MoHu returns! Will you be there?

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Earlier this month, the people behind MoHu — a 10-day celebration of the arts in the Capital Region — gathered to announced that the second annual MoHu festival will take place beginning Friday, Oct. 5, with more than 100 venues, artists, and arts organizations from all over Albany, Schenectady, Rensselaer, and Saratoga counties banding together to display the strength and diversity of the cultural programming that makes this area so special.

One of the main goals of the MoHu festival is to raise awareness of the diversity and quality of the arts in the region — to let readers like you know more about what’s going on in the area around you — in the areas bordering the Mohawk and Hudson Rivers. (Get it? That’s where “MoHu” comes from, Mohawk and Hudson.)

Last year, the MoHu organizers hoped to have 50,000 attend various MoHu-labeled events, and they say an estimated 52,272 people turned out for music, dance, theater, comedy, poetry and visual arts. The figure is an estimate, because not all events were ticketed.

One of the events of note is a free event called “Drums Along the MoHu Festival Finale” at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 14, at The Egg in Albany. The event features four percussionists – Brian Melick, Devesh Chandra, Robot Aston Ellis and Zorkie Nelson – will perform musical works that celebrate the diversity of the Capital Region.

Another new thing this year is a pre-MoHu fundraiser, called MoHu Takes Flight and labeled as a “an interactive arts cocktail party to kick off and help support the second annual MOHU Festival.” The benefit includes opportunities for art-making and watching. It takes place from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 4, at the Eclipse Hangar at the Albany International Airport. Tickets are $50 for the public and $30 for MoHu artists. For more information about the benefit, contact Leesa Perazzo 518•382•3884 x187 or lperazzo@proctors.org

For more information about MoHu, visit http://mohufest.com/

‘Rat Pack Show’ at Palace rescheduled to May 9, 2013

The Palace Theatre has announced another rescheduling of “Sandy Hackett’s Rat Pack Show,” which had been scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 15. (The Saturday date had been the rescheduled date for the event which was originally slated to be Friday, March 23.

Tickets for the show will be honored on the new date. For those unable to attend, refunds are available at the original point of purchase.

Tickets for the 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 9, performance are on sale at the Palace box office, Ticketmaster.com and by phone at 800-745-3000.

Call the Palace Theatre box office at 465-4663 for more information.

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Lark Fest seeks volunteers

Want to make yourself useful while enjoying a day of great local and national music acts?

Well, Lark Fest still needs volunteers for Saturday’s 31st annual event taking place on Lark Street in Albany from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

A variety of positions are available with shifts from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. There is a particular need for “Lark Patrol” volunteers, who will assist the Albany Police Department with the closure of side streets throughout the day.

To volunteer, contact volunteer coordinator Aimee Gould-Pryba at 434-5411 or goulda@ci.albany.ny.us.

For more information about the festival, call the Lark Street Business Improvement District at 434-3861 or visit http://www.larkstreet.org.

For an interview with headliner Karl Wallinger, click here.

— CJ Lais

Foundry exhibit celebrates Oberlander Group

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The newest exhibition at the Foundry for Art and Design, “Designing for the Arts: A 25 Year Retrospective of Oberlander Group,” opens Saturday and will have a reception from 6 to 9 p.m.

The exhibition marks the 25th anniversary of the graphic design firm, which has offices in Cohoes, and has had clients such as the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Miami City Ballet and New York City Ballet.

“Oberlander Group’s design services have contributed to the success of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater by amplifying the excitement that audiences feel when attending our performances,” said Sharon Gersten Luckman, Ailey’s executive director. “As evidenced in the striking materials for our upcoming New York season, the posters, brochures and ads they’ve created beautifully capture the power and passion of our world-renowned dancers.”

The free exhibit features designs that include photography by Rodney Smith, Ray Meeks, Richard Corman, Andrew Eccles and Gio Alma.


On exhibit

“Designing for the Arts: A 25 Year Retrospective of Oberlander Group”
When: Opening reception: 6-9 p.m. Saturday; hours: 1-4 p.m. Sundays Sept. 9, 16, 23
Where: The Foundry for Art, Design + Culture, 119 Remsen St., Cohoes
Info: 878-2612; http://www.oberlandergroup.com; http://www.thefoundrysite.com

Are fine art museums fine places for cat video contests?

