
Theatre Headlines
Music Headlines
Dance Headlines









Updated 8/24/10! |



Professional Theatre
-
African American Companies
Community
Theatre
Academic
Theatre
Youth Theatre
Music
Dance
People
- Director/ Musical Directors / Choreographers
Casting

Books/Scripts
Box Office/Tickets
Music
Dance
Costumes &
Make-Up
Audio
Set Design/Rigging
Lighting
Special Effects
Consulting
Services
Supplies
Gifts

| |
Steel Band Opens Midsummer Lakeside
Concerts; Anni Clark, String Bands; Dulcimer Master to Continue Bates College
Series
LEWISTON, ME: The Caribbean-inspired,
Massachusetts-based Pan Loco Steel Band opens the annual Bates College Midsummer
Lakeside Concert Series on Thursday, July 8, in the Florence Keigwin
Amphitheater at the college's Lake Andrews.
Midsummer Lakeside concerts start at 6 p.m. on six consecutive Thursdays in July
and August. The series will continue with Maine singer-songwriter Anni Clark,
the folk band Highland String Trio, eclectic folk-rock group the Zulu
Leprechauns, hammered-dulcimer player Harry Vayo and the Celtic-bluegrass fusion
band Irish Hill.
Sponsored by the Garcelon Society, the Bingham Betterment Fund and the Harward
Center for Community Partnerships at Bates, these family concerts are open to
the public at no cost. Listeners are encouraged to bring a picnic and lawn
chairs or blankets.
An alternative site will be announced in case of rain. For more information
about the series, please call 207-786-6400.
Here's the complete schedule:
 |
July 8, Pan Loco Steel Band: Former students at Berklee
College of Music and the University of New Hampshire, the Pan Loco Steel
Band came together in 1991. Consisting of two steel drummers, an electric
bass player and a percussionist, the group concentrates on authentic
Caribbean music. Steel pan players Bob Lucas, a Bay State native, and
Justin Petty, who grew up in the U.S. Virgin Islands, founded the quartet in
Boston, and they arrange the band's music. Bassist Gerry Rollock hails from
Trinidad, and teaches and plays in the Boston area. Percussionist Sean
Skeete has performed with ensembles as diverse as the Boston Symphony
Orchestra, Alvin Ailey Dance Theater and Blue Man Group.
|
 |
July 15, Anni Clark: Nominated for "Female Vocalist of the
Year" at the 2006 Texas Music Awards, this veteran Maine singer-songwriter
has released seven albums and appeared with the likes of Shawn Colvin,
Richie Havens and Patty Larkin. Audiences love her humor and expressive
power. Clark's music has been described as "folk, pop and blues with a dash
of Maine humor." Twice a finalist in the well-known songwriters' competition
at the Kerrville Folk Festival, Clark was invited to be a judge for the
event in 2001. In 2003, she won both "Female Artist of the Year" and "Folk
Artist of the Year" in Jam Music Magazine's Readers' Pix Awards. Clark also
works as an education tech in special education in Saco, Maine.
|
 |
July 22, Highland String Trio: Lauren Scott, Chris Bannon
and Walt Bannon are known for their energetic blend of Celtic, bluegrass and
Americana. Scott is a fiddler who also performs with the band Fiddle-icious.
Chris Bannon plays guitar and mandolin, and Walt Bannon provides vocals,
flute and guitar.
|
 |
July 29, The Zulu Leprechauns: These eclectic,
improvisational folk-rockers play a mix of original and familiar music,
incorporating styles from West Africa, rock 'n' roll, bluegrass and folk. In
addition to their own songs, they cover such artists as Neil Young, Bob
Dylan, the Grateful Dead, Lou Reed and Robert Johnson, among others. They
have made three recordings: the eponymous "Zulu Leprechauns," "Mixed
Messages" and their latest, "L.A. To Zaire." Founded in 1993, the
ensemble comprises bassist John Shaw, banjoist and electric dulcimer player
John Schwellenbach, percussionist and violinist Annegret Baier and
percussionist Jeff Howe. Their instrumental arsenal includes djembe,
six-string bass, guitar, dumbek, conga, shakers and cymbals. They have
played the Maine Festival, Congress Square Festival and New Year's Portland,
along with such venues as Portland's Oak Street Theater, the Waldo Theater
and the Camden Opera House.
|
 |
Aug. 5, Harry Vayo: A master of the hammered dulcimer and
a self-described healing musician, Vayo performs his own compositions,
Celtic and Asian tunes, Beatles songs, Cajun sounds and an occasional
classical piece. He has made two recordings and has appeared at the Common
Ground Fair and New Year's by the Bay in Belfast, among many other Maine
venues.
|
 |
Aug. 12, Irish Hill: This local quartet offers a heartfelt
blend of Celtic, bluegrass and old-time fiddle music. The players are
guitarist Scott Williams, mandolinist Roberta Hill, fiddler-banjoist Michael
Conant and bassist Tim Clough. Rich harmonies by Hill and Conant round out
Irish Hill's distinctive sound.
|
|