Obrigada Brena for the beautiful photos of our last show, Postcards from Brasil!
To see more of Brena's fabulous photography, visit her blog, Treasure Chest.
Tuesday
Thursday
JUNK KITCHEN #7
POSTCARDS FROM BRASIL
FRIDAY 27 JULY, 2012 @8PM
Outpost 186186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Cambridge, MA
postmarked: Rio de Janeiro, 13 July 2012
Hey!
Hope you're having a great summer! We've been traveling all over Brazil for the past few months, and it is incredible! The food is amazing, the people are so warm and friendly—we're already talking about coming back next year. But what is really blowing us away is the MUSIC!
Everywhere we go—from Bahia in the northeast, where we heard the berimbau and saw capoeira on the streets, to here in Rio, where we saw Guinga live in concert (!) and met musicians who play with Hermeto Pascoal, and went to choro rodas—everywhere there is music playing. We're trying to record all this music with our ears, because we can't wait to play everything for you!
In fact, our flight gets back into Boston on Friday, July 27th, and we're heading straight to Outpost 186 to play all this music for you! We've had all kinds of ideas, and we've been talking about things like authenticity—can we as Americans just pick up and play Brazilian music?—as well as the definition of a “classic.” As always at the Junk Kitchen, we want to play music that's got a slightly different take on the common interpretation. So we've found some great classics here in Brazil, a few even from the late 19th century! While they're quite well-known here, we think back in Cambridge they will sound fresh and new, like instant life-long friends.
We've also heard so much music that doesn't sound at all like the standard Brazilian bossa export, and yet we've also heard some “bossas” which are so fresh and infectious—we've just got to bring it all back for you! So we're going to do our best, fully acknowledging that this music is pretty new for us, we're just going to dive in and do it—just like a gringa jumping into the samba de roda and shaking her hips like she didn't know any better! Why not? Life's too short not to groove, dance, sweat and swing!
So we hope you'll join us July 27th at 8pm! And don't forget to bring some limes for the caipirinhas!
Beijos,
Esther & Ben
Hope you're having a great summer! We've been traveling all over Brazil for the past few months, and it is incredible! The food is amazing, the people are so warm and friendly—we're already talking about coming back next year. But what is really blowing us away is the MUSIC!
Everywhere we go—from Bahia in the northeast, where we heard the berimbau and saw capoeira on the streets, to here in Rio, where we saw Guinga live in concert (!) and met musicians who play with Hermeto Pascoal, and went to choro rodas—everywhere there is music playing. We're trying to record all this music with our ears, because we can't wait to play everything for you!
In fact, our flight gets back into Boston on Friday, July 27th, and we're heading straight to Outpost 186 to play all this music for you! We've had all kinds of ideas, and we've been talking about things like authenticity—can we as Americans just pick up and play Brazilian music?—as well as the definition of a “classic.” As always at the Junk Kitchen, we want to play music that's got a slightly different take on the common interpretation. So we've found some great classics here in Brazil, a few even from the late 19th century! While they're quite well-known here, we think back in Cambridge they will sound fresh and new, like instant life-long friends.
We've also heard so much music that doesn't sound at all like the standard Brazilian bossa export, and yet we've also heard some “bossas” which are so fresh and infectious—we've just got to bring it all back for you! So we're going to do our best, fully acknowledging that this music is pretty new for us, we're just going to dive in and do it—just like a gringa jumping into the samba de roda and shaking her hips like she didn't know any better! Why not? Life's too short not to groove, dance, sweat and swing!
So we hope you'll join us July 27th at 8pm! And don't forget to bring some limes for the caipirinhas!
Beijos,
Esther & Ben
Friday
JUNK KITCHEN #6
NEW MUSIC NIGHT
SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 20128PM @ Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square
Cambridge, MA
If you were on the market for a new jacket, you wouldn’t expect to have some previous owner's loose change and half pack of cigarettes in the left pocket. Not if it was sold to you as new, am I wrong?
If you were to buy a new car, you would expect it to be brand new, wouldn't you? I mean we’re talking new-car-smell, reeking of well-fitted suede-barracuda-sport-coat new (no need to turn it inside out, unless you bought a convertible, of course.) It wouldn’t be right to pay full price for a “new” car that’s been owned and driven by other people, with a few thousand miles racked on the odometer and a few treads missing on the tires.
When it comes to new music, though, countless times don’t we settle for music that is, well . . . only sorta new?