Museums are places that contain things, most often objects of historical or cultural value and significance. Museums are also places in which events can take place, such as galas or concerts. So it shouldn’t be surprising that the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, one of the most prominent U.S. institutions of contemporary art, held an Internet Cat Video Festival last week.

One of the ironies of the event is that the videos being shown were from the Internet, which allows people to experience the same cultural artifacts (whether significant or not) even if they are separated by place and time; however, on the grounds of the Walker, the videos were watched by people gathered together in one location to watch the same thing at the same time.

Another irony is that even though some may think a bricks and mortar museum as a repository as culture has been overwhelmed by the World Wide Wide as a repository of culture, people remain social animals, willing to gather at a museum to share a cultural experience.

The broader question, though, can be stated two ways:
1. If the Walker is spending time with cat videos, then does that mean it is spending less time with serious artists?
2. Are cat videos art?

Evening with Stephen Sondheim at HVCC canceled

This just in:

Hudson Valley Community College’s Cultural Affairs Program regretfully announces the cancellation of An Evening with Stephen Sondheim, an on-stage conversation with the legendary composer and lyricist on Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2012 in the Maureen Stapleton Theatre on the college’s campus in Troy.

It is hoped the program can be rescheduled during the Spring 2013 semester.

Tickets hadn’t yet gone on sale to the general public, but students, faculty and staff seeking to refund tickets should contact Debby Gardner at (518) 629-8071.

Megyn Kelly: From Delmar to the face of Fox for the GOP convention

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Two years ago, the Times Union reported on Megyn Kelly, recounting her career trajectory as going “from Bethlehem cheerleader to Albany Law School graduate to anchor of a cable-news program with a daily audience that tops one million. That’s the path — albeit dramatically oversimplified — taken by Megyn Kelly, who grew up in Delmar and is a rising star at Fox News.”

Today, she’ll be coanchoring Fox’s GOP convention coverage, as the Associated Press reports:

Four years ago, Megyn Kelly roved the Democratic and Republican convention floors as a reporter for Fox News Channel. Starting Monday in Tampa, Fla., she’ll be in Fox’s booth as co-anchor with Bret Baier for the 2012 meetings.
The elevation shows how Kelly, host of the daytime “America Live” program, is rising at Fox. Her ratings are increasing even in a rough year for cable news. Recently she single-handedly minimized the damage after a Fox flub covering the Supreme Court health care decision and even had a surprise talk with an old nemesis, Jon Stewart.

Read the AP story here

UPDATE: Acts added to free Pearl Palooza on Sept. 22, 2012

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WEQX has announced the lineup for the third annual free music celebration on Albany’s Pearl Street, Peal Palooza, which is slated for noon to 9 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 22, place on North Pearl Street in downtown Albany (between Pine St. and Sheridan Ave.).

The headliners will be Matt & Kim on the mainstage, and a second stage will feature Capital Region acts. Matt & Kim will be returning to the region, having previously performed at Upstate Concert Hall (Northern Lights), SPAC, and Lark Fest.

UPDATE: Phantogram and Conehead Buddha have been added to this show

Hailing from Saratoga Springs, electronic rock duo Phantogram been praised by the likes of Pitchfork, Alternative Press, Spin and NPR. Founders Josh Carter (vocals, guitar, samples) and Sarah Barthel (vocals, keys, samples) are local indie rock heroes, turned international darlings.

One of the original genre-blending bands to grace the jam scene, Conehead Buddha plays songs you can dance to. Originally formed in late 1993, the band hit the touring circuit hard – making friends and fans all over the SUNY college circuit, New England, and the Southeastern states. In 2002, the band took a break, but in 2012 are back in full force playing live shows and with a new album. Present Perfect was just released this July.


The Mainstage

Matt & Kim
Robert Delong
The Royal Concept
Oberhofer

The local stage
Eastbound Jesus
Wild Adriatic
Barons in the Attic
MIRK

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Watch this: A hover vehicle takes flight