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The AAA Four Diamond Award-winning Harrah's New Orleans hotel is located in the heart of the world's most exhilarating city. This 26-story marvel, with 450 oversized rooms and suites, provides an unparalleled escape. Roulette Basics Roulette is an intriguing game that is played throughout the world. The large payoffs that are possible for small wagers always stimulate the interest of the expert as well as the novice player. Different players use different colored chips so the bets are not confused.
This concert celebrates the first album release from Jessica Pavone’s newest incarnation for string ensemble, which features two violins and two violas. Brick and Mortar, to be released on Birdwatcher Records on October 4th, 2019, is her first body of string ensemble music since pausing to focus on writing for solo viola for the last six years. Her earlier work for string quartet, which substituted a second violin for double bass was documented on her 2009 and 2012 releases from the Tzadik label; Songs of Synastry and Solitude and Hope Dawson is Missing, highlighted melody, narrative, and themes of undeniable truths. Upon completion, Pavone focused primarily on creating a new and unique voice on her instrument with her solo music resulting in three releases for solo viola; Knuckle Under, Silent Spills and In the Action. Pavone returned to composing for string ensembles in the spring of 2017 by forming the J.Pavone String Ensemble as an extension of the sonic discoveries of her solo music.
As both an instrumentalist and composer, Pavone has regularly and thematically explored tactile experience in her compositions and performances. This is most notable in her solo viola music, where she performs indeterminate pieces that stem from years of concentrated long tone practice, her interest in repetition, song form, sympathetic vibration, and the physicality of playing her somewhat larger-than-comfortable instrument. Founded in 2017, The Jessica Pavone String Ensemble combines these modalities as an ensemble she both composes for and performs in as a violist. The group presents original compositions which expand on the themes of her solo work while also integrating a deeper understanding of the effects sound has on the listener. While these discoveries have been primarily instinctual, she plans to further study these principles more formally by gaining a better understanding of Cymatics.
The performance is accompanied by the premiere for Hurtle and Hurtle, a video work directed by artist Neil Cloaca Young. Shot entirely along the Connecticut River and its related rapids, dams, canals, and spillways in Western Massachusetts, the piece meditates on the way the river’s water as it moves at varying speeds on its journey to the ocean, passing all manner of obstacles, both geological and human-made.
Jessica Pavone String Ensemble
Jessica Pavone (composer/viola)
Abby Swidler (viola)
Erica Dicker (violin)
Angela Morris (violin)
And special guests:
Meaghan Burke (cello)
Nicholas Jozwiak (cello)
Shayna Dulberger (double bass)
Lisa Hoppe (double bass)
Neil Cloaca Young (video artist)
As both an instrumentalist and composer, Pavone has regularly and thematically explored tactile experience in her compositions and performances. This is most notable in her solo viola music, where she performs indeterminate pieces that stem from years of concentrated long tone practice, my interest in repetition, song form, sympathetic vibration, and the physicality of playing my somewhat larger-than-comfortable instrument. Founded in 2017, The Jessica Pavone String Ensemble combines these two modalities as an ensemble she both compose for, and performs in as a violist. The group presents original compositions which expand on the themes of her solo work while also integrating a deeper understanding of the effects sound has on the listener. While these discoveries have been primarily instinctual, she plans to further study these principles more formally by gaining a better understanding of Cymatics.
Jessica Pavone is a multi-string instrumentalist and composer residing in Queens, NY. While her earliest training was primarily in classical music, after graduating from conservatory, she began exploring other avenues for creative musical expression. Pavone has received grants and commissions from The American Music Center, New Music USA, Music at the Anthology (MATA), The Jerome Foundation, The Tri-Centric Foundation, Experiments in Opera, and was a composer in residence at Mise-En_Place in 2018. She has premiered new work in venues in New York City such as Roulette Intermedium, Issue Project Room, Abrons Art Center, and The Kitchen. As an instrumentalist, she has personally worked with and interpreted new music by Aaron Siegel, Elliott Sharp, Glenn Branca, Henry Threadgill, Matana Roberts, Matthew Welch, Tristan Perich, Anthony Braxton, and William Parker. As a composer, she has released over a dozen albums produced by Tzadik, Taiga Records, Thirsty Ear, Relative Pitch, and Skirl Records. In 2011, Pavone was featured in NPR’s “The Mix: 100 Composers Under 40″ and since, The Wire magazine has praised her “ability to transform a naked tonal gesture into something special,” and The New York Times described her music as “distinct and beguiling…its core is steely, and its execution clear.”
Neil ‘Cloaca’ Young is an artist who makes sounds, images, and events. An active improviser and collagist, Young’s output takes many forms as experimental cinema, audio recordings, compositions and performances, utilizing a variety of tools and media such as percussion, electroacoustic synthesis, coding, magnetic tape, and celluloid film. Solo and in collaborations, Young has exhibited and performed at High Zero, ICA Boston, EMPAC, Block Museum of Art, IFFR, Ann Arbor Film Festival, SXSW, CPH:DOX, Anthology, Kunstencentrum Belgie and Instants Chavirés. He co-directed the feature-length portrait film MILFORD GRAVES FULL MANTIS, which has screened all over North America and Europe to critical acclaim, winning the Best International Documentary Award at In-Edit Barcelona and Best Documentary Feature at Oak Cliff as well as the Independent Vision Jury Prize at the Sarasota Film Festival. He has been awarded the Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship for his work in filmmaking and has participated in residencies at Signal Culture in upstate NY and Deplayer in The Netherlands. He lives and works in Western Massachusetts, North America.
