrsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/interwoven-ami-1/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:CRS is pleased to present the first of three concerts of AMI a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The first concert will take place on Saturday September 24 at 7:30 pm and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto/shamisen) with Keiko Tokunaga (violin) and Hikaru Tamaki (cello) performing compositions by Japanese and western composers: \n\n\nDaron Hagen: “Cavatina” the second movement of “Cantabile”\nElizabeth Brown: “The Secret Life of Birds”\nKen Ueno: “Tsuki no Uta” (Song of the Moon)\nMichael Ippolito: “Strange Loops: IV. The Stonecutter”\nSeihō Kineya: “Tsuki no En” from the Noh play Mii-dera Temple\nThomas Osborne: Tumbling From the Ninth Height of Heaven\n\n\nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music traditional and contemporary side by side we likewise hope to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions to inspire new friendships and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted no exceptions. In addition masks must be worn throughout. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you that we may let go of what we know or think and simply experience. \nThe second concert in the series will take place on October 8 and will feature the Korean wind player gamin with two violins and viola performing the music of Ki Young Kim Theodore Wiprud William Cooper and gamin. The third concert will occur on October 29 and will feature Andy Lin (erhu/viola) performing Chen Yi’s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet and other compositions. \nABOUT THE PROGRAM \nDaron Hagen‘s “Catavina” is the second movement of “Cantabile” a portrait of the historical figure Taira no Tokuko’s years as a recluse and Buddhist nun. “Cantabile” is one of a long song cycle “Heike Quinto” which was composed by Daron Hagen and commissioned by Duo YUMENO in 2015 – 2022. The recording of Heike Quinto will be released from Naxos in 2022-23. \nElizabeth Brown‘s “The Secret Life of Birds” (1992) was commissioned by the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs for Shirley Yamamoto flute and Yoko Awaya koto and is inspired by Brown’s love of the different ways birds use their voices: the ‘song’ the ‘call’ the ‘note.’ The koto part uses a traditional tuning though offset by a half step for the upper half of the strings. \nKen Ueno‘s “Tsuki no Uta” was composed for koto and voice and premiered in 2010. \nMichael Ippolito‘s “Strange Loops” (2018) for violin and cello takes its title from the concept developed by Douglas Hofstadter in his books Gödel Escher Bach and I Am a Strange Loop. Strange loops arise when one moves through a system in one direction yet somehow ends up back at the beginning. \nSeihō Kineya‘s “Tsuki no En” (1959) is a contemporary Hôgaku which is a composition written in the post-war era after the style and/or instrumentation of Japanese traditional music but influenced by western music composed for the Noh play Mii-dera Temple. \nThomas Osborne‘s Tumbling From the Ninth Height of Heaven (2007) takes its title from a poem by Li Bai (c. 700-762) a Chinese poet from the Tang dynasty. The poem “Viewing the Waterfall at Mount Lu” describes an enormous waterfall at Mount Lu in Jiangsi province. Osborne’s composition also draws inspiration from Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai woodcut depicting Li Bai at the edge of a cliff gazing upon the immense falls while his two young attendants try to keep the inebriated poet from tumbling over the edge. \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ami-1-tickets-403776054047\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE \nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York NY 10003\n212-677-862 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee between 12th & 13th streets one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6 N/R/Q L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nHIKARU TAMAKI concertizes regularly as a soloist chamber musician and orchestral player in the US and Japan. He served as the principal cellist of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic and was a member of the Freimann String Quartet from 2001 until 2013. Solo performances with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic have included numerous major concertos in the cello repertoire. Tamaki was a prizewinner in the prestigious All Japan Viva Hall Cello Competition in 2000. \nTamaki is the founder of Duo YUMENO and regularly collaborates with koto/shamisen player Yoko Reikano Kimura. The duo was awarded the Chamber Music America Classical Commissioning Program grant in 2014 and received the Aoyama Baroque Saal Award in the following year. \nFrom 2016 he has served as the principal cellist of the Berkshire Opera Festival and is also a member of the Albany Symphony Orchestra and the Allentown Symphony Orchestra. He has performed in such venues as Carnegie Hall Symphony Space Town Hall and Fisher Performing Arts Center. \nBorn in Kyoto Tamaki’s studies in Japan were with Noboru Kamimura and Peter Seidenberg. Studies in the United States began at the Eastman School of Music where he was named a George Eastman Scholar and continued at Rice University and Northwestern University for his graduate degree. His teachers were Paul Katz and Hans Jorgen Jensen.\nhikarucello.com | duoyumeno.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019 and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021 Keiko founded an online concert series Jukebox Concerts in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers but also to residents of nursing homes hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year she created INTERWOVEN a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013 and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute.\ninterwovenmusic.org \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015 and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019 the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions.\ncrsny.org;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220930T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220930T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220915T224202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220928T222953Z
UID:39669-1664564400-1664573400@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Celebrate the Poet Rumi's Birthday with the CRS Sufi Community & Brooklyn Nomads
DESCRIPTION:On the occasion of the 815th birthday of the beloved Sufi mystic and poet Jalāl al-Dīn Muḥammad Mevlana Rūmī\, we invite you to join us for an intimate evening of art\, poetry reading\, and dance under the direction of Sufi dance artist Paola García\, accompanied by live music by Hadi and Mohamad Eldebek of the Brooklyn Nomads\, at the L-Private Gallery. \nFEATURED DANCERS\nPaola García\, Danielle Karabos\, Fanny Pérez Gutiérrez\, Melissa Rivero\, and Wendi Wang \nVISUAL ARTISTS\nLoy Luo\, Mina Omidi\, and Fanny Pérez Gutiérrez \nLet’s come together to empty our minds of all thoughts of the individual self and practice divine listening\, connecting with the still center within\, around which we turn. Into this emptiness we invite the flood of divine fullness\, which sometimes gives rise to a state known as “mystical intoxication\,” a reflection of knowing and experiencing that you and I and the Divine are One. \nPlease bring and wear your mask\, and socks or slippers if you would like to try whirling. \nDoors open 7pm. Ritual/performance starts 7:30pm. You may not be able to enter after 7:30pm. \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \n\n\nHADI ELDEBEK is an Oudist\, Composer\, and Cultural Entrepreneur based in New York City. He has collaborated with prominent figures and institutions in the Arts\, Culture\, and Education sectors\, including Yo-Yo Ma’s Silkroad Ensemble\, Harvard Graduate School of Education\, The Kennedy Center\, TED\, Disney World Imagineering\, and others. In addition\, Hadi has founded several cultural startups\, including grantPA and Circle World Arts. His TED talk\, discussing the importance of funding the arts and artists\, has gone viral with over 1.25 million views. \n\n\nMOHAMED ELDEBEK is a percussionist from Lebanon based in New York City.  He has performed internationally in numerous venues including the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts\, the National Center for Performing Arts in Beijing\, Symphony Space\, Metropolitan museum of Arts\, Shanghai Concert Hall\, and others. His musical adventures brought him to tour in China and teach Arabic music and dance at the first world arts workshop in Xizhou town\, Yunnan Province. \nTHE BROOKLYN NOMADS is a cross cultural collective rooted in musical traditions from the Arab world. Our musicians are from Lebanon\, Germany\, Sudan\, Turkey\, Iran\, the US\, Albania\, and others. Our music includes global styles like Flamenco\, Jazz\, Balkan\, Bluegrass\, North & East African\, European Classical and more. thebrooklynnomads.com \nFANNY PÉREZ GUTIÉRREZ is a visual and movement creator\, writer\, and teacher. CRS presented her solo exhibition “Electricity” in 2019. She is a trained facilitator of Ritual Body Postures by the Cuyamungue Institute and is currently studying Yarsan Sufism and mysticism with Farima Berenji. She has also studied Sufi dance with Rana Gorgani and Läle Sayoko and performed with the CRS Sufi dance community and elsewhere. She recently performed with the American Sufi Music Project as part of Litfest 22 by Asylum Bookstore in Pittsburgh\, PA. @fannnsystem \nLOY LUO is a Chinese artist who lives and works in Beijing. Since January 2020\, She has been working in the United States. She received her MFA from the Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology in 2010 and taught art at the University of Science and Technology\, Beijing from 2010-2012. Luo creates Paintings\, Sculptures\, Concept and Performance art. Her works have been exhibited or collected in China\, Italy\, America\, Germany\, Belgium\, Sweden\, Australian\, and France\, etc. Her solo exhibitions include: “Homeless” at Undercurrent (New York\, America); “The Other I (The Me in Others)” at WhiteBox Harlem (New York\, America); “Who is the ‘Me’”online show curated by Funspace Art Center( Roma\, Italy) “Mirror” at Anaya Beach Art Fair (Heibei\, China); “Stillness”at Beijing Jindu Art Center (China) in 2018; “Dance Together”at Fun Space Gallery (Rome\, Italy) in 2016\, and“Suspending”at 798 Ning Space Gallery (Beijing\, China) in 2015. loyluo.art \nMINA OMIDI is a multidisciplinary artist and designer living and working in New York. In her work\, painting functions as a place of reflection\, as a medium to snatch the fleeting time in an ongoing journey of self discovery and unfolding. Mina is an intuit who works through the constant process of being an observer in the moment; cultivating the flow of energies that need to be captured\, in an intimate engagement with color\, form\, and space. The essence of her exploration is to depict the world between visual and spiritual senses. Her goal in her practices is to create escapes that help to contemplate and evoke the purity of lightheartedness and rawness; which would not only be a form of putting healing energy out through a piece but also to inspire and elevate anyone who experiences her work. minaomidi.com \nPAOLA GARCÍA teaches Sufi dance at Anahid Sofian Studio and performs with the CRS Sufi dance community and elsewhere. She has studied extensively with Sufi dance artist Rana Gorgani in NYC and in Europe and was awarded the International Sufi Dance Certification Of Cid UNESCO by her\, granting Paola authority to teach Gorgani’s method of Sufi dance training. She has performed in multiple venues including Grounds for Sculpture\, Mana Contemporary\, Alwan Center for the Arts\, The Cathedral of Saint John the Divine\, From the Horse’s Mouth\, The Outlet Dance Project\, Dixon Place\, MODArts Dance Collective\, Queens Library\, and Jamaica Center for the Arts\, among others. Paola holds a Master’s Degree in Islamic Studies from Columbia University and a J.D. from Columbia Law School. She is a writer\, Middle Eastern Studies researcher\, lawyer\, translator and student of Sufism. @wonder_paola \nMELISSA RIVERO is the author of The Affairs of the Falcóns\, which won the 2019 New American Voices Award and a 2020 International Latino Book Award. The book was also longlisted for the PEN/Hemingway Debut Novel Prize\, the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize\, and the Aspen Words Literary Prize. Born in Lima\, Peru and raised in Brooklyn\, she is a graduate of NYU and Brooklyn Law School. She still lives in Brooklyn with her family. melissa-rivero.com \nWENDI WANG is the founder of China’s One Thousand and One Nights Dance Art Center and is currently the Artistic Director of the “1001 Experimental Theater.” She has won the Asian International Music\, Dance Art Competition\, and the champion of the Fujian Women’s Talent and Emotional Reality Show. Wendi is known for her spiritual teaching\, and she has trained a group of outstanding dancers and teachers with distinct personalities and independent thoughts to cultivate a group of talents in the promotion of Chinese oriental dance. She has served as a judge of the major art festivals in China\, traveling to Middle East and North Africa\, and many countries in East Africa. She went to the United States in 2015 and actively joined in various art activities at New York and actively promoted dance art. She has successively exhibited at New York fashion Events and art exhibition centers\, poetry associations\, museum\, libraries\, and churches\, and collaborated with artists from different fields. She hopes to establish a bridge between Eastern and Western culture through her work. wendiwengdanceart.com \nABOUT THE PRESENTERS\n \nL PRIVATE GALLERY is an extension of artist Loy Luo’s workspace. The artist’s pursuit of artistic quality\, enthusiasm for artistic exchanges\, and convenient transportation have gradually transformed the space into a place for painters\, sculptors\, musicians\, performance artists and philosophers to collide and display their works. There is a brave spirit of academic exploration and an open atmosphere of artistic innovation.  loyluo.art \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. crsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/rumis-birthday-2022/
LOCATION:L- Private Gallery\, 98 Mott St #600A\, New York\, NY\, 10013\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,sufi
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221002T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221002T181500
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220830T225152Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220831T200211Z
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SUMMARY:Saxophonist Caroline Davis:  Oscillations
DESCRIPTION:Please join us in the award-winning White Room at CRS on Sunday\, October 2\, 2022 at 5pm for a discussion and live performance by acclaimed saxophonist and scholar Caroline Davis\, who has been investigating the therapeutic use of sounds modeled on brain waves. \nTickets are $20 ($10 for students and seniors) and are available in advance from Eventbrite and at the door (cash only). \nDiscussion: Oscillations is an immersive experience encouraging synchronicity through the study of brain rhythms. Simultaneous patterns in the brain create a complex scene of wild oscillations in our bodies and minds. Given research in neuroscience\, the hope is that oscillating rhythms can provide a new sense of focus and clarity\, similar to a dream state. Anecdotal evidence suggests that for some listeners it may reveal new ways of hearing ourselves and the world providing both comfort\, hope\, and healing. \nPerformance: Caroline Davis will perform a solo saxophone set inspired by research on oscillations in the brain. Watch her last video in the series for a sneak peak: \n \nABOUT CAROLINE DAVIS \nMobile since her birth in Singapore\, composer and saxophonist Caroline Davis’s music covers a wide range of styles\, owed to her shifting environment as a child. As a leader\, she has released six albums: Live Work & Play (2012)\, Doors: Chicago Storylines (2015)\, Heart Tonic (2018)\, Alula (2019)\, Anthems (2019)\, and Portals (2021). She won Downbeat’s Critic’s Poll Rising Star Alto-Saxophonist (2018) and was listed in both Downbeat’s Readers Poll (2021) and JazzTimes Expanded Critics Poll (2021).  Her work has garnered much praise from NPR\, The New York Times\, The Wire\, DownBeat\, JazzTimes\, and many international publications. \nDavis has worked with Lee Konitz\, Angelica Sanchez\, The Femme Jam\, Matt Mitchell\, Terry Riley\, Miles Okazaki\, Thana Alexa\, and Billy Kaye\, to name a few. She regularly collaborates with the experimental R&B band\, My Tree (Where the Grace Is\, AfterGlow). She has been in residence at MacDowell\, The Jazz Gallery\, and ICE Ensemble Evolution; and awarded Jerome Hill\, CMA\, and NYFA grants. Her compositions integrate science and music\, influenced by her Ph.D. Davis is an advocate for gender equity (This Is A Movement\, The New School) and abolition (Justice for Keith Lamar). \ncarolinedavis.org \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/saxophonist-caroline-davis-oscillations-tickets-411539294107 \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter\, no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE LOCATION:\nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York\, NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee\, between 12th & 13th streets\, one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6\, N/R/Q\, L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \nhttps://crsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/saxophonist-caroline-davis-oscillations/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:Please join us in the award-winning White Room at CRS on Sunday October 2 2022 at 5pm for a discussion and live performance by acclaimed saxophonist and scholar Caroline Davis who has been investigating the therapeutic use of sounds modeled on brain waves. \nTickets are $20 ($10 for students and seniors) and are available in advance from Eventbrite and at the door (cash only). \nDiscussion: Oscillations is an immersive experience encouraging synchronicity through the study of brain rhythms. Simultaneous patterns in the brain create a complex scene of wild oscillations in our bodies and minds. Given research in neuroscience the hope is that oscillating rhythms can provide a new sense of focus and clarity similar to a dream state. Anecdotal evidence suggests that for some listeners it may reveal new ways of hearing ourselves and the world providing both comfort hope and healing. \nPerformance: Caroline Davis will perform a solo saxophone set inspired by research on oscillations in the brain. Watch her last video in the series for a sneak peak: \n \nABOUT CAROLINE DAVIS \nMobile since her birth in Singapore composer and saxophonist Caroline Davis’s music covers a wide range of styles owed to her shifting environment as a child. As a leader she has released six albums: Live Work & Play (2012) Doors: Chicago Storylines (2015) Heart Tonic (2018) Alula (2019) Anthems (2019) and Portals (2021). She won Downbeat’s Critic’s Poll Rising Star Alto-Saxophonist (2018) and was listed in both Downbeat’s Readers Poll (2021) and JazzTimes Expanded Critics Poll (2021).  Her work has garnered much praise from NPR The New York Times The Wire DownBeat JazzTimes and many international publications. \nDavis has worked with Lee Konitz Angelica Sanchez The Femme Jam Matt Mitchell Terry Riley Miles Okazaki Thana Alexa and Billy Kaye to name a few. She regularly collaborates with the experimental R&B band My Tree (Where the Grace Is AfterGlow). She has been in residence at MacDowell The Jazz Gallery and ICE Ensemble Evolution; and awarded Jerome Hill CMA and NYFA grants. Her compositions integrate science and music influenced by her Ph.D. Davis is an advocate for gender equity (This Is A Movement The New School) and abolition (Justice for Keith Lamar). \ncarolinedavis.org \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/saxophonist-caroline-davis-oscillations-tickets-411539294107 \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE \nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee between 12th & 13th streets one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6 N/R/Q L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \nhttps://crsny.org;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221008T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221008T210000
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LAST-MODIFIED:20220818T220022Z
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SUMMARY:INTERWOVEN Ensemble:  Ami Concert Series Vol. 2
DESCRIPTION:CRS presents the second of three concerts of AMI\, a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The concert will take place on Saturday\, October 8 at 7:30 pm and will feature gamin (piri/saenghwang) with Alex Fortes (violin)\, Keiko Tokunaga (violin)\, and Ana Kim (cello)\, performing compositions by Ki Young Kim and Theodore Wiprud as well as New York premieres by William Cooper and gamin. \nThe Korean piri and saenghwang are small instruments capable of producing surprisingly loud\, earthy\, and otherworldly sounds. The Korean concept of pitch is quite variable – any note can be a gesture with rising or falling attack\, middle\, and release. This program pairs two compositions by Korean composers with two by composers from the West\, each of whom was inspired to bring together the differing sounds and conventions of Korean woodwinds and western strings in distinctly different and thrilling ways\, expanding the possibilities of each. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only\, if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted\, no exceptions. In addition\, masks must be worn throughout. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga\, INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry\, woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins\, traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music\, traditional and contemporary\, side by side\, INTERWOVEN likewise hopes to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions\, to inspire new friendships\, and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service\, we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you\, that we may let go of what we know or think\, and simply experience. \nThe first concert in the series will take place on September 24 and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto) performing works by Grammy and Oscar winning composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and others. The third concert will occur on October 29 and will feature Andy Lin (erhu/viola)\, performing Chen Yi‘s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet and other compositions. \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ensemble-ami-concert-series-vol-2-tickets-404303722317\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter\, no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE LOCATION:\nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York\, NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee\, between 12th & 13th streets\, one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6\, N/R/Q\, L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE MUSICIANS \nA native of San Diego\, New York-based violinist ALEX FORTES is recognized for his versatility and warmth. Recent performances have included concerts in France\, \nGermany\, Denmark\, Austria\, and Indonesia\, as well as throughout North America. His playing is featured on A Far Cry’s 2014 Grammy-nominated album\, Dreams and Prayers\, as well as on Law of Mosaics\, which The New Yorker’s Alex Ross hailed as one of the top ten albums of 2014. He can also be heard on a forthcoming album with the Henschel Quartett and pianist Donald Berman featuring the music of Chris Theofanidis. \nFortes holds a strong interest in finding new contexts in which to experience familiar music. His arrangements of Schubert lieder and chamber music were hailed by the Boston Globe as “uniformly resourceful and complementary…smart\, subtle.” In May 2016\, A Far Cry premiered his arrangement with Sarah Darling of Bach’s Goldberg Variations in collaboration with pianist Simone Dinnerstein. \nA strong advocate for the importance of social and civic engagement\, Alex spent a year working as an administrator and playing for the Longwood Symphony\, an orchestra associated with Boston’s medical community that uses its performances to raise funds and awareness for medical nonprofits. In May 2010\, he was chosen by former U.S. Senator and New School President Bob Kerrey to be the student speaker at the New School’s commencement ceremony\, where he spoke about the importance of interdisciplinary cooperation and civic engagement for fostering innovation and strong communities. \nAlex has participated in educational residencies in both English and Spanish related to entrepreneurship\, music performance and education\, at colleges and public schools throughout the United States. He holds music degrees from Mannes College and a B.A. in Government from Harvard College. \nIndiana-native ANA KIM is a versatile cellist based in New York\, who performs on modern and historical instruments with various ensembles throughout the United States\, Europe\, and South Korea. She performs with ensembles including the Sebastians\, American Classical Orchestra\, and Boston Baroque. \nAna has participated in festivals such as Yellow Barn\, Verbier Academy\, Music@ Menlo\, and International Musicians Seminar at Prussia Cove. She has received a Doctorate at the University of Southern California and has studied Historical Performance at Juilliard. \nHer teachers include