Nina Simone Meets Yo Yo Ma
Cellist Extraordinaire Ben Sollee Headlines
NY Loves Mountains Festival
Two Concerts: May 29th and May 31st
On Friday, May 29th, 7pm, nationally acclaimed cellist Ben Sollee will make a special appearance at the Philip Coltoff Center in the Village, as part of the "Light Comes" theatrical production. Sollee will host both a pre-show reception, and then accompany the theatre troupe in the first original play based on mountaintop removal.
A Kentucky native, Sollee has been a frequent participant in anti-mountaintop removal benefits and concerts.
On Sunday, May 31st, 7:30 pm, Sollee will headline the special "To Save the Land and People" Concert at the Bell House in Brooklyn, 149 7th St. Tickets are $17 in advance and $20 at the door. Other bands include The Demolition String Bands and authors Silas House and Jeff Biggers.
From Ben's official website:
"It was the cat-poles around the lake at his grandfather’s farm that inspired Ben Sollee’s debut album Learning To Bend. The frailty of those awkward looking plants standing stoutly against winds that challenged even the strongest of nearby trees is an affecting metaphor for human struggle and perseverance. This idea is central to Learning To Bend.
Key tracks on Learning To Bend include two reactions to the current political landscape, “A Few Honest Words,” and an adaptation of Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come,” in which Ben has written updated, politically relevant verses. Other highlights of the album are the playful, soul track, “How To See the Sun Rise” and the vulnerable yet insistent “It’s Not Impossible,” where Ben laments the unfortunate status quo that “boys don’t cry.”
Ben has found considerable success in recent years through his ability to bend. In 2007, he was named one of NPR’s “Top Ten Unknown Artists of the Year.” His distinctive cello technique and soulful voice have been marinating for years in his work with avant-garde bluesman Otis Taylor, The Sparrow Quartet, (featuring banjo-master BĂ©la Fleck), and on the internationally known Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour.
Ben’s unique performance experience and creative vision trump his 24 years and traditional classical training; he is poised to emerge as a solo artist, bridging genres and demographics with earnest and dynamic songwriting. However, the single most salient quality of Learning to Bend, is Ben’s contagiously optimistic worldview. Ben is not just expressing his personal quest for flexibility, he is asking the entire country to learn to bend, learn how to cry, learn how to see the sun rise… He is at the forefront of a movement that is happening right now: a zeitgeist in which a nation can face reality and empower itself to evolve and feel deeply and stand up for the power of hope."
Here's a clip of one of Ben's great renditions of "A Change is Gonna Come":
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