Tag Archives: Cincinnati Arts Association

Reinventing Radio: An Evening with Ira Glass | Sat., Oct. 25 | Aronoff Center

Reinventing Radio – Ira Glass
brings his American Life to Cincinnati

Proudly presented by 91.7 WVXU

CAA_Ira GlassSaturday, October 25
Aronoff Center – Procter & Gamble Hall
Tickets on sale Friday, May 9 at 10:00 AM

Cincinnati, OH – Ira Glass, creator and host of the award-winning public radio program This American Life, will bring his unique brand of storytelling to Cincinnati’s Aronoff Center on Saturday, October 25 at 8:00 PM.

Tickets to Reinventing Radio: An Evening with Ira Glass go on sale Friday, May 9 at 10:00 AM at http://www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center Ticket Office.

Known as one of America’s most respected broadcasters and journalists, Glass will recreate the sound of the show right in front of the audience by live mixing favorite stories with pre-taped quotes and music that illustrate the power of the spoken word to both entertain and inspire.

Glass’s quirky, unassuming, and impossible-not-to-like persona translates as well onstage as it does on radio as he shares an insider’s look at how radio is made and the art of pushing the boundaries of journalism.

This American Life premiered in 1995 on Chicago’s public radio station WBEZ and is now heard on more than 500 public radio stations each week by over 1.7 million listeners. Most weeks, the podcast of the program is the most popular podcast in America.

Under Glass’s direction, This American Life has won the highest honors for broadcasting and journalistic excellence, including several Peabody and DuPont-Columbia awards. In 2013, Glass received the Medal for Spoken Language from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Proudly presented by 91.7 WVXU and produced by Show and Tell.

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Cincinnati Boychoir to Become Resident Company at the Aronoff Center

Cincinnati Boychoir to Become Resident Company
of the Aronoff Center

CAA_Boy Choir

Aronoff Center will be only the second permanent home of the Boychoir in 50 years
Cincinnati Boychoir celebrates 50th Anniversary Season in 2014-2015
More than 250 boys from around the region will participate in 2014-2015

Cincinnati, OH – The Cincinnati Boychoir and the Cincinnati Arts Association are pleased to announce that the Boychoir will be moving to the Aronoff Center in August 2014, in time for the start of its 2014-2015 Season.

Due to an extensive amount of growth over the past several years, the Boychoir has been seeking a new home for the more than 150 boys that regularly attend rehearsals, classes, and festivals. The Aronoff Center is home to several sizeable rehearsal and performance spaces, and provides compatible facilities and atmosphere for the Boychoir’s music education and performance programs.

Boychoir Artistic Director Christopher Eanes said of the move, “We are absolutely thrilled to be able to take advantage of the amazing facilities at the Aronoff Center and to partner with the Cincinnati Arts Association, which already brings so much artistic vitality to the downtown area. There could not be a better way for us to continue our mission of reaching boys from all walks of life through musical education and professional performances.”

Entering its fiftieth season in 2015, the Boychoir has served the community as a musical education and professional performance venue for boys since its founding in 1965 as a part of the Cincinnati Public Schools. Recently, the choir has reached back into the public schools, providing free after-school choral classes through its Cincinnati Sings! program. Each year, more than 250 of these students come together at the All-City Boychoir Festival in February for a day of singing, music games, and camaraderie. In addition to providing the Boychoir with rehearsal and performance space, CAA will assist the Boychoir with ticketing, marketing, and back-of-house operations. “We could not take this step forward without the incredible resources and the professional staff of the Cincinnati Arts Association and the Aronoff Center,” said Eanes.

“We are delighted to welcome the Cincinnati Boychoir to the Aronoff Center as our newest resident company,” said Steve Loftin, President and Executive Director of the Cincinnati Arts Association. “The remarkable work of the Boychoir aligns perfectly with our ongoing mission of providing a variety of arts experiences for Tri-state area youth. We hope that the location and quality of our facilities will help the Boychoir expand the opportunities for boys from all neighborhoods and socio-economic backgrounds to participate in the Boychoir’s exemplary programs.”

CINCINNATI BOYCHOIR
Each year, the Cincinnati Boychoir presents approximately forty performances in a wide variety of venues. The Boychoir has performed concerts and completed residencies both at home and abroad, and, in June 2013, the Boychoir undertook three three-day residencies with boychoirs in London, Leicester, and Canterbury. As an organization that values collaboration, the Boychoir has built artistic partnerships with Cincinnati’s Vocal Arts Ensemble, Cincinnati Opera, May Festival, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, the musicians of Christ Church Cathedral, Collegium Cincinnati, Taft Museum of Art, and Elementz, as well as many other choirs that together make Cincinnati ‘The City That Sings’. In 2013, the Cincinnati Boychoir was the subject of a thirty-minute special on WCET (Cincinnati’s public television station) entitled A Treasure of Youth and Song.

