Thursday, November 5, 2009

An American homecoming

By Meredith Deliso

On May 8, 1964, Jay and the Americans played the auditorium of Our Lady of Grace Church in Gravesend to a packed crowd of local teenagers.

On November 14, they return to the Gravesend church for a homecoming 45 years in the making.

“I remember it well,” says band founder Sandy Yaguda (aka Deanne), of that night. “When we played a place with a big crowd in Brooklyn, it was kind of gratifying to see all the people turn out.”

It was especially gratifying being that the band has its roots in Brooklyn. Formed in 1960, the band originally consisted of Yaguda, Howie Kirschenbaum (aka Kane), who grew up with Yaguda in Flatbush (“Our parents pushed our baby carriages down the street together,” says Yaguda), Kenny Vance and John Traynor (the eponymous Jay, though by the time they played the Gravesend gig was replaced by David Blatt).

Starting off playing in Kirschenbaum’s Brooklyn basement, everything seemed to click for the band. Soon they had a record deal, their music was blaring on AM radio and they were meeting their idols, touring with Roy Orbison, The Beatles and The Rolling Stones. Among the pioneers of rock and roll, they went on to have 12 top 10 records from 1962 to 1971, including “She Cried,” “Only in America,” “This Magic Moment,” and “Come a Little Bit Closer.”

After disbanding in 1974, the band has been at it again in recent years, this time with a new, third “Jay” – Jay Reincke – rerecording their hits and reuniting with fans all across the country as they revisit cities they played while in their 20s.

“When we got back and started doing it again, we didn’t know what the response was going to be. Now we’re in awe of it,” says Yaguda. “We knew we were fortunate to have hit records, but we never realized the impact we had on people’s lives.”

While they’ve played nearby in Long Island and Staten Island, the Americans haven’t made it back to Brooklyn since their breakup, and the November show marks their first Brooklyn appearance in over 30 years. You can thank one Brooklynite, who was there from the start, for making it happen.

When he was 17, Chick Palotta, a life-long member of OLOG and Gravesend resident, was working as the chief booking agent for WMCA Radio “Good Guy” Jack Spector, and booked the Americans at the church for their 1964 show. Fast forward to this year, Palotta was looking to arrange a fundraiser for his church. When he heard that the Americans were playing at Monsignor Farrell High School in Staten Island, he thought he’d see about them coming back to OLOG.

“I thought having them back after 45 years would be a novel idea as a fundraiser,” says Palotta, who while working for the radio station made OLOG quite the happening place, with 15 “Good Guy” record hops from 1964-1969. When the Americans return to OLOG, they’ll play their classic hits, as well as new material, since, nearly 50 years into the game, the band’s still making new music.

“It’s really like coming home,” says Yaguda, who moved out to Long Island at the age of 13 and now lives in Long Beach. “Brooklyn is home, it will always be home, and I always cherish those years in Brooklyn. It taught us how to be real people.”

The Brooklyn show will be a course through the band’s history, as they’ll pull from songs related to their career, including those of artists they hung out with, such as Neil Diamond and Roy Oribson, and songs written by other artists for them.

“The show is not just singing, it tells a story about what it was like to be Jay and the Americans from the beginning to the end,” says Yaguda. “It’s a long journey.”

Jay and the Americans play a benefit at Our Lady of Grace (Avenue W and East 2nd Street) November 14 at 7:30 p.m. (doors at 6:45). Tickets are $55 for general admission, or $75 for table seating (call for availability). For more information, call 718-627-2020.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Music festival strikes again

This past summer, Nation Beat challenged notions of “world music” with its festival, “Is America Part of the World?” at the Bklyn Yard.

On November 13, the festival strikes again, with part 2 coming to the Bell House in Gowanus.

Representing the two coasts, the night will feature Nation Beat, based out of Brooklyn, and San Francisco’s Rupa and the April Fishes.“Is America part of the World?” aims to challenge the way we think about “American” and “World” music with artists that are home-bred and world-traveled, providing a platform for these artists and their fans to come together and celebrate a new era of music and culture that celebrates the fruits of cultural exchange.

With Nation Beat, Northeastern Brazil meets the American South, and Brazilian Carnival meets New Orleans Mardi Gras as the band fuses maracatu rhythms and forro with NOLA funk and blues. Musical agitators Rupa and the April Fishes are specialists in crossing borders and building bridges, and on “Este Mundo” they effortlessly blur the boundaries of genre and geography to create a sound with international spices, mixing in elements of Gypsy swing, Colombian cumbia, French chanson and Indian ragas.

It happens November 13 at the Bell House (149 7th St.) starting at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15. For more information, call 718-643-6510.

