New York Festival of Song (NYFOS) opens a new season of NYFOS AFTER HOURS . The unplugged cabaret series featuring Blier and the NYFOS gang returns Monday nights at HENRY's Restaurant on Broadway & 105th St. The opening night celebration will be "Crystal Anniversary Cabaret", celebrating 15 years of HENRY's Restaurant, on Monday, October 20, 2014 at 10 p.m.
Featuring:
JULIA BULLOCK, soprano
MEREDITH LUSTIG, soprano
BEN BLISS, tenor
MILES MYKKANEN, tenor
THEO LEBOW, tenor
JONATHAN ESTABROOKS, baritone
THEO HOFFMAN, baritone
STEVEN BLIER, piano
NYFOS Artistic Director Steven Blier says: "My neighborhood restaurant, HENRY's, has become one the Upper West Side's enduring pleasures. It serves fresh, locally sourced food to mellow, locally sourced diners. It has been a true pleasure to make music in my own stomping grounds for the past five years, and I am thrilled to honor this beautiful establishment and its proprietor, the eponymous Henry Rinehart, with a musical celebration. Everyone loves making (and hearing) music in this warm, wood-paneled environment. Here's to the next 15 years!"
New York Festival of Song (NYFOS) launches its second season of the NYFOS After Hours cabaret series at HENRY's Restaurant, 2745 Broadway at 105th Street. These evenings are an uncanny mixture of intimacy and dynamite, the cozy and the colossal, with singers that one would ordinarily see on a much larger stage.
About NYFOS After Hours: In February 2010 at HENRY's Restaurant on the Upper West Side, an informal world-class cabaret series began, springing out of a personal friendship between NYFOS Artistic Director Steven Blier and restaurant owner Henry Rinehart.
Eventually dubbed NYFOS After Hours, these highly popular late-night-and unamplified-concerts entertain diners with superlative voices in a mix of freshly created shows and revivals of past programs. The cream of New York's rising talent joins some of the city's most illustrious singers and actors, accompanied by Blier at the piano. NYFOS After Hours is presented as part of the restaurant's ongoing series, Sing for Your Supper @ HENRY's. Henry Rinehart says: "All of us at HENRY's are thrilled to host this series with Steven Blier and NYFOS. NYFOS is one of New York's great cultural institutions and Steven is a dear friend. Together we will continue to present Broadway's most intimate night of song to packed houses."About NYFOS: Now in its 27th season, New York Festival of Song (NYFOS) is dedicated to creating intimate song concerts of great beauty and originality. Weaving music, poetry, history and humor into evenings of compelling theater, NYFOS fosters community among artists and audiences. Each program entertains and educates in equal measure.
Founded by pianists Michael Barrett and Steven Blier in 1988, NYFOS continues to produce its series of thematic song programs, drawing together rarely-heard songs of all kinds, overriding traditional distinctions between high and low performance genres, exploring the character and language of other cultures, and the personal voices of song composers and lyricists. Since its founding, NYFOS has particularly celebrated American song. Among the many highlights is the double bill of one-act comic operas, Bastianello and Lucrezia, by John Musto and William Bolcom, both with libretti by Mark Campbell, commissioned and premiered by NYFOS in 2008 and recorded on Bridge Records. In addition to Bastianello and Lucrezia and the 2008 Bridge Records release of Spanish Love Songs with Joseph Kaiser and the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, NYFOS has produced five recordings on the Koch label, including a Grammy Award-winning disc of Bernstein's Arias and Barcarolles, and the Grammy-nominated recording of Ned Rorem's Evidence of Things Not Seen (also a NYFOS commission) on New World Records. Soon to come: a CD of Spanish song-Basque, Catalan, Castilian, and Sephardic-on the GPR label, with soprano Corinne Winters accompanied by Steven Blier. In November 2010, NYFOS debuted NYFOS Next, a mini-series for new songs, hosted by guest composers in intimate venues. Starting in 2013-2014, the series moved to Opera America's National Opera Center.Videos