János Starker\, Ralph Kirshbaum\, Laurence Lesser\, and Phoebe Carrai. With a keen interest in education\, Ana has participated in outreach residencies with Kneisel Hall Festival in Maine and Listen Closely in New York\, and the American Classical Orchestra’s Classical Music for Kids. She had taught at Pacific Union College and public schools in Napa Valley. She is currently teaching at the Browning School in New York City. \nGAMIN is a Korean-born multi-instrumentalist who specializes in traditional Korean wind instruments. She tours the world performing traditional Korean music and engages in numerous cross-disciplinary collaborations. She is a designated Yisuja\, official holder of South Korea’s Important Intangible Cultural Asset No. 46. \nFrom 2000 to 2010\, gamin was the principal piri player at the National Gugak Orchestra in Seoul. She has received several cultural exchange program grants and collaborated in cross-cultural new music works with world-acclaimed musicians. She was a featured artist at the Silkroad concert in Seoul (2018)\, performing on stage with the founder\, Yo-Yo Ma. \nHer album “Nong” was released by Innova Records. Her Carnegie Hall solo début\, accompanied by Nangye Gugak Orchestra\, was postponed due to the pandemic. Recently\, she was awarded the prestigious two-year Jerome Hill Foundation Artist Fellowship. \ngaminmusic.com/ \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance\, violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed\, toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019\, and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure\, pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra\, Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021\, Keiko founded an online concert series\, Jukebox Concerts\, in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers\, but also to residents of nursing homes\, hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year\, she created INTERWOVEN\, a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians\, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet\, the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance\, First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013\, and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road\, Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past\, she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute. \ninterwovenmusic.org \nABOUT THE COMPOSERS \nKI YOUNG KIM is an international\, genre-bending composer whose work defies categorization. Since becoming a recipient of the Asian Cultural Council Grant in 1995\, he has broadened his music career in Japan and New York while collaborating with dancers\, theater directors\, and visual artists. A classically-trained composer and scholar of Korean avant-garde theater\, Kim has received multiple commissions from the National Gugak Center\, Korea’s premier traditional music center. He is also the founder of CMB 567\, an organization examining intra-Asian relations through contemporary art and music. \nKim’s collaborators include pioneering artists like Shin-Ja Hong\, Asoon Ahn\, Gloria McLean\, Whitewave\, String Noise\, and Chang-Jin Lee. His compositions have premiered at La MaMa\, Dance Theater Workshop\, Tenri Gallery\, and other venues. He is currently based in New York\, where he directs Quiet Revolution\, a multidisciplinary performance combining Western and Korean instruments in ritualistic meditation. In 2019\, he became a composer-in-residence at Brandeis University. \nTHEODORE WIPRUD is a composer\, educator\, and arts leader. He is widely known for having served as Vice President\, Education\, at the New York Philharmonic from 2004-2018\, and as host of the iconic Young People’s Concerts. \nAt the same time\, he has produced a steady stream of works including a Sinfonietta (2016)\, premiered by the South Dakota Symphony; a Violin Concerto (Katrina)\, composed for Ittai Shapira\, and released with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic on Champs Hill Records; a one-act opera\, My Last Duchess\, with libretto by Tom Dulack based on poetry by Robert Browning; a song cycle\, For Allegra\, on a variety of American poets; and a number of pieces based on gugak\, Korean traditional music\, and including gugak instruments like p’iri\, gayageum\, and haegeum. \nMany of Wiprud’s works explore spiritual experience\, like the orchestral Hosannas of the Second Heaven and Grail; his two string quartets; and a number of choral pieces. Other works respond to American literature\, including American Journal\, based on Robert Hayden’s poem\, and A Georgia Song\, a setting of Maya Angelou. \nWiprud graduated cum laude in biochemistry at Harvard and earned a master’s in theory and composition at Boston University\, where he worked with David Del Tredici. He also studied with Robin Holloway at Cambridge University\, and with Jacob Druckman and Bernard Rands at Aspen.  \nHailed by the San Francisco Chronicle for his richly soaring vocal lines\, WILLIAM DAVID COOPER is the composer of three operas and music for orchestra\, chamber ensembles\, Baroque instruments\, chorus\, film\, and dance. His operas have been performed by Fort Worth Opera\, West Edge Opera\, andthe National Opera Association\, among others. His music has also been performed by Augustin Hadelich\, Liza Stepanova\, The New York Virtuoso Singers\, C4\, Antico Moderno\, Splinter Reeds\, the Lysander Trio\, ECCE Ensemble\, the Calder Quartet\, the Slee Sinfonietta\, and the Juilliard Orchestra. An alumnus of UC Davis and the Juilliard School\, Cooper serves on the faculty of the Walnut Hill School for the Arts\, and as organist and choir master at St. James Episcopal Church in New London\, CT. \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \ncrsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/interwoven-ami-2/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:CRS presents the second of three concerts of AMI a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The concert will take place on Saturday October 8 at 7:30 pm and will feature gamin (piri/saenghwang) with Alex Fortes (violin) Keiko Tokunaga (violin) and Ana Kim (cello) performing compositions by Ki Young Kim and Theodore Wiprud as well as New York premieres by William Cooper and gamin. \nThe Korean piri and saenghwang are small instruments capable of producing surprisingly loud earthy and otherworldly sounds. The Korean concept of pitch is quite variable – any note can be a gesture with rising or falling attack middle and release. This program pairs two compositions by Korean composers with two by composers from the West each of whom was inspired to bring together the differing sounds and conventions of Korean woodwinds and western strings in distinctly different and thrilling ways expanding the possibilities of each. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted no exceptions. In addition masks must be worn throughout. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music traditional and contemporary side by side INTERWOVEN likewise hopes to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions to inspire new friendships and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you that we may let go of what we know or think and simply experience. \nThe first concert in the series will take place on September 24 and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto) performing works by Grammy and Oscar winning composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and others. The third concert will occur on October 29 and will feature Andy Lin (erhu/viola) performing Chen Yi‘s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet and other compositions. \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ensemble-ami-concert-series-vol-2-tickets-404303722317\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE \nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee between 12th & 13th streets one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6 N/R/Q L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE MUSICIANS \nA native of San Diego New York-based violinist ALEX FORTES is recognized for his versatility and warmth. Recent performances have included concerts in France \nGermany Denmark Austria and Indonesia as well as throughout North America. His playing is featured on A Far Cry’s 2014 Grammy-nominated album Dreams and Prayers as well as on Law of Mosaics which The New Yorker’s Alex Ross hailed as one of the top ten albums of 2014. He can also be heard on a forthcoming album with the Henschel Quartett and pianist Donald Berman featuring the music of Chris Theofanidis. \nFortes holds a strong interest in finding new contexts in which to experience familiar music. His arrangements of Schubert lieder and chamber music were hailed by the Boston Globe as “uniformly resourceful and complementary…smart subtle.” In May 2016 A Far Cry premiered his arrangement with Sarah Darling of Bach’s Goldberg Variations in collaboration with pianist Simone Dinnerstein. \nA strong advocate for the importance of social and civic engagement Alex spent a year working as an administrator and playing for the Longwood Symphony an orchestra associated with Boston’s medical community that uses its performances to raise funds and awareness for medical nonprofits. In May 2010 he was chosen by former U.S. Senator and New School President Bob Kerrey to be the student speaker at the New School’s commencement ceremony where he spoke about the importance of interdisciplinary cooperation and civic engagement for fostering innovation and strong communities. \nAlex has participated in educational residencies in both English and Spanish related to entrepreneurship music performance and education at colleges and public schools throughout the United States. He holds music degrees from Mannes College and a B.A. in Government from Harvard College. \nIndiana-native ANA KIM is a versatile cellist based in New York who performs on modern and historical instruments with various ensembles throughout the United States Europe and South Korea. She performs with ensembles including the Sebastians American Classical Orchestra and Boston Baroque. \nAna has participated in festivals such as Yellow Barn Verbier Academy Music@ Menlo and International Musicians Seminar at Prussia Cove. She has received a Doctorate at the University of Southern California and has studied Historical Performance at Juilliard. \nHer teachers include János Starker Ralph Kirshbaum Laurence Lesser and Phoebe Carrai. With a keen interest in education Ana has participated in outreach residencies with Kneisel Hall Festival in Maine and Listen Closely in New York and the American Classical Orchestra’s Classical Music for Kids. She had taught at Pacific Union College and public schools in Napa Valley. She is currently teaching at the Browning School in New York City. \nGAMIN is a Korean-born multi-instrumentalist who specializes in traditional Korean wind instruments. She tours the world performing traditional Korean music and engages in numerous cross-disciplinary collaborations. She is a designated Yisuja official holder of South Korea’s Important Intangible Cultural Asset No. 46. \nFrom 2000 to 2010 gamin was the principal piri player at the National Gugak Orchestra in Seoul. She has received several cultural exchange program grants and collaborated in cross-cultural new music works with world-acclaimed musicians. She was a featured artist at the Silkroad concert in Seoul (2018) performing on stage with the founder Yo-Yo Ma. \nHer album “Nong” was released by Innova Records. Her Carnegie Hall solo début accompanied by Nangye Gugak Orchestra was postponed due to the pandemic. Recently she was awarded the prestigious two-year Jerome Hill Foundation Artist Fellowship. \ngaminmusic.com/ \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019 and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021 Keiko founded an online concert series Jukebox Concerts in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers but also to residents of nursing homes hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year she created INTERWOVEN a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013 and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute. \ninterwovenmusic.org \nABOUT THE COMPOSERS \nKI YOUNG KIM is an international genre-bending composer whose work defies categorization. Since becoming a recipient of the Asian Cultural Council Grant in 1995 he has broadened his music career in Japan and New York while collaborating with dancers theater directors and visual artists. A classically-trained composer and scholar of Korean avant-garde theater Kim has received multiple commissions from the National Gugak Center Korea’s premier traditional music center. He is also the founder of CMB 567 an organization examining intra-Asian relations through contemporary art and music. \nKim’s collaborators include pioneering artists like Shin-Ja Hong Asoon Ahn Gloria McLean Whitewave String Noise and Chang-Jin Lee. His compositions have premiered at La MaMa Dance Theater Workshop Tenri Gallery and other venues. He is currently based in New York where he directs Quiet Revolution a multidisciplinary performance combining Western and Korean instruments in ritualistic meditation. In 2019 he became a composer-in-residence at Brandeis University. \nTHEODORE WIPRUD is a composer educator and arts leader. He is widely known for having served as Vice President Education at the New York Philharmonic from 2004-2018 and as host of the iconic Young People’s Concerts. \nAt the same time he has produced a steady stream of works including a Sinfonietta (2016) premiered by the South Dakota Symphony; a Violin Concerto (Katrina) composed for Ittai Shapira and released with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic on Champs Hill Records; a one-act opera My Last Duchess with libretto by Tom Dulack based on poetry by Robert Browning; a song cycle For Allegra on a variety of American poets; and a number of pieces based on gugak Korean traditional music and including gugak instruments like p’iri gayageum and haegeum. \nMany of Wiprud’s works explore spiritual experience like the orchestral Hosannas of the Second Heaven and Grail; his two string quartets; and a number of choral pieces. Other works respond to American literature including American Journal based on Robert Hayden’s poem and A Georgia Song a setting of Maya Angelou. \nWiprud graduated cum laude in biochemistry at Harvard and earned a master’s in theory and composition at Boston University where he worked with David Del Tredici. He also studied with Robin Holloway at Cambridge University and with Jacob Druckman and Bernard Rands at Aspen.  \nHailed by the San Francisco Chronicle for his richly soaring vocal lines WILLIAM DAVID COOPER is the composer of three operas and music for orchestra chamber ensembles Baroque instruments chorus film and dance. His operas have been performed by Fort Worth Opera West Edge Opera andthe National Opera Association among others. His music has also been performed by Augustin Hadelich Liza Stepanova The New York Virtuoso Singers C4 Antico Moderno Splinter Reeds the Lysander Trio ECCE Ensemble the Calder Quartet the Slee Sinfonietta and the Juilliard Orchestra. An alumnus of UC Davis and the Juilliard School Cooper serves on the faculty of the Walnut Hill School for the Arts and as organist and choir master at St. James Episcopal Church in New London CT. \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \ncrsny.org;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T150000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221006T214301Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221006T215450Z
UID:39859-1667048400-1667055600@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Guided Meditation & Spiritual Healing Clinic with Yasuko Kasaki & CRS Healers
DESCRIPTION:We are happy to invite you back to CRS in person for an afternoon of meditation and healing! Together\, let’s share stillness and peace of mind. \nBring any issue you are facing right now — physically\, emotionally\, mentally\, and/or spiritually. With eyes closed (you will be seated and a healer will stand nearby; no touching is involved)\, a CRS healer\, trained in A Course in Miracles and spiritual reading/healing\, will observe you with his inner sight\, free of any judgments\, as your truly are\, a perfect shining spirit. Together\, will ask the Holy Spirit (or Inner Guide if you prefer) to bring us directly to whatever seed thought is causing your current issues and ask for guidance about how your spirit really wants to make use of your present situation for its growth and sharing of love. After about 10 minutes of meditation\, we will share the inspirational guidance that we receive. \nSuggested Donation $20 cash. No one turned away due to lack of funds.\nRSVP REQUIRED to etsuko@crsny.org\nProof of vaccination is not required but please wear a mask while present. And if you have any COVID/cold symptoms\, please do not come this time.  \nWe share healing quietly and provide you with an opportunity to come to rest\, reflect\, and remember who you truly are\, in a supportive\, non-judgmental\, meditative environment. We’d like to offer you an opportunity to experience stillness of mind and peace so that you can return to harmony with your true nature and purpose. Then you will find that rather than needing “solutions” to “problems” you will realize that you have no problems except those that you project. \nWe call this spiritual healing but it is not religious nor connected with any church or group. It is simply a practice of meditating together on our true nature and connecting with universal spirit/energy or what you will. \nA Note About the Role of Words in Healing: “Strictly speaking\, words play no part at all in healing. The motivating factor is prayer\, or asking. What you ask for you receive. But this refers to the prayer of the heart\, not to the words you use in praying. Sometimes the words and the prayer are contradictory; sometimes they agree. It does not matter. God does not understand words\, for they were made by separated minds to keep them in the illusion of separation. Words can be helpful\, particularly for the beginner\, in helping concentration and facilitating the exclusion\, or at least the control\, of extraneous thoughts. Let us not forget\, however\, that words are but symbols of symbols. They are thus twice removed from reality….” — A Course in Miracles Manual for Teachers\, Section 21 \n“Since only the mind can be sick\, only the mind can be healed. Only the mind is in need of healing.” —”PSYCHOTHERAPY: Purpose\, Process and Practice\,”Supplements to A Course in Miracles
URL:https://crsny.org/event/guided-meditation-spiritual-healing-clinic-with-yasuko-kasaki-crs-healers/2022-10-29/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event,CRS Presents
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/3E42A2F1-2725-4458-AAAC-9C4E32292E64.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221029T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220818T002042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220818T220049Z
UID:39159-1667071800-1667077200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:INTERWOVEN Ensemble:  Ami Concert Series Vol. 3
DESCRIPTION:CRS presents Vol. 3 of AMI\, a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The concert will take place on Saturday\, October 29 at 7:30 pm and will feature Andy Weiyan Lin (erhu/viola) with Emilie-Anne Gendron (violin)\, Keiko Tokunaga (violin)\, Matthew Cohen (viola)\, and Nan-Cheng Chen (cello)\, performing Chen Yi‘s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet as well as shorter selections by Dvorak\, Mozart\, and others. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only\, if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted\, no exceptions. In addition\, masks must be worn throughout. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga\, INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry\, woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins\, traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music\, traditional and contemporary\, side by side\, INTERWOVEN likewise hopes to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions\, to inspire new friendships\, and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service\, we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you\, that we may let go of what we know or think\, and simply experience. \nThe first concert in the series will take place on September 24 and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto) performing works by Grammy and Oscar winning composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and others. The second concert in the series will take place on October 8 and will feature the Korean wind player gamin with two violins and viola performing the music of Ki Young Kim\, Theodore Wiprud\, William Cooper\, and gamin.  \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ensemble-ami-concert-series-vol-3-tickets-404328075157\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter\, no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE LOCATION:\nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York\, NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee\, between 12th & 13th streets\, one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6\, N/R/Q\, L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE MUSICIANS \nTaiwanese born violist and erhuist (Chinese violin) ANDY WEIYAN LIN is recognized as one of the most promising and the only active performers who specialized in both western and eastern instruments.  \n“The great Molto adagio…..elicited some of the night’s most sensitive work\, especially from Wei-Yang Andy Lin on viola.” — Strad Magazine \n“Taiwanese-born violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin…..is also a virtuoso on the erhu\, and he gave a brilliant performance.” — New York Times \nAndy is the artistic director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society. He holds his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from The Juilliard School and received his Doctor’s degree in Musical Arts from SUNY Stony Brook. He has won numerous competitions including Taiwan National Viola Competition and First Prize in the 2008 Juilliard Viola Concerto Competition. He has also appeared as a viola and/or erhu soloist with orchestras such as the Busan Metropolitan Traditional Music Orchestra\, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia\, Children’s Orchestra Society\, Grant Park Symphony Orchestra\, Incheon Philharmonic\, the Juilliard Orchestra\, Milwaukee Symphony\, New York Classical Players\, Orford Academy Orchestra\, Solisti Ensemble and Yonkers Philharmonic Orchestra. Andy is also a founding member of the award winning string quartet\, the Amphion String Quartet\, and a member of the Musicians of Lenox Hill and serves as principal violist of the New York Classical Players and the Solisti Ensemble. He has been invited to perform chamber music with Itzhak Perlman where The New York Times described “Mr. Perlman\, playing first violin… answered in kind by the violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin.” He has also been invited by the Metropolitan Museum to give recitals at their Gallery Concert Series and Patrons Lounge Concert\, as well as a recital at the Caramoor Center for the Music and the Arts. Andy plays on a viola made by one of his best friends Jacob Ho.  \nandylinviola.com \nViolinist EMILIE-ANNE GENDRON\, lauded by the New York Times as a “brilliant soloist” and by Strad Magazine for her “marvellous and lyrical playing\,” enjoys a dynamic career based in New York City. Ms. Gendron is on the roster of the Marlboro Music Festival and the touring Musicians From Marlboro\, as well as acclaimed groups such as A Far Cry\, Argento Chamber Ensemble\, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center\, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia\, Iris Orchestra (as one of its concertmasters)\, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra\, Talea Ensemble\, and Sejong Soloists. She is a founding member of Ensemble Échappé\, a new-music sinfonietta\, and of Gamut Bach Ensemble\, in residence with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. A deeply committed chamber musician\, Ms. Gendron is a longtime member of the Momenta Quartet\, whose vision encompasses contemporary music of all backgrounds alongside great music from the past—currently quartet-in-residence at Binghamton University and most recently serving as Bates College’s 2019-20 Artists-in-Residence in Music. Other regular collaborations include the Melody and Company chamber series with pianist Melody Fader and the longstanding G-Sharp Duo\, founded with pianist Yelena Grinberg in 2003.  \nMs. Gendron is also a sought-after educator and clinician. She has been a member of the Toomai String Quintet\, specializing in innovative educational outreach and community engagement\, since 2009. Toomai\, one of the original pilot ensembles in Carnegie Hall’s “Musical Connections” program\, helped design composition and performance workshops with incarcerated men at Sing Sing Correctional Facility; has worked with student composers in the New York Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers Program and with NYC public school students through the “Midori and Friends” educational initiative; and presents at institutions across the U.S.