For over fifteen years the Cactus Club has been among the finest live music venues in Milwaukee, featuring such acts as The White Stripes, Queens of the Stone Age, Interpol, Death Cab for Cutie, Trans Am, The Promise Ring, The Dirtbombs,The Spits, The Faint, Spoon, Bright Eyes, Themselves, Eyedea And Abilities, Andrew Bird, Dan Deacon, Dalek, MC Chris, The Sword, High On Fire, and countless others. Newly remodeled from top to bottom and featuring an impressive Beer and Liquor menu, we open at 3pm daily. We are located at 2496 S. Wentworth. Click here for directions. tel. 414.897.0663

Home  Events  Booking 
 
 
 
 
Call Me Lightning, May 2008. All photography by Jenny Bohr.
Peter Cincotti w/ Christina Courtin

Peter Cincotti w/ Christina Courtin

Wed. 05/23 | 6:00PM

Buy Tickets
Event Details
Peter Cincotti Peter Cincotti, singer-songwriter-pianist and native New Yorker, began playing piano at the age of three. While in high school, he regularly performed in clubs throughout Manhattan and by the age of 18 was being called “one of the most promising singer-pianists of the next generation” by the New York Times. In 2003, Peter’s debut album, produced by the legendary Phil Ramone, reached #1 on the Billboard jazz charts, making Cincotti the youngest artist ever to do so. This led to acclaimed performances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, The Olympia in Paris, The Montreux Festival (where he won an award in their renown piano competition), Queen Elizabeth Hall in London, and many other prestigious venues around the world. Peter made his acting debut in the Kevin Spacey film Beyond The Sea, and also contributed to the film’s soundtrack. He then made a cameo appearance in the blockbuster film Spider-Man 2, and soon after became the face of Ermenegildo Zegna, promoting their 2004/2005 fashion campaign. His original song “December Boys” was featured in the Australian film December Boys, starring Daniel Radcliffe. In 2006, Cincotti teamed up with 14-time Grammy Award winner David Foster to record his first album of all original material for Warner Brothers Records entitled “East Of Angel Town.” His single “Goodbye Philadelphia” took the airwaves by storm reaching the Top Ten on radio playlists throughout Europe, and in the Spring of 2009, Cincotti brought the album to the United States by joining the artist Seal on his sold out American tour. Hailed as “the rebirth of cool” by Elle magazine, Peter explores musical styles that blend pop, rock, blues and jazz, infusing each new song he writes with originality and startling energy. His unparalleled piano skills and brilliantly relevant songwriting make Cincotti one of the most unique and socially aware artists in the music industry today, a sentiment that is freshly showcased on his new album “Metropolis.” “Working with people like David Ryan Harris (John Mayer, Dave Mathews, etc.), John Bettis (The Carpenters, Madonna, etc.), Jon Ingoldsby (Ke$ha, Elton John, etc.), and producer John Fields (Jonas Brothers, Switchfoot, Pink, etc.), opened the door to endless creative possibilities that allowed me to execute a vision without musical boundaries or limitations,” says Cincotti. “I wanted to make a record that could be played anywhere from a dance club to your living room and still feel unified. The songs themselves blend many genres and styles together, and explore themes of loss, change, sex, and love, with a musical atmosphere that revolves around the piano – as with everything I do.” “Metropolis” is scheduled for release Spring/Summer of 2012. Photos by Paola Mccartney Vicens Christina Courtin As anyone who’s caught one of Christina Courtin’s live performances can attest, the New York City–based musician decisively takes over whatever space she’s occupying, her long dark hair flying behind her as she paces the stage, her voice malleable and otherworldly, an irrepressible smile on her face throughout. It’s not simply youthful bravado but a kind of rapture that possesses her—the unalloyed pleasure of singing, connecting, pouring out as much of her heart as possible in an all-too-brief set. Making her Nonesuch debut, though, Courtin turns her high-voltage style inside out. Her self-titled disc is disarmingly beautiful and intimate, her voice at times pared down to a confessional whisper, yet it’s just as compelling as her bravura work on stage. There’s something beguiling about opening tracks “Green Jay” and “Bundah,” as if we’ve stumbled into a reverie already in progress. Courtin’s vocals are warm, gentle, and dreamy; she stretches out individual words in slow motion while chamber-ensemble strings wrap themselves around folk-rock-leaning melodies. As the disc progresses, darker, moodier sounds and emotions lurk around the edges of her songs. One gets the sense that turmoil lies beneath the surface, and that feeling becomes palpable by the seventh track, the tour-de-force “Laconia.” Metal-tinged guitar chords courtesy of Jon Brion push aside the string ensemble and Courtin’s voice turns startlingly raw as she repeats, like Dorothy in Oz, “How did I end up here, and how do I get back?” Perhaps this 10-song set is a mirror of the journey Courtin herself took, from her Buffalo, NY, home to a coveted spot at The Juilliard School to live-music stages throughout New York City, at both its grungy clubs and its fabled concert halls. Courtin had been studying the violin