The eight-dollar cover will win you the surf-styled Rembetika music of Alaniaris: Michael Kaler (bass), Mark Zurawinski (drums), and Ken Aldcroft (guitar).
Monday, September 7, 2009
Come to Celebrate Two Years and Five-Hundred Shows at Somewhere There
The eight-dollar cover will win you the surf-styled Rembetika music of Alaniaris: Michael Kaler (bass), Mark Zurawinski (drums), and Ken Aldcroft (guitar).
Thursday, August 20, 2009
MUSIC(in)GALLERIES 2009
Thanks to each of the forty artists and to all of the galleries for a splendid time. John Halfpenny was so kind as to make this video, a selection of the day's programming: Nicole Rampersaud, Ronda Rindone, the Element Choir, Tomasz Krakowiak, Allison Cameron, and Jean Martin.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
MUSIC(in)GALLERIES 2009: Saturday 15 August
Somewhere There presents the fourth annual MUSIC(in)GALLERIES, Saturday 15 August, 1-5pm. This musical gallery crawl will once again transform the gallery district of Queen Street West, Toronto, from Trinity Bellwoods Park to Gladstone Avenue, into a focal point for the city's increasingly vibrant and renowned creative music scene.
At no cost to the public, dozens of Toronto's most creative musicians will perform in seventeen art galleries and three bars during the afternoon; the music will start in Trinity Bellwoods Park at 1pm, move into a nearby gallery, with new sets of music starting roughly every ten minutes, generating a gallery-crawl momentum. While most spaces will feature exceptional solo performers playing all manner of instruments in countless styles, MUSIC(in)GALLERIES programming will be punctuated by three special group performances:
- Christine Duncan's massive creative voice ensemble, the Element Choir, at the Edward Day Gallery
- Ryan Driver (thumb reeds) and Renée Lear (projections) performing their live video and music collaboration, "The Balloons of India," at XPACE Gallery
- The Woodchoppers Association will feature two very special guests from Mali, West Africa, Abdoulaye Koné (n'goni) and Jah Youssouf (voice & kamel n'goni) at the Gladstone Melody Bar to finish the event in danceable style.
1:00 Southwest corner of Trinity Bellwoods Park, moving into (1:05) Lausberg Contemporary, 880 Queen Street West – Nicole Rampersaud, trumpet
1:15 Angell Gallery, 890 Queen Street West – Rob Piilonen, flute
1:25 *New* Gallery, 906 Queen Street West – Ronda Rindone, bass clarinet
1:35 Clint Roenisch Gallery, 944 Queen Street West – Alex Lukashevsky, voice & guitar
1:45 Edward Day Gallery, 952 Queen Street West – Christine Duncan’s Element Choir
2:00 MOCCA, 952 Queen Street West – Kyle Brenders, saxophone
2:10 Propeller Centre for the Visual Arts, 984 Queen Street West -- Tomasz Krakowiak, percussion
2:20 Camera/Stephen Bulger, 1026 Queen Street West – Jim Lewis, trumpet
2:40 XPACE, 58 Ossington Avenue – Ryan Driver, thumb reeds & Renée Lear, projections
2:55 Lennox Contemporary, 12 Ossington Ave – Tilman Lewis, cello
3:05 Lens Factory, 1040 Queen Street West – Allison Cameron, apparatus
3:15 Katharine Mulherin Contemporary Art Projects 1082 Queen Street West – David Sait, guzheng
3:25 David Kaye Gallery, 1092 Queen Street West (entrance from Dovercourt) – Wes Neal, double bass
3:35 The Beverly Owens Project, 1140 Queen Street West – Lina Allemano, trumpet
3:45 Median Contemporary, 1142 Queen Street West – Michelangelo Iaffaldano, curio
3:55 Drake Hotel Patio, 1150 Queen Street West -- Nichol Robertson, banjo
4:05 Loop Gallery, 1174 Queen Street West – Anne Bourne, cello & voice
4:15 Akau, 1186 Queen Street West (entrance from Northcote) – Eric Chenaux, guitar
4:25 Gladstone Art Bar, 1214 Queen Street West – Jean Martin, drums & honk-trumpet
4:40 Gladstone Melody Bar, 1214 Queen Street West – The Woodchopper’s Association with Jah Youssouf & Abdoulaye Koné
5:00 Gladstone Melody Bar -- celebration, libation, conversation, no music
MUSIC(in)GALLERIES is supported by the New Music Program of the Canada Council
Monday, June 1, 2009
Somewhere There June 2009 Newsleter
The new residency in June is the intriguing duo of Allison Cameron on small, amplified things and Nobuo Kubota, voice and microphone. Allison had her own residency last summer, and it was terrific to hear her in so many different contexts. The programming for the series with Nobuo is not yet fixed but, at a guess, it will reflect a similar diversity.