The Boychoir’s 50th Anniversary Season will include performances of Handel’s Messiah, Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms, and the world premiere of A Horizon Symphony by composer Dominick DiOrio. The choir will tour to Sydney, Australia in July, 2015.

CINCINNATI BOYCHOIR SPONSORS: ArtsWave, Charles H. Dater Foundation, The Greater Cincinnati Foundation, Ohio Arts Council

For more information, visit www.cincinnatiboychoir.org.

CINCINNATI ARTS ASSOCIATION
Founded in 1992, the Cincinnati Arts Association (CAA) is a not-for-profit organization that oversees the programming and management of the Tri-state’s finest performing arts venues – the Aronoff Center for the Arts and Music Hall – and is dedicated to supporting performing and visual arts. Each year, CAA presents a diverse schedule of events; serves more than of 600,000 people in its venues; features the work of talented local, regional, and national artists in the Weston Art Gallery (located in the Aronoff Center); and supports the work of more than one dozen resident companies. Since the inception of its acclaimed arts education programs in 1995, CAA has reached more than 1.3 million students.

CINCINNATI ARTS ASSOCIATON SEASON SPONSORS: Ameritas (Founding Season Sponsor), Fifth Third Bank (Lifetime Endowment Partner), Furniture Fair, Local 12 WKRC, The P&G Fund of The Greater Cincinnati Foundation

For more information, visit www.CincinnatiArts.org.

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The Piano Guys | Wed., September 3 | Aronoff Center

THE PIANO GUYS
SEPTEMBER 3 AT THE ARONOFF CENTER

Reserved Seat Tickets: $49.50, $35, $25 and a limited number of $125 (VIP)
Tickets go on sale Friday, April 4 at 10am and will be available at www.livenation.com,
CincinnatiArts.org, charge by phone (513) 621-ARTS [2787], Aronoff Center Ticket Office

CAA_The Piano GuysHailing from Utah, The Piano Guys became an Internet sensation by way of their immensely successful series of strikingly original self-made music videos. They’ve made over 35 since joining forces in early 2011, including their hit video, an innovative 10-handed version of One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful.” But it’s the Guys’ highly original blend of classical music with pop that has really been the cause of an Internet phenomenon that has brought them to their major label debut album, The Piano Guys, released on Sony Masterworks on October 2nd, 2012.

In the last few months, The Piano Guys have performed everywhere from “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,” to “The Today Show” and “Katie.” Their most recent video, “Mission Impossible,” featuring YouTube violin sensation Lindsey Stirling, continues to build momentum with over 1.5M views in a month. It finds the band and Stirling in a spy thriller as covert operatives while playing their unique take on this famous musical theme.

The album features more of the imaginative mash-up arrangements that The Piano Guys are already famous for, including sources ranging from Michael Jackson to Mozart, The Bourne Identity to David Guetta. It also includes an original song and innovative takes on hits by One Direction, Adele, and Christina Perri.

But just who are The Piano Guys? Actually, there’s only one piano player, Jon Schmidt, and one other instrumentalist, Steven Sharp Nelson, on cello. Yet the other two – Paul Anderson and Al van der Beek – are equally significant members of the group. The Piano Guys’ name comes from Anderson’s piano store in St. George, Utah, which was called The Piano Guys. Looking for an alternative to low-yield conventional advertising, Anderson devised a Facebook promotional page and YouTube channel featuring the most famous pianist he could find – local pianist, Jon Schmidt. A self-described “New Age Classical” player, Schmidt was indeed well-established locally, thanks to eight albums and seven piano books of his song transcriptions. He also performed concerts throughout Utah, one of which featured a young guest artist, Steven Sharp Nelson, who adventurously combined traditional cello playing with percussion effects. “I was 15 when I met Jon and started playing with him,” Nelson recalls. “I had to get a ride to shows! But we’ve had a great brotherhood that’s now lasted 20 years.”

When Nelson moved from Salt Lake City to the suburb of Sandy, providence, if not serendipity, intervened. Al van der Beek, who came from a musical family and played several instruments and sang, lived down the street from Nelson’s new place, and helped him move. “I suggested we ‘collaborate’ sometime and he hesitated, because I think he didn’t want to disappoint me if I was horrible!” says van der Beek, laughing. “But,” says Nelson, “I checked out his home studio and started playing some of my unfinished songs, and he told me what the titles should be and their meaning – and finished them on the spot! The guy is music incarnate!”

