Czech Wednesdays! Pilsner Urquell for $6.50, and selection of schnitzels ($14-$15)
ALILO-OBA WITH ORI SHALVA & ANDREA KUZMICH’S SONGSCAPIN’
7.00
January 7 marks Old Christmas in Sakartvelo (aka Georgia) and the time for Alilo-oba. But at Drom we’re flipping the script, and instead of going door to door with carols, we’re inviting you to come to us for an evening of songs celebrating life, renewal, and abundance for the year ahead.
First set features the “amazing harmonies” (Eroll Nazareth, CBC Radio) of Ori Shalva, North America’s foremost Georgian polyphonic ensemble. Led by virtuoso traditional singer and multi-instrumentalist Shalva Makharashvili, Ori Shalva brings to life this UNESCO-recognized musical treasure - rarely heard outside its homeland - and transports listeners to the mountainous villages, and ancient rites of this small country at the crossroads of Asia and Europe.
Flipping the script even more, the second set features the genre-bending reimaginings of Georgian and Ukrainian folk polyphony through Andrea Kuzmich’s songSCAPIN’ project, which weaves tradition with jazz and raw improvisation to create an irresistible, groove-driven experience. But don’t expect to simply sit back and listen: in true folk fashion, you - the audience - will be invited to sing, clap, and become an essential celebratory force!
Part of a monthly series at Drom Taberna curated by the Small World Music Incubator Program.
Photo by Barry McCluskey
MATTHEW LAWRENCE (THE SINGING BREADMAN) & THE BAKER’S DOZEN
11.00
The singing breadman is the alias of Matthew Lawrence, a folk-singer and baker-by-trade who spends too much of his time hunting down hard-to-find (and not-so-hard-find) songs from any folk tradition he can get his hands on. He generally lands somewhere between American, Irish, English, and Yiddish folk music, so I guess that puts him somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic (though he avoids shanties if at all possible). Angry songs, love songs, have-another-drink songs, don't-sleep-with-your-lord's-wife-while-he's-away songs...and, always a sucker for nostalgia, a bit of the ol' Greenwich village (though requests for Simon and Garfunkel will incur extra fees). Folk music is cool...I promise.