I mean is John Cage really new anymore? Would you drink a 20 to 60-year-old cup of coffee? No! You'd expect it to be fresh, hot and tasty. So shouldn’t new music be the same way?
This Junk Kitchen show is dedicated to defining our standard for new music. All the pieces here are written especially for this night. And just as the FDA qualifies that food is only considered fresh within 72 hours of preparation, we are requiring that our composers create their pieces no more than 72 hours before the first performance – and I mean the very first, no rehearsals, no run-throughs – just as is, when served up steaming and aromatic, by our Junk Kitchen Players. The strike of the notes will be the first time ears ever hear it. (One might also call this a “sight reading” night but we figured that it would make it sound even more like a nerd event... Oops.)
Featuring NEW compositions by:
Ian Dicke, Todd Brunel, Eric Biondo, Brian Abbott, Rob Manthey, Pam Marshall and others
Played by:
Matt Samolis - flute
Deirdre Viau - flute
Esther Viola - oboe
Honjo Tsuyoshi - saxes
Ryan Fessinger - bassoon
McMillan Gaither - trombone
Marion Campos - guitars
Brigham Hall - piano
Paul Jacobs - piano
Ben Dicke - drums
...and others
Sunday
JUNK KITCHEN #5
RAYMOND SCOTT REVIEW
FRIDAY, MAY 25, 2012
8PM @ Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square
Cambridge, MA
FRIDAY, MAY 25, 2012
8PM @ Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square
Cambridge, MA
This night is dedicated to an unsung
hero of modern American music: composer, bandleader, pianist,
engineer, and electronic instrument pioneer Raymond Scott.
The show will feature two sections, one
highlighting his major contributions to Jazz (also recognizable from
adaptations used in classic cartoon soundtracks) and the other
"unplugging" his electronic music for TV and radio. We're
arranging tunes, snippets, and jingles from his experimentations
under the Manhattan Research Inc. project, some of his earliest and
most distinctive electronic works.
Collaborating musicians:
Jerry Sabatini—trumpet
Andy Volker—tenor sax
Kyle Moffat—alto sax
Esther Viola—oboe
Brigham Hall—piano
Paul Jacobs—piano
Al Marra—vibraphone
Eric Hofbauer—guitar
Scott Fitzpatrick—bass
Sven Larson—bass
Ben Dicke—drums
Friday
JUNK KITCHEN #4
DO YOU DO DUO, TWO?
FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 2012
8PM @ Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square
Cambridge, MA
FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 2012
8PM @ Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square
Cambridge, MA
Junk Kitchen turns armchair
psychologist with this one, as its patients will be coming tonight to
get things off their chests! Couples tired from the daily grind,
frustrated by a flirting affair or just sick of no one paying
attention to them will have a chance to vent out in stream-of
conscious improvs.
Pairs who “just want to make it work”
will display their communication skills by hashing out old emotional
scars, coming to amends and forging new bonds which will help send
them off onto the sunset.
And perhaps new partnerships will be
sparked, as the series also sets up some worthy singles on blind-date
improvisations or gently nudges newly-met duos to keep on playing.
In the process JK is going to keep its
big mouth shut and take the Freudian approach. It will dim the
lights, place fake plants around the room, put up generic pictures of
beaches on the walls as patients lying down on a big cold leather
couch will have the Doc saddle up next to them with a legal pad and
an expensive pen. I can’t guarantee you that its notes won’t be
full of doodles though . . . (Co-pay required)
Duos:
In-it-for-the-long-haul:
Garrison Fewell and Eric Hofbauer
(guitars)
Skinny Vinny (drums and sax)
second-date:
Esther and Shelly (oboe and bassoon)
blind-date:
Brian Abbott and Joshua DeScherer
(guitar and contra-bass)
Sunday
JUNK KITCHEN #3
SOUND OF THE FOUND
Music of Found Objects and Homemade Instruments
Click here to listen to the show!!!
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 2012 @ 8PM
Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Cambridge, MA
featuring special guests:
Matt Samolis and Dovina -- bottles, buckets, glass, and more
and
Gary Fieldman--home-made percussion-kit
with
Geni Skendo
Al Marra
Ben Dicke
Esther Viola
and others!
-- on bottles, pans, jars, tins, wheels, balloons, plastic bags, tin foil, boxes, and more!!!
There is a real problem with Music these days: its ego is way out of control!