Somewhere There also wishes to extend thanks and express enthusiasm (and relief) that the Toronto Arts Council has stepped up to our request for support for the residency program. The modest grant that’s just been awarded will subsidize about 150 shows during the 2009-2010 season of residencies, starting with Allison and Nobuo's. This will go a long way toward making viable these residencies in particular and Somewhere There in general. Thank you for supporting informal music-making!
Lastly, I’ll mention that Somewhere There’s good friend, Jack Vorvis, had his bicycle stolen from outside the studio on 24 May. Jeremy Strachan has kindly agreed to program a fundraising concert, Sunday 14 June, featuring Jack with a bunch of friends – programming is to be announced.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
May 2009 Newsletter

May marks the second month of trumpeter Nicole Rampersaud’s residency, featuring a set of solo trumpet followed by a set with (usually) a single guest (Evan Shaw, Germaine Liu, Kyle Brenders, Parmela Attariwala, and Matt Miller, for example). Nicole’s playing continues to mature at an incredible rate, and her solos demonstrate not only a keen moment-to-moment imagination and (of course) remarkable instrumental facility, but also a sense of formal development that is rare among solo improvisers. As austere as a set of solo trumpet may sound, it would be a shame to miss this string of shows that constitute a laboratory for someone who is quickly becoming one of Toronto’s leading musical voices.
New this month is bassist Aaron Lumley’s residency, also with a program of solo improvisation and small-group playing that will no doubt feature Aaron’s characteristically physical, gut-stringy style. Aaron has been playing a ton lately, in countless contexts – I just heard him play beautifully with David Prentice at Ron Gaskin’s VTO Festival at the Tranzac – and, like Nicole, he is honing his massive vocabulary of technical extensions toward becoming one of the more distinctive improvisers in the city. Finally, speaking of Ron Gaskin, Somewhere There once again wishes him a happy sixtieth birthday, and thanks Tim Posgate for organizing a small but festive party for Ron in conjunction with a Cluttertones date as part of Rob Clutton’s residency.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Somewhere There March 2009 Newsletter
This month’s residencies have more to do with jazz music in general than they have pretty much at any point in Somewhere There’s history. Thursdays in March will continue to feature Drumheller drawing on the wonderful material from their expansive book of tunes by all five members. Wednesdays host a new residency by Drumhellerite, Rob Clutton, primarily with his newish band, The Cluttertones (with Lina Allemano, Tim Posgate, Anthony Michelli, Brodie West, and Ryan Driver), though other weeks will feature guests like Marilyn Lerner and Paul Cram in small groups featuring Rob. The Sunday 6pm slot has been taken on by Jeremy Strachan, and features similarly newish bands, Canaille (with Mike Smith, Nick Buligan, and Colin Fisher, and Dan Gaucher) and a duet with Mike Smith on guitars and banjos. With a record twenty-nine shows booked in March, there’s still certainly no shortage of live music at Somewhere There. We hope to see you around!
Friday, January 30, 2009
February 2009 Newsletter

February will be busy as well, with the key event being AIMToronto’s Interface Series with British saxophonist, Evan Parker, on 13, 14, and 15 February (bring your Valentine!) Nilan Perera has done curator work on this one, and has placed Parker in six thematically related groups of Toronto players that will challenge and provoke him. Simply put, it’s a great honour to have Evan at Somewhere There.
The Wednesday-night residency by Odradek continues until the end of February, and has already featured two CD release concerts. Andy Yue, Jim Bailey, and Michelangelo Iaffaldano have put together some fine programs that go from strength to strength (and, sometimes, from strange to strange), a trend that will no doubt continue this month. The Element Choir also continues their Sunday-evening romps, and I have to say that it would be a real shame if listeners miss the astonishing sound of forty voices in Somewhere There’s intimate confines!
Thursday nights in February and March feature the wonderful drummer and all-around charmer, Nick Fraser. Originally, Nick had hoped that Drumheller, the wonderful jazz quintet that he convenes, would be on hand every week but he has since intimated that schedules are making that plan next to impossible to execute. As I’m writing, I don’t know exactly what’s on tap, but hope that at least some of Nick’s Thursdays will feature the full band (with Eric Chenaux, Rob Clutton, Doug Tielli, and Brodie West).
Click here to see the entire month's programming.