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    Jazz in August...Charlie Parker Festival -- concerts, art, readings and more! Stay tuned for details; sign up on our mailing list. (see contacts for more information)
  • Yolene Legrand Calendars

    2009 wall calendars featuring the art work of the internationally known, Haitian-born, New York artist Yolene Legrand are now available for purchase at Tribes. This beautiful calendar, on high quality semi-gloss paper is 12" x 12" and has different images for each month.

  • Charlie Parker Festival(link)


    August 7, 2008- August 29, 2008
    Venue: Tribes Gallery
    Address: 285 East Third Street, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10009

    Thur. August 7th, 6-9 pm: “Bird in the Bush” – Group art exhibition

    7 pm: Live music by Search

    Artists include: Itziar Barrio, Dianne Bowen, Stephanie Colonna, Robyn Desposito, Nikki Johnson, Hilary Maslon, Kelley Meister, Grace Rim, Emily Steinfeld, Angela Valeria, Chin Chih Yang, Alessandra Zeka

    Sun. August 10th: “Dead Bird Films” (Films from the year of Charlie Parker’s death)

    In Tribes Garden

    8 pm: Ryder Pales – Live Concert

    9 pm: Film Screening – “The Man With the Golden Arm” (1955 Frank Sinatra)

    Tues. August 12th: 7-9 pm: Piano and Cello Duo featuring Francesca Tedeschi and Noelle Casella

    Sat. August 16th: “Bird in the Bushes”

    In Tribes Garden

    5 pm: Poetry Reading featuring Erich Christiansen, Steve Dalachinsky, John Farris, Merry Fortune, Yuko Otomo, Amy Ouzoonian, Eve Packer

    7 pm: Live Music - Will McEvoy Ensemble

    8 pm: Live Music - Bobby Sanabria’s Quintet

    Sat. August 23rd: “Love Does Not Make My Cat Play Ragtimey”

    8 pm: Multimedia Performance and music featuring Sabrina Chapadjiev, Joseph Keckler and Chavisa Woods

    Sun. August 24th: In Tribes Garden

    6 pm: Acoustic Jam – Flash-Back Puppy Band featuring Denmark’s Carsten “Nado” Kragelund Adrian Chan, Cello plus an Open Mic

    Fri. August 29th: “Charlie Parker Birthday Block Party” – Free!

    2-9 pm: Day-long Street Fest featuring:

    An Artist Flea Market

    An Open Mic in the East 3rd St. Community Garden.Sign up begins at 2 pm and the event lasts until 5 pm (all types) with featured poets Jennifer Blowdryer, Steve Dalachinsky, Hattie Gosset, Tom Savage, Danny Shot, Chavisa Woods, and Susan Yung

    7 pm: Street Concert featuring the Stumblebum Brass Band

    Contributions are accepted at the door $7

    This event is sponsored in part by: Capital One Bank, Poets and Writers, Loisaida Drugs, the DCA, the L Magazine, Astor Wines & Spirits, Chez Betty Café, Councilwoman Rosie Mendez, Phil Hartman, Anyssa Kim, Robert Mnuchin, Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn and other private donors.


  • Events Calendar

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Saturday September 13th 2-4pm Memorial reading of I Dream About You Baby, poems by Lester Afflick at the St. Marks Poetry Project located at 131 East 10th Street @ 2nd ave.





poem-idreamaboutyou.jpg

Fly By Night Press is proud to announce the publication of I Dream About You Baby, poems by Lester Afflick.

Book release Party July 19th 2008 4-5:30 pm @ The Bowery Poetry Club- Readers TBA



Latest Reviews

BEIJING COMA by Ma Jian

BEIJING COMA by Ma Jian
translated by Flora Drew
Reviewed by Sarah Goodwin-Nguyen
Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008 , 592 pages
$27.50
With this year’s Olympic games being held in Beijing, China’s past and present human rights violations have become front-page news again.   Perhaps the last time the world paid as much attention to Beijing was in 1989, when a […]


The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño,

The Savage Detectives by Roberto Bolaño, Translated from the Spanish by Natasha Wimmer
Reviewed by Sarah Goodwin-Nguyen
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Hardcover, 2007, 577 pages
$27
Critics from The New Yorker, Bookforum, The Washinton Post, etc. proclaim Bolaño an exciting, pivotal voice in Latin American literature, and gush isn’t-it-great the book has finally been translated into English?  The literati […]


Review of “Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky: Jimi Hendrix: Voodoo Child”

He is eternally young, eternally a memory. Because he cannot defend himself, he becomes eternally an ideological figure, a figure whose connotations have unavoidably trumped his personality. Dead men tell no tales, so men with agendas do so for them.


America’s Child

The Sixties were a bend in the river—-a river that seems to be in danger of going the way of the Rio Grande—dried up. Susan Sherman traces the gathering currents of this river at the confluence between some of its major tributaries. For her it begins in Los Angeles in the Forties and Fifties, which was by then the heart of America’s image-making machine. Her transformation follows the larger social trajectory of a country that rose victorious and prosperous from a world war. First are her frustrated early attempts to keep step with the world of toothpaste smiles, tidy lawns, backyard barbeques, martini cocktail hours, and non-filtered cigarettes. With her move to Berkley at nineteen, and the ensuing, age-specific progression of influences, relationships and their resulting liberations and limitations, she begins her five-decade investigation into political and social change and the power and beauty of language.


