March 26 2010

March 26, 2010: New York Wine Tasting, 6 p.m.

Business networking in New York City and BrooklynEnjoy Argentina and Italian wines while networking at Hudson Terrace. Wine will be sold by the glass and chocolate will be complimentary. Best of all, your chance to check out Hudson Terrace… The views are incredible. 621 West 46th St., Between 11th and 12th Ave., New York, NY 10036. Learn more.

March 26, 2010: Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.

Celebrating the 200th anniversary of the birth of P.T. Barnum, Barnum’s FUNundrum! is a special tour of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus. It features more than 130 performers from six continents. See your favorites, plus new acts like pirates, mermaids and two-tiered trampolines. Show up early for a free preshow. Find Tickets, Madison Square Garden, 7th Ave & 32nd Street, New York, NY 10001.

March 26, 2010: Wicked, a Broadway play at the Gershwin Theatre, 8 p.m.

Wicked's on tap on Broadway at the Gershwin Theatre in New York City.Based on the best-selling novel by Gregory Maguire entitled “Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West,” is a story about the witches of Oz before Dorothy arrives from Kansas. With music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz (Godspell), Wicked tells tale of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West and her former best friend, Glinda, the Good Witch. Elphaba, born with emerald green skin and a fiery spirit befriends Glinda who is beautiful and popular while both are attending Shiz University.

The friendship starts shows cracks as Elphaba and Glinda’s personalities begin to form. Their disagreements on the Wizard’s ruling of Oz, their vastly different personalities and a rivalry over the same love interest threatens to upset the order at their university. Appropriate for children ages 8 and up. Find tickets for the show at the Gershwin Theatre, 222 West 51st St., New York, NY 10019.

Click the calendar at the top right of this page to find more things to do in New York and Brooklyn.

March 26: Brooklyn Book Club, 7 p.m.

The Brooklyn Heights Women’s Book Club will be discussing “Let The Great World Spin” by Colum McCann. More.

March 26: Brooklyn Concert, 7:30 p.m., David Ford with Ed Vallance

Concert Schedule in New York and BrooklynInfluenced by Tom Waits, Neil Young, and Todd Rungren, David Ford was in several bands before venturing out on his own. Milk & Cookies is an annual charity event that Ford founded and he although his home is in Great Britain, Ford has admitted that his favorite place to play in the US is Philadelphia. Union Hall, 702 Union Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215. Find Tickets.

March 26: Brooklyn Concert, 8 p.m., Miike Snow

Concert Schedule in New York and BrooklynChildhood friends from Sweden, Christian Karlsson and Pontus Winnberg met American songwriter Andrew Wyatt and the indiepop band Miike Snow was formed. In addition to performing in their own band, Karlsson and Winnberg have worked with artists like Madonna, Kylie Minogue and Britney Spears.

An electropop group that’s just three years old out of Sweden, Miike Snow easily qualifies for the weirdo prize, having one member who thinks he might be the reincarnation of Rasputin. They sound a lot like a band that would end up in an anime. Live at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, 66 North 6th St., Brooklyn, NY 11211. $20 at Ticketmaster.

March 26: Brooklyn Concert, 9 p.m., Seabear

Concert Schedule in New York and BrooklynICELAND FOLK:With a new album due out in March 2010, Seabear’s indie, folk pop music has been featured on Finding Neverland and Gossip Girl soundtracks. Lead singer Sindri Mar Sigfussion has been called the “Icelandic Beck” by Rolling Stone magazine. Find Tickets.

Seabear set for first U.S. Tour, brand spanking new album

Seabear's newest album, We Built a Fire.A group that Clash calls “Sufjan Stevens meets an unplugged Arcade Fire,” I spoke with founder and lead singer, Sindri Mar Sigfusson, via tele as he prepared to leave for Seabear’s first U.S. tour. Aged 27 years, Sindri’s at that dangerous rock age. “My birthday’s in May,” he says. “I hope I’ll make it until then.”

His band, Seabear, is poised to be the next big thing out a very miniature country known as Iceland. Of Iceland’s population of 317,000, seven instrument-bearing 20-somethings have come together to form Seabear. Already out in Europe, the group’s third major album, We Built a Fire, is due out Tuesday, March 16, 2010, and the band members are packing their bags as we speak for shows in Austin, New York City, Cambridge, Mass., and across the Northeast.

Sindri bought his first electric guitar when he 19 or 20. He took lessons for three months, then started noodling around on his own. “I wasn’t very good,” he says, but he plugged into his computer and started sampling, mixing and combining sounds. He would keep playing music as he worked his way through art school, and his solo act soon morphed into Seabear.

“I didn’t expect it to happen like it that,” Sindri says. “When I started recording it was never my intention to play live … When you start playing live, I think the music changes quite a bit. I’m very happy about that.”

Indeed, rumor has it Seabear’s latest disc is more upbeat, lending itself to livelier shows. That’ll be a good thing for the band’s debut at South by Southwest in Austin. They’re scheduled to play live four times between March 17-20 throughout Austin (see the full list on their MySpace page).

Seabear playing live in Rotterdam.“Our soundman in Europe, he asked us to go to a hot sauce shop in Austin and buy him the hottest sauce they have,” Sindri says. Beyond that, the group doesn’t have a lot of set plans outside of performances. They plan to hit up Graceland on the drive from Austin to the East Coast. “We’ll just look around,” Sindri says, “Go to Wal-Mart, do the tourist thing.”

When I ask Sindri if he has any advice for aspiring musicians, he’s quick to say persistence is the most important ingredient. “I think you probably have to write 500 bad songs until you come up with something that you like and you’re happy with. … It’s 50 percent believing in yourself and 50 percent of being critical with yourself.”

It’s a formula that seems to have worked for Seabear. “I don’t know if I ask anymore than this,” Sindri says. “Getting to play a lot and not like losing money on it. I think we’re in a very good place right now. (I hope we) keep on being happy with what we’re doing. It’s best when you release albums, not have any expectations, and just be happy with how things are.”

Seabear will play two shows in the New York City area. One at the Mercury Lounge on March 25, and one at Southpaw on March 26.

- Posted by Fred Marion, March 14, 2010
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