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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Nathan Weinbender

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A&E >  Entertainment

Pianist riding career momentum

Jon Nakamatsu still remembers the first time he saw a piano: He was 4 years old, and it was love at first sight. “I immediately gravitated toward it,” Nakamatsu recalled, speaking by phone from his home in San Jose, Calif. “My parents are not musical, and they were a little perplexed by me being so enthusiastic about something like that.”
A&E >  Entertainment

Company puts own stamp on classic ballet

Since its Russian premiere in 1892, the music and imagery of the ballet “The Nutcracker” has become iconic. Although it’s been reworked and reinterpreted throughout the years, the fairy tale story and P.I. Tchaikovsky’s score, which remains one of the most recognizable of the late 19th century, is rarely tampered with. Next week, the prestigious Moscow Ballet brings its lavish touring production of “The Nutcracker” to Spokane, a colorful and lively celebration of both the magic of the holidays and the majesty of Russian ballet.
A&E >  Entertainment

Down home feel, global flair

Don’t let this week’s snow flurry fool you: We’re still in the middle of fall. And if you needed a further reminder that winter is still more than a month away, indulge in the Fall Folk Festival, now in its 18th year, this weekend. The event, which is free and all-ages, features a diverse selection of music and dance on eight stages, as well as local arts and crafts vendors and kids’ activities.

A&E >  Entertainment

Ten years of radio done differently

Hit the “seek” button on your car radio and you’re likely to come across the usual stuff – Top 40 hits, a selection of classic rock staples, perhaps some political or cultural discourse courtesy of NPR. But if it stops on either 92.3 or 88.1 FM, the dual frequencies of Spokane’s Thin Air Community Radio (KYRS), you’re going to hear something different.
A&E >  Entertainment

Potter brings talent to the Fox

So much of jazz is based around improvisation, and much of jazz saxophonist Chris Potter’s musical career has been made up as he goes along. “I don’t even remember deciding to be a musician,” Potter said during a recent telephone interview. “By the time I was finished with high school, that’s just obviously what I wanted to do.”
News >  Spokane

Review: ‘Second Samuel’ explores themes of tolerance, community

“Second Samuel,” Pamela Parker’s bittersweet comedy running at Spokane’s Civic Theatre, is a two-act play. This is an important distinction, because each half of the story shows a small Georgia town in a different state of transformation. Change isn’t something the residents of the tight-knit community Second Samuel openly embrace. In fact, it’s one of those places where everything is as it’s always been, and that’s just fine with everyone.
News >  Spokane

Macklemore, Lewis play to adoring Spokane Arena crowd

I have to be honest: I’ve never really liked Macklemore. I’ve tried, really. It’s great that he and Ryan Lewis, two young guys from Washington (Lewis is a Spokane native), have become so popular, and it’s even greater that they’ve done it without the support of a major record label. That’s a triumph for independent musicians everywhere.
A&E >  Entertainment

New EP reflects Lion Oh My’s growth

Pretty much every phase of the Lion Oh My’s career has been made up on the fly. When the Spokane rock four-piece played its first show, they only had four or five songs written and were practicing in an abandoned, windowless church that they rented for about $200 a month and kept warm with a small kerosene heater.
A&E >  Entertainment

Pianist Patricia Barber grew up on jazz

Although she’s been a recording artist for over two decades, jazz pianist Patricia Barber says she wasn’t totally comfortable with her career choice until she had been doing it for years. “I’ve always said it was a stupid thing for a smart woman to do, to go into jazz,” she said from her home in Chicago. “But it’s sort of in your blood, I think.”
A&E >  Entertainment

Symphony pairing a perfect marriage

Dawn and Mateusz Wolski bring a new meaning to the word “harmony.” She’s an internationally renowned soprano opera singer, he’s a Polish violinist who’s been the concertmaster of the Spokane Symphony since 2007, and they’ve been married for 10 years. They both caught the musical bug at an early age.
A&E >  Entertainment