Music’s strong arm on the public has slapped the artists to the waysides for years while tricking the neighborhood kids to grab a guitar, grab a microphone and play by the rules. Believe in the hype and fame and fortune will follow. A few tired blues licks later these pop stars are mistaken for visionaries of creative sounds. The Junk Kitchen Concert Series is going to give it a reality check!
Music of Found Objects and Homemade Instruments is a full-on intervention at the Outpost, cornering Music to the front of the room and having it fess up to its faults, its wrong doings and to hopefully show Music what it can be and not what it has been for years on end.
The performers of this show will act like surgeons spending the evening undressing Music to its frail and skinny core, putting it under the knife with the scalpels of bare hands on the back of cold metal chairs. Old spoons on empty paint buckets will play ugly rhythms underneath disjointed melodies made out of twine. Old rusty nails will poke through in attacks of dissonance as a climax of hubcaps will loudly crash together scaring Music out the door and back into the streets, delirious and humbled.
In the end there is something to be discovered while performing music on anything that is not an instrument. It will showcase the fact the music is made by people and not the instruments that they play. Torn away are the rich textures, controlled range, and harmonic potential that we are all used to.
This night Music is in its purest form. Whether it’s drumming on the back of a stop sign or blowing into empty beer bottles, the music here will exist simultaneously on either end of the spectrum by exploring the fringes of acoustic sound art while throwing us back into our primal urges to create.
Audience members are encouraged to bring there own homemade “instruments” to play in a group performance at the end of the evening. For those less savvy, the requirement is that you only bring in what you have found on the way to the Outpost!
Music of Found Objects and Homemade Instruments
Click here to listen to the show!!!
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 2012 @ 8PM
Outpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Cambridge, MA
featuring special guests:
Matt Samolis and Dovina -- bottles, buckets, glass, and more
and
Gary Fieldman--home-made percussion-kit
with
Geni Skendo
Al Marra
Ben Dicke
Esther Viola
and others!
-- on bottles, pans, jars, tins, wheels, balloons, plastic bags, tin foil, boxes, and more!!!

Music’s strong arm on the public has slapped the artists to the waysides for years while tricking the neighborhood kids to grab a guitar, grab a microphone and play by the rules. Believe in the hype and fame and fortune will follow. A few tired blues licks later these pop stars are mistaken for visionaries of creative sounds. The Junk Kitchen Concert Series is going to give it a reality check!
Music of Found Objects and Homemade Instruments is a full-on intervention at the Outpost, cornering Music to the front of the room and having it fess up to its faults, its wrong doings and to hopefully show Music what it can be and not what it has been for years on end.
The performers of this show will act like surgeons spending the evening undressing Music to its frail and skinny core, putting it under the knife with the scalpels of bare hands on the back of cold metal chairs. Old spoons on empty paint buckets will play ugly rhythms underneath disjointed melodies made out of twine. Old rusty nails will poke through in attacks of dissonance as a climax of hubcaps will loudly crash together scaring Music out the door and back into the streets, delirious and humbled.
In the end there is something to be discovered while performing music on anything that is not an instrument. It will showcase the fact the music is made by people and not the instruments that they play. Torn away are the rich textures, controlled range, and harmonic potential that we are all used to.
This night Music is in its purest form. Whether it’s drumming on the back of a stop sign or blowing into empty beer bottles, the music here will exist simultaneously on either end of the spectrum by exploring the fringes of acoustic sound art while throwing us back into our primal urges to create.
Audience members are encouraged to bring there own homemade “instruments” to play in a group performance at the end of the evening. For those less savvy, the requirement is that you only bring in what you have found on the way to the Outpost!
JUNK KITCHEN #2
GET OUT YOUR MINI
Friday, February 24, 2012 @8PMOutpost 186
186 1/2 Hampshire St.
Inman Square, Cambridge, MA
While mini skirts are more than
welcome, and may even get you a surprise at the door, this night is
about an altogether other kind of mini: the miniature piece of music.
The miniatures featured in this Junk Kitchen installment are very,
very short pieces of music, ranging from a matter of seconds to a
minute, maybe two. But anything over two minutes isn't very mini
anymore, now is it?
So this program will feature dozens of
pieces—composed, improvised, covered or stolen—performed on oboe,
piano, vibraphone, guitar, voice, and more!