In The Piano Guys, then, van der Beek is charged with the studio operations, as well as co-writing and some vocal texturing, music arranging, “and a lot of percussion work,” adds Nelson.

Anderson was so taken by the music of Schmidt and Nelson that he closed his store at the end of 2011 in order to devote himself to the group, which only became a full-time operation in February 2012. “I had to let the piano store go!” he says, laughing. “Some of the pianos are still in storage and have been used in the videos.”

The spectacular Piano Guys videos, which have so far netted over 293 million YouTube views (and 500,000 new views a day), are essentially divined by Stewart and Anderson. “Jon had built up a fan base for 20 years, and we used that as a springboard for getting exposure,” Anderson notes, “but it’s all about the merits of the videos, and share-ability. People see them and then share them with their friends on Facebook, and before you know it, they can take off.”

And sure enough, The Piano Guys have over 696,000 Facebook fans who have shared videos like “Michael Meets Mozart,” which features over 100 tracks of cello textures, including a deep bass drum sound created by tapping on the cello body; a shaker sound made by Nelson rubbing rosin on his bow; and a record-scratch noise caused by his scraping a quarter on the strings. “Michael Meets Mozart” is on The Piano Guys debut CD, as is “Cello Wars,” the ambitious video which resulted from a six-month production required to realize its Star Wars-inspired light saber/cello bow concept, since rewarded by over 14 million YouTube views.

“We try to put a ‘wow factor’ in every video,” says Anderson, promising that future videos for The Piano Guys tracks will likewise factor in plenty of wow. This certainly is true for “Peponi (Paradise),” the Guys’ African spin on Coldplay’s “Paradise,” for which the group, hours after coming up with the concept, helicoptered a grand piano onto the edge of a 1,000-foot cliff, where stellar African guest vocalist Alex Boyé sang the translated words. Same with “Code Name Vivaldi,” which blends The Bourne Identity soundtrack riff with a similarly intense Vivaldi cello concerto in a breathless video culminating with Schmidt and Nelson, who was originally swayed into classical music by the Vivaldi piece, performing on a flatcar on a high-speed train.

The album’s lead track “Titanium/Pavane” is a mash-up of French classical composer Gabriel Fauré’s “Pavane” with David Guetta’s “Titanium,’ – the Guys having previously lensed a lovely take on Guetta’s “Without You.” A clip will certainly be created for “Arwen’s Vigil,” a Piano Guys original. “Beethoven’s 5 Secrets” merits special mention. The piece itself employs five separate melodies from the four movements of Beethoven’s 5th Symphony, in conjunction with OneRepublic’s “Secrets.”

“We love showcasing the beauty of the earth—where people don’t expect to find classical instruments,” says Anderson, and sure enough, the Beethoven video combines stunning outdoor performance footage from the mountains surrounding St. George, Utah, with a concert featuring the American Heritage Lyceum Philharmonic Youth Orchestra, thereby manifesting The Piano Guys’ dual goal of bringing people to classical music and inspiring young musicians.

“Lots of parents are using our music to show their kids how fun classical music can be and motivate them to learn instruments,” says Schmidt. The Piano Guys’ cover song mash-ups, adds Nelson, have become “a great way to introduce ourselves and make an instant connection with our audience as a classic spin on new stuff – and a new spin on classic stuff.”

With van der Beek’s studio prowess together with the inventive cinematography of Anderson, Schmidt and Nelson have forged a fresh approach to the growing classical crossover fusion of classical and pop music that in their case has connected quietly but emotionally with a massive audience.

“We’re all spiritual guys, and the only way to properly explain it is not to take credit!” says Nelson. “It really seems meant to be.”

The Piano Guys
Official Website: www.thepianoguys.com
Official Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/PianoGuys
Official Twitter: www.twitter.com/PianoGuys (@pianoguys)
Official YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/ThePianoGuys

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Student Art Show | May 3-11 | Aronoff Center

Cincinnati Arts Association
presents
STUDENT ART SHOW
Local Students Display “My Neighborhood” Artwork
May 3 – 11, 2014 • Aronoff Center

CAAHow do the children of Greater Cincinnati see and interpret the world around them? The Cincinnati Arts Association (CAA) explores this question through its annual Student Art Show, which exhibits artwork by local students. This year’s theme is “My Neighborhood.” The exhibition will be on display in the Aronoff Center’s Fifth Third Bank Theater (7th & Main Streets in downtown Cincinnati) from Saturday, May 3 – Sunday, May 11, 2014. Exhibition hours are Friday, 4:00- 8:00 PM, Saturday, 12:00 PM-5:00 PM, and Sunday 11:00 AM-4:00 PM. The Student Art Show is free and open to the public.

