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7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
New Year STORY SWAPECHOES OF THE PAST: STORIES TO SHAPE THE NEW YEAR!Join Patchwork Storytelling Guild on January 1 at 7 PM (EST) via Zoom for an evening of storytelling and connection to welcome the new year with open hearts and shared tales. Whether you have a story to tell or simply wish to listen, all are welcome to this cozy and inspiring gathering. Let’s celebrate the new year together!
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8:00 PM - 11:45 PM
Queer noise/hip hop/avant jawn featuring: Chris Conde, Sour Spirit, Ishtar Sr., Glitch Proverbs, Icon Ebony Fierce. Admission is $15; no one turned away for lack of funds
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7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
@henbane.philly @songpeople_ and @_red_birds_
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8:00 PM - 10:00 PM
Fire Museum Presents: Yeison Landero If you’re talking about cumbia royalty, there is no higher court than that of Andrés Landero — long considered the king of cumbia across the world for his contributions to the tropical genre. Yeison, his grandson, caught his Andrés’ attention at the age of 7, when he displayed not just a raw talent for interpreting melodies, but also a pure love for the music — un corazón cumbiambero. Yeison grew up surrounded by music. In his early years, his home was visited by musicians of the highest stature: Alfredo Gutiérrez, Lizandro Meza, Calixto Ochoa, Enríquez Díaz, Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto… innumerable distinguished folk figures performed around his kitchen table. The first band he performed in was with Andrés Landero himself — he and his sister were introduced as “los nietos de Andrés Landero”, performing cumbia at festivals, concerts, and fairs across Colombia. Yeison has dedicated his life to the genre and the instrument of his family legacy, in the spirit of Andrés, and he is rightly called the heir to cumbia. He lights up every stage he plays on. Pay-what-you-wish; suggested donation $15-25. Advance registration is recommended. Register HERE |
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8:00 PM - 9:30 PM
Bowerbird welcomes back Laraaji, a key figure in the evolution of ambient music whose distinctive sound has been captivating listeners for decades. Philadelphia-born and New Jersey-raised, Laraaji has pursued spiritual transcendence through music since the mid-1970s. After years of developing an aesthetic shaped by Eastern philosophies and transcendental research in his longtime Harlem home, Laraaji’s breakthrough came when Brian Eno discovered him busking in Washington Square Park in 1979, improvising celestial meditations on his electric zither. This encounter led to a collaboration on Eno’s influential Ambient series, resulting in the 1980 album Day of Radiance. Since then, Laraaji has become a defining figure in new age and ambient music, known for his commitment to hand-crafted sounds over synthesizers and his embrace of a human presence in his performances. Whether playing monochord instruments, singing, or using electronics-kissed percussion, his music remains rooted in a cosmic African-American tradition. His soundscapes are as hypnotically beautiful as they are rich with moments of tension and dissonance, bringing depth to his trance-inducing explorations. For over four decades, Laraaji’s work has continued to evolve, inviting listeners into deep states of reflection while remaining grounded in a deeply personal musical journey. Admission is FREE/pay-what-you-wish |
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