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009

You - yes you! - could be 'Miss G Train'

The City Reliquary is looking for the
next
first "Miss G Train."

The pageant coincides fittingly with the museum's current exhibition of the old “Miss Subways” contests.

Why the G train? Well, the museum is located near the Metropolitan Avenue stop on the line. And, at only four cars and the only line to not go into Manhattan, the train is much charmed and maligned, and the City Reliquary embraces the unsung histories and quirky collections of New York.

Heeding the call to compete? The pageant will be open to New Yorkers of all ages and genders (calling all Mr. G Trains too, then).

To vie for your chance to rep the G, submit a photograph of yourself, along with a 200-word essay about the G train and why you wish to be its ambassador, to missgtrain@cityreliquary.org by Nov. 16.

Indeed open to all, on Nov. 19, all participants will have the chance to participate in the pageant, to be held at the City Reliquary (370 Metropolitan Ave.), from 8 to 10 p.m., complete with sashes and celebrity judges.

Brooklynites, start working on those essays now. We wouldn't want someone from Manhattan to win, would we?

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This week in 24/Seven

Each week we'll preview what you can expect in our 24/Seven print edition, out Thursday for you southern Brooklynites and Friday for the downtown neighborhoods.



Highlights include:



Homecoming: Jay and the Americans come home November 14, playing Our Lady of Grace in Gravesend, where some Brooklynites may remember seeing them more than 45 years ago.



Theater: You may need to sit down for this show. The Brooklyn-based theater company The Civilians present "You Better Sit Down: Tales From My Parents' Divorce," November 12-14 at Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO.



Music: Record label Slumberland celebreates 20 years of making music with a anniversary show November 14 at The Bell House in Gowanus, with some of its Brooklyn bands like the Pains of Being Pure at Heart on board for the show. In Williamsburg, Phonograph take it easy at Spike Hill, playing music off their new album "OKNO" November 12.



Comedy: SNL writer Hannibal Buress will bring the laughs to Knitting Factory each week, as he kicks off a weekly Sunday residency November 15.



Columns: Michele gets some cool kicks at Central Sports on Kings Highway for Pumps & Pleats, while the Kitchen Klutz breaks out the panini maker for her original Ham-key panini.



Photography: Documentary photographer Damian Wampler follows Darfur refugee and Brooklyn cabbie Omer Omar in a compelling new photo series included in a School of Visual Arts exhibition called “Surface Tension,” on view now through November 14.



For these stories and more, pick up a copy in your nabe or check back here later this week!

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Monday, November 2, 2009

The Burg is back

Williamsburg's favorite (only?) television show is back.

Tubefilter fills us in on the return of Brooklyn hipster comedy The Burg.

On hiatus since 2007, the web series, from Brooklyn-based Dinosaur Diorama, returns with a full-length episode, picking up where the last episode left off.

Titled "Change," the episode finds two characters, Jed and Zander, realizing they live in "the coolest neighborhood of the coolest borough in the coolest city in the world,” attempting to set some new hipster trends and reaching back to childhood (to pogo sticks and skorts, which were cool at one point). Needing change she can believe in, another regular, Spring, looks to Obama for some direction to keep friend Courtney from selling out for a beach house.

Very much of the local scene, Tubefilter notes a number of Williamsburg-based bands tapped for the new episode, including Future in Plastics, Bishop Allen and Project Jenny, Project Jan.

Watch the current episode here, or head to theburg.tv if you need to catch up with the gang again before diving in.

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Have you got what it takes to Connect Four?

The Bell House gets in on the board game fun with "The World's Biggest Connect Four Championship."

The first round kicks off tomorrow night in the front lounge of the Gowanus bar, for four (of course) consecutive weeks of play. The finalists will compete November 24 on a gigantic, custom-made Coneect Four board to find out who the champion is.

The winner gets a cash prize plus bar tabs, with gift certificates, board games, and all kinds of fun for the runners-up.

Want to give it a shot? Email to register. It costs $3 to play, and is free to watch. Check in is at 6 p.m., with play beginning at 7 p.m. This should be interesting.

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Get Bored to Death tonight

Like "Bored to Death," the HBO comedy set in and around Brooklyn that has Jason Schwartzman trapesing around as the Philip Marlowe of the borough?


Tonight, the Paley Center hosts creator and executive producer Jonathan Ames and actors Ted Danson and Jason Schwartzman for a discussion, titled, "Raymond Chandler Meets Craigslist: HBO's Bored to Death," moderated by comedian John Hodgeman.

An unscreened episode will air at the event, and the show's stars will discuss how hardboiled fantasies can help us deal with reality.

Tickets are $15 for members, $20 for everyone else. At 6:30 p.m. The Paley Center is located at 25 W. 52nd Street in Manhattan.

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