With
over 250 artists from more than a dozen countries, the Ashkenaz
Festival transforms Toronto’s waterfront with global Jewish arts and
culture
TORONTO, ON –
This Labour Day weekend, join over 250 artists from around the world at
the 10th biennial Ashkenaz Festival to experience the vibrancy of
Jewish creativity, from the traditional to the cross-cultural. From the
ever-popular Ashkenaz Parade produced by Shadowland Theatre, to the
music of klezmer-gypsy party-punk rockers Lemon Bucket Orkestra, the
staggering array of music, film, performance, literature, crafts and
visual arts invites people of all ages and backgrounds to explore Jewish
culture.
"Ashkenaz represents the
cutting-edge of contemporary Jewish artistic creation," says Eric Stein,
artistic director. " In 2014, as we present the 10th edition of our
world-renowned festival of Jewish musical and artistic creativity, we
continue striving to serve as a vibrant continuum of artistic and
communal transformation, in which past meets present to establish a
living, breathing culture whose own legacy will resonate far into the
future.”
The product of a long and
storied past, found in all corners of the globe today, Jewish culture is
one that continues to be informed by a special preoccupation with
memory and remembrance. That unique raison d’etre will also serve as a
wellspring of creativity in Toronto this Labour Day weekend as
Harbourfront Centre, on the occasion of its 40th anniversary,
collaborates with the Ashkenaz Festival to showcase the varied artistry
of this diverse, living culture.
International headliners include the Canadian premieres of the racy Yiddish folk-opera Lilith The Night Demon in One Lewd Act, Jewish-Afrobeat pioneers Zion80 from New York, Yiddish psychedelic rockers Forshpil
from Russia and Germany, genre-busting DJ and Latin-Jewish fusionist
Simja Dujov from Argentina, Iraqi-Jewish roots rocker Dudu Tassa from
Israel, and the multimedia tour de force The Sarajevo Haggadah: Music of the Book.
Canada is also well-represented, with local musicians and artists like JUNO-award winning David Buchbinder's Odessa/Havana,
Vancouver klezmer-punk upstart Geoff Berner, Montreal Yiddish hip-hop
renegade Socalled, Toronto choral sensation Choir! Choir! Choir!, Quebec
fiddling femme fatale Briga, and Jaffa Road's Aviva Chernick with her
stunning new solo project, titled simply AVIVA.
For
additional information and complete event listings, the public may
visit harbourfrontcentre.com/summer/ashkenaz or call the Information
Hotline at 416-973-4000.
About Ashkenaz Festival
The
Ashkenaz Festival is one of the largest and most prestigious showcases
of Jewish music and culture in the world. Since 1995, the festival has
taken place biennially at Harbourfront Centre, Toronto’s premier venue
for the presentation of world and folk culture and for the meeting of
diverse communities through the arts. Originally founded as a showcase
for Klezmer and Yiddish music and culture, the Ashkenaz Festival has
evolved over the years into an eclectic showcase of global Jewish art
and culture, encompassing not merely the traditions of Eastern Europe,
but also Sephardic, Mizrachi and Israeli culture, and all manner of
cross-cultural fusion. The Festival is offered 90% free to the public
and attracts a multicultural audience of over 60,000 people. Nowhere
else in the world does so large and diverse an audience come together to
experience Jewish cultural arts. Though strongly focused on music,
Ashkenaz is a multidisciplinary festival, including dance, theatre,
film, literature and talk, visual arts, and kids/family programs.
Ashkenaz usually features over 80 performances and 200 individual
artists, hailing from across Canada and around the world. Over the
years, Ashkenaz has presented artists from over 25 countries and 6
continents.
ABOUT HARBOURFRONT CENTRE
Harbourfront
Centre is a Canadian charity operating the 10 prime acres of Toronto’s
central waterfront as a free and open public site. We celebrate the
multiplicities of cultures that comprise Canada and enliven the city
through the creative imaginations of artists from across the country and
around the globe. For information about visiting Harbourfront Centre
during the Queens Quay revitalization, visit
harbourfrontcentre.com/gettinghere.
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Ashkenaz Festival Highlights
The Sarajevo Haggadah: Music of the Book
Sunday, August 31, 2014 from 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. – Harbourfront Centre Theatre
The
Sarajevo Haggadah: Music of the Book is a new multimedia work that
traces the highly dramatic story of one of the world’s most famous
manuscripts. It is composed and performed by Bosnian-born, Los
Angeles-based accordionist Merima Kljuco, whose unique score draws on
the musical traditions of Spain, Italy, Austria, and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Presented with animation by video artist Bart Woodstrup, The Sarajevo
Haggadah follows the manuscript’s travels from medieval Spain to 20th
century Bosnia. This is when it was hidden and rescued during World War
II by Muslims, and later restored by the National Museum in Sarajevo
after the 1992-1995 war. The presentation will be introduced by Canadian
journalist Ralph Benmergui, who will also host a talkback with the
artists and the audience following the show.