\, ranging from grade school to university level. As a member of the Momenta Quartet\, Ms. Gendron gives guest masterclass and coaching appearances on their educational-performing circuit of nearly 40 institutions ranging from public and arts schools\, universities\, and conservatories in the U.S. and as far afield as Bolivia\, Indonesia\, and Mexico. Ms. Gendron has served as guest chamber music coach for the Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program and at the Longy School of Music; as violin specialist for student composers at Juilliard’s Evening Division\, NYU\, and Fordham University; and as a chamber music and contemporary music coach and performer at the annual Brandeis Composers Conference. \nMs. Gendron’s extensively varied international appearances have included recitals in Sweden and at the Louvre in Paris; festivals in Russia\, Finland\, Indonesia\, South Korea\, and Jordan; and major venues across the Americas\, Europe\, and Asia\, in collaboration with such artists as Teddy Abrams\, Rachel Barton Pine\, Bruno Canino\, Leon Fleisher\, Richard Goode\, Anthony McGill\, Edgar Meyer\, Shlomo Mintz\, Anthony Newman\, Samuel Rhodes\, Marcy Rosen\, Gil Shaham\, and Jörg Widmann\, among many others. Her performances have been broadcast over radio and television in the U.S.\, U.K.\, Switzerland\, New Zealand\, Canada\, Denmark\, Japan\, and South Korea. She is a past winner of the Stulberg String Competition and took 2nd Prize and the Audience Prize at the Sion-Valais (formerly Tibor Varga) International Violin Competition.  \nBorn in the U.S. to Japanese and French-Canadian parents\, and a dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada\, Ms. Gendron began her violin studies at age 4 with Carl Shugart and Carol Sykes. Her subsequent training at the Juilliard School was overseen by teachers Dorothy DeLay\, Won-Bin Yim\, Hyo Kang\, David Chan\, and Axel Strauss. Ms. Gendron holds the distinction of being the first person in Juilliard’s history to be accepted simultaneously to its two most selective courses of study\, both the Doctor of Musical Arts and the Artist Diploma. She holds a B.A. in Classics (magna cum laude and with Phi Beta Kappa honors) from Columbia University\, and a Master of Music degree and the coveted Artist Diploma from Juilliard. \nemilieannegendron.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance\, violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed\, toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019\, and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure\, pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra\, Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021\, Keiko founded an online concert series\, Jukebox Concerts\, in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers\, but also to residents of nursing homes\, hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year\, she created INTERWOVEN\, a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians\, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet\, the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance\, First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013\, and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road\, Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past\, she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute. \ninterwovenmusic.org \nUkrainian-American violist MATTHEW COHEN is a dynamic and versatile artist whose captivating performances have made him one of the most sought-after violists of his generation. A prize winner at the prestigious Primrose International Viola Competition\, he was also awarded top prizes at the Citta di Cremona International Viola Competition in Italy\, Vivo International Music Competition and the Art of Duo International Competition. Particularly interested in advocating viola having a solo and unique voice\, he is challenging the misperception that viola has a limited repertoire by bringing attention to the lesser-played works as well as arrangements of other masterworks.  \nSince his first performance in Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium was at the age of 15 as a soloist in the New York premiere of Tomas Svoboda’s Sonata No. 2 for orchestra and solo string quartet\, he has concertized as a soloist and chamber musician throughout North America and Europe in venues such as Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall\, the Ford Amphitheater and Broad Stage in California\, the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Oregon\, Gstaad Menuhin Festival in Switzerland and the Casa della Musica in Cosenza\, Italy. Recent solo engagements include his European debut performing Hummel’s Potpourri with the Gstaad Festival Orchestra and Bartok’s Viola Concerto with the I Virtuosi Italiani orchestra in Cremona\, and presenting the world premiere of internationally recognized video game score composer Garry Schyman’s viola concerto “Zingaro” with the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony conducted by Dr. Noreen Green. Past appearances include concerti with ensembles such as the North Shore Symphony Orchestra\, Manchester Summer Chamber Music\, Symphony in C\, Ensemble Baroquelyn\, Juilliard Orchestra\, Colburn Orchestra\, Oregon Sinfonietta\, and Oregon Symphony/Oregon Ballet Theater.  \nA passionate chamber musician\, he has performed alongside many distinguished artists including members of the Borromeo\, Guarneri\, Orion\, Parker\, Tokyo\, and Vermeer string quartets and the Beaux Arts and Tempest piano trios\, and has been featured by numerous concert series and chamber music societies including Bargemusic\, Camerata Pacifica\, the Colburn Chamber Music Society\, Heifetz Celebrity Series\, Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players\, Ringwood Friends of Chamber Music\, Olmos Ensemble\, Red Barn Chamber Music\, and the Wolfeboro Friends of Chamber Music. Summer festival engagements include appearances at ChamberFest Cleveland\, Gstaad Menuhin Festival and Academy\, Heifetz International Music Institute\, the Meadowmount School for Strings\, Methow Valley Chamber Music Festival\, Music Academy of the West\, the Perlman Music Program\, Philadelphia Young Pianist’s Academy\, Ravinia’s Steans Music Institute\, and the Sarasota Music Festival. \nAs a recent graduate of the Juilliard School’s Master of Music program\, he was the proud recipient of a Kovner Fellowship; he earned his Bachelor of Music degree from Cleveland Institute of Music and received an Artist Diploma from Colburn Conservatory where he studied with Misha Amory\, Heidi Castleman\, Paul Coletti\, Jeffrey Irvine\, and Cynthia Phelps. He has served as a member of the chamber music faculty at the HeifetzPEG Institute and is the co-founder and Artistic Director of Fishin’ in C Chamber Music Series\, a concert series based in Fishtown\, Philadelphia that launched in Fall 2018. In addition to his musical activities\, he enjoys public speaking and has acted in a number of plays including various works of Shakespeare\, Peter Pan\, Auntie Mame\, and the musical Bugsy Malone. His recording of York Bowen’s Phantasy for viola and piano with acclaimed pianist Vivian Fan is available on the Soundset label. \ncohenviola.com \nCellist NAN-CHENG CHEN’s performance was described as “personable and smile-inducing” and “fine playing” by the Washington Post and “Beautiful Tone” by New York Concert Reviews. A chamber music enthusiast\, Nan-Cheng is the executive director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society and was a member of Sonic Escape trio. As a soloist\, Nan-Cheng has collaborated with Simon Bolivar Orchestra\, Queens Symphony Orchestra\, Metro-West Symphony\, Quincy Symphony and Symphony Pro Musica\, and has toured North American\, South America\, Europe and Asia. His recent highlight include debuts with National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan and Taipei Symphony Orchestra. Nan-Cheng’s festival participations includes Banff Centre Residency\, Sarasota Music Festival\, Heifetz Institute\, Encore School for Strings\, and Kneisel Hall. He was a guest-performing artist at Chautauqua Summer Music Festival\, a Kaplan Fellow at the Bowdoin International Music Festival and served as a teaching artist at the Annual Music Festival of Walnut Hill. As a music educator\, Nan-Cheng has given cello masterclasses at Penn State University\, University of Wisconsin\, University of Calgary as well as universities in Panama\, Colombia and Taiwan. Nan-Cheng holds a B.M. and M.M. from The Juilliard School\, and is enrolled as a doctoral candidate at CUNY Graduate Center. He taught at CUNY Queens College and now serves as a full-time college music faculty in New York. \nnewasiacms.org/nancheng-chen \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \ncrsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/interwoven-ensemble-ami-concert-series-vol-3/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/221029-Interwoven-scaled.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:CRS presents Vol. 3 of AMI a new series of chamber concerts by the international ensemble INTERWOVEN in the award-winning White Room at CRS. The concert will take place on Saturday October 29 at 7:30 pm and will feature Andy Weiyan Lin (erhu/viola) with Emilie-Anne Gendron (violin) Keiko Tokunaga (violin) Matthew Cohen (viola) and Nan-Cheng Chen (cello) performing Chen Yi‘s Fiddle Suite for String Quartet as well as shorter selections by Dvorak Mozart and others. \nTickets are $30 and are available online through eventbrite.com and at the door for cash only if not sold out. Seating is limited and includes floor seating on blankets. All patrons must show proof of vaccination at the door in order to be admitted no exceptions. In addition masks must be worn throughout. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins traditions and materials. \nAmi means “to knit” in Japanese and “friend” in many Romance languages. By bringing together musicians from different cultural backgrounds to play western and non-western music traditional and contemporary side by side INTERWOVEN likewise hopes to introduce patrons of different backgrounds to the wonders and commonalities to be found in unfamiliar traditions to inspire new friendships and to strengthen our cross-cultural connections. \nDeep listening forms the foundation of the practice and programming of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing). Free from distractions such as food and drink service we share these opportunities to listen deeply with you that we may let go of what we know or think and simply experience. \nThe first concert in the series will take place on September 24 and will feature Yoko Reikano Kimura (koto) performing works by Grammy and Oscar winning composer Ryuichi Sakamoto and others. The second concert in the series will take place on October 8 and will feature the Korean wind player gamin with two violins and viola performing the music of Ki Young Kim Theodore Wiprud William Cooper and gamin.  \nTICKET LINK:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/interwoven-ensemble-ami-concert-series-vol-3-tickets-404328075157\n \nCOVID POLICY: \nProof of full vaccination is required to enter no exceptions. Masks must be worn throughout. Seating is limited and includes seating on the floor. Please do not come if you are symptomatic. Ask for a refund instead or donate your ticket. \nVENUE \nThe White Room at CRS\n123 4th Ave FL3\nNew York NY 10003\n212-677-8621 \nDIRECTIONS:\nCRS is located on the 3rd floor of a walk-up building above Think Coffee between 12th & 13th streets one block east of The Strand Bookstore. There is no elevator or wheelchair access. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \n4/5/6 N/R/Q L trains to 14th St / Union Square \nABOUT THE MUSICIANS \nTaiwanese born violist and erhuist (Chinese violin) ANDY WEIYAN LIN is recognized as one of the most promising and the only active performers who specialized in both western and eastern instruments.  \n“The great Molto adagio…..elicited some of the night’s most sensitive work especially from Wei-Yang Andy Lin on viola.” — Strad Magazine \n“Taiwanese-born violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin…..is also a virtuoso on the erhu and he gave a brilliant performance.” — New York Times \nAndy is the artistic director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society. He holds his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from The Juilliard School and received his Doctor’s degree in Musical Arts from SUNY Stony Brook. He has won numerous competitions including Taiwan National Viola Competition and First Prize in the 2008 Juilliard Viola Concerto Competition. He has also appeared as a viola and/or erhu soloist with orchestras such as the Busan Metropolitan Traditional Music Orchestra Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia Children’s Orchestra Society Grant Park Symphony Orchestra Incheon Philharmonic the Juilliard Orchestra Milwaukee Symphony New York Classical Players Orford Academy Orchestra Solisti Ensemble and Yonkers Philharmonic Orchestra. Andy is also a founding member of the award winning string quartet the Amphion String Quartet and a member of the Musicians of Lenox Hill and serves as principal violist of the New York Classical Players and the Solisti Ensemble. He has been invited to perform chamber music with Itzhak Perlman where The New York Times described “Mr. Perlman playing first violin… answered in kind by the violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin.” He has also been invited by the Metropolitan Museum to give recitals at their Gallery Concert Series and Patrons Lounge Concert as well as a recital at the Caramoor Center for the Music and the Arts. Andy plays on a viola made by one of his best friends Jacob Ho.  \nandylinviola.com \nViolinist EMILIE-ANNE GENDRON lauded by the New York Times as a “brilliant soloist” and by Strad Magazine for her “marvellous and lyrical playing” enjoys a dynamic career based in New York City. Ms. Gendron is on the roster of the Marlboro Music Festival and the touring Musicians From Marlboro as well as acclaimed groups such as A Far Cry Argento Chamber Ensemble Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia Iris Orchestra (as one of its concertmasters) Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Talea Ensemble and Sejong Soloists. She is a founding member of Ensemble Échappé a new-music sinfonietta and of Gamut Bach Ensemble in residence with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. A deeply committed chamber musician Ms. Gendron is a longtime member of the Momenta Quartet whose vision encompasses contemporary music of all backgrounds alongside great music from the past—currently quartet-in-residence at Binghamton University and most recently serving as Bates College’s 2019-20 Artists-in-Residence in Music. Other regular collaborations include the Melody and Company chamber series with pianist Melody Fader and the longstanding G-Sharp Duo founded with pianist Yelena Grinberg in 2003.  \nMs. Gendron is also a sought-after educator and clinician. She has been a member of the Toomai String Quintet specializing in innovative educational outreach and community engagement since 2009. Toomai one of the original pilot ensembles in Carnegie Hall’s “Musical Connections” program helped design composition and performance workshops with incarcerated men at Sing Sing Correctional Facility; has worked with student composers in the New York Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers Program and with NYC public school students through the “Midori and Friends” educational initiative; and presents at institutions across the U.S. ranging from grade school to university level. As a member of the Momenta Quartet Ms. Gendron gives guest masterclass and coaching appearances on their educational-performing circuit of nearly 40 institutions ranging from public and arts schools universities and conservatories in the U.S. and as far afield as Bolivia Indonesia and Mexico. Ms. Gendron has served as guest chamber music coach for the Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program and at the Longy School of Music; as violin specialist for student composers at Juilliard’s Evening Division NYU and Fordham University; and as a chamber music and contemporary music coach and performer at the annual Brandeis Composers Conference. \nMs. Gendron’s extensively varied international appearances have included recitals in Sweden and at the Louvre in Paris; festivals in Russia Finland Indonesia South Korea and Jordan; and major venues across the Americas Europe and Asia in collaboration with such artists as Teddy Abrams Rachel Barton Pine Bruno Canino Leon Fleisher Richard Goode Anthony McGill Edgar Meyer Shlomo Mintz Anthony Newman Samuel Rhodes Marcy Rosen Gil Shaham and Jörg Widmann among many others. Her performances have been broadcast over radio and television in the U.S. U.K. Switzerland New Zealand Canada Denmark Japan and South Korea. She is a past winner of the Stulberg String Competition and took 2nd Prize and the Audience Prize at the Sion-Valais (formerly Tibor Varga) International Violin Competition.  \nBorn in the U.S. to Japanese and French-Canadian parents and a dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada Ms. Gendron began her violin studies at age 4 with Carl Shugart and Carol Sykes. Her subsequent training at the Juilliard School was overseen by teachers Dorothy DeLay Won-Bin Yim Hyo Kang David Chan and Axel Strauss. Ms. Gendron holds the distinction of being the first person in Juilliard’s history to be accepted simultaneously to its two most selective courses of study both the Doctor of Musical Arts and the Artist Diploma. She holds a B.A. in Classics (magna cum laude and with Phi Beta Kappa honors) from Columbia University and a Master of Music degree and the coveted Artist Diploma from Juilliard. \nemilieannegendron.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019 and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021 Keiko founded an online concert series Jukebox Concerts in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers but also to residents of nursing homes hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year she created INTERWOVEN a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013 and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute. \ninterwovenmusic.org \nUkrainian-American violist MATTHEW COHEN is a dynamic and versatile artist whose captivating performances have made him one of the most sought-after violists of his generation. A prize winner at the prestigious Primrose International Viola Competition he was also awarded top prizes at the Citta di Cremona International Viola Competition in Italy Vivo International Music Competition and the Art of Duo International Competition. Particularly interested in advocating viola having a solo and unique voice he is challenging the misperception that viola has a limited repertoire by bringing attention to the lesser-played works as well as arrangements of other masterworks.  \nSince his first performance in Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium was at the age of 15 as a soloist in the New York premiere of Tomas Svoboda’s Sonata No. 2 for orchestra and solo string quartet he has concertized as a soloist and chamber musician throughout North America and Europe in venues such as Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall the Ford Amphitheater and Broad Stage in California the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Oregon Gstaad Menuhin Festival in Switzerland and the Casa della Musica in Cosenza Italy. Recent solo engagements include his European debut performing Hummel’s Potpourri with the Gstaad Festival Orchestra and Bartok’s Viola Concerto with the I Virtuosi Italiani orchestra in Cremona and presenting the world premiere of internationally recognized video game score composer Garry Schyman’s viola concerto “Zingaro” with the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony conducted by Dr. Noreen Green. Past appearances include concerti with ensembles such as the North Shore Symphony Orchestra Manchester Summer Chamber Music Symphony in C Ensemble Baroquelyn Juilliard Orchestra Colburn Orchestra Oregon Sinfonietta and Oregon Symphony/Oregon Ballet Theater.  \nA passionate chamber musician he has performed alongside many distinguished artists including members of the Borromeo Guarneri Orion Parker Tokyo and Vermeer string quartets and the Beaux Arts and Tempest piano trios and has been featured by numerous concert series and chamber music societies including Bargemusic Camerata Pacifica the Colburn Chamber Music Society Heifetz Celebrity Series Jupiter Symphony Chamber Players Ringwood Friends of Chamber Music Olmos Ensemble Red Barn Chamber Music and the Wolfeboro Friends of Chamber Music. Summer festival engagements include appearances at ChamberFest Cleveland Gstaad Menuhin Festival and Academy Heifetz International Music Institute the Meadowmount School for Strings Methow Valley Chamber Music Festival Music Academy of the West the Perlman Music Program Philadelphia Young Pianist’s Academy Ravinia’s Steans Music Institute and the Sarasota Music Festival. \nAs a recent graduate of the Juilliard School’s Master of Music program he was the proud recipient of a Kovner Fellowship; he earned his Bachelor of Music degree from Cleveland Institute of Music and received an Artist Diploma from Colburn Conservatory where he studied with Misha Amory Heidi Castleman Paul Coletti Jeffrey Irvine and Cynthia Phelps. He has served as a member of the chamber music faculty at the HeifetzPEG Institute and is the co-founder and Artistic Director of Fishin’ in C Chamber Music Series a concert series based in Fishtown Philadelphia that launched in Fall 2018. In addition to his musical activities he enjoys public speaking and has acted in a number of plays including various works of Shakespeare Peter Pan Auntie Mame and the musical Bugsy Malone. His recording of York Bowen’s Phantasy for viola and piano with acclaimed pianist Vivian Fan is available on the Soundset label. \ncohenviola.com \nCellist NAN-CHENG CHEN’s performance was described as “personable and smile-inducing” and “fine playing” by the Washington Post and “Beautiful Tone” by New York Concert Reviews. A chamber music enthusiast Nan-Cheng is the executive director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society and was a member of Sonic Escape trio. As a soloist Nan-Cheng has collaborated with Simon Bolivar Orchestra Queens Symphony Orchestra Metro-West Symphony Quincy Symphony and Symphony Pro Musica and has toured North American South America Europe and Asia. His recent highlight include debuts with National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan and Taipei Symphony Orchestra. Nan-Cheng’s festival participations includes Banff Centre Residency Sarasota Music Festival Heifetz Institute Encore School for Strings and Kneisel Hall. He was a guest-performing artist at Chautauqua Summer Music Festival a Kaplan Fellow at the Bowdoin International Music Festival and served as a teaching artist at the Annual Music Festival of Walnut Hill. As a music educator Nan-Cheng has given cello masterclasses at Penn State University University of Wisconsin University of Calgary as well as universities in Panama Colombia and Taiwan. Nan-Cheng holds a B.M. and M.M. from The Juilliard School and is enrolled as a doctoral candidate at CUNY Graduate Center. He taught at CUNY Queens College and now serves as a full-time college music faculty in New York. \nnewasiacms.org/nancheng-chen \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. \ncrsny.org;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221030T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221030T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220403T222610Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221019T211608Z
UID:38667-1667145600-1667149200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Four Seasons in NY: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 25
DESCRIPTION:We invite you to celebrate the autumn season with us at Four Seasons in New York: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 25 by the acclaimed vocalist and koto and shamisen player Yoko Reikano Kimura on Sunday\, October 30\, 2022 at 4pm in the award-winning White Room at CRS. This concert is presented by CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) and Yoko Reikano Kimura and is supported by Hogaku Journal and Mar Creation\, Inc. \nTickets are $30 cash only at the door. To RSVP\, email info@yokoreikanokimura.com \n* Our top priority is the health and safety of the CRS audiences\, artists\, and staff. For this concert we ask that you wear a mask. Thank you for your kind understanding and corporation. \nThis concert features some of Yoko’s favorite autumn pieces from the Yamada style koto music repertoires by the legendary Nakanoshima: \n“Matsukaze” by Shosei Nakanoshima\n“Aki Shizuka – Tranquility in Autumn” by Kin’ichi Nakanoshima\n“Banshiki-cho for solo sangen” by Kin’ichi Nakanoshima \n“…Yoko Reikano Kimura\, playing the shamisen and singing\, is superb….” — New York Times\n“…Kimura’s voice was rich and full-bodied ….” — KC METROPLIS \nAbout Four Seasons in New York – Gems of Japanese Music \nNew York’s music scene reflects the diverse and vibrant culture of the city. Kimura\, together with CRS (Center for Remembering and Sharing)\, began this concert series in the fall of 2015. As a Japanese instrumentalist\, she hopes to introduce the brilliance of traditional Japanese music\, which is still being passed on to future generations after many centuries. Starting with the 2018-19 season\, the series has featured contemporary pieces composed by living composers as well. Since the first concert\, about 50 works from the classical repertoire have been introduced in the concert series. Please come and experience the sounds of koto and shamisen and enjoy the taste of the four seasons here in New York! \nAbout past performances: https://www.yokoreikanokimura.com/projects/fourseasons/ \nAbout the Artists \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto\, shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts\, she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music\, an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama\, Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko\, a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo\, accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki\, NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist\, Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist\, she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works\, such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum\, Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra\, Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi\, Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015\, and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference\, and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019\, the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \n  \n  \n\n\nTRANSLATE with  x\n\n\n  English \n\n\n\n\n\n\nArabic\nHebrew\nPolish\n\n\nBulgarian\nHindi\nPortuguese\n\n\nCatalan\nHmong Daw\nRomanian\n\n\nChinese Simplified\nHungarian\nRussian\n\n\nChinese Traditional\nIndonesian\nSlovak\n\n\nCzech\nItalian\nSlovenian\n\n\nDanish\nJapanese\nSpanish\n\n\nDutch\nKlingon\nSwedish\n\n\nEnglish\nKorean\nThai\n\n\nEstonian\nLatvian\nTurkish\n\n\nFinnish\nLithuanian\nUkrainian\n\n\nFrench\nMalay\nUrdu\n\n\nGerman\nMaltese\nVietnamese\n\n\nGreek\nNorwegian\nWelsh\n\n\nHaitian Creole\nPersian\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n \n\n      \n\n\nTRANSLATE with \n\n COPY THE URL BELOW \n   \n   Back\n   \n\n\nEMBED THE SNIPPET BELOW IN YOUR SITE  \n\nEnable collaborative features and customize widget: Bing Webmaster Portal\nBack