since she was three and was gifted enough to make it into Juilliard as a violin student. Yet singing had always been a covert passion. As Courtin recalls, “I was singing ever since I was little; I always knew that I could. It was like this secret that I had or something. It was weird—I was really, really embarrassed. It took me a long time to be public about it. I just did it for fun. When I was 16, I wrote my first songs and I thought, ‘All right, let’s make a record.’” When she entered Juilliard, Courtin kept writing, though she initially kept her singing talent to herself. “It took me a while to realize what I wanted to do. I was miserable. And then I started singing in my junior year. From there everything changed.” Courtin agreed to participate in multimedia shows that her fellow Juilliard students would put on for their after-hours entertainment, playing pop and jazz and whatever else they weren’t getting to do in the classroom. At first, she proceeded with caution, but after her initial terror subsided, she discovered that performing her songs was exciting, addicting even, and she was inspired to put together a band to play around town and to record an independently released disc. Her Juilliard friends became her first fans: “The only friends I had at the time in New York were people I met at school, who were all mainly classical musicians. Luckily for me they were really supportive and came out to hear us play in places they probably would have never set foot in otherwise. But it was a scary experience, to have only musicians in the audience! Eventually my friends told their friends, until the people coming to see us weren’t just musicians anymore. Soon enough the audiences were full of people that I didn’t know at all.” She laughs. “I guess my friends were all sick of me.” For Courtin, the pop and classical aspects of her career operated on parallel tracks. She was offered the chance to work with cellist Yo-Yo Ma and his Silk Road Ensemble at a Carnegie Hall Professional Training Workshop in 2004. She went in to collaborate as a violinist with other musicians from around the world, but some members of the Silk Road Ensemble “spilled the beans and told Yo-Yo that I sang. I ended up singing a song for one of the concerts at Zankel Hall. It was a lot of fun, and I met great people that I remain friends with today. The experience turned me on to so many feelings and so many people.” Courtin was the only non-operatic singer asked to join the group at another Carnegie Hall workshop, led by soprano Dawn Upshaw and Argentine composer Osvoldo Golijov. Upshaw not only became a supporter and a fan, but she suggested to her friends at her longtime label Nonesuch that perhaps they should go hear one of Courtin’s shows. Those artistic relationships have continued: Courtin played violin in Golijov’s La Pasión Según San Marcos (The Passion According to St. Mark) in the Canary Islands in February and is scheduled to sing alongside Upshaw in Dresden, Germany, this May. Courtin co-produced the album with bassist Greg Cohen and her frequent band-mate, singer/guitarist Ryan Scott. The inspired choice of Cohen reflects Courtin’s own range and ambition: he’s played live and/or recorded with John Zorn, Ornette Coleman, Tom Waits, Antony and the Johnsons, even Woody Allen. They chose to cut most of these songs in Los Angeles with an accomplished group of musicians, including keyboardist Benmont Tench, drummer Jim Keltner, pedal steel player Greg Leisz, and multi-instrumentalist Jon Brion. (Leisz helps bring a pronounced Nashville lilt to “Foreign Country” and” One Man Down.”) Says Courtin, “When we went out to L.A., I was pretty nervous, and didn’t really know what to expect, musically or personality-wise. But it turned out great. They were really, really sweet to me—and they didn’t have to be. There was a lot of time spent talking about what instruments we were going to use on which tunes, but there wasn’t a lot of time spent on learning the tunes. Those guys don’t need anyone to tell them what to play, once they got a sense of the music. Their ears are amazing. You give a song to them and out comes this incredible arrangement. They all have killer instincts." Additional sessions in New York City featured guitarist Marc Ribot and pianist Rob Burger (of the Tin Hat Trio). Pulling together the sessions from both coasts was engineer-mixer David Boucher, who’s also recently worked with Randy Newman and Andrew Bird. Courtin arranged most of the strings, performed by Brooklyn Rider, a boundary-pushing string quartet that also performs as part of Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble. (To further the musical connections, the quartet’s co-founders, brothers Colin and Eric Jacobson, lead the Knights, a chamber orchestra in which Courtin plays.) The only thing Courtin didn’t do on this record, notably, is play violin—“Take that, Juilliard!” she jokes—though she does contribute some viola and toy piano to “Hedonistic Paradise.” Appraising her album, Courtin says, finally, “The records that I love the most are the ones that are full of life and energy—and that doesn’t in any way mean perfection. They have real feeling to them. One of the things I wanted to achieve with the record was for it to be a real world of its own, with songs and sounds that take you somewhere else.”
Artists
Comments

You must Login to post comments.