Valentine's Day Dining at The Ribbon Midtown
Posted Feb 14, 2020
What a fabulous dinner we had for Valentine's Day this year! For our annual outing we chose The Ribbon in Midtown and what a treat it was indeed!
View full postPosted Feb 14, 2020
What a fabulous dinner we had for Valentine's Day this year! For our annual outing we chose The Ribbon in Midtown and what a treat it was indeed!
View full postPosted Feb 11, 2020
Midge Ure, who is a very young 66 (and whose given name is James Ure), has led an exemplary career as one of the major point men of British pop music.
View full postUpdated Feb 11, 2020
We've compiled some fun and little known facts about NYC. You may find several you weren't aware of. They are categorized as Fun, Historical, Broadway and Famous Firsts. Enjoy!
View full postUpdated Feb 9, 2020
Tucked away along a busy block of Mulberry Street is one of the city’s quiet gems of Italian dining. Paesano's of Little Italy is still making exquisite but simple Italian dishes here the same way they did when the restaurant first opened. Paesano's has been a fixture of Little Italy since 1911 and is the original red sauce Italian restaurant.
View full postPosted Jan 23, 2020
Restaurant week began for me at The Ribbon on West 44th Street. One of two venues with the same name (the other is off Central Park on West 72nd Street), The Ribbon is a roomy, comfy spot ensconced in the middle of the theater district.
View full postPosted Jan 21, 2020
Ken Burns’s epic history of “Country Music” covered virtually every aspect of that great American musical form, except, now that I think of it, one very important point: that country & western, like rock and also jazz, Mr. Burn’s other well-explored musical passion, has been a musical form that originated and flourished in the USA - with some foreign roots to be sure - and was then famously re-gifted to the rest of the world.
View full postUpdated Jan 21, 2020
Nektar, which celebrated its 50th anniversary a few months ago, is one of those not-so-little rock bands that could. Their music was, essentially, too involved, too complicated, too “progressive” for the band to have hit singles, and even their albums were not the kind of surface-y, hook-y pop that generated Billboard chart sales - most of their most memorable “songs,” if that’s the word for them, were 40 minutes long.
View full postPosted Jan 9, 2020
About three songs in to his opening (Monday) night set at The Iridium, Simon Phillips, in his first talking break to the audience, made the comment in his unquestionably British accent that his friends in the UK have forgotten that he is actually English while most Americans are well aware that he wasn’t exactly born in the Bronx.
View full postUpdated Jan 3, 2020
Whenever I experience the music of Pharoah Sanders - and I’ve been going to see him at The Iridium for over 15 years at least - I’m always reminded that many of the preconceptions that we have regarding the evolution of jazz are completely wrong. I have it in my head that, in the modern era at least, that every new school of jazz was more abstract and less audience-friendly that that which preceded it.
View full postPosted Dec 15, 2019
By Kevin Yazell
It became immediately evident at last night’s John Waite show, his second of two nights at The Iridium, that his heartfelt lyrics and sincere delivery has been underappreciated by the masses for a long time. These are the qualities that make his work stand out head and shoulders above many of his 80s and 90s contemporaries.
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