URL:https://crsny.org/event/four-seasons-in-ny-gems-of-japanese-music-vol-25/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents,Gems of Japanese Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/221030-Four-Seasons-in-NY-25.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221108T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221025T183205Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221025T183205Z
UID:39876-1667932200-1667934000@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Guided Meditation with Christopher Pelham in English (on Zoom)
DESCRIPTION:Please join me in the sharing of miracles. Here\, your mind can come to rest and you can remember true peace. No experience with meditation is required\, and everyone is welcome. I ask only that you make it your intention to sit still\, quiet in body and mind\, and to listen to\, receive\, and follow my instruction to the best of your ability. You will learn to meditate as you practice. \nZoom Meeting Link:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81541160040 \nCall-in info:\nMeeting ID: 815 4116 0040\nOne tap mobile: 1-929-436-2866
URL:https://crsny.org/event/guided-meditation-with-christopher-pelham-in-english-on-zoom-4/2022-11-08/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/AfterlightImage.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221113T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221113T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221103T032356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221228T172109Z
UID:39906-1668340800-1668344400@crsny.org
SUMMARY:DIVINE
DESCRIPTION:Supported by a commission from CRS\, Berlin-based butoh dance artist Yuko Kaseki and ballet artist Megumi Eda present the first showing of their new collaborative dance work-in-progress\, DIVINE\, inspired by tragic tales of wronged and resilient women such as ballet’s “Giselle” and the classic Japanese Kaidan ghost story “Oiwa.” The performance will take place on Nov 13\, 2022 at 6 pm in Studio 2 at Kunstquartier Bethanien\, Mariannenplatz 2\, 10997 Berlin. Tickets are 10 euros at the door. \nThese two dancers are like oil and water\, moon and turtle\, the North and South Pole\, a crane in rubbish…. By exchanging their polar opposite approaches to movement and performance\, they assume characters plagued with the discomfort and instability of unfamiliar\, distorted bodies. These two figures with different space/time/ dimensions meet where the eye of the corona appears to have passed\, which they cross in sympathy but filled with confusion and dissonance from wildly different types of existences. Their suffering and persistence echo the paths of Giselle and Oiwa and countless other women whose divine spirits have endured objectification\, coercion\, violence\, and imprisonment in images and lives not of their own choosing or making. \nThis is only the second commission by CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) and the first production we have supported outside the United States. We became connected to Yuko Kaseki through the work of past CRS visiting instructor and performer Shinichi Momo Koga and through Yuko’s work with CAVE Art Space and Japan Society. We developed a relationship with Megumi when her daughter performed in ballet recitals at CRS under the direction of Rie Fukuzawa and through Megumi’s work with Yoshiko Chuma & the School of Hard Knocks. At Yoshiko’s suggestion\, CRS presented Megumi’s talk and documentary video art at CRS\, which grew out of Megumi’s work with Yoshiko. This project was\, in fact\, hatched at a School of Hard Kocks performance last October at Ki Smith Gallery\, and we are grateful for Yoshiko’s support and encouragement. \nMegumi Eda was born in Nagano\, Japan and had her professional debut with the Matsuyama Ballet Company at age 14 in Tokyo where she appeared in many of the ballet classics in repertoire. After appearing successfully in the Prix de Lausanne Competition\, she was invited to the Hamburg Ballet School and for the next 15 years\, as a member of the Hamburg Ballet\, the Dutch National Balletand the Rambert Dance Company\, she worked with many choreographers including John Neumeier\, Christopher Bruce\, Jiri Kylian\, Lindsey Kemp\, William Forsythe\, Hans van Manen\, Twyla Tharp and David Dawson. In 2004\, she moved to New York as a founding member of Armitage Gone! Dance and has continued a close collaboration with Karole Armitage to this day. In addition to her work with Armitage she has begun to incorporate other art forms including sculpture and video into her own installations and performances. In New York\, she has developed her passion as a video editor and a director. She has been collaborating with Yoshiko Chuma since 2014 as a Performer/Filmmaker. She won a Bessie Award (NYC Dance & Performance Awards) in 2004. Megumi was named one of Dance Magazine’s BEST PERFORMERS 2015.  Since 2018 she has lived in Berlin and has recently presented her solo choreography in Venice and Berlin. \nmegumieda.com \nYuko Kaseki is a director\, choreographer\, teacher and Butoh dancer who has lived in Berlin long and short enough. She has been searching for a way to penetrate the space between physical and spiritual expression. Every day she trains her perception to find the moment of extraordinary in the ordinary.She studied Butoh dance and Performing Art in HBK Braunschweig with Anzu Furukawa and danced in her company Dance Butter Tokio and Verwandlungsamt in 1989-2000. \nin 1995\, Yuko Kaseki and Marc Ates founded the dance company cokaseki. cokaseki is as an ensemble for performative research around dance\, visual arts and experimental music in live events and improvisations at theater\, gallery\, site specific space\, and film… Since then various members have been part of the group in different roles and changing creative responsibilities. Collaborations have been taking place in numerous international projects with performers such as Christine Bonansea\, Sherwood Chen\, Shinichi Iova Koga\, 4RUDE\, Minako Seki\, Lisa Stertz\, Valentin Tszin\, Teo Vlad\, musicians such as Antonis Anissegos\, Kriton Beyer\, Audrey Chen\, Contagious\, Kirikoo Des\, Axel Dörner\, Echo Ho\, Emilio Gordoa\, miu\, Nguyễn + Transitory\, Yasumune Morishige\, Olaf Rupp\, Tot Onyx\, Sasha Pushkin\, SEQUOIA\, Kazuhisa Uchihashi\, Xenon\, and visual artists such as\, Nikhil Chopra\, Morvarid K\, Sarane Lecompte\, Arata Mori\, Justin Palermo\, Chiharu Shiota\, Peter Zach\, and more. \nSolo and ensemble performances\, collaborations\, and improvisations are performed throughout Europe\, Finland\, Norway\, Georgia\, Turkey\, Russia\, Japan\, Taiwan\, Korea\, Malaysia\, Thailand\, Indonesia\, India\, Burkina Faso\, Canada\, Mexico\, Brazil\, Chile\, Uruguay\, Argentina\, Australia\, and the USA. \nThese works are accumulations of poetic and vivid images that incorporate the spirit of Butoh\, and her performance aims to reflect the outsider’s existence. \nHer strong interest about breaking border of physical expression\, leads to projects with artists with mixed ability such as Theater Thikwa (Berlin)\, Roland Walter (Berlin)\, Sung Kuk Kang (Seoul)\, Zan-Chen Liao (Taipei). \nYuko Kaseki performs and organizes improvisation series “AMMO-NITE GIG” (Vol.1- 48 and on going) with international performers and musicians since 2004. \nVarious collaboration\, AmaTerraz and quantsquat with Teo Vlad (Berlin)\, inkBoat (San Francisco)\, CAVE (New York)\, Tableau Stations (San Francisco)\, improvisation duo with Antonis Anissegos (Berlin)\, ITAKO with Kazuhisa Uchihashi (Berlin)\, Poema Theater (Moscow)\, Theater Salad (Seoul) and many others. \ncokaseki.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/divine/
LOCATION:Kunstquartier Bethanien\, Mariannenpl. 2\, Berlin\, 10997\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221119T050000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221119T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221116T111845Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T111847Z
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SUMMARY:re(in)spiration Performance Workshop with Yuko Kaseki\, Miho Tsujii and Kanako Sehara
DESCRIPTION:CRS invites you to a two-day Re(in)spiration Performance Workshop in Berlin with Berlin-based Butoh artist Yuko Kaseki\, Japan-based performance artist Miho Tsujii\, and Japan-based calligrapher Kanako Sehara on Nov 19 – 20\, 2022 from 11 am  – 5 pm each day. The workshop fee is 180 euros. \nWorkshop participants will have the option of also joining a public performance presentation on Nov 20 at 7 pm. Attendance to the performance as a viewer is by donation. \nThe workshop and performance will take place at\nDOCK11\, Saal 3\nKastanienallee 79\, 10437 Berlin \nInfo/Registration: info@cokaseki.com \nThe physical activity of inhaling and exhaling grounded in Japanese re(in)spirational practices is foundational to the “movement of life\,” whose process evokes sound\, movement\, form and the ever-transformational waves\, resonating with each other. \nThe blending of different Japanese arts\, such as butoh\, classical Noh\, and calligraphy\, contextualized in other cultures and personal experiences creates a unique form of expression. \nThis workshop begins with the breath\, the process of becoming words\, and the origins of the written word; then using the whole body\, the breath gives rise to voice\, to sounds\, and to dancing in the revolution of the spirit of the word. \nTime goes round and round\nDancing around and around\nForming the waves of wrinkles\nLight and shades of wrinkle folds\nRe(in)spiring cycles of life\nBorders dissolve\, ground shifts\nCirculation of the universe \nThis workshop is supported by CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) and hosted by Yuko Kaseki with ICAS (International Culture & Art Spot). \nKaseki\, Tsujii\, and Sehara with ICAS produced the KOTOHOGI SALON and KOTOHOGI SOUND HEAD supported by the PLUS project in Ibaraki City\, Osaka\, last August. This event is an evolution process of that project. \nAnnouncement Calligraphy:  Kanako Sehara \nABOUT THE WORKSHOP LEADERS \n\n\nYuko Kaseki is a Director\, choreographer\, Butoh dancer\, performer\, and teacher in Berlin. She has been created various projects with international musicians such as Kazuhisa Uchihashi\, Antonis Anissegos\, Emilio Gordoa\, Audrey Chen\, Axel Dörner\, and others\, visual artists such as Morvarid K\, Chiharu Shiota\, Nikhil Chopra\, Arata Mori and others\, dancer/performer such as Shinichi Iova Koga\, Minako Seki\, Christine Bonansea\, Sherwood Chen\, Valentin Tszin and others. Solo and ensemble performances\, improvisations are performed around 30 countries. These creations are the accumulation of poetic and vivid images that incorporate the spirit of Butoh\, performance\, and live art. Her performance aims to reflect the outsider’s existence. Collaboration with the Disabled Theater Thikwa (Berlin) overturns the concept of her dance and has a great influence on subsequent activities. Her strong interest in breaking borders of physical expression leads to many collaborations with international mixed ability artists.\ncokaseki.com\nPhoto: TAIFUN\n\n\n Miho Tsujii\, a performance artist\, conceives\, directs and performs solo and collaborative works. Her performance intersects poetic visuals\, movement\, vocalization\, sound\, multi-language\, video and audience interactions. While her works are experimental\, Miho is extensively trained in the Japanese traditional arts of Ikebana\, Noh dance and vocals and underlying conceptual systems\, which feed the technique/wisdom required to address her primary concern to regenerate life at the foot of destructions. Her works have been presented internationally at arts\, theater\, educational and public space\, as well as with and within communities surviving catastrophic events\, including Mies van Der Rohe Haus (Berlin)\, Brooklyn Museum (NY)\, La MaMa Experimental Theater (NY)\, New York University (Shanghai)\, CUNTethics & SQUATconstellation (online feminist intervention\, Berlin) and O-Link House (tsunami surviving community\, Japan). She also teaches\, workshops and lectures at universities\, museums and communities around the world. Miho holds M.A. in Arts Politics from Tisch School of the Arts at New York University\, B.A. in Sociology and Anthropology from Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania\, and is trained at Bigakko experimental art dojo in Tokyo. Miho was born in Japan\, raised in Germany and is currentasly based in a former factory in Osaka\, Japan. She is also a shamanic healer.\nmihotsujii.com\nPhoto: TAIFUN\n\n\n\nKanako Sehara is a Japanese calligraphy and Tenkoku stone seal engraving artist. Her solo exhibitions\, featuring “science characters\,” “equality/non-equality\,” “cunt” among others have been presented at venues including Issoan zen monastery (2020)\, Kyukyodo Gallery in Ginza (2017)\, and Kansai Airport Exhibition Hall (2012) in Japan. She has performed live painting for KOTOHOGI Sound Head (Osaka 2022)\, for 7 consecutive days inside the main window-display of Hankyu Department Store (Osaka 2014)\, in online performance series with Berlin-based CUNTethics and SQUATconstallation (2020)\, at Neu Chayamachi (Osaka\, 2017) and Kiyomihara Shrine memorial for tsunami survivors (Osaka 2011). Her calligraphy has been merchandized as Kizakura sake brand in Kyoto (2016) and Seijo Ishii 90th anniversary Debazakura sake label (2017). Kanako teaches around the world and runs her own school of calligraphy & Tenkoku in Osaka\, Japan. She is a zen monk in training and an artist living with nature.\nkanako-sehara.com/\n\n\nPhoto by Juergen Staack
URL:https://crsny.org/event/reinspiration-221119/2022-11-19/
LOCATION:Dock 11\, Saal 3\, Kastanienallee 79\, Berlin\, 10437\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Concert
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221204T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221204T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220819T195417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221127T221805Z
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SUMMARY:gamin: Nong (concert at Roulette)
DESCRIPTION:CRS invites you to join us in Brooklyn on Dec 4\, 2022 for our first collaboration with Roulette\, a concert in celebration of CRS Crossing Boundaries curator GAMIN’s recent album “Nong” presented at Roulette with support from CRS and performed by CRS Crossing Boundaries curator gamin with members of the INTERWOVEN ensemble\, and composer and electronic sound artist Yoon-Ji Lee. \nNong is an ancient Korean term meaning “to play” — here\, the joy of discovering new ways of playing when different cultures intersect. gamin\, a Korean-born NYC-based multi-instrumentalist specializing in traditional Korean wind\, along with her collaborators\, places instruments and concepts from traditional Korean music alongside a variety of American musical elements. \nOn the program\, Theodore Wiprud’s Mudang for Piri (a double-reed bamboo oboe) incorporates shamanic energy that ranges from meditation to ecstasy. Korean composer Yoon-Ji Lee dedicates her composition to ‘comfort women’ (local women enslaved throughout Japan-occupied East Asia\, 1932-1945) in her work for taepyungso (a double-reed shawn) and strings. Works by William David Cooper weave Western string instruments with Korean winds\, incorporating folk tunes and different tuning systems. Korean composer Ki-Young Kim reflects Korean traditional philosophical ideas in his new piece\, and gamin’s composition broadens the range of the new musical realm with her traditional improvisatory ideas of Korean folk music. \nWith Nong\, gamin and her collaborators—the string quartet Interwoven and electronic sound artist Yoon-Ji Lee—hope to diversify American audiences’ aesthetic understanding of East Asia\, which is all too often painted in broad strokes. They also intend to inspire new generations of American composers and musicians to embrace the inherent multiculturalism of American music\, inform their crafts with rich traditions from around the world\, and approach music-making with the distinct goal of bridging cultural divides. \ngamin is a Korean born NYC based multi-instrumentalist specialized for traditional Korean wind. She tours the world performing both traditional Korean music and cross-disciplinary collaborations. She is a scholar and designated Yisuja\, official holder of Korea’s Important Intangible Cultural Asset No. 46. \nFrom 2000 to 2010\, gamin was the principal player at the National Gugak Orchestra.  gamin has received several cultural exchange program grants\, including Artist-in-Residence at the Asian Cultural Council\, and has collaborated in cross-cultural improvisation with world-acclaimed musicians\, presenting premieres at Roulette Theater\, New School\, and Metropolitan Museum. gamin was featured artist at the Silkroad concert\, Seoul\, 2018\, performing on-stage with the founder\, Yo-Yo Ma. \nSince 2018\, gamin curated performances at the Center for Remembering and Sharing. For 2020\, gamin was selected as artist-in-residency at the HERE Arts Center\, NYC\, and her album ‘Nong’ was released by Innova Records. gamin’s Carnegie Hall solo début\, accompanied by Nangye Gugak Orchestra\, scheduled for March 2020\, was postponed by Covid 19. For 2021-2022\, gamin was awarded the prestigious two year Fellowship by Jerome Hill Foundation. \ngaminmusic.com/
URL:https://crsny.org/event/gamin-nong-concert/
LOCATION:Roulette\, 509 Atlantic Ave\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11217\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221210T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221210T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20220404T193527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221130T202327Z
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SUMMARY:Crossing Boundaries Vol. 16: FOCUSING ON HER
DESCRIPTION:CRS and Tenri Cultural Institute of NY present Crossing Boundaries Concert Series Vol. 16:  FOCUSING ON HER. The program features three AAPI female musicians — Amirtha Kidambi (Indian-American\, voice/saxophone)\, Yoko Reikano Kimura (Japan\, shamisen)\, and gamin (Korea\, saenghwang) — improvising and performing music by female composers: Amirtha Kidambi (Indian-American)\, Yoko Sato (Japan)\, and Yoon-Ji Lee (Korea)\, with visual projection designed by Bang Geul Han (Korea). Each of the compositions is a prayer or elegy for those who endure or have endured trauma. \nCurated by multi-Instrumentalist gamin\, this fifth season of Crossing Boundaries consists of three concerts exploring the theme of WOMEN IN MUSIC performed by female and female-identifying musicians. Following the performance there will be a conversation with the audience about the concert and the theme of gender liberation in the music industry. \nTickets are available on eventbrite.com for $10 – $50 or for cash at the door. \nProof of vaccination is NOT required but we encourage (but don’t require) you to wear masks\, and if you are feeling sick\, please play it safe and stay home.  \nAll proceeds will go to the Sendai Chamber Ensemble (SCE)\, a volunteer group of seven musicians from Sendai and Fukushima that provides concerts to uplift the spirits of the survivors in the region\, including performances at more than 300 kindergartens\, nursery schools\, elementary and junior high schools.  \n \nTHE PROGRAM \n“Untitled after Kim Myung Soon”composed by Yoon Ji Lee 이윤지 in 2019performed by gamin 가민 / saenghwang solovisual art by Bang Geul Han 한방글 \n“The Road”composed by Yoko Sato 佐藤容子 in 2007performed by Yoko Reikano Kimura 木村伶香能 / shamisen solo \n“Swim Fast (2021) for Ellen O”composed by Amirtha Kidambi in 2021performed by Amirtha Kidambi / vocal & saxophone \nImprovisationperformed by gamin\, Yoko Reikano Kimura\, and Amirtha Kidambi \nABOUT CROSSING BOUNDARIES CONCERT SERIES \nCROSSING BOUNDARIES is a concert series devoted to dissolving boundaries between performers and audiences\, the traditional and contemporary\, classical and experimental\, and the culturally specific and the global. Series curators are given the opportunity to create unique performance events in collaboration with musical\, visual\, and/or movement artists of their choosing. \nCrossing Boundaries is made possible in part with public funds from Creative Engagement\, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and administered by LMCC. LMCC empowers artists by providing them with networks\, resources\, and support\, to create vibrant\, sustainable communities in Manhattan and beyond.  \n   \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nAMIRTHA KIDAMBI is invested in the creation and performance of subversive music\, from free improvisation and avant-jazz\, to experimental bands and new music. She is an educator\, activist and organizer\, informed by anti-racism\, decolonization and anti-capitalism. As a bandleader\, she is the creative force behind Elder Ones and Lines of Light vocal ensemble and has received critical praise from the New York Times\, Pitchfork\, Downbeat and WIRE magazine. Kidambi is a key collaborator in Mary Halvorson’s latest sextet Code Girl\, the duo Angels & Demons with Darius Jones\, a new project with Luke Stewart and in various collaborations with William Parker. She also had the honor of working with the late composers Muhal Richard Abrams and Robert Ashley. Amirtha is the co-founder of South Asian Artists in Diaspora collective and co-organizer of Musicians Against Police Brutality with Matana Roberts. http://www.amirthakidambi.com/audiovisual \nAmirtha Kidambi\, Elder Ones “Eat the Rich” from Amirtha Kidambi on Vimeo. \nBANG GEUL HAN is an interdisciplinary artist working across video\, performance\, text\, and code. Born and raised in Seoul\, Korea and based in the US since 2003\, her work has been shown in venues including The Bronx Museum of the Arts\, Queens Museum\, DOOSAN Gallery New York\, NURTUREart\, A.I.R. Gallery\, Cuchifritos Gallery in New York City\, Galerie Les Territories and Projét Pangée in Montreal\, and Centro Internazionale per l’Arte Contemporanea in Rome. Her work has been reviewed in The New Yorker\, The New York Times\, Brooklyn Rail\, and Art Papers. She lives in Brooklyn\, NY. http://whatbunny.org/web/ \nGAMIN is a Korean-born NYC-based multi-instrumentalist specializing in traditional Korean wind instruments. She tours the world performing both traditional Korean music and cross-disciplinary collaborations. She is a scholar and designated Yisuja\, official holder of Korea’s Important Intangible Cultural Asset No. 46. From 2000 to 2010\, gamin was the principal player at the National Gugak Orchestra.  gamin has received several cultural exchange program grants\, including Artist-in-Residence at the Asian Cultural Council\, and has collaborated in cross-cultural improvisation with world-acclaimed musicians\, presenting premieres at Roulette Theater\, New School\, and Metropolitan Museum. gamin was featured artist at the Silkroad concert\, Seoul\, 2018\, performing on-stage with the founder\, Yo-Yo Ma. For 2020\, gamin was selected as artist-in-residency at the HERE Arts Center\, NYC\, and her album “Nong” was released by Innova Records. gamin’s Carnegie Hall solo début\, accompanied by Nangye Gugak Orchestra\, scheduled for March 2020\, was postponed by Covid 19. http://gaminmusic.com \n&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt;a href=”https://yoon-jilee.bandcamp.com/album/padong”&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;gt;Padong by Yoon-Ji Lee&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt;/a&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;gt; \nBased in Tokyo\, composer YOKO SATO’s creative activities are focused on exploring intercultural musical elements and aesthetics while expanding the repertoire of contemporary music for traditional Japanese instruments. She has collaborated with many of Japan’s most prominent hōgaku (Japanese traditional music) musicians and ensembles and maintains an active career with a steady stream of commissions and performances from an extensive network of colleagues located throughout the globe. A prolific composer of music for the theater\, she has composed several operettas commissioned by regional governments to promote musical activities for local Japanese communities. She received her Ph.D. in Music with an emphasis in composition from the University of Hawai‘i\, Manoa in 2014\, where she was the recipient of the East-West Center Graduate Degree Fellowship. She is currently working for the Lifelong Learning Division of Fujisawa City Hall to promote educational and cultural activities in the community. https://yokosatomusic.com \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is one of the most captivating artistic voices of Japanese koto and shamisen consistently praised by critics for her musical elegance and versatile repertoire. Based in New York and Japan\, Kimura has concertized around the world including prestigious venues such as the Warsaw Autumn Festival\, Israel Festival\, The University of Cambridge\, John F. Kennedy Center\, Carnegie Hall\, Lincoln Center\, Metropolitan Museum\, Kabuki-za and various World Heritage Sites. Kimura has also performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and worked with renowned artists and organizations such as Heiner Goebbels\, Wiener Solisten Trio\, American Symphony Orchestra\, and Basil Twist. Her awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition\, the Kyoto Aoyama Barocksaal Award\, and a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Kimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. http://yokoreikanokimura.com \n \nYOON-JI LEE is a Korean composer based in Boston and New York. She has been creating music based on non-linear structure with a powerful focus on quickly juxtaposing disparate elements through the rapid transformation in both acoustic and electroacoustic mediums. Her works have been engaged with visual arts\, dance\, literature and intercultural influences. Lee’s chamber and electronic music have been performed in Korea and around the U.S.