Theaters roll out dramatic, musical takes on comedy

Now that the dog days of summer are fading from our seasonal rearview mirror, the local theater scene is buzzing with activity. Tonight alone you’ve got two theatrical premieres to choose from: Lake City Playhouse’s production of the operatic farce “Lend Me a Tenor,” and Civic Theatre’s take on the Southern-fried comedy-drama “Second Samuel.” “Tenor” is probably the best known of the two shows. It had successful runs on both West End and Broadway, and the latter production received several Tony and Drama Desk Awards. Written by Ken Ludwig, it’s confined to a two-room hotel suite in 1930s Cleveland on the night of a watershed performance by Italian opera tenor Tito Merelli.
A&E >  Entertainment

Pianist Patricia Barber grew up on jazz

Although she’s been a recording artist for over two decades, jazz pianist Patricia Barber says she wasn’t totally comfortable with her career choice until she had been doing it for years. “I’ve always said it was a stupid thing for a smart woman to do, to go into jazz,” she said from her home in Chicago. “But it’s sort of in your blood, I think.”
A&E >  Entertainment

Symphony pairing a perfect marriage

Dawn and Mateusz Wolski bring a new meaning to the word “harmony.” She’s an internationally renowned soprano opera singer, he’s a Polish violinist who’s been the concertmaster of the Spokane Symphony since 2007, and they’ve been married for 10 years. They both caught the musical bug at an early age.
News >  Features

‘Never the Sinner’ at Interplayers a riveting look at murder

The Leopold and Loeb murder case is one of the most famous and frequently studied of the 1920s, and it has inspired a number of literary works: Patrick Hamilton’s 1929 play “Rope” (later adapted to film by Alfred Hitchcock), Meyer Levins’ novel “Compulsion” and its screen adaptation, and John Logan’s 1988 play “Never the Sinner.” Logan’s interpretation, which was written while he was a student at Northwestern University, is being performed at Interplayers Theatre beginning tonight, and director Ken Urso says that it sticks more closely to the details of the actual case than either “Rope” or “Compulsion.”
A&E >  Entertainment

Ex-‘Idol’ hopefuls join symphony

When you think of the symphony, what names pop into your mind? Mozart, maybe, or Bach? But what about the Bee Gees, Journey, or Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons? This Saturday, three former “American Idol” contestants will be performing pop, rock and jazz classics while accompanied by the Spokane Symphony and conductor Morihiko Nakahara in a program called “Symphony Idol,” meant to challenge your perceptions of an orchestra’s limitations.
A&E >  Entertainment

‘Anne Frank’ director returns to familiar territory

Tracey Vaughan first experienced “The Diary of Anne Frank” in 1993, playing the title role in North Idaho College’s production of Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett’s play. Twenty years later, she has returned to the show, except this time she’s on the other side of the stage, directing NIC’s revival of the renowned historical drama. By now, everyone is aware of the plight of Anne Frank – that she was a Jewish girl living in Amsterdam during WWII, that she and her family evaded Nazi capture and lived in hiding for two years before they were found and sent to concentration camps. Frank’s diary has become compulsory reading since its first publication in 1947, and Goodrich and Hackett’s stage adaptation, which is set entirely within the Frank family’s secret annex, deals with both the specific horrors of the Jewish persecution and the universal pangs of adolescence.
News >  Features

‘Little Shop’ brings big laughs

‘Little Shop of Horrors” is one of the most celebrated cult musicals of the ’80s, a peculiar B-movie plot imbued with ’60s girl-group pop songs. Inspired by Roger Corman’s low-budget 1960 horror comedy, the show debuted off-Broadway in 1982 and was the first big hit for Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, who were later responsible for the original songs in such Disney films as “The Little Mermaid” and “Beauty and the Beast.” This weekend, Ignite! Community Theatre will be premiering their interpretation of “Little Shop.” It’s the company’s first-ever musical production.
A&E >  Entertainment

