Nellie McKay and Turtle Island Quartet to Perform 1/4 at Eccles Center

By: Dec. 20, 2013
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Singer, songwriter, ukulele player, pianist, mimic, comedienne and actor Nellie McKay joins forces with two-time Grammy award-winning Turtle Island Quartet for a jazzy jaunt back in time. The program, "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing," fills The Eccles Center with the tunes of Billie Holiday, Billy Strayhorn, Doris Day and the Weimar cabaret of the 1920s (plus some present-day originals). Show starts at 7:30 p.m.

McKay and Turtle Island share a knack for improvisation as well as a tendency to charm. A "bewitching pixie of a performer" (The New York Times), McKay can pull off sweetness and sunshine as well as biting wit with her beguiling stage presence and velvet vocals. Equally versatile and original in its endeavors, Turtle Island fuses the classical quartet esthetic with contemporary American musical styles and evocative and innovative rhythms. This rare collaboration will include originals by McKay and Turtle Island. And the show borrows from the icons of the 1920s and 1930s: Billie Holiday favorites, such as These Foolish Things and The Very Thought of You; classics made famous by Marlene Dietrich such as Ich Bin Die Feshce Lola and Black Market; and music from Doris Day and Strayhorn (including the standard, "A Flower is a Lovesome Thing").

Turtle Island Quartet, which was founded in 1985, has been unafraid to push the boundaries of chamber music. The members - David Balakrishnan, Mark Summer, Mateusz Smoczynski and Benjamin von Gutzeit - have brazenly journeyed through an array of genres not typically associated with string ensembles: folk, bluegrass, swing, be-bop, funk, R&B, new age, rock, hip-hop, as well as music of Latin America and India. The Grammy-winning quartet has a vast repertoire packed into dozens of recordings as well as soundtracks for film, TV and radio (Today Show, All Things Considered, Prairie Home Companion, and Morning Edition). And this is not the group's first foray into collaboration with edgy artists; Turtle Island has teamed up with everyone from Paquito d'Rivera to Leo Kottke.

In describing the quartet, a St. Louis Post-Dispatch reviewer raves, "It must have been like this when Beethoven was taking Vienna by storm - the exhilaration of seeing the future of classical music unfold before your eyes and ears."

The uber-talented Nellie McKay last graced The Eccles stage in 2012 with her poignant and entertaining indie-cabaret-pop performance of "I Want to Live." Given her remarkably varied talents, McKay's career has traveled a colorful road. She won a Theatre World Award for her portrayal of Polly Peachum in Broadway's "The Threepenny Opera" and performed onscreen in PS I Love You. Aside from recording her own original albums, her music has accompanied television shows, such as Grey's Anatomy and Boardwalk Empire; she's also appeared on an array of talk shows, such as Late Show with David Letterman.

"We are overjoyed to welcome back the extraordinary Nellie McKay and Turtle Island Quartet - a talented group that promises to be a fantastic departure from any preconceived notions you may have of classical chamber music," says PCI executive director Teri Orr. "It's edgy. It's fun. It's bold. It's delightful."

Park City Institute presents Nellie McKay and Turtle Island Quartet's "A Flower is a Lonesome Thing" on Saturday, January 4. The concert takes place at The George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Center for the Performing Arts (1750 Kearns Blvd., Park City). Show starts at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $20 to $69 with a 20-percent discount for seniors; ½ price tickets for children ages 16 and under; $5 seats available in the Copper Section for Summit County students (K-12). Tickets and information are available at The Eccles Center box office, 435-655-3114 or www.ecclescenter.org.

Park City Institute is a non-profit organization, dedicated to bringing world-class performances and new ideas to the community. Since 1998, PCI has presented internationally renowned and cutting edge musicians, actors, authors, comedians, dancers, speakers and film at The George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Center for the Performing Arts (a joint-use facility with the Park City School District). The organization will present its 11th season of headliner concerts at Deer Valley Resort in the summer of 2014. PCI is dedicated to introducing young people to the arts through free student outreach workshops, shows and demonstrations. They proudly launched the Mega Genius Supply Store and IQ HQ - an after school literacy program and very thinky retail store - in January 2010. And the organization continues to illuminate with TEDx events and Curiosities evenings.



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