\, by ensembles including JACK Quartet\, MIVOS Quartet\, Argento Ensemble\, International Contemporary Ensemble\, Kammerensemble Neue Musik Berlin\, Talea Ensemble\, ensemble mise-en\, and many others. Lee received Mass Cultural Council’s Artist Fellowship\, the Jane Geuting Camp Fellowship from Virginia Center for the Creative Arts\, the Patsy Lu Award from International Alliance of Women in Music\, and the Henry M. MacCracken Fellowship from NYU. Lee has participated in artist residencies at National Sawdust\, Atlantic Center for the Arts\, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts\, and Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts. Lee earned her PhD at NYU and did her Masters/GD at New England Conservatory. Lee is Currently Assistant Professor at Berklee College of Music. http://www.yoonjilee.org \nABOUT THE PRESENTERS \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a lead sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. https://crsny.org \nTENRI CULTURAL INSTITUTE is a non-profit organization with a mission to promote the study of Japanese language and the appreciation of international art forms. The Institute hosts a variety of traditional and contemporary cultural programs in our modern\, spacious educational facility\, performing arts and exhibition space. Conveniently located in the heart of Greenwich Village\, the center of New York City’s educational and artistic communities\, Tenri Cultural Institute is a beautiful cultural oasis amidst the hustle and bustle that is New York City. Tenri Cultural Institute has a 30-year history in the celebration of Japanese and Western culture. By providing our audience with a traditional and unique point of view to the understanding of culture and the arts\, we fulfill our mission: To foster cultural understanding\, harmony and community.https://tenri.org \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n\n\nTRANSLATE with  x\n\n\n  English \n\n\n\n\n\n\nArabic\nHebrew\nPolish\n\n\nBulgarian\nHindi\nPortuguese\n\n\nCatalan\nHmong Daw\nRomanian\n\n\nChinese Simplified\nHungarian\nRussian\n\n\nChinese Traditional\nIndonesian\nSlovak\n\n\nCzech\nItalian\nSlovenian\n\n\nDanish\nJapanese\nSpanish\n\n\nDutch\nKlingon\nSwedish\n\n\nEnglish\nKorean\nThai\n\n\nEstonian\nLatvian\nTurkish\n\n\nFinnish\nLithuanian\nUkrainian\n\n\nFrench\nMalay\nUrdu\n\n\nGerman\nMaltese\nVietnamese\n\n\nGreek\nNorwegian\nWelsh\n\n\nHaitian Creole\nPersian\n \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n \n\n      \n \n\nTRANSLATE with \n\n COPY THE URL BELOW \n   \n   Back\n   \n\n\nEMBED THE SNIPPET BELOW IN YOUR SITE  \n\n” title=” \n \n" title="
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crossing-boundaries-vol-16-focusing-on-her/
LOCATION:Tenri Cultural Institute\, 43A W 13th St\, New York\, 10011
CATEGORIES:Concert,Crossing Boundaries,CRS Presents
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221217T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221217T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221116T000714Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T000807Z
UID:39915-1671300000-1671307200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Rumi’s Wedding Night: Evening Sema Gathering\, Zikr and Performance with Sufi Master Farima Berenji
DESCRIPTION:Join us for our next Sufi dance / music event\, a Sacred Dance\, Music and Healing Journey with visiting Sufi Master of Yarsan Order and Scholar\, Farima Berenji\, PhD at Last Frontier NYC in Greenpoint\, Brooklyn in celebration of Rumi’s Wedding Night! \nTickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/462455676377 \nSchedule: \n– 12/17/2022 from 6 – 8 pm\nRumi’s Wedding Night:\nEvening Sema Gathering\, Zikr and Performance $25 ($20 for those who attend workshop)\n$30 at the door \n– 12/18/2022 from 2 – 4pm\nWorkshop\n$50 \nJoin us on a path of healing and self-growth through the power of Sufism\, Sacred Circles\, music\, and Sacred Dance. In that journey\, the promptings of the Inner Divine are found\, and love\, kindness\, and compassion flow naturally into our daily life. \nWe will create a sacred\, supportive space where we can all release whatever energy no longer serves us\, relax and open our heart\, body\, and mind. We will discover the power and mystery of ancient Persian and Sufi dance and rituals – a gateway for self-growth and spiritual transformation–through prayers\, whirling\, music\, and love. Be moved by beautiful Sufi rituals\, sacred music\, songs\, chanting\, poetry\, and dance in prayers and Love! \nIn this workshop and gathering\, we will combine the sacred phrases\, chants\, music\, and movements from ancient Persian spiritual traditions of Khorasan and Yarsan to help touch the spiritual essence within us and to help us recognize it in others. These fundamental elements compose the ancient\, contemporary\, and devotional roots of sacred dance. \nIn this workshop/gathering we will experience:\n– Presence and surrender to Love.\n– Practice devotional embodiment and ancient Persian healing dance rituals.\n– The power of healing and love through poetry\, zikr\, and Sufi whirling (Iranian\, Central Asian\, and Turkish Rituals and Zikr)\n– The power of the sharing circle and acts of kindness and love toward self and others.\n– Dance and Music as prayer and spiritual transformation.\nThe workshop and gathering will also include:\n– Breathing meditations.\n– Basic whirling techniques for beginners (Iranian\, Turkish and Central Asian Sema and Semah)\n– Gwati and Iranian Zikr Rituals (Sufi Prayers and Ancient Medicine Healing Circles)\n– Sema Gathering\, Performances\, and Sohbet (Sufi Whirling Gathering and Spiritual Talk/Lectures)\, Q&A\, and Sharing Circles. \nParticipants are encouraged to bring a poem or story to share. Musicians feel free to bring your instruments to inspire and bring love into our circle! \nThis event is done with support from NOoSPHERE Arts and Center for Remembering and Sharing. \nFarima Berenji is an Iranian-American scholar and dance ethnologist\, an award winning internationally acclaimed dance artist\, a choreographer\, instructor\, and an archaeologist specializing in ancient\, sacred\, classical\, and folkloric dances of Persia\, Ionia\, and the Silk Road. She is a third generation artist—her devotion to the world of arts inspired by both her mother and grandmother as performing artists\, poets\, and musicians of Azerbaijani heritage. Farima has spent her lifetime studying Persian/Iranian and Central Asian dance\, culture\, and history. Recognized as one of the few world scholarly experts of ancient and mystical dance ethnology\, she travels worldwide to record\, research\, lecture\, perform\, educate\, and to inspire dynamic creativity and rejuvenation through dance and movement. \nAs a Sufi from the bloodline of St. Fateme and a Magi (Shaman) from the bloodline of Iranian Zoroastrian Magi\, Farima is strongly connected to spirituality and healing. She is one of the very few Iranian women granted by the Magi and Gwati tribes of Iran to perform ancient healing and sacred rituals. Her Shamanic healing therapies are now in use in hospitals in Iran and the US. Farima infuses spirituality into her dance and teachings to exceptionally impassion\, empower\, and inspire students to deeply understand the meaning of culture and dance and to explore dance as a powerful means to express emotion\, facilitate spiritual healing\, and bridge cultures. Using her own findings and techniques she makes the connection between soul and movement to create an artist not just a dancer. United in all her accomplishments is her contribution in advocating art\, culture\, and dance to help bridge cultural gaps and create respect among all people. She seeks to lead people to the historic beauty and richness of Persia and the Silk Road culture and to aid them find inner bliss through dance\, music\, and spirituality. \nhttp://farimadance.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/rumis-wedding-night-2022/
LOCATION:Last Frontier NYC\, 520 Kingsland Ave\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11222\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,sufi
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221218T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221218T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221116T000941Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221116T000941Z
UID:39921-1671372000-1671379200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Dance of the Soul Workshop with Sufi Master Farima Berenji
DESCRIPTION:Join us for our next Sufi dance / music event\, a Sacred Dance\, Music and Healing Journey with visiting Sufi Master of Yarsan Order and Scholar\, Farima Berenji\, PhD at Last Frontier NYC in Greenpoint\, Brooklyn in celebration of Rumi’s Wedding Night! \nTickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/462455676377 \nSchedule: \n– 12/17/2022 from 6 – 8 pm\nRumi’s Wedding Night:\nEvening Sema Gathering\, Zikr and Performance $25 ($20 for those who attend workshop)\n$30 at the door \n– 12/18/2022 from 2 – 4pm\nWorkshop\n$50 \nJoin us on a path of healing and self-growth through the power of Sufism\, Sacred Circles\, music\, and Sacred Dance. In that journey\, the promptings of the Inner Divine are found\, and love\, kindness\, and compassion flow naturally into our daily life. \nWe will create a sacred\, supportive space where we can all release whatever energy no longer serves us\, relax and open our heart\, body\, and mind. We will discover the power and mystery of ancient Persian and Sufi dance and rituals – a gateway for self-growth and spiritual transformation–through prayers\, whirling\, music\, and love. Be moved by beautiful Sufi rituals\, sacred music\, songs\, chanting\, poetry\, and dance in prayers and Love! \nIn this workshop and gathering\, we will combine the sacred phrases\, chants\, music\, and movements from ancient Persian spiritual traditions of Khorasan and Yarsan to help touch the spiritual essence within us and to help us recognize it in others. These fundamental elements compose the ancient\, contemporary\, and devotional roots of sacred dance. \nIn this workshop/gathering we will experience:\n– Presence and surrender to Love.\n– Practice devotional embodiment and ancient Persian healing dance rituals.\n– The power of healing and love through poetry\, zikr\, and Sufi whirling (Iranian\, Central Asian\, and Turkish Rituals and Zikr)\n– The power of the sharing circle and acts of kindness and love toward self and others.\n– Dance and Music as prayer and spiritual transformation.\nThe workshop and gathering will also include:\n– Breathing meditations.\n– Basic whirling techniques for beginners (Iranian\, Turkish and Central Asian Sema and Semah)\n– Gwati and Iranian Zikr Rituals (Sufi Prayers and Ancient Medicine Healing Circles)\n– Sema Gathering\, Performances\, and Sohbet (Sufi Whirling Gathering and Spiritual Talk/Lectures)\, Q&A\, and Sharing Circles. \nParticipants are encouraged to bring a poem or story to share. Musicians feel free to bring your instruments to inspire and bring love into our circle! \nThis event is done with support from NOoSPHERE Arts and Center for Remembering and Sharing. \nFarima Berenji is an Iranian-American scholar and dance ethnologist\, an award winning internationally acclaimed dance artist\, a choreographer\, instructor\, and an archaeologist specializing in ancient\, sacred\, classical\, and folkloric dances of Persia\, Ionia\, and the Silk Road. She is a third generation artist—her devotion to the world of arts inspired by both her mother and grandmother as performing artists\, poets\, and musicians of Azerbaijani heritage. Farima has spent her lifetime studying Persian/Iranian and Central Asian dance\, culture\, and history. Recognized as one of the few world scholarly experts of ancient and mystical dance ethnology\, she travels worldwide to record\, research\, lecture\, perform\, educate\, and to inspire dynamic creativity and rejuvenation through dance and movement. \nAs a Sufi from the bloodline of St. Fateme and a Magi (Shaman) from the bloodline of Iranian Zoroastrian Magi\, Farima is strongly connected to spirituality and healing. She is one of the very few Iranian women granted by the Magi and Gwati tribes of Iran to perform ancient healing and sacred rituals. Her Shamanic healing therapies are now in use in hospitals in Iran and the US. Farima infuses spirituality into her dance and teachings to exceptionally impassion\, empower\, and inspire students to deeply understand the meaning of culture and dance and to explore dance as a powerful means to express emotion\, facilitate spiritual healing\, and bridge cultures. Using her own findings and techniques she makes the connection between soul and movement to create an artist not just a dancer. United in all her accomplishments is her contribution in advocating art\, culture\, and dance to help bridge cultural gaps and create respect among all people. She seeks to lead people to the historic beauty and richness of Persia and the Silk Road culture and to aid them find inner bliss through dance\, music\, and spirituality. \nhttp://farimadance.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/dance-of-the-soul-workshop-with-sufi-master-farima-berenji/
LOCATION:Last Frontier NYC\, 520 Kingsland Ave\, Brooklyn\, NY\, 11222\, United States
CATEGORIES:sufi
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221220T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221220T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221213T024857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221217T184909Z
UID:40009-1671564600-1671571800@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Secret Journey: Stop Calling Them Dangerous #4 Love Story\, Palestine
DESCRIPTION:CRS and The School of hard knocks present Secret Journey: Stop Calling Them Dangerous #4: Love Story\, Palestine a long-table discussion between Yoshiko Chuma and assembled artists/panelists with Ryuji Yamaguchi  https://jordantimes.com/news/local/experimental-dance-performance-delves-questions-identity-and-self from Jordan. The panel symposium will conduct several discussions that will explore\, examine\, and translate stories about oppression\, marginalization\, prejudice\, and profiling. To aid in the moderation of the discussions\, a simple and engaging structure will be introduced at the beginning of the panel symposium; this will allow for productive communication and thoughtful transparency. The members of the audience will have to suggest a topic related to the aforementioned categories. \nSuggested donation $20. No RSVP required. \nCRS is a place where emerging artists can learn from established artists\, share their work\, and explore new ideas. \nPhoto of Yoshiko Chuma by Robert Flynt \nLanding in New York City in 1976\, Yoshiko Chuma quickly settled in Manhattan’s East Village – a place that\, at the time\, was often labeled as “seedy”\, “dirty”\, and/or “dangerous”. Indeed\, in 1976\, the East Village was mostly devoid of the culture and inflation you would see before you today\, and it is here that Chuma began her career\, now spanning an impressive 45 years to date. She is notoriously well-traveled\, and has crossed the borders between East and Central Europe\, Palestine\, Albania\, Kosovo\, Afghanistan\, and most recently\, Venezuela. For some\, these places have been forbidden realms\, but for Chuma\, these lands have become centers of creation. As she might put it\, her visits to these locations have challenged what were preconceived ideas of privilege\, danger\, and civilization as a whole…. \nThe School of Hard Knocks\, or fully titled “Yoshiko Chuma & The School of Hard Knocks\, was founded in 1983 during a tumultuous time in New York’s East Village. The name was inspired by Chuma’s interest in American idioms during her early days in the United States.   The School of Hard Knocks  favors abstract  art and discourages efforts to interpret the work\, saying that “What we do is ambiguous. we don’t have a statement. If we had a statement\, we would be writers. https://www.culturebot.org/2012/04/13019/yoshiko-chumas-love-story-palestine-at-lamama/     https://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/12/arts/dance/love-story-palestine-by-yoshiko-chuma.html https://vimeo.com/41877261 https://www.thelodownny.com/leslog/2012/05/arts-watch-yoshiko-chuma-brings-her-love-story-palestine-to-lamama.html   http://palestine.mei.columbia.edu/news-1/2016/8/26/love-story-palestine \nPanel Statement: We refute the idea of an immigration travel ban – America is a nation of immigrants. We want the participants and our audience to see the other parts of the world in a new light. This is about sharing experiences – sharing experiences of other lives and other worlds. And through our sharing\, explore what can and can’t be felt through our varied cultural and historical differences. \nThis panel was initially conceived by Yoshiko Chuma and Megan Kendzior during an impassioned conversation at Chuma’s private residence; this took place shortly after President’s Day (the first following Trump’s election) and served as yet another inspiration for the panel’s topics/categories. The primary reason for this creation and development of this event is to give to the art scene in New York another view point to discuss the same agenda: “Stop Calling Them Dangerous.” \n*Acknowledgement: Yoshiko’s experience in Palestine with dancer and activist Noora Baker (one of the leading dancers and directors of the El-Funoun Palestinian Popular Dance Troupe company in Ramallah\, Palestine) has been a substantial inspiration for this project. \nRyuji Yamaguchi  first came to King’s Academy in 2007 as the dance program coordinator in the Department of Art\, Design and Technology. During his years at King’s\, he served in various roles\, including dean\, department head\, and international student coordinator. After leaving King’s to spend a year in New York to dance and choreography while studying for his Master’s degree in educational leadership at Columbia University\, Ryuji Yamaguchi returned to King’s Academy in 2017 as dance program coordinator and a class dean. In 2022\, he was appointed dean of residential life. Born in Nagoya\, Japan\, He grew up in Japan and the United States. He attended Deerfield Academy and received his Bachelor’s degree in East Asian studies from Harvard University. His dance activities have spanned the Middle East\, Europe\, Japan and the United States\, and he has performed in works by such choreographers as Yoshiko Chuma\, Douglas Dunn\, Brenda Divelbliss and Christopher Williams. Mr. Yamaguchi has collaborated with numerous Jordanian and Palestinian artists\, and has invited over 40 Japanese and American artists to Jordan. As assistant director and producer to Yoshiko Chuma and The School of Hard Knocks since 2007 with six major productions in Jordan\, Palestine and New York City . In 2013\, he founded Jordan Youth Dance Exchange\, contributing to the growth of high school dancers in Jordan. \nSCHEDULE \nPanelists:  Ryuji Yamaguchi\, Yoshiko Chuma \n7:15 PM       House Opens – snacks and drinks \n7:30 PM-7:40 PM      Introductory remarks \n7:40 PM -7:45 PM Introducing Ryuji Yamaguchi \n7:45 PM -8:45 PM Ryuji Yamaguchi with many clips on the video . why\, how\, where\, and what ( 2007-2022 ) – located Madoba \, Amman in Jordan as Dance Artist\, The educator\, The leadership\, The organizer\, The Dancer\, The producer . \n8:45 PM -9:00pm the conversation between Ryuji Yamaguchi and Yoshiko Chuma  \n9:00 PM- 9:30 pm long table discussion  \nIn recent years\, and particularly following nationwide protests \, there is a renewed interest in the day that celebrates freedom. \nThe School of Hard Knocks ends with some thoughts on lifestyle as the continuation of collaboration.  The way we choose to live our lives can insist on collaboration\, even from afar and across Zoom. The School of Hard Knocks would like all of us to feel comfortable collaborating with each other and most importantly to do so from our own vantage point. It assembles us because we’re all very different\, living in different parts of the world\, focussing on different things. In fact\, despite our physical distance\, modern technology allows for a proliferation of access to stories and information. Where once sources were limited\, we have millions of people to connect with\, millions of digitized books and records\, and millions of performances online waiting to be watched. But what are the risks of this world of mass information? How can we contemplate the violence and carnal danger of borders and oppression in a creative or online space ? \nThe School of Hard Knocks was originally the title of a production in 1980. As the production expanded in the years after\, The School of Hard Knocks\, as an overarching investigation of embodied movement was established in 1983. With now the 40th anniversary lurking at the horizon\,  2020-2023 was conceptualized and organized to not only celebrate over four decades of collaborations with multiple generations of artists but also mark a completely new style of theatre.\n1 secret anniversary\n2 secret theatre\, club\, gallery\, park\, apartment\, and others\n3 Secret festival\n4 secret audience\n5 secret artists\nAn ongoing multi-disciplinary performance series conceived. Assembling a mosaic of films\, dance\, music\, visual art\, and narratives\, we continue a lifetime investigation of ideas regarding national security\, perceived dangers within borders\, immigration\, and war. \nFor more than four decades now\, Yoshiko Chuma has been building unique structures in the liminal area between her native Japanese culture and her adopted American one. Using trained and pedestrian movers\, virtuoso instrumentalists (who’s playing she often conducts)\, film\, video\, and sculptural forms by collaborating artists\, she develops unusual time-based art works that blend the live and the recorded\, the flat and the three-dimensional\, people and things. Chuma’s multidisciplinary work tries to capture the contemporary world in all its complexity: speedy\, multi-faceted\, diverse\, both conceptual and concrete. She has traveled and worked in countries around the globe\, with international casts. \nForbidden realms for some but centers of creation .\, as visiting  to these locations challenge preconceived ideas of danger and have brought about some of the most beautiful experiences. Intentionally proposes to confuse documentation with history\, recreating segments from own documented events.  We never give ourselves any boundaries or let them interfere with the work. Making art is not the intention at all. All of their efforts are oriented towards giving performances that have never been seen before. \nHaving received no formal art training\, we pursue spontaneous and experimental techniques and methods of construction. The  creative process begins with a single movement  or abstract image conveyed to her film making pattern. Chuma once presented a crumpled piece of drowning to her team and requested a single movement that expressed similar qualities. Project after project\, year after year\, we upend conventional notions of dance and disrupt accepted characteristics of performance. The performances not only stand apart from the genealogy of dance but also resist definition and confound interpretation – endless peripheral borders.\n \nPresident and founder of CRS Yasuko Kasaki is an internationally beloved spiritual writer\, counselor\, healer\, lecturer and translator from Tokyo\, Japan. The founder of CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, the first and only spiritual center devoted to the teaching and practice of A Course in Miracles (ACIM) in New York City\, she is widely recognized as the person most responsible for the spread of A Course in Miracles throughout Japan. \nCRS serves as a spiritual and creative laboratory\, providing a diverse and international community of artists and healers across disciplines with opportunities to experiment and share their unique inner visions in order to illuminate what is true and universal. Yasuko Kasaki in 2004\, CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) offers spiritual counseling\, healing\, and mind training and also develops and presents arts and cultural programming. The CRS mission is rooted in the non-dualistic teachings of A Course in Miracles (ACIM)\, which reminds us that we are limitless spiritual beings and encourages us to remember our true nature by committing to a practice of deep\, non-judgmental inquiry.