Instrumental encounter

Zuill Bailey’s first run-in with the cello was a literal one when he was just 4 years old. “One day after a concert, I went running backstage, and I knocked a cello out of this girl’s hand and broke the neck,” Bailey said. He was raised in a musical family – his mother is a pianist, his father is a music educator and his sister is a violinist – and shortly after the incident, he was given a small practice cello.
A&E >  Entertainment

Instrumental encounter

Zuill Bailey’s first run-in with the cello was a literal one when he was just 4 years old. “One day after a concert, I went running backstage, and I knocked a cello out of this girl’s hand and broke the neck,” Bailey said. He was raised in a musical family – his mother is a pianist, his father is a music educator and his sister is a violinist – and shortly after the incident, he was given a small practice cello.
A&E >  Entertainment

Bon Jovi: Still there for you

Bon Jovi has had so many successful albums and singles in their long career that they could quit at any moment and still leave behind quite a legacy. But they keep releasing new material and continue racking up hits, and the name of their current tour – “Because We Can” – might explain why they haven’t thrown in the towel. Unlike most of the bands from their era, Bon Jovi refuses to be stamped with an expiration date.
A&E >  Entertainment

Pickwick marries diverse sounds

Seattle’s Pickwick has been playing together in various capacities for the past few years, but they already have the experience of old pros. They’re one of those bands that combine wildly disparate styles – melodic pop, fuzz-heavy rock, blue-eyed soul – to create a sound that appeals to a surprisingly diverse cross-section of listeners. They’re frequently likened to the Black Keys, a comparison that isn’t unfair. Pickwick has been touring extensively in support of their first LP, “Can’t Talk Medicine,” which was released earlier this year, playing live with Neko Case and Okkervil River. Although the band’s roots are in the Pacific Northwest, Galen Disston, Pickwick’s lead singer, says that he was surprised that their fan base extended to the East Coast.
A&E >  Entertainment

Terrain’s arts celebration opens for sixth annual one-night show

It’s just four days before Terrain, the annual one-night-only celebration of Spokane’s art and music scene, and you get the feeling that the event’s main organizers – Luke Baumgarten, Ginger Ewing and Patrick Kendrick – haven’t had a moment to sit and relax in awhile. They’re on the third floor of the former Music City Building, 1011 W. First Ave., an open, high-ceilinged space, and there’s a flurry of activity around them. Pretty soon, Terrain will have occupied every square inch of the building, filling it with art installations and musical performances; artists are already trickling in and out, carrying pieces of their displays and hanging their work on the walls. It’s all starting to come together.
A&E >  Entertainment

Bon Jovi: Still there for you

Bon Jovi has had so many successful albums and singles in their long career that they could quit at any moment and still leave behind quite a legacy. But they keep releasing new material and continue racking up hits, and the name of their current tour – “Because We Can” – might explain why they haven’t thrown in the towel. Unlike most of the bands from their era, Bon Jovi refuses to be stamped with an expiration date.
News >  Features

For Chapman, family and Christian beliefs shape musical career

Steven Curtis Chapman has been one of Christian music’s best-selling artists for more than two decades, releasing 47 No. 1 singles and a number of gold- and platinum-certified albums since his debut in 1987. But long before he was a successful singer-songwriter with a stockpile of awards – including five Grammys and a whopping 57 Dove Awards from the Gospel Music Association – Chapman recalls eavesdropping on his father writing and playing music in his childhood home in the small town of Paducah, Ky.
A&E >  Entertainment

Terrain’s arts celebration opens for sixth annual one-night show

It’s just four days before Terrain, the annual one-night-only celebration of Spokane’s art and music scene, and you get the feeling that the event’s main organizers – Luke Baumgarten, Ginger Ewing and Patrick Kendrick – haven’t had a moment to sit and relax in awhile. They’re on the third floor of the former Music City Building, 1011 W. First Ave., an open, high-ceilinged space, and there’s a flurry of activity around them. Pretty soon, Terrain will have occupied every square inch of the building, filling it with art installations and musical performances; artists are already trickling in and out, carrying pieces of their displays and hanging their work on the walls. It’s all starting to come together.