Cost: $22 (Advanced Ticket) and $25 (Day of Ticket)
Zion80
Sunday, August 31, 2014 from 9:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. – WestJet Stage
Zion80
explores Jewish music – from Carlebach to Zorn and everything in
between – through the lens of the Afrobeat master Fela Kuti. Join them
for their CD release of Adramelech.
The Ashkenaz Parade
Monday, September 1, 2014 from 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Redpath Stage
The
signature event of the Ashkenaz Festival, the Ashkenaz Parade
transforms Harbourfront Centre into a swirling cavalcade of music,
dance, theatre, giant puppetry, stiltwalkers and various other forms of
pomp and pageantry. Under the direction once again of Toronto street
theatre stalwarts Shadowland Theatre, the Parade features hundreds of
musicians, artists and community participants in a joyful and whimsical
procession that serves as the penultimate climax to the Ashkenaz
Festival.
David Buchbinder’s Odessa/Havana
Saturday, August 30, 2014 from 8:00 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. – WestJet Stage
Ashkenaz
founding Artistic Director David Buchbinder teams up with a crew of top
Jazz and World musicians to present this exhilarating project of
musical discovery: the Jewish-Cuban connection. 2014 JUNO winners for
World Music Album of the Year.
Lemon Bucket Orkestra
Saturday, August 30, 2014 from 9:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. – WestJet Stage
Toronto's
notorious "Balkan-klezmer-Gypsy-party-punk super-band" caps off a
nationwide summer tour with a triumphant homecoming performance on the
main stage
Choir! Choir! Choir!
Sunday, August 31, 2014 from 7:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. – Redpath Stage
Toronto’s bar-hopping choral phenomenon delivers a set of Jewish pop classics in three-part harmonies.
SCHUND (2010)
Saturday August 30, 11pm. - Studio Theatre
This
clever and heartfelt mockumentary unfolds like a detective story
exploring the disappearance of a fictional Yiddish actor 25 years ago.
The only clue: a mysterious inscription on the door of his house reading
"schund". Along the way, we meet the very real colorful characters who
made up Israel's vibrant Yiddish theater scene during the country's
first decades. Yiddish theater thrived even as it drew ire from an
Israeli establishment bent on suppressing what it felt was a threat to
the primacy of Hebrew culture.
The Yellow Ticket
Featuring a Live Musical Score by Alician Svigals and Marilyn Lerner
Sunday, August 31, 2014 from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. – Harbourfront Centre Theatre
Set
in Poland and Tsarist Russia, The Yellow Ticket (1918) portrays a
woman’s struggle to overcome adversity in a story of secret identities,
heroic measures, and triumphant love. Remarkably progressive for its
time, The Yellow Ticket was the first film to explore Jewish
discrimination in Tsarist Russia. It stars famed Polish actress Pola
Negri, Hollywood’s first European silent film star. The film is shown
with a live musical score composed by famed Klezmer violinist Alicia
Svigals (The Klezmatics).
Cost: $15 (Advanced Ticket) and $18 (Day of Ticket)
CATSKILLS CABARET
Saturday August 30, 10:30pm. - Lakeside Terrace, FREE
This
new spin on Ashkenaz’s signature late-night cabaret sessions features
novelty songs, comedy, spoken word, jokes, magic tricks, ventriloquism,
feats of strength, and perhaps a rubber chicken or two.
GEOFF BERNER with SOCALLED - Festival Man
Sunday August 31, from 6 pm to 7:00 pm – Marilyn Brewer Community Space
Festival
Man is the first novel by rebel folk scene accordionist and songwriter
Geoff Berner. At turns funny and strangely sobering, this "found memoir"
is a picaresque tale of inspired, heroic deceit, incompetence, and –
just possibly – triumph. The author will read passages from his twisted
tome, and be interviewed by Socalled about his process and inspiration
in creating this ultimately scathing portrait of the Canadian folk music
festival scene.
Late Night Dance Parties
Saturday August 31 and Sunday September 1, from 11 pm to 1 am – Brigantine Room
The
party rages late on consecutive nights in Ashkenaz’s popular late-night
dance concerts in the Brigantine Room. Groove-heavy sets from
klezmer-cumbia guru Simja Dujov and psychedelic Yiddish rockers Forshpil
will be followed by DJ sets from Socalled.
Lilith, the Night Demon in One Lewd Act
Monday, September 1, 2014 from 6:0 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. – Harbourfront Centre Theatre
Veretski
Pass's newest and most daring project is a Yiddish chamber-folk opera
that tells the story of Adam's first wife, in an adult, edgy alternate
story of creation. Refusing to lie beneath Adam, Lilith flies off to the
Red Sea creating then killing 100 demon babies a day, until the three
angels sent by God negotiate a deal with her.
Cost: $22 (Advanced Ticket) and $25 (Day of Ticket)
Festival Finale
Monday, September 1, 2014 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. – WestJet Stage
As
always, the festival comes to a climactic close with a series of
performances by some of this year’s headlining artists, culminating in a
massive jam session with all the Festival musicians. This year’s finale
will include tributes to two giants of Yiddish culture who left us this
past year, researcher and anthologist Chana Mlotek and songwriter/poet
Beyle Schaechter-Gottesman
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