URL:https://crsny.org/event/secret-journey-stop-calling-them-dangerous-4-love-story-palestine/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:CRS Presents
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ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221231T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221231T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221201T192623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T192625Z
UID:39950-1672509600-1672513200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:FREE New Year's Eve Guided Meditation with Yasuko Kasaki
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Saturday\, Dec 31 at 6pm for our annual year ending guided meditation with CRS Founder Yasuko Kasaki. This year the meditation will be held in our award-winning White Room and space is limited so registration is required. Please RSVP by email to etsuko@crsny.org. \nLet’s join our minds in stillness to remember who we are and prepare to begin the new year with a clear mind and renewed intention to see and share only love. \nWhat would love have me do?\nWhere would love have me go?\nWhat would love have me say\, and to whom? 
URL:https://crsny.org/event/free-new-years-eve-guided-meditation-with-yasuko-kasaki/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
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ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230110T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230110T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221208T230819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221208T230819Z
UID:39957-1673375400-1673377200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Guided Meditation with Yasuko Kasaki in English (on Zoom)
DESCRIPTION:Tuesdays from 6:30 – 7 pm from Jan 10 – March 28\, 2023\nFollowed by ACIM Class from 7 – 8 pm (same Zoom link) \nZoom Meeting Link:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81541160040 \nCall-in info:\nMeeting ID: 815 4116 0040\nOne tap mobile: 1-929-436-2866 \nSuggested class donation $20 via PayPal to https://www.paypal.me/crsny\n(no one turned away due to lack of funds) \nPlease join me in the sharing of miracles. Here\, your mind can come to rest and you can remember true peace. No experience with meditation is required\, and everyone is welcome. I ask only that you make it your intention to sit still\, quiet in body and mind\, and to listen to\, receive\, and follow my instruction to the best of your ability. You will learn to meditate as you practice. \nEach week I will share with you a different inspirational message from Holy Spirit. This may take the form of creative visualization exercises\, or instruction about the nature and purpose of meditation\, or about our true nature and relationship to ourselves\, to one another\, and to the world. In a sense\, this is both a meditation practice and a meditation class. At the end of the meditation you will have a chance to respond briefly if you like. \nSome students have been practicing regularly for a number of years. Others drop in and out as they have time or need. Some come to learn and grow\, others more so simply to calm down\, to take time out from the frenetic pace of their busy lives. If you are new and feeling uncertain or shaky\, do not hesitate to introduce yourself to some of the other students\, to ask questions before or after. Try to observe and emulate the stillness and concentration of others around you whom you sense are most grounded. Soon\, you\, in turn\, may provide inspiration and guidance for others. \nWhile the principles are based on A Course in Miracles (ACIM)\, it does not matter if you are unfamiliar with ACIM or are not prepared to study it outside of this meditation. You can still take from this practice some very practical\, effective lessons\, tools\, and experiences that can enable you to lead a more peaceful\, purposeful\, fulfilling and loving life. \nABOUT YASUKO KASAKI \nYasuko Kasaki is an internationally beloved spiritual writer\, counselor\, healer\, lecturer and translator from Tokyo. She is widely recognized as the person most responsible for the spread of A Course in Miraclesthroughout Japan. In 2004 she founded CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, the first and only spiritual center devoted to the teaching and practice of A Course in Miracles in New York City. She has taught and worked with thousands of people from around the world to help resolve their mental and physical issues and witness miracles. She presents at the CMC’s annual ACIM Conferences in the U.S.\, and several times a year she gives large seminars throughout Japan. She has also been presented internationally at ACIM conferences and workshops in the U.K.\, Spain\, Germany\, and Israel. \nYasuko is the author of The Scales Fell from My Eyes: An Illustrated Course in Miracles and 17 books in Japanese about the Course\, as well as numerous novels\, short stories\, essays and collections of photographs. Her translations of the ACIM Workbook and of books by Course teachers Jon Mundy\, Gabrielle Bernstein and David Hoffmeister have also been published in Japan. Yasuko’s spiritual writing and lectures are celebrated for their clearly stated explanations of complex concepts illustrated by captivating personal stories of struggle and triumph\, drawn from her long career as a writer\, motorcyclist\, and spiritual counselor. Meditation and communication with Holy Spirit form the foundation of her practice.
URL:https://crsny.org/event/guided-meditation-with-yasuko-kasaki-in-english-on-zoom-4/2023-01-10/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/IMG_4847.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230110T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230110T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221208T231000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221208T231129Z
UID:39970-1673377200-1673380800@crsny.org
SUMMARY:A Course in Miracles Class with Yasuko Kasaki (on Zoom)
DESCRIPTION:Tuesdays from 7 – 8 pm from Jan 10 – March 28\, 2023\nPreceded by Guided Meditation from 6:30 – 7 pm (same Zoom link) \nTogether\, let’s come to rest and remember true peace. Each class usually contains some lecture on concepts from A Course in Miracles\, some discussion and Q&A\, and a meditation\, creative visualization and/or spiritual reading practice in order to experience mind change. \nOur primary goal in these classes is for each student to learn to listen to the guidance of Holy Spirit and live his/her life with certainty and peace. Slowly\, you will re-train your eyes to see the world around you without judgment. You will learn to communicate with your holy spirit. Students of all experience levels and backgrounds are welcome! \nZoom Meeting Link:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81541160040 \nCall-in info:\nMeeting ID: 815 4116 0040\nOne tap mobile: 1-929-436-2866 \nSuggested donation $20 via PayPal to https://www.paypal.me/crsny\n(no one turned away due to lack of funds) \nYou can find the text of A Course in Miracles (ACIM) online here (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Course_in_Miracles)\, among other places. \nYasuko Kasaki is an internationally beloved spiritual writer\, counselor\, healer\, lecturer and translator from Tokyo. She is widely recognized as the person most responsible for the spread of A Course in Miracles throughout Japan. In 2004 she founded CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, the first and only spiritual center devoted to the teaching and practice of A Course in Miracles in New York City. She has taught and worked with thousands of people from around the world to help resolve their mental and physical issues and witness miracles. She presents at the CMC’s annual ACIM Conferences in the U.S.\, and several times a year she gives large seminars throughout Japan. She has also been presented internationally at ACIM conferences and workshops in the U.K.\, Spain\, Germany\, and Israel. \nYasuko is the author of The Scales Fell from My Eyes: An Illustrated Course in Miracles and 17 books in Japanese about the Course\, as well as numerous novels\, short stories\, essays and collections of photographs. Her translations of the ACIM Workbook and of books by Course teachers Jon Mundy\, Gabrielle Bernstein and David Hoffmeister have also been published in Japan. Yasuko’s spiritual writing and lectures are celebrated for their clearly stated explanations of complex concepts illustrated by captivating personal stories of struggle and triumph\, drawn from her long career as a writer\, motorcyclist\, and spiritual counselor. Meditation and communication with Holy Spirit form the foundation of her practice. \nYou can listen to a sampling of Yasuko’s recent guided meditations here:\nhttp://crsny.podbean.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/a-course-in-miracles-class-with-yasuko-kasaki-on-zoom-6/2023-01-10/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230114T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230114T183000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221227T230326Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221227T230356Z
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SUMMARY:CRS Presents "Being Now Together” Concert with SACO & As It Is
DESCRIPTION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) presents “Being Now Together” with SACO & As It Is\, celebrating the New Year. The free spirit of this ten-piece ensemble will take you to the space of galactic love and harmony where we all can create\, and experience beautiful vibrations together. One Love! \nTickets are $20 and are available via Eventbrite and at the door (cash only). Seating is limited and advanced ticket purchase is highly recommended. Proof of vaccination is not required but you are encouraged to wear a mask. \nSaco Myoji: Vocal\, Keyboard\, Mbira\nSakurako Kataoka: Spoken-word\nMichael T.A. Thompson: Percussion\nONE NOTE ONE SPIRIT Choir: Chieko Palenberg\, Kashimi Asai\, Miyoko Satoh\, Motoi Urano\, Senko Nishimura\, Takemi Kitamura\, Tomomi Kawai \nThe multi-instrumentalist\, Saco Myoji (aka Yasuma)’s musical experiences are broad; Blues\, Funk\, Rock\, Bossa Nova\, Salsa\, Jazz\, and Free Improvisational music. She blends all together with her native Japan’s melodies and sensibility to express love and gratitude to nature and the Universe and her music uplifts audience’s spirit. Saco appears in clubs\, galleries\, festivals\, and healing/wellness events in Japan and U.S.\, mostly in the New York City area\, including the Celebrating Women Composer Festival\, the Vision Festival\, the WHAM Festival\, and other venues and events. Saco offers various configurations of the ensemble; solo\, duo\, trio\, and often brings the choir\, extra percussionists and dancers\, depending on the size and occasion of the event. She released the album “AS IT IS is Beautiful” in summer 2018. It features songs in Japanese and English. Saco is a co-founder of One Note One Spirit\, the unique sound community for everyone and ATOWA\, the piano duo with the celestial sound creator; composer\, pianist and crystal singing bowl player\, Naoe Moriya who lives in Yokohama\, Japan.\nhttps://www.sacoyasuma.com/\nhttps://www.youtube.com/@saco1love \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. https://crsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crs-presents-being-now-together-concert-with-saco-as-it-is/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230128T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230128T203000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221227T002857Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221227T231307Z
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SUMMARY:CRS Presents Crossing Boundaries Concert Series #19:  Careful in the Sun
DESCRIPTION:CRS presents Crossing Boundaries Concert Series Vol. 19\, curated by Maya Keren. Careful In The Sun traverses a verdant landscape of collective improvisation grounded in loops and songs by Maya Keren. The collective (Eliza Salem on drums\, Anna Abondolo on fretless bass and voice\, Emmanuel Michael on electric guitar\, Eden Girma on voice and electronics\, and Maya Keren on piano and voice) find their center in lush harmonies and cathartic hooks underlaid with the strange and spontaneous logic of dreams. In this concert\, they will inhabit the space together to let their songs bloom and breathe\, offering an opportunity for connection\, healing\, and joyfulness. \nTickets are available on eventbrite.com for $20 ($10 for students) or for cash at the door. \nProof of vaccination is NOT required but we encourage (but don’t require) you to wear masks\, and if you are feeling sick\, please play it safe and stay home. \nABOUT CROSSING BOUNDARIES CONCERT SERIES \nCROSSING BOUNDARIES is a concert series devoted to dissolving boundaries between performers and audiences\, the traditional and contemporary\, classical and experimental\, and the culturally specific and the global. Series curators are given the opportunity to create unique performance events in collaboration with musical\, visual\, and/or movement artists of their choosing. The series was conceived in 2018 by the Korean traditional wind player and composer gamin\, who has continued to help curate the series each year. https://crsny.org/crossing-boundaries-concert-series/ \nCrossing Boundaries is made possible in part with public funds from Creative Engagement\, supported by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and administered by LMCC. LMCC empowers artists by providing them with networks\, resources\, and support\, to create vibrant\, sustainable communities in Manhattan and beyond. \n  \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nAnna Abondolo is a bassist and composer from Los Angeles\, California. She is currently based in Brooklyn developing an interdisciplinary collective entitled\, “Rainbow Princess.” https://www.facebook.com/people/Anna-Abondolo/100008127379473/ \nEden Girma is a multi-instrumental musician and vocalist hailing from Madison\, WI. Through a genre-bending compositional ear and a poetic lyricism\, Eden aspires to create music that not only resonates with individual hearts\, but brings people closer together in a spirit of intimacy and empathy. https://edengirma.me/ \nEliza Salem is a drummer currently based in Brooklyn. She is a Metro DC native who learned her craft in the Washington area’s vibrant musical scene under the guidance of mentors Paul Carr and Chris Allen. In the spring of 2021\, she received her Bachelor’s degree from the University of Michigan where she had the privilege of studying with professors including Michael Gould\, Sean Dobbins\, Ellen Rowe\, Dennis Wilson\, Robert Hurst\, and Benny Green\, among others. In the summer of 2019\, she studied at Brooklyn’s School for Improvisational Music\, where she worked closely with Ralph Alessi\, Andy Milne\, Gerald Cleaver\, Kris Davis\, Tim Berne\, and other distinguished improvisers. In 2021\, Eliza was one of 15 fellows selected to take part in the Ravinia Steans Music Institute’s renowned jazz program where she had the opportunity to learn from and workshop original compositions with masters Rufus Reid\, Billy Childs and Steve Wilson. Over the last several years she has worked professionally as a bandleader and side person in the greater Detroit and D.C. areas at renowned venues such as Cliff Bell’s\, the Blue Llama Jazz Club\, Columbia Station\, An Die Musik\, the Keystone Korner\, Twins\, and Jojo’s. Since moving to New York City in 2021\, she has performed at acclaimed performance spaces such as Dizzy’s\, Smalls Jazz Club\, the Django\, Ornithology Jazz Club\, the Harlem Museum of Jazz\, 55 Bar\, the McKittrick Hotel\, and more. In the summer of 2022 Eliza had the opportunity to perform at the Newport Jazz Festival as a part of the Michael Dudley trio. Currently\, Eliza is enjoying working full-time as a freelance musician and drum teacher\, and can be found playing in the band Careful In the Sun led by pianist and composer Maya Keren\, crocheting\, and hanging out with her roommate’s cat Azula. https://metropolisensemble.org/artists-collection/eliza-salem \nEmmanuel Michael has been a part of various diverse ensembles and has had the honor to work with a wide variety of artists such as Rufus Reid\, Wycliff Gordon\, Matt Wilson\, Keyon Harrold\, and Immanuel Wilkins. Michael was also a member of the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz Peer-to-Peer All-Star Sextet of 2019\, giving him the honor of touring and holding workshops through several schools within the state of Oklahoma with jazz icons Steve Wilson and Lisa Henry\, under the direction of Dr. J.B Dyas and Bart Marantz. Michael also toured throughout parts of China and Taiwan under Carnegie Hall’s NYO Jazz 2019 with Sean Jones and Kurt Elling\, allotting him the honor of working for two weeks in New York with artists such as Shammie Royston\, Obed Calvaire\, Erika Von Kleist\, and Mathew Stevens. Michael now attends the Manhattan School of Music and works as a professional musician in New York City. https://www.sfjb.org/emmanuel-michael \nMaya Keren is a Brooklyn-based pianist\, vocalist\, composer\, and songwriter from Philadelphia. They are interested in the process of environing people\, voices\, instruments\, and sounds in ways that invite connection with one’s erotic instinct\, embody compassionate and queer relations with the self and the collective\, and destabilize learned systems of domination. Sites of learning include the Creative Music Program in Philly\, Banff International Workshop in Jazz and Creative Music\, Mutual Mentorship for Musicians and the Ida B. Wells JUST Data Lab. Maya graduated from Princeton University in 2022 with a Bachelor’s degree in Music and a certificate in African American Studies. They currently live in Brooklyn where they teach at Brooklyn Conservatory and write songs\, loops\, and words for their band Careful In The Sun\, drawing inspiration from Gwendolyn Brooks\, Clarice Lispector\, Pinegrove\, and the Wissahickon. https://www.mayakerenmusic.com/ \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. https://crsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crs-presents-crossing-boundaries-concert-series-19-careful-in-the-sun/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,Crossing Boundaries,CRS Presents
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230204T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230204T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20230114T233102Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230131T175524Z
UID:40222-1675519200-1675526400@crsny.org
SUMMARY:POSTPONED: Guided Meditation & Spiritual Healing Clinic with Yasuko Kasaki & CRS Healers
DESCRIPTION:Due to the forecast of dangerously cold weather this Saturday\, we have decided to postpone this Saturday’s in-person meditation and healing clinic. We apologize for the inconvenience\, and we look forward to welcoming you back on a warmer day! \nWe are happy to invite you back to CRS in person for an afternoon of meditation\, healing\, and spiritual community! Let’s witness the light in one another and share stillness and peace of mind. We’ll begin with a short talk and guided meditation by Yasuko and then share our one-on-one spiritual healing with you. After we can enjoy some social time together. \nBring any issue you are facing right now — physically\, emotionally\, mentally\, and/or spiritually. With eyes closed (you will be seated and a healer will stand nearby; no touching is involved)\, a CRS healer\, trained in A Course in Miracles and spiritual reading/healing\, will observe you with his inner sight\, free of any judgments\, as your truly are\, a perfect shining spirit. Together\, will ask the Holy Spirit (or Inner Guide if you prefer) to bring us directly to whatever seed thought is causing your current issues and ask for guidance about how your spirit really wants to make use of your present situation for its growth and sharing of love. After about 10 minutes of meditation\, we will share the inspirational guidance that we receive. \nSuggested Donation $20 cash. No one turned away due to lack of funds.\nRSVP REQUIRED to etsuko@crsny.org\nProof of vaccination is not required but you are encouraged to wear a mask while present. And if you have any COVID/cold symptoms\, please do not come this time.  \nWe share healing quietly and provide you with an opportunity to come to rest\, reflect\, and remember who you truly are\, in a supportive\, non-judgmental\, meditative environment. We’d like to offer you an opportunity to experience stillness of mind and peace so that you can return to harmony with your true nature and purpose. Then you will find that rather than needing “solutions” to “problems” you will realize that you have no problems except those that you project. \nWe call this spiritual healing but it is not religious nor connected with any church or group. It is simply a practice of meditating together on our true nature and connecting with universal spirit/energy or what you will. \nA Note About the Role of Words in Healing: “Strictly speaking\, words play no part at all in healing. The motivating factor is prayer\, or asking. What you ask for you receive. But this refers to the prayer of the heart\, not to the words you use in praying. Sometimes the words and the prayer are contradictory; sometimes they agree. It does not matter. God does not understand words\, for they were made by separated minds to keep them in the illusion of separation. Words can be helpful\, particularly for the beginner\, in helping concentration and facilitating the exclusion\, or at least the control\, of extraneous thoughts. Let us not forget\, however\, that words are but symbols of symbols. They are thus twice removed from reality….” — A Course in Miracles Manual for Teachers\, Section 21 \n“Since only the mind can be sick\, only the mind can be healed. Only the mind is in need of healing.” —”PSYCHOTHERAPY: Purpose\, Process and Practice\,”Supplements to A Course in Miracles
URL:https://crsny.org/event/guided-meditation-spiritual-healing-clinic-with-yasuko-kasaki-crs-healers-2/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event,CRS Presents
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ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230205T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230205T173000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221228T034531Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230112T021731Z
UID:40042-1675612800-1675618200@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Four Seasons in NY: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 26
DESCRIPTION:We invite you to celebrate the winter season with us at Four Seasons in New York: Gems of Japanese Music Vol. 26 by the acclaimed vocalist and koto and shamisen player Yoko Reikano Kimura\, with special guest composer and shakuhachi player Elizabeth Brown\, on Sunday\, February 5\, 2023 at 4pm in the award-winning White Room at CRS. This concert is presented by CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) and Yoko Reikano Kimura and is supported by Hogaku Journal and Mar Creation\, Inc. \nTickets are $30 cash only at the door. To RSVP\, email info@yokoreikanokimura.com \n* Our top priority is the health and safety of the CRS audiences\, artists\, and staff. For this concert we ask that you wear a mask. Thank you for your kind understanding and corporation. \n“…Yoko Reikano Kimura\, playing the shamisen and singing\, is superb….” — New York Times\n“…Kimura’s voice was rich and full-bodied ….” — KC METROPLIS \nAbout Four Seasons in New York – Gems of Japanese Music \nNew York’s music scene reflects the diverse and vibrant culture of the city. Kimura\, together with CRS (Center for Remembering and Sharing)\, began this concert series in the fall of 2015. As a Japanese instrumentalist\, she hopes to introduce the brilliance of traditional Japanese music\, which is still being passed on to future generations after many centuries. Starting with the 2018-19 season\, the series has featured contemporary pieces composed by living composers as well. Since the first concert\, about 50 works from the classical repertoire have been introduced in the concert series. Please come and experience the sounds of koto and shamisen and enjoy the taste of the four seasons here in New York! \nAbout past performances: https://www.yokoreikanokimura.com/projects/fourseasons/ \nAbout the Artists \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto\, shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts\, she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music\, an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama\, Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko\, a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo\, accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki\, NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist\, Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist\, she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works\, such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum\, Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra\, Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi\, Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015\, and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference\, and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019\, the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nElizabeth Brown combines a composing career with a diverse performing life\, playing flute\, shakuhachi\, and theremin in a wide variety of musical circles. Her chamber music\, shaped by this unique group of instruments and experiences\, has been called luminous\, dreamlike and hallucinatory. \nBrown’s music has been heard in Japan\, Russia\, Colombia\, Australia\, South Africa and Vietnam as well as across the US and Europe. A Guggenheim Fellowship recipient and Juilliard graduate\, she has received grants\, awards and commissions from Orpheus\, St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble\, Newband\, The Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival\, Kamratōn\, the Barlow Foundation\, the Asian Cultural Council\, the Japan/US Friendship Commission\, Music from Japan\, Meet the Composer\, the Electronic Music Foundation\, Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival\, the Cary Trust\, and NYFA\, among others. She has two solo CDs: Elizabeth Brown: Mirage (New World) and Blue Minor: Chamber Music by Elizabeth Brown (Albany)\, and her music is also available on CRI\, Innova\, and Music and Arts. She has been Artist-in-Residence at the Hanoi National Conservatory and in Grand Canyon National Park\, and a fellow at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center in Italy and at the MacDowell Colony. \nelizabethbrowncomposer.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/four-seasons-in-ny-gems-of-japanese-music-vol-26/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents,Gems of Japanese Music