Featuring:
Special guests!! duo Cotton Candy
& compositions/performances by:
John McDonald, piano
William Kenlon, voice/percussion
Brigham Hall, piano
John McDonald, piano
William Kenlon, voice/percussion
Brigham Hall, piano
First Worst Thirst:
Ben Dicke, drums
Esther Viola, oboe
Eric Hofbauer, guitar
Ben Dicke, drums
Esther Viola, oboe
Eric Hofbauer, guitar
Saturday
JUNK KITCHEN #1
Join us FRIDAY JANUARY 27, 2012 at 8PM
MUSIC
FOR TOYS
Click here to listen to the show!!!
Have you ever graced through the aisles of a toy store, spotting various musical instruments on display? Has the temptation of creativity hit you enough that you’ve banged out a few chords at the toy piano, broken into a beat on “My First Drum Kit,” or tried to come up with something... anything interesting on a one-octave xylophone in the key of C?
Well, the folks at the Junk Kitchen Concert Series have concocted a remedy for those of you with such childish urges: a musical pursuance that will relieve you of being seen in a toy store and getting kicked out by security. This first installment will feature music written for and improvised on toy instruments and will feature many area performers and special guest Jaggery.
Our mission here is not only to give these instruments their due, but also to pose a challenge to those performing on them. We‘re keeping the Jazz Box in its case, and the Mark 7 at home, 'cause this is a night for musicians to get in the zone with the most interesting sounds this side of Christmas.
Click here to listen to the show!!!
Have you ever graced through the aisles of a toy store, spotting various musical instruments on display? Has the temptation of creativity hit you enough that you’ve banged out a few chords at the toy piano, broken into a beat on “My First Drum Kit,” or tried to come up with something... anything interesting on a one-octave xylophone in the key of C?
Well, the folks at the Junk Kitchen Concert Series have concocted a remedy for those of you with such childish urges: a musical pursuance that will relieve you of being seen in a toy store and getting kicked out by security. This first installment will feature music written for and improvised on toy instruments and will feature many area performers and special guest Jaggery.
Our mission here is not only to give these instruments their due, but also to pose a challenge to those performing on them. We‘re keeping the Jazz Box in its case, and the Mark 7 at home, 'cause this is a night for musicians to get in the zone with the most interesting sounds this side of Christmas.
Wednesday
JUNK KITCHEN #0
Join us TUESDAY DECEMBER 13 @ Outpost 186 for Junk Kitchen's pre-launch party!
The official start of the series will be in January, but we couldn't wait to get started! So we decided to throw a warm-up concert, featuring performances by First Worst Thirst in diverse formations.
We'll be playing original tunes, improvisations, as well as samples of some of the themes of the up-coming season, like Raymond Scott Night, Burt Bacharach Bash and Get into the Mini, a program of miniatures, compositions and improvs.
In line with the festivities of the season, this will be a thoroughly entertaining affair. So dress up or dress down, whatever you need to do, and come ready to move, have a drink, play along or just sit back and enjoy!
The official start of the series will be in January, but we couldn't wait to get started! So we decided to throw a warm-up concert, featuring performances by First Worst Thirst in diverse formations.
We'll be playing original tunes, improvisations, as well as samples of some of the themes of the up-coming season, like Raymond Scott Night, Burt Bacharach Bash and Get into the Mini, a program of miniatures, compositions and improvs.
In line with the festivities of the season, this will be a thoroughly entertaining affair. So dress up or dress down, whatever you need to do, and come ready to move, have a drink, play along or just sit back and enjoy!
CALL FOR ARTISTS*:
We are currently booking for 2012, the fourth Friday of
every month. If you are or will be in or near Boston and are interested
in performing or collaborating on our series, please contact us!
*musicians, composers, painters, poets, graphic designers, dancers,
writers, photographers, chefs... or any other creatives welcome!
Working theme ideas and dates for 2012:
Jan 27 - Music for Toy Instruments
Feb
24 - Miniatures and Short Pieces
March 23 - Music of Found
Objects
April 27 - Solo and Duo night
May 25 - Raymond Scott
Tribute
June 22 - New Music Night
July 27 - Music of Brazil
Aug
24 - Burt Bacharach Bachelor Pad
Sept 28 - “Other”
instruments: Reeds and strings of foreign shores
Oct 26 TBA
Nov
TBA
Dec TBA
Feb 24 - Miniatures and Short Pieces
March 23 - Music of Found Objects
April 27 - Solo and Duo night
May 25 - Raymond Scott Tribute
June 22 - New Music Night
July 27 - Music of Brazil
Aug 24 - Burt Bacharach Bachelor Pad
Sept 28 - “Other” instruments: Reeds and strings of foreign shores
Oct 26 TBA
Nov TBA
Dec TBA
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