A proponent of new music, Erica Dicker is committed to creative collaboration with living composers and innovation in both the classical concert hall and nontraditional contexts. Erica is a founding member of the contemporary chamber music collective Till By Turning, an ensemble devoted to reinforcing the modern canon and linking educational programs to their repertoire. As part of the New York-based horn trio, Kylwyria, Erica and her colleagues, Julia Den Boer(piano) and John Gattis (horn), work to generate interest in and develop adventurous chamber music repertoire for their unique instrumentation through dynamic programming and commissioning. Erica is also violinist in Katherine Young’s Pretty Monsters, as well as Vaster Than Empires, an electro-acoustic collaboration with composer and sound artist Paul Schuette and percussionist Allen Otte. She has premiered works by many composers including solo works written for her by Olivia Block, Turkar Gasimzada, Ryan Ingebritsen and Katherine Young. Erica also writes and performs her own music, exploring the idiomatic modalities and textures of her instrument. Taking Auspices, her debut solo album, is released by Tubapede Records as a digital download and limited edition vinyl LP.
Abby Swidler is a performer, composer, and educator. A violinist and vocalist, Abby is a passionate collaborator, frequently performing with ruby, a song collaboration with Kim Mayo; the NYC chamber orchestra, Shattered Glass; Italian film-score band, Tredici Bacci; and The Jessica Pavone String Ensemble, among other projects across genre lines. As a composer and performer, Abby has collaborated with dance, film, theater, and performing ensembles; working with artists like Carla Kihlstedt, Mirah, Kishi Bashi, Jherek Bischoff, Anthony Coleman, Bent Knee, The California Guitar Trio, Shizuka Viola Duo, Dance Visions INC., and Giselle Ty. She has played on over 30 studio albums. Abby received a B.M. in Violin Performance from Eastman School of Music and an M.M. in Contemporary Improvisation from The New England Conservatory. Originally from Missoula, MT, they currently live in Brooklyn, NY.
If Brooklyn’s music circles draw a Venn diagram, Angela Morris thrives in the loop between avant-jazz and pop. Originally from Toronto, the NYC-based composer, saxophonist, and multi-instrumentalist has performed throughout North America and Europe from arenas to DIY basement shows and everything between. The Webber/Morris Big Band, her 18-piece jazz big band, performs original compositions by Morris and co-leader Anna Webber. The New York Times praised their “ambitious original compositions” and “jagged-edged band that has begun to turn musicians’ heads.” The ensemble will release their debut recording in 2020 on the Greenleaf Music label. Morris is a member of Motel and TMT Trio, two collaborative trios that respectively released albums in 2017: like you always do, I always did too by Motel (Prom Night Records), and Star Balladby TMT Trio. A 2019 Composer Fellow at Gabriela Lena Frank Creative Academy of Music, Morris has also been artist-in-residence at Willapa Bay AiR, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the Banff Centre. She holds an MA in Music Composition from the Aaron Copland School of Music at CUNY Queens College in New York and BA in Jazz Studies from Humber College in Toronto. She is an alumna of the BMI Jazz Composer’s Workshop lead by Jim McNeely and studied composition with the Grammy-nominated jazz composer Darcy James Argue.
Photo: Yuan Liu
Photo by Bryan Dorrough
For the most part, parking on the streets of the French Quarter is a very bad proposition for visitors. Stringent parking control measures are in effect and meter limits are strictly enforced by dour and determined meter maids. Tow trucks are always on the streets, even at night – especially at night – and many a visitor’s trip has been ruined by an expensive detour to the City Pound to retrieve a car illegally left in a no-parking zone, too close to a corner or in a protected zone. Here are a few tips to help you skip the fuss and find trouble-free parking in the French Quarter.
Photo: Lonesome Yellow Bike by Theodore Lee
Navigate Parking Like the Locals
In the back of the Quarter, a residential parking program gives local registered parkers an advantage and a pass, but even registered parkers have to play a tricky game of hopscotch parking to stay ahead of street cleaning and time limits. Many residents arrange to park their vehicles in private lots or parking buildings nearby, at significant cost, we might add. Savvy Quarterites walk, bike, scoot and generally take advantage of the historic district’s appealing scale.
Parking at Your Hotel
Visitors with reservations at French Quarter hotels can park their vehicles with the hotel but should be aware that it is an extra charge and can be as much as $30 to $45 a day. Don’t even think of bringing an oversized vehicle onto the streets of the Quarter without some good and defensible reason, prior permissions and permits from the Police Department. Anything bigger than an SUV is likely to get jammed at the corners and stymied on the narrow streets that were originally laid out for horse-drawn vehicles.
New Orleans, LA (French Quarter) by Jason Paris
Parking Lots and Garages in the French Quarter
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But don’t despair, there is ample and convenient parking available all along the riverfront side of the French Quarter. Download a pdf of French Quarter Riverside Parking Lots.
- Beginning at the Canal Street upriver border of the district near the Aquarium, Canal Place and Custom House there is multi-story covered parking in the Canal Place Garage. The entrance is at the end of Iberville and the River.
- Moving downriver along North Peters there are large lighted lots at Iberville and North Peters, Conti and North Peters, and Toulouse and Decatur, all convenient to the Jax and Millhouse developments and Jackson Square. These lots extend to the levee wall and streetcar tracks running along the riverfront and are much bigger than they appear from the street.
- At St. Peter and Decatur is the entrance to the French Market parking lot that is between the Market and the Moonwalk and extends all the way to Barracks Street and the Old U.S. Mint.
- Just at the downriver border of the Quarter is another French Market lot at the corner of Decatur and Elysian Fields.
Here’s some good advice: park anywhere in these riverfront lots and enjoy the French Quarter without risking the nasty loss that accompanies the street-side game of parking roulette.
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To reserve French Quarter parking in advance, click here.