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230218T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230218T213000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221227T214931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221227T215015Z
UID:40030-1676750400-1676755800@crsny.org
SUMMARY:CRS presents Shoko Nagai’s Tokala with violinist Sita Chay & percussionist Satoshi Takeishi
DESCRIPTION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) presents Shoko Nagai’s TOKALA ensemble featuring Shoko Nagai(piano/accordion)\, Satoshi Takeishi (percussion) and Sita Chay (violin). Tokala explores the ancient connections between Japan and the Middle East established via the Silk Road; this conduit of cultural and commercial exchange left an imprint that became an integral part of Japanese culture.  \nBringing together Japanese and Korean folk\, pop music and Middle Eastern music\, Tokala illuminates and expands the centuries-old connections between these traditions.  \nTickets are $20 ($10 for students) and are available via Eventbrite and at the door (cash only). Proof of vaccination is not required but you are encouraged to wear a mask. \n“We have seen the art works\, instruments\, and other artistic objects from the Persian empire preserved in Imperial storage in Nara\, Japan. We can but only imagine what it was like for musicians of Japan to hear the sounds of Persian court music. We are sure that it has left strong imprints deep in the Japanese traditional culture.” — Shoko Nagai \nTokala received a grant from NYFA (New York Fine Arts) for City Artist Corps 2021. \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nShoko Nagai is a versatile musical artist who improvises and performs with world-renowned musicians on piano and accordion and composes original scores for films and live performances. As a teenager in her native Japan\, Nagai was trained on Yamaha’s electronic organ\, the “Electone\,” to perform popular music. Since moving to the U.S. from Japan and studying classical\, jazz music\, and compositions at Berklee\, she has adapted her mastery of the keyboard to prepared piano\, accordions\, and other keyboard instruments\, often inspired by the minimalist approach of composer Toru Takemitsu. Whether she is performing Klezmer\, Balkan or experimental music\, Nagai is a charismatic presence onstage\, who hypnotizes audiences with her intense focus and virtuoso sound. http://www.shokonagai.net/ \n“Whether traipsing over a steady\, rolling rhythm or swimming through a collage of abstract sound\, Nagai\, a pianist\, treat every moment as an opportunity for deep synchronicity.” — GIOVANNI RUSSONELL\, New York Times \nSatoshi Takeishi\, drummer\, percussionist\, and arranger is a native of Mito\, Japan. He studied music at Berklee College of Music in Boston\, Massachusetts. While at Berklee he developed an interest in the music of South America and went to live in Colombia following the invitation of a friend. He spent four years there and forged many musical and personal relationships. One of the projects he worked on while in Colombia was ‘Macumbia’ with composer/arranger Francisco Zumaque in which traditional\, jazz and classical music were combined. With this group he performed with the Bogota symphony orchestra to do a series of concerts honoring the music of the most popular composer in Colombia\, Lucho Bermudes. In 1986 he returned to Miami\, U.S. where he began working as an arranger/producer as well as a performer. \nIn 1987 he produced ‘Morning Ride’ for jazz flutist Nestor Torres on Polygram Records. His interest expanded to the rhythms and melodies of the Middle East where he studied and performed with Armenian-American oud master Joe Zeytoonian. Since moving to New York in 1991 he has performed and recorded in vast variety of genre\, from world music\, jazz\, contemporary classical music to experimental electronic music with musicians such as Ray Barretto\, Carlos ‘Patato’ Valdes\, Eliane Elias\, Marc Johnson\, Eddie Gomez\, Randy Brecker\, Dave Liebman\, Anthony Braxton\, Mark Murphy\, Herbie Mann\, Paul Winter Consort\, Rabih Abu Khalil\, Erik Friedlander\, Ned Rothenberg\, MIchael Attias\, Shoko Nagai\, Paul Giger\, Toshiko Akiyoshi Big Band\, Ying String Quartet\, Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra\, Dhafer Youssef\, Lalo Schifrin and Pablo Ziegler to name a few. He continues to explore multi-cultural\, electronics and improvisational music with local musicians and composers in New York. \nSita Chay is a violinist\, composer\, and producer who won a 2017 Latin Grammy Award for Best Mariachi Album\, as violinist with the Flor de Toloache. She is also an awardee of New York Foundation for the Arts Women’s Fund\, NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship\, New Music USA’s Creator Development Fund\, Joe’s Pub Working Group\, and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Creative Engagement Grant for various projects she is envisioning. Ms. Chay is the director and a founder of the Korean Shaman Music Ritual\, SaaWee\, which was received by international critics as a “delicate powerhouse”. For SaaWee\, she has interwoven her theatrical experiences from Broadway shows\, folkloric spirituality from Korean shaman rituals\, and contemporary music flare from New York jazz scenes. SaaWee’s Return of Songbirds debuted at the Lincoln Center as part of #Retartstage project in 2021 and was invited to Ars Electronica Festival 2021. SaaWee won the California Music Video Awards 2022 in Best World Music category. She has appeared as a speaker and a lecturer at Chamber Music America Conference 2019\, New York Musical Festival 2018\, Seoul National University\, Colombia National University\, and Joong Ang University.  \nSita often performs at artistically acclaimed venues such as Carnegie Hall\, Lincoln Center\, Jazz at Lincoln Center\, The Blue Note\, Apollo Theater\,Madison Square Garden\, and was invited to the Montreal International Jazz Festival in 2015\, London K-Music Festival in 2018\, Global Fest 2018 and to the New York Sanjo Festival 2017 and 2018 to premiere her original and commissioned compositions. She has appeared as a guest violinist for critically acclaimed Broadway shows\, My Fair Lady\, Miss Saigon\, Ain’t Too Proud\, Hello Dolly\, Sweeney Todd\, On the Town\, Fiddler on the Roof and Sunset Boulevard. Frequent TV and NPR appearances include “Tonight Show”\, “Mozart in the Jungle\,” and Randy Cohen’s “Person Place Thing”. She has collaborated with such artists as the Lionel Loueke\, the Eagles\, Kenny Werner\, Billy Drewes\, Sandeep Das\, Frank London\, Edward Perez\, Balla Kouyate\, Emerson String Quartet\, Natalia Laforcade\, Duksoo Kim\, Bette Midler\, Alicia Hall Moran\, Alan Ferber\,Taebaek Lee\, Pamela Frank\, Nadia Solemo Sonenberg\, Frank Huang\, and Robert Craft\, the student of Stravinsky and Schoenberg. Her album credits include Stereography Project 1st and 2nd album\, Miho Hazama’s M Unit “Dancer in Nowhere\, Flor de Toloache “Las Caras Lindas.” http://www.sitachay.com \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a lead sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions. https://crsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crs-presents-shoko-nagais-tokala-with-violinist-sita-chay-percussionist-satoshi-takeishi/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230304T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230304T173000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20230202T213139Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230202T213222Z
UID:40241-1677945600-1677951000@crsny.org
SUMMARY:CRS Presents Hot Wrk Ensemble: WRKin it Out
DESCRIPTION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) presents the Hot Wrk Ensemble: WRKin It Out in the award-winning White Room at CRS on March 4\, 2023 at 4pm. With J Brooks Marcus (J Why) on percussion\, Lois Hicks-Wozniak on saxophones\, and Brad Hubbard on baritone sax & woodwinds\, Hot Wrk Ensemble performs diverse\, genre-busting chamber music — everything from Bach & Scarlatti to contemporary art music\, and jazz-like fusion with improvisation and compositions by ensemble members. Audience members are encouraged to ask questions\, share ideas\, and feel part of the music creation process. \nTickets are $30 ($15 for students and $20 for seniors) and are available via eventbrite.com and for cash only at the door. \nProof of vaccination is not required\, but we do strongly encourage you to wear a mask. Please note that CRS is only accessible by stairs. \nBrad Hubbard is a Composer who plays Baritone Saxophone\, Flute\, and Bass Clarinet. Brad has performed throughout the world in many diverse settings. In addition to performing as a solo recitalist and with the Hot Wrk Ensemble\, Brad is a member of 3rd Bell\, a quartet that combines jazz\, world\, and electronic music filtered through a singer/songwriter mentality. He is also a member of David Sanford’s Pittsburgh Collective an innovative 20 piece big band and Neil Alexander’s X Ensemble\, a modern Chamber Jazz Octet. He commissioned and premiered Benjamin Boone’s “Concerto for Baritone Saxophone and Orchestra” as well as pieces from Sherwood Shaffer\, Monica Ashton\, Mark Taylor and Michael Bellar. He is also involved as a composer and performer with Composers Concordance in New York City. As a sideman Brad has appeared with a broad range of artist including Corey Glover of Living Colour\, Nancy Wilson\, Pinetop Perkins\, Lew Tabackin\, Lenny Pickett\, Boots Randolph\, Roy Clark\, The Monica Ashton Jazz Band and various local groups in the Hudson Valley. \nBrad was a member of the New Century Saxophone Quartet from 1988-2004. During his tenure with the quartet\, the ensemble was the first of its kind to win the prestigious Concert Artist Guild competition in New York City in 1992. The quartet toured throughout the United States and the World performing in major concert venues including Carnegie Hall\, Chicago’s Pick-Staiger Concert Hall\, Atlanta’s Spivey Concert Hall\, Boston’s Symphony Hall and Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum\, New York’s Merkin Concert Hall and the Kosciuszko Foundation Townhouse\, Washington\, D.C’s Strathmore Hall\, Alaska’s Juneau Jazz and Classics Festival\, the Villla Schönberg in Zurich\, Switzerland\, the Conservatoire de Musique in Esch Luxembourg\, the Macau International Music Festival and the Academy for the Performing Arts in Hong Kong\, China. New Century was also the first saxophone quartet to perform at La Huaca del Complejo Atlapa in Panama City\, Panama. NCSQ has also appeared in unique concert settings including two command performances for President Clinton in the White House to a concerto performance with the United States Navy Band. Brad appears on the first 6 New Century recordings on the Channel Classics label. \nBrad is currently the Woodwind Instructor at The Beacon Music Factory in Beacon NY\, where he lives with his family. \nJ. Brooks Marcus (aka J Why) is a multi-instrumentalist and composer who studied jazz\, classical\, electronic and experimental music at California Institute of the Arts\, Berklee College of Music\, and San Francisco State University. He has composed for dance\, film\, puppet theater\, and podcasts. Collaborators have included: multi-instrumentalist and composer Julz A\, dance filmmaker Anna Brady Nuse\, and choreographer Sasha Welsh. J has composed music for filmmaker Amir Bar-Lev\, Los Angeles theater company About Productions\, dance filmmaker Susan Osberg\, and animator/puppet theater artist Susan Simpson. In 2017 he formed the collaborative production duo Obsidian Soundsystem with musician and engineer Jonny Taylor. As a performer\, he has played with Pamela Z\, Gwen Laster’s Gameboard\, and Andy Rinehart. J teaches composition at SUNY New Paltz and percussion\, clarinet and computer music at Beacon Music Factory. His music can be found at https://soundcloud.com/j-why-1 and https://obsidiansoundsystem.bandcamp.com/music. \nLois Hicks-Wozniak is an active concert saxophonist and educator in the New York Metropolitan and the Hudson Valley region\, committed to community engagement through new music and Global Music styles. A D’Addario Woodwinds Artist\, her many awards include winning the Special Presentation Winners Recital Series\, sponsored by Artists International Presentations; earning her a New York Recital Debut at Weill Recital Hall in Carnegie Hall. She is described in performance as having “tremendous technique and fidelity to tone without sacrificing musical line\,” and a “beautiful soprano saxophone sound…preserving the beauty and consistency of her sound regardless of the technical or musical demands of the moment” (Saxophone Symposium). An active soloist\, she has performed and recorded within many ensembles to include the Albany Symphony\, the Hudson Valley Philharmonic\, and with Pat Waing master\, Kyaw-Kyaw Naing and the first Burmese-American Hsiang Waing ensemble. Her album Playback: Music for Saxophone and Bass Trombone is with Matt Wozniak and Nadine Shank\, piano. She is a featured educator in the textbook\, World Music Pedagogy Vol VII: Teaching World Music in Higher Education (Routledge 2020). She co-founded the saxophone and percussion chamber group\, Hot Wrk Ensemble\, featuring improvisatory music\, arrangements\, and original works\, to include her own compositions. She previously served active duty in the U.S. Army as a saxophonist with the West Point Band and taught at Marist College\, Montclair State University\, and SUNY New Paltz. She holds degrees from Florida State University and Montclair State University. Her sixth grade band director suggested she play the saxophone\, and although she cried when she first saw the instrument\, she has no regrets.\nhttp://loishickswozniak.com/ \n 
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crs-presents-hot-wrk-ensemble-wrkin-it-out/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230311T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230311T153000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20230119T032152Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230127T024041Z
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SUMMARY:CRS Presents INTERWOVEN International Chamber Ensemble at Resobox
DESCRIPTION:CRS presents the international chamber music ensemble INTERWOVEN on Saturday\, March 11\, 2023 at 2pm at Resobox East Village\, our first collaboration with Resobox. INTERWOVEN’s Yoko Reikano Kimura (Shamisen/Voice)\, Andy Lin  (Erhu/Viola)\, Emilie-Anne Gendron (Violin)\, Keiko Tokunaga (Violin)\, and Nan-Cheng Chen (Cello) will perform a program featuring Japanese\, Chinese\, and western compositions such as “A Popular Tune” by JungYoon Wie\, “Sekiheki no Fu — Red Cliff” by Kin’ichi Nakanoshima\, “Chimera” by Theodore Wiprud\, “Crosscurrents” by Takuma Itoh\, and Ravel’s “String Quartet” (First and Second Mv). \nTickets are $30 ($15 for students and $20 for seniors) and are available via eventbrite.com or for cash at the door. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga\, INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry\, woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins\, traditions and materials. \nRESOBOX is a Japanese cultural center dedicated to sharing and celebrating Japanese influence in the arts. It offers a broad range of authentic Japanese activities\, events\, classes\, art exhibitions and even cuisines to spread to diverse audiences every day. \nThis concert falls on the 12th anniverary of the Great East Japan earthquake\, tsunami\, and ongoing nuclear disaster\, and we’d like to dedicate this concert to those who were lost\, those left behind\, and those who helped. We remember you. \n“I want to express how grateful we (Japanese) were to all the neighboring countries for helping us when we were most vulnerable\, and witnessing such kindness made me want to work towards a more harmonious relationship between all the Asian countries despite its complicated past.” — Keiko Tokunaga \nVENUE LOCATION:\nResobox East Village\n91 E 3rd St\nNew York\, NY 10003\n(212) 598-5993 \nDIRECTIONS:\nResobox EV is located in Manhattan’s East Village on the north side of E 3rd Street just west of 1st Avenue on the ground floor. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \nF train to 1st/2nd Ave & Houston St\, 6 train to Bleecker St or Astor Place\, R/W to Prince St \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nViolinist EMILIE-ANNE GENDRON\, lauded by the New York Times as a “brilliant soloist” and by Strad Magazine for her “marvellous and lyrical playing\,” enjoys a dynamic career based in New York City. Ms. Gendron is on the roster of the Marlboro Music Festival and the touring Musicians From Marlboro\, as well as acclaimed groups such as A Far Cry\, Argento Chamber Ensemble\, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center\, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia\, Iris Orchestra (as one of its concertmasters)\, Orpheus Chamber Orchestra\, Talea Ensemble\, and Sejong Soloists. She is a founding member of Ensemble Échappé\, a new-music sinfonietta\, and of Gamut Bach Ensemble\, in residence with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. A deeply committed chamber musician\, Ms. Gendron is a longtime member of the Momenta Quartet\, whose vision encompasses contemporary music of all backgrounds alongside great music from the past—currently quartet-in-residence at Binghamton University and most recently serving as Bates College’s 2019-20 Artists-in-Residence in Music. Other regular collaborations include the Melody and Company chamber series with pianist Melody Fader and the longstanding G-Sharp Duo\, founded with pianist Yelena Grinberg in 2003.  \nMs. Gendron is also a sought-after educator and clinician. She has been a member of the Toomai String Quintet\, specializing in innovative educational outreach and community engagement\, since 2009. Toomai\, one of the original pilot ensembles in Carnegie Hall’s “Musical Connections” program\, helped design composition and performance workshops with incarcerated men at Sing Sing Correctional Facility; has worked with student composers in the New York Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers Program and with NYC public school students through the “Midori and Friends” educational initiative; and presents at institutions across the U.S.\, ranging from grade school to university level. As a member of the Momenta Quartet\, Ms. Gendron gives guest masterclass and coaching appearances on their educational-performing circuit of nearly 40 institutions ranging from public and arts schools\, universities\, and conservatories in the U.S. and as far afield as Bolivia\, Indonesia\, and Mexico. Ms. Gendron has served as guest chamber music coach for the Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program and at the Longy School of Music; as violin specialist for student composers at Juilliard’s Evening Division\, NYU\, and Fordham University; and as a chamber music and contemporary music coach and performer at the annual Brandeis Composers Conference. \nMs. Gendron’s extensively varied international appearances have included recitals in Sweden and at the Louvre in Paris; festivals in Russia\, Finland\, Indonesia\, South Korea\, and Jordan; and major venues across the Americas\, Europe\, and Asia\, in collaboration with such artists as Teddy Abrams\, Rachel Barton Pine\, Bruno Canino\, Leon Fleisher\, Richard Goode\, Anthony McGill\, Edgar Meyer\, Shlomo Mintz\, Anthony Newman\, Samuel Rhodes\, Marcy Rosen\, Gil Shaham\, and Jörg Widmann\, among many others. Her performances have been broadcast over radio and television in the U.S.\, U.K.\, Switzerland\, New Zealand\, Canada\, Denmark\, Japan\, and South Korea. She is a past winner of the Stulberg String Competition and took 2nd Prize and the Audience Prize at the Sion-Valais (formerly Tibor Varga) International Violin Competition.  \nBorn in the U.S. to Japanese and French-Canadian parents\, and a dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada\, Ms. Gendron began her violin studies at age 4 with Carl Shugart and Carol Sykes. Her subsequent training at the Juilliard School was overseen by teachers Dorothy DeLay\, Won-Bin Yim\, Hyo Kang\, David Chan\, and Axel Strauss. Ms. Gendron holds the distinction of being the first person in Juilliard’s history to be accepted simultaneously to its two most selective courses of study\, both the Doctor of Musical Arts and the Artist Diploma. She holds a B.A. in Classics (magna cum laude and with Phi Beta Kappa honors) from Columbia University\, and a Master of Music degree and the coveted Artist Diploma from Juilliard. \nemilieannegendron.com \nTaiwanese born violist and erhuist (Chinese violin) ANDY WEIYAN LIN is recognized as one of the most promising and the only active performers who specialized in both western and eastern instruments. \n“The great Molto adagio…..elicited some of the night’s most sensitive work\, especially from Wei-Yang Andy Lin on viola.” — Strad Magazine \n“Taiwanese-born violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin…..is also a virtuoso on the erhu\, and he gave a brilliant performance.” — New York Times \nAndy is the artistic director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society. He holds his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from The Juilliard School and received his Doctor’s degree in Musical Arts from SUNY Stony Brook. He has won numerous competitions including Taiwan National Viola Competition and First Prize in the 2008 Juilliard Viola Concerto Competition. He has also appeared as a viola and/or erhu soloist with orchestras such as the Busan Metropolitan Traditional Music Orchestra\, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia\, Children’s Orchestra Society\, Grant Park Symphony Orchestra\, Incheon Philharmonic\, the Juilliard Orchestra\, Milwaukee Symphony\, New York Classical Players\, Orford Academy Orchestra\, Solisti Ensemble and Yonkers Philharmonic Orchestra. Andy is also a founding member of the award winning string quartet\, the Amphion String Quartet\, and a member of the Musicians of Lenox Hill and serves as principal violist of the New York Classical Players and the Solisti Ensemble. He has been invited to perform chamber music with Itzhak Perlman where The New York Times described “Mr. Perlman\, playing first violin… answered in kind by the violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin.” He has also been invited by the Metropolitan Museum to give recitals at their Gallery Concert Series and Patrons Lounge Concert\, as well as a recital at the Caramoor Center for the Music and the Arts. Andy plays on a viola made by one of his best friends Jacob Ho.  \nandylinviola.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance\, violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed\, toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019\, and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure\, pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra\, Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021\, Keiko founded an online concert series\, Jukebox Concerts\, in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers\, but also to residents of nursing homes\, hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year\, she created INTERWOVEN\, a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians\, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet\, the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance\, First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013\, and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road\, Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past\, she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute.\ninterwovenmusic.org \nCellist NAN-CHENG CHEN’s performance was described as “personable and smile-inducing” and “fine playing” by the Washington Post and “Beautiful Tone” by New York Concert Reviews. A chamber music enthusiast\, Nan-Cheng is the executive director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society and was a member of Sonic Escape trio. As a soloist\, Nan-Cheng has collaborated with Simon Bolivar Orchestra\, Queens Symphony Orchestra\, Metro-West Symphony\, Quincy Symphony and Symphony Pro Musica\, and has toured North American\, South America\, Europe and Asia. His recent highlight include debuts with National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan and Taipei Symphony Orchestra. Nan-Cheng’s festival participations includes Banff Centre Residency\, Sarasota Music Festival\, Heifetz Institute\, Encore School for Strings\, and Kneisel Hall. He was a guest-performing artist at Chautauqua Summer Music Festival\, a Kaplan Fellow at the Bowdoin International Music Festival and served as a teaching artist at the Annual Music Festival of Walnut Hill. As a music educator\, Nan-Cheng has given cello masterclasses at Penn State University\, University of Wisconsin\, University of Calgary as well as universities in Panama\, Colombia and Taiwan. Nan-Cheng holds a B.M. and M.M. from The Juilliard School\, and is enrolled as a doctoral candidate at CUNY Graduate Center. He taught at CUNY Queens College and now serves as a full-time college music faculty in New York. \nnewasiacms.org/nancheng-chen \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto\, shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts\, she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music\, an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama\, Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko\, a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo\, accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki\, NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist\, Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist\, she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works\, such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum\, Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra\, Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi\, Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO\, with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015\, and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference\, and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019\, the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently\, CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians)\, a platform created to empower\, elevate\, normalize and give visibility to women\, non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race\, sexuality\, or ability across generations in the US and worldwide\, through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions.\ncrsny.org
