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04/05/2010
James Maddock - WFUV and VinoFile members ONLY (no tickets will be sold to the general public)
04/21/2010
Ian Hunter, legendary lead singer of Mott the Hoople - April 21 - ADDED DUE TO POPULAR DEMAND
04/22/2010
the church - An Intimate Space tour -30th Anniversary Acoustic Show - ONLY NYC performance
Music Event February 28, 2010
- Robyn Hitchcock with Sean Nelson and Lenny Kaye
- 8:00pm
Tickets
- Bar Stools$35.00
- Reserved Tables$40.00
- Reserved Best Tables$45.00
- VIP Tables$55.00
SOLD OUT
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Just Announced
Former Harvey Danger frontman Sean Nelson will join Robyn for this show with a special guest appearance from Patti Smith band member, Lenny Kaye on rhythm guitar. Sure to be a stellar collaboration.
Much has been written about Robyn Hitchcock, but the truth of his experience only truly plays out in performance. To immerse yourself in his songs is to gain a deeper understanding of what drives all creation. The timing and delivery of his lyrics is surreal enough that it draws you into deep explorations of the psyche. Prepare yourself for a truly remarkable evening with the master songwriter.
ABOUT ROBYN HITCHCOCK
Robyn Hitchcock is one of England's most enduring contemporary singer/songwriters and live performers, although he's been branded eccentric and quirky during the course of his long career. Hitchcock started his recording career with the Soft Boys, a punk-era band specializing in melodic pop merged with comedic lyrics. His voice veers between John Lennon and Syd Barrett, helping to nurture his madman reputation, but his true influences lie more in English folk-rock; his guitar and vocal style and lyrical inanities recall the Incredible String Band or Roy Harper. Hitchcock's solo debut, 1981's Black Snake Diamond Role, helped consolidate his reputation as an oddball and was followed by the psychedelia of Groovy Decay in 1982 and the all-acoustic I Often Dream of Trains in 1984.
By 1985, his penchant for zaniness and songsmithing coalesced with Fegmania!. Three years later, Hitchcock landed his first major U.S. label contract with A&M Records and released Globe of Frogs in 1988 and Queen Elvis in 1989. He sustained and probably even grew his career; however, by this time, critical approval had fallen off for his work. It wasn't until the 1996 release of Moss Elixir that Hitchcock returned to form and fully embraced his folk roots. Storefront Hitchcock, the soundtrack to the Jonathan Demme-directed concert film, followed in 1998.
Upon release from his contract with Warner Bros., Hitchcock self-released A Star for Bram in 2000, a collection of outtakes and leftover recordings from the Jewels for Sophia sessions. In 2002 he released Robyn Sings, a double-disc collection of Bob Dylan songs culled from various venues in America and abroad during 1999-2000. The stripped-down Luxor followed in 2003. The following year saw the prolific artist taking a bit role in Jonathan Demme's remake of The Manchurian Candidate, as well as releasing Spooked, a collaboration with Gillian Welch and David Rawlings recorded over a period of six days in Nashville. A Japanese compilation featuring new, live, and rare recordings called Obliteration Pie arrived at the beginning of 2006, followed by This Is the BBC, a Hux Records collection of tunes recorded for the network during the mid-'90s.







