Music@Mill NUEVO TANGO Great Music | Socially Distanced | Factory Space
Other
610 Elm Street,McKinney TX 75069
23 April, 2021
Description
MUSIC@MILL FESTIVAL April 23-24, 2021 "Music that gives you a heartbeat.." Safely socially distanced in a cool factory space. “NUEVO TANGO” 💃 April 23, 2021. 7:00pm. Warehouse Space, The Cotton Mill. The festival opens April 23, 2021 at 7:00 pm with the sensual sway of Piazzolla's NUEVO TANGO music in this journey to Argentina by violinist Chee-Yun Kim, pianist Amy Yang and cellist Joseph Kuipers in the Grand Hallway of the Cotton Mill. Astor Piazzolla: Le Grande Tango (cello & piano) Carlos Gardel: Por Una Cabeza for Trio ( violin/ cello/ piano) Astor Piazzolla: Obivion ( violin/ piano) Astor Piazzolla: The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires for Piano Trio Chee-Yun Kim, violin Joseph Kuipers, cello Amy Yang, piano Very limited seating. Music@Mill April 23-24, 2021 Four Concerts | Four Genres great music | food trucks | cocktails 🥂🥃 wine 🍷 | socially distanced Artistic Director Joseph Kuipers brings the expressive, authentic energy of chamber music, cello choir singer songwriter, Tango, and Americana musicians in socially distanced surround seating to the old factory space of the McKinney Cotton Mill April 23, 2021 7:00pm | TANGO NUEVO 💃 APRIL 23, 2021 8:45pm |Americana/ Western Swing/ Singer-songwriter/ 🎙️ April 24, 2021 3:00pm |TEXAS CELLOS #CELLOCHOIR 🎵 April 24, 2021 4:30pm | Whiskey Shakers Mixology class 🥃 April 24, 2021 6:00pm | MIRO STRING QUARTET 🎵 Learn mixology in a cocktail class with three times 'Dallas's best bartender' Kyle Hilla. April 23, 2021, 7:00 pm & April 24, 2021 4:30 pm The Whiskey Shakers is a 90-minute masterclass in the art of making whiskey cocktails where you’ll try your hand at three different cocktails - shaken and stirred. We’ll provide you with the knowledge and professional tools to make your own cocktails - a Whiskey Sour, Old Fashioned and High Ball to be precise - in a really cool private Cotton Mill Bar. A little history is thrown in for storytelling measure, and best of all, you get to enjoy your very own whiskey cocktail creations before a heading over to enjoy a concert. Up to 16 participants (group sizes limited to allow for social distancing) Music@Mill April 23-24, 2021 Socially distanced music festival in a warehouse space. FESTIVAL CONCEPT "HINGES' In this life beauty is passing. The flower in spring, the moment in a musical phrase, the person who truly sees you. They are beautiful because they will soon be gone yet awake a memory of what I truly desired all along. The fragile nature of these beautiful moments I must say, is connected to us knowing consciously or subconsciously that they are fleeting, allowing us to briefly connect and quench the unknown longings within us, if only for a moment. These beautiful moments come often at times of change, times of a new direction, of ends and beginnings: in short, turning points. Throughout my life I have always felt drawn toward finding and understanding these junctures, whether they be in history, a musical tradition, or my own life. By realizing and comprehending where the hinge of a matter is we come to a much more complete understanding of what lies ahead of us. Looking back awakens a nostalgia for what was, and yet we have the hopeful expectation of what may come. In programing Music@Mill I went with the idea of the hinge, because this last year has been one of the most turbulent shifts in human history. Through transitions between sound worlds from the heavenly intimacy of Schubert’s Cello Quintet, to Piazzolla’s Nuevo Tango to the swanky harmonies of Beatles ‘No. 1 Classics’ and the eternal spaciousness of Arvo Pärt by the Texas Cellos @texascellos to the Americana expression of singer-songwriters, we pass through different stories in sound, and experience the ‘hinges’ between chapters in close proximity. Like a rock album, the festival programming is hung together under an arch. If we as a society, and as performing artists survive, and I hope we will survive! —We will enter a new era. A new era in culture and art, where Music@Mill played a small role in sustaining live culture. Remember— the Baroque era followed the bubonic plague! Joseph Kuipers. Artistic Director
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