URL:https://crsny.org/event/crs-presents-interwoven-international-chamber-ensemble-at-resobox/
LOCATION:Resobox East Village\, 91 E 3rd St\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:Concert,CRS Presents
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GEO:40.724831;-73.9877549
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=DESCRIPTION:CRS presents the international chamber music ensemble INTERWOVEN on Saturday March 11 2023 at 2pm at Resobox East Village our first collaboration with Resobox. INTERWOVEN’s Yoko Reikano Kimura (Shamisen/Voice) Andy Lin  (Erhu/Viola) Emilie-Anne Gendron (Violin) Keiko Tokunaga (Violin) and Nan-Cheng Chen (Cello) will perform a program featuring Japanese Chinese and western compositions such as “A Popular Tune” by JungYoon Wie “Sekiheki no Fu — Red Cliff” by Kin’ichi Nakanoshima “Chimera” by Theodore Wiprud “Crosscurrents” by Takuma Itoh and Ravel’s “String Quartet” (First and Second Mv). \nTickets are $30 ($15 for students and $20 for seniors) and are available via eventbrite.com or for cash at the door. \nFounded by Grammy-winner Keiko Tokunaga INTERWOVEN is a chamber ensemble whose mission is to bring together the sounds from different places and time. The ensemble name derives from the idea that music making is like creating a tapestry woven together with threads that represent and celebrate diverse origins traditions and materials. \nRESOBOX is a Japanese cultural center dedicated to sharing and celebrating Japanese influence in the arts. It offers a broad range of authentic Japanese activities events classes art exhibitions and even cuisines to spread to diverse audiences every day. \nThis concert falls on the 12th anniverary of the Great East Japan earthquake tsunami and ongoing nuclear disaster and we’d like to dedicate this concert to those who were lost those left behind and those who helped. We remember you. \n“I want to express how grateful we (Japanese) were to all the neighboring countries for helping us when we were most vulnerable and witnessing such kindness made me want to work towards a more harmonious relationship between all the Asian countries despite its complicated past.” — Keiko Tokunaga \nVENUE \nResobox East Village\n91 E 3rd St\nNew York NY 10003\n(212) 598-5993 \nDIRECTIONS:\nResobox EV is located in Manhattan’s East Village on the north side of E 3rd Street just west of 1st Avenue on the ground floor. \nNEAREST SUBWAY STATIONS:  \nF train to 1st/2nd Ave & Houston St 6 train to Bleecker St or Astor Place R/W to Prince St \nABOUT THE ARTISTS \nViolinist EMILIE-ANNE GENDRON lauded by the New York Times as a “brilliant soloist” and by Strad Magazine for her “marvellous and lyrical playing” enjoys a dynamic career based in New York City. Ms. Gendron is on the roster of the Marlboro Music Festival and the touring Musicians From Marlboro as well as acclaimed groups such as A Far Cry Argento Chamber Ensemble Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia Iris Orchestra (as one of its concertmasters) Orpheus Chamber Orchestra Talea Ensemble and Sejong Soloists. She is a founding member of Ensemble Échappé a new-music sinfonietta and of Gamut Bach Ensemble in residence with the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society. A deeply committed chamber musician Ms. Gendron is a longtime member of the Momenta Quartet whose vision encompasses contemporary music of all backgrounds alongside great music from the past—currently quartet-in-residence at Binghamton University and most recently serving as Bates College’s 2019-20 Artists-in-Residence in Music. Other regular collaborations include the Melody and Company chamber series with pianist Melody Fader and the longstanding G-Sharp Duo founded with pianist Yelena Grinberg in 2003.  \nMs. Gendron is also a sought-after educator and clinician. She has been a member of the Toomai String Quintet specializing in innovative educational outreach and community engagement since 2009. Toomai one of the original pilot ensembles in Carnegie Hall’s “Musical Connections” program helped design composition and performance workshops with incarcerated men at Sing Sing Correctional Facility; has worked with student composers in the New York Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers Program and with NYC public school students through the “Midori and Friends” educational initiative; and presents at institutions across the U.S. ranging from grade school to university level. As a member of the Momenta Quartet Ms. Gendron gives guest masterclass and coaching appearances on their educational-performing circuit of nearly 40 institutions ranging from public and arts schools universities and conservatories in the U.S. and as far afield as Bolivia Indonesia and Mexico. Ms. Gendron has served as guest chamber music coach for the Juilliard School’s Music Advancement Program and at the Longy School of Music; as violin specialist for student composers at Juilliard’s Evening Division NYU and Fordham University; and as a chamber music and contemporary music coach and performer at the annual Brandeis Composers Conference. \nMs. Gendron’s extensively varied international appearances have included recitals in Sweden and at the Louvre in Paris; festivals in Russia Finland Indonesia South Korea and Jordan; and major venues across the Americas Europe and Asia in collaboration with such artists as Teddy Abrams Rachel Barton Pine Bruno Canino Leon Fleisher Richard Goode Anthony McGill Edgar Meyer Shlomo Mintz Anthony Newman Samuel Rhodes Marcy Rosen Gil Shaham and Jörg Widmann among many others. Her performances have been broadcast over radio and television in the U.S. U.K. Switzerland New Zealand Canada Denmark Japan and South Korea. She is a past winner of the Stulberg String Competition and took 2nd Prize and the Audience Prize at the Sion-Valais (formerly Tibor Varga) International Violin Competition.  \nBorn in the U.S. to Japanese and French-Canadian parents and a dual citizen of the U.S. and Canada Ms. Gendron began her violin studies at age 4 with Carl Shugart and Carol Sykes. Her subsequent training at the Juilliard School was overseen by teachers Dorothy DeLay Won-Bin Yim Hyo Kang David Chan and Axel Strauss. Ms. Gendron holds the distinction of being the first person in Juilliard’s history to be accepted simultaneously to its two most selective courses of study both the Doctor of Musical Arts and the Artist Diploma. She holds a B.A. in Classics (magna cum laude and with Phi Beta Kappa honors) from Columbia University and a Master of Music degree and the coveted Artist Diploma from Juilliard. \nemilieannegendron.com \nTaiwanese born violist and erhuist (Chinese violin) ANDY WEIYAN LIN is recognized as one of the most promising and the only active performers who specialized in both western and eastern instruments. \n“The great Molto adagio…..elicited some of the night’s most sensitive work especially from Wei-Yang Andy Lin on viola.” — Strad Magazine \n“Taiwanese-born violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin…..is also a virtuoso on the erhu and he gave a brilliant performance.” — New York Times \nAndy is the artistic director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society. He holds his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from The Juilliard School and received his Doctor’s degree in Musical Arts from SUNY Stony Brook. He has won numerous competitions including Taiwan National Viola Competition and First Prize in the 2008 Juilliard Viola Concerto Competition. He has also appeared as a viola and/or erhu soloist with orchestras such as the Busan Metropolitan Traditional Music Orchestra Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia Children’s Orchestra Society Grant Park Symphony Orchestra Incheon Philharmonic the Juilliard Orchestra Milwaukee Symphony New York Classical Players Orford Academy Orchestra Solisti Ensemble and Yonkers Philharmonic Orchestra. Andy is also a founding member of the award winning string quartet the Amphion String Quartet and a member of the Musicians of Lenox Hill and serves as principal violist of the New York Classical Players and the Solisti Ensemble. He has been invited to perform chamber music with Itzhak Perlman where The New York Times described “Mr. Perlman playing first violin… answered in kind by the violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin.” He has also been invited by the Metropolitan Museum to give recitals at their Gallery Concert Series and Patrons Lounge Concert as well as a recital at the Caramoor Center for the Music and the Arts. Andy plays on a viola made by one of his best friends Jacob Ho.  \nandylinviola.com \nWinner of the 2019 GRAMMY Award for Best Chamber Music/ Small Ensemble Performance violinist KEIKO TOKUNAGA spends most of her days touring and performing globally as a soloist and chamber musician. Keiko has performed toured and recorded extensively with the internationally acclaimed Attacca Quartet from 2005 to 2019 and has been praised by the Strings Magazine for possessing a sound “with probing quality that is supple and airborne” and for her “pure pellucid bow strokes”. She has soloed with various orchestras including the Spanish National Orchestra Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya and Virginia Arts Festival Chamber Orchestra. \nIn 2021 Keiko founded an online concert series Jukebox Concerts in order to provide artistic outlets for musicians who lost their engagements due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The performances were made available not only to the subscribers but also to residents of nursing homes hospitals and assisted living facilities across the country. Later in the year she created INTERWOVEN a multi-cultural ensemble whose mission is to eliminate discrimination against the AAAPI (Asians Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders) community by integrating the musical traditions of the East and West. \nWhile Keiko played the Attacca Quartet the ensemble won numerous prestigious awards including the GRAMMY Award for Best Small Ensemble Performance First Prize of the 7th Osaka International Chamber Music Competition in 2011; the Third Prize and the Australian Broadcast Corporation Classic FM Listener’s Choice Award of the 6th Melbourne International Chamber Music Competition in 2011. The Attacca Quartet served as the Graduate String Quartet in Residence at The Juilliard School from 2011 till 2013 and as artist-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the 2014-15 season. \nWhen she is not on the road Keiko enjoys her career as an educator. She is currently on faculty at Fordham University. In the past she taught at The Juilliard School Pre-College Division; the Hunter College of New York; New York University; the Port Townsend Chamber Music Festival; and Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute.\ninterwovenmusic.org \nCellist NAN-CHENG CHEN’s performance was described as “personable and smile-inducing” and “fine playing” by the Washington Post and “Beautiful Tone” by New York Concert Reviews. A chamber music enthusiast Nan-Cheng is the executive director and co-founder of the New Asia Chamber Music Society and was a member of Sonic Escape trio. As a soloist Nan-Cheng has collaborated with Simon Bolivar Orchestra Queens Symphony Orchestra Metro-West Symphony Quincy Symphony and Symphony Pro Musica and has toured North American South America Europe and Asia. His recent highlight include debuts with National Symphony Orchestra of Taiwan and Taipei Symphony Orchestra. Nan-Cheng’s festival participations includes Banff Centre Residency Sarasota Music Festival Heifetz Institute Encore School for Strings and Kneisel Hall. He was a guest-performing artist at Chautauqua Summer Music Festival a Kaplan Fellow at the Bowdoin International Music Festival and served as a teaching artist at the Annual Music Festival of Walnut Hill. As a music educator Nan-Cheng has given cello masterclasses at Penn State University University of Wisconsin University of Calgary as well as universities in Panama Colombia and Taiwan. Nan-Cheng holds a B.M. and M.M. from The Juilliard School and is enrolled as a doctoral candidate at CUNY Graduate Center. He taught at CUNY Queens College and now serves as a full-time college music faculty in New York. \nnewasiacms.org/nancheng-chen \nYOKO REIKANO KIMURA is a distinguished virtuoso of Japanese koto shamisen performer and singer in both traditional and contemporary music. Kimura has concertized in about 20 countries around the world based in New York and Japan. Following her studies at the Tokyo University of the Arts she studied at Institute of Traditional Japanese Music an affiliate of Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Japan. Kimura was awarded a scholarship from the Agency of Cultural Affairs of Japan. Her teachers include Kono Kameyama Akiko Nishigata and Senko Yamabiko a Living National Treasure. Awards include the First prize at the prestigious 10th Kenjun Memorial National Koto Competition and the First prize at the 4th Great Wall International Music Competition. Kimura performed at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo accompanying Danjuro Ichikawa XII. Her performances have been broadcasted on NHK-FM’s Hogaku no Hitotoki NPR’s Performance Today and WKCR. As a koto soloist Kimura has performed Daron Hagen’s Koto Concerto: Genji with the Wintergreen Music Festival Orchestra conducted by Mei-Ann Chen and several string quartets. As a shamisen soloist she performed Kin’ichi Nakanoshima’s Shamisen Concerto at the National Olympic Memorial Youth Center. \nHer performances have been featured at many opera and theater works such as Michi Wiancko’s Murasaki’s Moon at Metropolitan Museum Piestro Mascagni’s Iris by American Symphony Orchestra Basil Twist’s Dogugaeshi Yasuko Yokoshi’s Bell and many others. \nKimura is a founder of Duo YUMENO with cellist Hikaru Tamaki. The duo received the Kyoto Aoyama Barock Saal Award in 2015 and featured at Chamber Music America’s 2016 National Conference and performed at the John F. Kennedy Center in 2017. In 2019 the duo had its ten-year anniversary recital at Carnegie Hall.\nyokoreikanokimura.com | duoyumeno.com \nABOUT THE PRESENTER \nCRS (CENTER FOR REMEMBERING & SHARING) is a spiritual healing and art center founded in 2004 by the writer/lecturer/spiritual counselor Yasuko Kasaki and artist Christopher Pelham. Our mission is guided by A Course in Miracles (ACIM). ACIM says that recognizing that you and your brother are actually one is the only way to experience peace. The mission of CRS is to promote the awareness that limitless creativity lives within each of us. We train minds to recognize the light in themselves and others and provide them opportunities to share their inner vision through the healing and creative arts. Since its founding CRS has provided numerous residencies and performance and exhibition opportunities to artists from all over the world. Currently CRS is a multi-year sponsor of M³ (Mutual Mentorship for Musicians) a platform created to empower elevate normalize and give visibility to women non-binary musicians and those of other historically underrepresented gender identities in intersection with race sexuality or ability across generations in the US and worldwide through a radical model of mentorship and musical collaborative commissions.\ncrsny.org;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=91 E 3rd St:geo:-73.9877549,40.724831
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230315T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230315T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221208T230819Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230305T162204Z
UID:39967-1678905000-1678906800@crsny.org
SUMMARY:Guided Meditation with Yasuko Kasaki in English (on Zoom)
DESCRIPTION:Tuesdays from 6:30 – 7 pm from Jan 10 – March 28\, 2023 (except this week)\nFollowed by ACIM Class from 7 – 8 pm (same Zoom link) \nZoom Meeting Link:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81541160040 \nCall-in info:\nMeeting ID: 815 4116 0040\nOne tap mobile: 1-929-436-2866 \nSuggested class donation $20 via PayPal to https://www.paypal.me/crsny\n(no one turned away due to lack of funds) \nPlease join me in the sharing of miracles. Here\, your mind can come to rest and you can remember true peace. No experience with meditation is required\, and everyone is welcome. I ask only that you make it your intention to sit still\, quiet in body and mind\, and to listen to\, receive\, and follow my instruction to the best of your ability. You will learn to meditate as you practice. \nEach week I will share with you a different inspirational message from Holy Spirit. This may take the form of creative visualization exercises\, or instruction about the nature and purpose of meditation\, or about our true nature and relationship to ourselves\, to one another\, and to the world. In a sense\, this is both a meditation practice and a meditation class. At the end of the meditation you will have a chance to respond briefly if you like. \nSome students have been practicing regularly for a number of years. Others drop in and out as they have time or need. Some come to learn and grow\, others more so simply to calm down\, to take time out from the frenetic pace of their busy lives. If you are new and feeling uncertain or shaky\, do not hesitate to introduce yourself to some of the other students\, to ask questions before or after. Try to observe and emulate the stillness and concentration of others around you whom you sense are most grounded. Soon\, you\, in turn\, may provide inspiration and guidance for others. \nWhile the principles are based on A Course in Miracles (ACIM)\, it does not matter if you are unfamiliar with ACIM or are not prepared to study it outside of this meditation. You can still take from this practice some very practical\, effective lessons\, tools\, and experiences that can enable you to lead a more peaceful\, purposeful\, fulfilling and loving life. \nABOUT YASUKO KASAKI \nYasuko Kasaki is an internationally beloved spiritual writer\, counselor\, healer\, lecturer and translator from Tokyo. She is widely recognized as the person most responsible for the spread of A Course in Miraclesthroughout Japan. In 2004 she founded CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, the first and only spiritual center devoted to the teaching and practice of A Course in Miracles in New York City. She has taught and worked with thousands of people from around the world to help resolve their mental and physical issues and witness miracles. She presents at the CMC’s annual ACIM Conferences in the U.S.\, and several times a year she gives large seminars throughout Japan. She has also been presented internationally at ACIM conferences and workshops in the U.K.\, Spain\, Germany\, and Israel. \nYasuko is the author of The Scales Fell from My Eyes: An Illustrated Course in Miracles and 17 books in Japanese about the Course\, as well as numerous novels\, short stories\, essays and collections of photographs. Her translations of the ACIM Workbook and of books by Course teachers Jon Mundy\, Gabrielle Bernstein and David Hoffmeister have also been published in Japan. Yasuko’s spiritual writing and lectures are celebrated for their clearly stated explanations of complex concepts illustrated by captivating personal stories of struggle and triumph\, drawn from her long career as a writer\, motorcyclist\, and spiritual counselor. Meditation and communication with Holy Spirit form the foundation of her practice.
URL:https://crsny.org/event/guided-meditation-with-yasuko-kasaki-in-english-on-zoom-4-2023-03-14/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://crsny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/IMG_4847.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing) 41 E 11th St 11th Fl New York NY 10003 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=41 E 11th St 11th Fl:geo:-73.992729,40.733158
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230315T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230315T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T115507
CREATED:20221208T231000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230305T162722Z
UID:39980-1678906800-1678910400@crsny.org
SUMMARY:A Course in Miracles Class with Yasuko Kasaki (on Zoom)
DESCRIPTION:Tuesdays (except this week) from 7 – 8 pm from Jan 10 – March 28\, 2023\nPreceded by Guided Meditation from 6:30 – 7 pm (same Zoom link) \nTogether\, let’s come to rest and remember true peace. Each class usually contains some lecture on concepts from A Course in Miracles\, some discussion and Q&A\, and a meditation\, creative visualization and/or spiritual reading practice in order to experience mind change. \nOur primary goal in these classes is for each student to learn to listen to the guidance of Holy Spirit and live his/her life with certainty and peace. Slowly\, you will re-train your eyes to see the world around you without judgment. You will learn to communicate with your holy spirit. Students of all experience levels and backgrounds are welcome! \nZoom Meeting Link:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81541160040 \nCall-in info:\nMeeting ID: 815 4116 0040\nOne tap mobile: 1-929-436-2866 \nSuggested donation $20 via PayPal to https://www.paypal.me/crsny\n(no one turned away due to lack of funds) \nYou can find the text of A Course in Miracles (ACIM) online here (http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Course_in_Miracles)\, among other places. \nYasuko Kasaki is an internationally beloved spiritual writer\, counselor\, healer\, lecturer and translator from Tokyo. She is widely recognized as the person most responsible for the spread of A Course in Miracles throughout Japan. In 2004 she founded CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, the first and only spiritual center devoted to the teaching and practice of A Course in Miracles in New York City. She has taught and worked with thousands of people from around the world to help resolve their mental and physical issues and witness miracles. She presents at the CMC’s annual ACIM Conferences in the U.S.\, and several times a year she gives large seminars throughout Japan. She has also been presented internationally at ACIM conferences and workshops in the U.K.\, Spain\, Germany\, and Israel. \nYasuko is the author of The Scales Fell from My Eyes: An Illustrated Course in Miracles and 17 books in Japanese about the Course\, as well as numerous novels\, short stories\, essays and collections of photographs. Her translations of the ACIM Workbook and of books by Course teachers Jon Mundy\, Gabrielle Bernstein and David Hoffmeister have also been published in Japan. Yasuko’s spiritual writing and lectures are celebrated for their clearly stated explanations of complex concepts illustrated by captivating personal stories of struggle and triumph\, drawn from her long career as a writer\, motorcyclist\, and spiritual counselor. Meditation and communication with Holy Spirit form the foundation of her practice. \nYou can listen to a sampling of Yasuko’s recent guided meditations here:\nhttp://crsny.podbean.com
URL:https://crsny.org/event/a-course-in-miracles-class-with-yasuko-kasaki-on-zoom-6-2023-03-14/
LOCATION:CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)\, 41 E 11th St 11th Fl\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
CATEGORIES:ACIM-Related Event
ORGANIZER;CN="CRS (Center for Remembering & Sharing)":MAILTO:info@crsny.org
GEO:40.733158;-73.992729
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END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR