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![]() Weekend Hotlist: 10/11/02
Friday, October 11, 2002 By Scott Mervis, Post-Gazette Weekend Editor
The good news is, there’s a new concert venue in town. The not-so-good
news is, it ain’t the Stanley or the Mosque - it’s another college gym.
But let’s give the Petersen Events Center at the University of
Pittsburgh a shot before we make any judgments. Breaking in the new
facility Sunday night is Counting
Crows, a band that produced one of the best debuts of the ’90s with
“August and Everything After,” a record that rejected grunge to evoke the
gentler wonders of the Band, Van Morrison and R.E.M. It hasn’t been that
good ever since, but the latest record, “Rock Candy,” is much better than
the single, “American Girls,” would suggest. And singer-songwriter Adam
Duritz, though never the most compelling live performer, still towers
above the characters who ended up imitating him. The band, which had been
touring with The Who, headlines the Petersen Center
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday with Graham Colton. Tickets are $20 to $30. Call
412-323-1919.
The Pittsburgh Dance Council presents …The Dance Alloy. Confused?
Understandable. This is the first time the Dance Council has programmed a
Pittsburgh company. The Alloy will perform the works of its artistic
director, Mark Taylor, and New York choreographer Sarah Skaggs. Among the
pieces are “What If; Translocations,” based on the work of Czech
artist/architect Magdalena Jetelova, and “Nothing Like the Sun,” using the
poems of Shakespeare, Constable, Whitman and others. It’s at the Byham at 8 tonight.
Tickets are $20 to $40. Call 412-456-6666. Meanwhile, Junction Dance Theatre
is producing “i.e. Harmony,” a multimedia work by its artistic director,
Melanie Miller, based on the life of Elie Nadelman, the Polish-Jewish
artist who shook up the art world early last century. It was presented as
a work in progress at the Frick Art Museum last November. Now it’s a
full-blown production that includes dancers Peter Boucher and Toma Smith,
actors Brian Czarnicki and Robin Rundquist, set design by Frank Ferraro
and video by Dennis Childers. It’s at the Kelly-Strayhorn, East Liberty,
at 8 tonight and Saturday. Tickets are $12 to $15. Call 412-392-3353.
Lost Highway, the
alt-country label that is home to the likes of Steve Earle, Willie Nelson
and Ryan Adams, has a pair of strong female artists with new records, and
both are coming here this weekend, on different bills at different clubs.
Tift Merritt, a singer,
songwriter and pretty hot guitarist, came to Lost Highway through Adams
and released “Bramble Rose,” a debut that has critics referencing Lucinda
Williams and Emmylou Harris. She’s at Rosebud at 7 p.m. Sunday. Kim Richey, well known to WYEP
audiences, just released her fourth record, “Rise,” which combines her
Nashville twang with some less organic pop, She’s at Club Cafe tonight and Saturday at
7:30. More about Richey.
Fifty years of polka-mania! Who has that kind of endurance? Jack
Tady! And he’s only 64. The Russelton native formed his first polka
band in 1952 when he was just 14. In the ’60s, he was crowned the Western
Pennsylvania Polka King by Frank Yankovic. In the ’80s, he got his own
radio show, “Jack Tady’s Polka Place,” on WEDO-AM. In the ’90s, he was
nominated for a Grammy Award in the polka category. And more recently, he
received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Polka Hall of Fame in
Cleveland. Sunday, he will celebrate with a reunion of his bands and
followers at the SNPJ Ballroom in Imperial. Tady says he would love
to get the younger generation involved. “The old folks are dying and we’re
losing the young kids,” he says. “We try to gear the show for younger
people. Some people are trying to incorporate country-rock and polkas.
That could be the way to go.” The music runs from 2 to 8 p.m. with Rob
DeBlander, Larry Placek, Carl Stocker, the P.O.P.P All-Stars and more.
Admission is $8; under 18 free. Call 724-274-7202.
Storyteller Bob
Gore isn’t taking the usual route of retiring to South Florida. He’ll
be collecting his Social Security in West Africa. But first he has
business here to attend to: a couple last stories for his fans. Gore, a
popular fixture in the theater and storytelling communities here, will
team up with Alison K. Babusci for “My Anansi, Your Anansi: 2
Storytellers, 1 Story,” a title that refers to “a favorite trickster of
African folklore.” It will be the first time that the two have worked in
tandem. The free performances are at 7 tonight and next Friday at the Pittsburgh Center for the
Arts.
Some women are fairly open about their pregnancies and birth
experiences. Others try to hide it. But can you imagine having the whole
thing shot for the three-story-high Omnimax Theater? Heather and Buster
Pike agreed, and their story is at the heart of “The Human Body,” a
feature that explores the creation of life as it also documents a day in
the life of bodies that have been up and running for a while. It opens
today at the Carnegie
Science Center and runs through June 26. Read
more.
In the world of unreal bodies, this weekend’s Black Sheep Puppet
Festival brings from Chicago a professor of puppetry. Blair Thomas,
actually an adjunct associate from the School of the Art Institute of
Chicago, presents “The Poet, the Puppet & the Prisoner,” a piece based
on the works of novelist Federico Garcia Lorca that chronicles the stages
of man from beginning to end. It is performed at the Brew House, South Side, at 8 tonight
through Sunday, and then Oct. 17 to Oct. 20. Tickets are $16. Call
412-394-3353.
Saturday’s your chance to take home a piece of the Mattress Factory. The 25th
Anniversary Auction offers nearly 100 pieces by artists who have worked in
residence at the museum. The Ladies United for the Preservation of
Endangered Cocktails serve the drinks and the New Alcindors serve the
music. It begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $75. Call 412-231-3169.
You may have seen Tommy Davidson in Spike Lee’s “Bamboozled.” Or
in the recent “Juwanna Mann.” Or as the comic relief on “The Fox NFL Show”
on Saturday nights. Now you can see him, in pure comic form, at the Improv
at 8 and 10 tonight; 7, 9 and 11 p.m. Saturday; and 7 p.m. Sunday. Tickets
are $20. Call 412-462-5233.
How can we not mention Koko
Taylor? The Queen of the Blues and winner of the 2002 W.C. Handy Blues
Award for Traditional Blues rocks Moondog’s Saturday at 9:30 p.m.
with her rousing Blues Machine. Tickets are $20. 412-828-2040.
Scott Mervis can be reached at smervis@post-gazette.com or
412-263-2576.
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