Representing students from grades K – 8, the diverse collection of two-dimensional artwork will include mediums from pencil drawings to printmaking to textiles. Now in its 12th year, the Student Art Show is organized and presented annually by CAA’s Department of Education and Community Relations, with the assistance of the Weston Art Gallery.

“CAA is excited to continue to present the Student Art Show annually. Every year students create a unique interpretation of the theme,” says Kathleen Riemenschneider, CAA’s Assistant Director of Education & Community Relations. “The program has been a wonderful opportunity for students to creatively express and share their views with their friends, family, and the public.”

The 2014 Student Art Show has 117 entries. Student artwork from the following schools will be on display: A D Owens (Newport, KY), Central Montessori Academy (Mt. Healthy, OH), Erpenbeck Elementary (Florence, KY), Mariemont Elementary (Mariemont, OH), Mary, Queen of Heaven (Erlanger, KY), Mercy Montessori Center (Walnut Hills, OH), Newport Primary (Newport, KY), Oakdale Elementary (Bridgetown, OH), Our Lady of the Visitation School (Delhi, OH), Springer School and Center (Hyde Park, OH), St. Ignatius School (Montfort Heights, OH), St. Joseph School—Crescent Springs (Crescent Springs, KY), Summit Country Day School (Hyde Park, OH), Terrace Park Elementary (Terrace Park, OH), and Winton Woods Middle School (Greenhills, OH).

The student artwork includes such titles as “My Neighborhood—World Peace Bell,” “Sunny Day in the City,” “Cat in the Moonlight (Silhouette),” “Starbucks on Wooster,” “Normal Day in the Yard,” “Music in My Town,” “Colorful Houses,” “The Tree House,” “Grandma April’s House,” “House on the Hill,” “Show Day,” “Welcome Spring,” “Snowy Night,” “Main Strasse Clock Tower,” “Backyard Chipmunk,” “Biking Around My Town,” and “Who Let the Dogs Out?”

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Comedian Brian Regan | Thur., December 11 | Aronoff Center‏

COMEDIAN BRIAN REGAN
ANNOUNCES THE 48-CITY SECOND LEG
OF HIS 2014 NORTH AMERICAN THEATER TOUR 

December 11, 2014 – Aronoff Center 

Tickets Go On Sale Friday, April 25 at 10:00 AM

CAA_Brian ReganCINCINNATI, OH – Comedian Brian Regan announces the 49-city second leg of his 2014 North American theater tour, which plays the Aronoff Center’s Procter & Gamble Hall on Thursday, December 11, 2014 at 7:30 PM. Tickets go on sale this Friday, April 25 at 10:00 AM. The first leg of Brian’s 2014 theater tour visited 31 cities from January through May. A list of new tour dates is below. More information and links to purchase tickets are available at www.BrianRegan.com.

Tickets are $48 & $43 and go on sale Friday, April 25 at 10:00 AM at www.CincinnatiArts.org, (513) 621-ARTS [2787], and the Aronoff Center Ticket Office.

All tickets subject to applicable service charges and fees. Dates and times subject to change without notice.

One of the most respected comedians in the country, Brian Regan is a legendary performer selling out large venues from coast to coast, and earning praise from the press, the public, and fellow comedians:

“He is one of my favorite, favorite stand-up comedians.” – Jerry Seinfeld

“Honestly, Brian Regan’s the best stand-up working today. Period.” – Patton Oswalt

“You’re the guy people look up to…Brian Regan’s the funniest guy…there’s Brian Regan and then there’s other people.” – Marc Maron

“I’ll take all of that guy you got…Very funny man.” – David Letterman

With his first appearance on The Late Show with David Letterman in 1995, Regan solidified his place on the show and recently made his 26th appearance, the most of any comedian on the CBS show.

Regan’s non-stop theater tour visits close to 100 cities each year since 2005, and continues through 2014. Last August, Regan sold out the legendary, 8600-seat Red Rocks Amphitheater outside of Denver, and in February 2014, Regan performed two sold-out shows at the 12,500-seat EnergySolutions Arena in Salt Lake City.

Occasionally venturing off the stand-up stage, Regan recently appeared in Seinfeld’s Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. He will also be seen in the upcoming Chris Rock movie Finally Famous, and he voiced the character of Weib Lunk for the 40th episode of The Looney Tunes Show titled, Spread Those Wings and Fly. Recently, Regan was nominated for a 2014 American Comedy Award for Best Concert Comic.

About Live Nation Entertainment
Live Nation Entertainment (NYSE: LYV) is the world’s leading live entertainment company comprised of four market leaders: Ticketmaster, Live Nation Concerts, Artist Nation Management and Live Nation Media/Sponsorship. For additional information, visit www.livenationentertainment.com.

 

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