The Living Hair Do

“…Here we are well into fall and there’s so much catching
up to do so let’s begin where I last left off with a brief list of
gigs I witnessed, before getting to the heart of this article.
There was the Zorn – Lou Reed duo which culminated with guest
appearances by Mike Patton, Zeena Parkins and Ikue Mori, followed 2 nights
later by Zorn, Reed, Ribot and Milford Graves who played impeccably and
tastefully throughout the night and who during set two when Reed
joined in, actually seemed to enjoy being “the drummer in the
band”…”



Latest Poetry

TRIBES & AQUARIAN ARTS ANNOUNCE POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

 
 If you are haveing trouble viewing the page please click on the link below
http://aquarianarts.org/pages/events.html
Selected by Yerra Sugarman,
author of The Bag of Broken Glass and Forms of Gone
http://yerrasugarman.blogspot.com/

1st place: Andrea L. Watson
 
2nd Place: Richard Palmer
 
3rd place Barry Denny
—————————————————————————–
 
Andrea L. Watson

Naming Ours the […]


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Latest Essays

The Living Hair Do

“…Here we are well into fall and there’s so much catching
up to do so let’s begin where I last left off with a brief list of
gigs I witnessed, before getting to the heart of this article.
There was the Zorn – Lou Reed duo which culminated with guest
appearances by Mike Patton, Zeena Parkins and Ikue Mori, followed 2 nights
later by Zorn, Reed, Ribot and Milford Graves who played impeccably and
tastefully throughout the night and who during set two when Reed
joined in, actually seemed to enjoy being “the drummer in the
band”…”


Remembering John Ranard- Words from the Memorial

 Andrew Castrucci
Dear john
you were one of my closest friends
I miss you dearly
i’ve known you for over 22 years
john you left us to early
I wasn’t ready for you to leave
I thought you were going to make another comeback
My muhammid aLI FROM LOUIEVILLE
You always had the strength to bounce back- I wasn’t ready to say goodbye
I […]



Latest Fiction

Selection from the short story “We Could Have Been Huge” - By Paul Lee

Simon
The more he thought about it, the worse it got.
He couldn’t stop thinking about it.
It kept getting worse.
Simon was lying on his bed in the dark. It was like his brain was accelerating and careening and fishtailing down a greased-up Mobius strip, all pumping and smashing down the brake pedal but the brake pedal is […]



Latest Videos

Steve Cannon for President!

www.News3Online.com


Obama’s speech on race

NPR link


Why not a black man?

Lest We Forget!

A Black Man

pic19973.jpg

Why is it that a Black Man can create a tiny piece called a filament
(electric light - Lewis Latimer) That allows people to see in the dark?
But can’t be seen fit to lead a country to the true light.

Why is it that a Black Man can create an instrument (clock - Benjamin
Banneker) that all People use to tell time?
But people don’t think it is time for him to run a country.

Why is it that a Black Man can design a place for the high authorities to
meet in & a place for the President to live in (The Capital & the
White House Phillip Reid (a slave) & Pierre L’Enfant)?
But not good enough to lead these meetings or live in himself.

Why is it that a Black Man was brilliant enough to do the first open heart
surgery (Dr. Daniel Hale Williams) And show the world how to get and
preserve plasma (Dr. Charles Drew)?
But not good enough to put a program in place where everyone can afford
this surgery.

Why is it that a Black Man was creative enough to design an instrument
(traffic light - Garrett Morgan) To bring multiple people (traffic) to a
halt?
But not seen creative enough to design a plan to bring all this unnecessary

and worthless Fighting between countries to an end.

Why is it that a Black Man could create the soles (shoes - Jan Matzeliger)
that people Walk on everyday?
But not seen good enough to fill the shoes of a bad president.

Why is it that a Black Man was smart enough & brave enough to teach himself
(Fredrick Douglas & Thomas Fuller - both slaves) and others how to read,
write and/or calculate math?
But not seen (as) smart enough and bold enough to calculate a platform to
be President to a country That sure needs another first by us.

So you see my Brothers and Sisters what I am saying is let us not forget
our past, Which led us to our present and can definitely be the backbone to
our
future.

We were good enough, smart enough, creative enough, and bold enough then,
so Lets all give Obama the chance to show that we are still these things
and more.

We all are as strong as our weakest link, so don’t be that weak link that
denies Our people that chance to show we still can OVERCOME & BE THE FIRST.

LeeAnn Wright
Heller, Draper, Hayden, Patrick & Horn, L.L.C.
650 Poydras Street, 25th Floor
New Orleans, LA  70130
Direct - (504) 299-3349
Firm -    (504) 299-3300
Fax -     (504) 299-3399

- OR -

9311 Bluebonnet Boulevard
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70810
Firm - (225) 767-1499
Fax -  (225) 761-0760