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ParkARTS neighborhood concerts, Swingin' In The Fens, featuring Marianne Solivan

Join us this summer in Boston parks for live concerts in your neighborhood.

July 24, 2019
Event Date2019-07-24T18:30:00

The sound of jazz will fill the Fenway area at Swingin’ in the Fens, the annual free concert, which takes place at Ramler Park, a jewel of the Fenway neighborhood. Parks and Recreation is hosting live concerts in neighborhoods throughout Boston. Neighborhood concerts are made possible by the generosity of:

  • Bank of America, and
  • support from Berklee College of Music.

All ParkARTS neighborhood performances are free of charge.  For more information, or a full schedule of events, please call 617-635-4505, visit the Parks Department online, or follow us on Facebook.

July 24, 2019
Event Date2019-07-24T18:30:00

Dorothy Curran Concert Series: Harold Melvin's Blue Notes

The Dorothy Curran Concert Series is Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series.

August 30, 2017
Event Date2017-08-30T19:00:00 - 2017-08-30T20:30:00

Now celebrating 45 years as Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series, these performances feature exciting entertainment for music lovers of all ages. This series is presented by Mayor Walsh in partnership with the:

  • Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and
  • the Mayor’s Office of Tourism, Sports, and Entertainment.

The title sponsor for this series is Bank of America.

About Harold Melvin's Blue Notes

Harold Melvin and The Blue Notes were and still are a charismatic Philly band whose roots dates back to long before their leap into stardom during the 70s. Behind lead singer Melvin, and the immensely popular Teddy Pendergrass, the group enjoyed the same tremendous success as their contemporaries featured on the 70s Soul Jam Tour.

Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes were formed by Melvin in Philadelphia in 1954, and not surprisingly, they would endure a long road characterized of modest success before reaching national stardom.  The group, which featured Melvin, Donald Broody, and Bernard Williams, signed with the small, New York-based Josie Records in 1954.  In 1960 under the Valley Vue label, they went onto record their first hit to reach the R&B charts with the single, "My Hero."

In 1970, it was the apparently unassuming addition of Pendergrass as their drummer that set off a series of pivotal events that led to the group's jump into national prominence.  In 1972, the group collaborated with producers/songwriters Leon Huff and Kenny Gamble, the same duo that worked with the distinguished soul band, The O Jays, and signed with their Philadelphia International label.  Melvin and Gamble and Huff agreed Pendergrass was best suited in the role of lead singer, a decision that would prove to be ingenious in the coming years. With Pendergrass in his new role and Gamble and Huff's influence, Harold Melvin and The Blue Notes reeled off a series of hits off of their 1973 self-titled album, including, "If You Don't Know Me By Now" and "The Love I Lost", which reached No. 3 and No. 7 on the Billboard pop charts respectively.  The new-look lineup featured Pendergrass's refreshingly emotional vocals on ballads, which truly appealed to the masses.  Their success continued in 1975, with their "To Be True" album.

In 1975 the group was joined by female vocalist Sharon Paige. The group then went on to release one of their most critically acclaimed albums, "Wake Up Everybody". Except for a brief absence in the early 1980s, Sharon Paige has toured with the group ever since.

They released three Top 40 R&B hits off the album, "Where Are All My Friends", the No. 15 Billboard pop song, "Bad Luck", and the No. 1 R&B single, "Hope That We Can Be Together Soon", which was a silky smooth duet that featured Melvin and R&B singer and current group member Sharon Paige. In 1975, the group released another smash-hit album entitled, "Wake Up Everybody", which featured only two singles, including the title track, an uplifting, socially motivated number that reached No.12 on the Billboard Pop Charts. "Wake Up Everybody" turned out to be Pendergrass's final album with the group, as he went on to pursue a successful career.  Still, the group responded with their 1977 hit single, "Reaching for the World", with David Ebbo as their new lead singer, who sounded strikingly similar to Pendergrass. The song climbed to No. 6 on the Billboard R&B Charts.

The group went onto release seven more albums, including four compilation albums, but more significant was their role as one of the three original featured bands on the 70s Soul Jam tour in 1986. Harold Melvin passed away in 1997.

The group today consists of Donnell Gillespie, Rufus Thorn, Anthony Brooks, John Morris, and features Sharon Paige. They continue to tour and dazzle crowds with the same array of groovy rhythms and soulful ballads that was the foundation for a young, ambitious Philadelphia soul band in 1954.

August 30, 2017
Event Date2017-08-30T19:00:00 - 2017-08-30T20:30:00

Dorothy Curran Concert Series: Natural Wonder - A Tribute To Stevie Wonder

The Dorothy Curran Concert Series is Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series.

August 23, 2017
Event Date2017-08-23T19:00:00 - 2017-08-23T20:30:00

Now celebrating 45 years as Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series, these performances feature exciting entertainment for music lovers of all ages. This series is presented by Mayor Walsh in partnership with the:

  • Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and
  • the Mayor’s Office of Tourism, Sports, and Entertainment.

The title sponsor for this series is Bank of America.

About Natural Wonder - A Tribute To Stevie Wonder

According to the old idiom, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but some subjects worthy of flattery are not so easily imitated, and in the age of the tribute band, many a giant of the American songbook goes without authentic tribute simply because the original article set the bar a little too high.

Such seems to be the case with Stevie Wonder, the genius of composition and unparalleled vocal and instrumental ability who, throughout his career, has had the backing of some of the most formidable musicians in the industry. When one considers the colossal talent that is Stevie Wonder – the limitless voice and boundless multi-instrumental skill – it’s no mystery as to why there is not one full-fledged Stevie Wonder tribute band working in the American tribute market.

Enter Gabriel Bello and Natural Wonder, the Ultimate Stevie Wonder Experience.

While Stevie Wonder impersonators dot the landscape, backing tracks in hand, Natural Wonder rolls into town with the full band experience complete with a crack rhythm section, full-fledged horn ensemble, and the formidable Gabriel Bello, a #1 Billboard-ranked vocalist, producer and multi-instrumentalist, channeling the energy and artistry that has made Stevie Wonder an icon across decades and genres. Whether it’s the Motown-era hits like “Signed, Sealed, Delivered” and “My Cherie Amour,” the fusion-flavored 70s platters like “Master Blaster” and “Do I Do,” the genius of Songs in the Key of Life, the signature harmonica solo of “Isn’t She Lovely,” or Stevie’s modern masterpieces like “My Love is on Fire,” Gabriel Bello and the industry veterans who comprise Natural Wonder recreate the look, feel, and sound of a Stevie set with all the musicianship necessary to blow audiences away with a seemingly unending barrage of hit songs that span the Stevie Wonder catalog.

Since its inception in 2012, Natural Wonder has wowed audiences in numerous festivals, private/corporate events (for clients including the American Heart Association, the Make-A-Wish Foundation, and the Southeastern Jewelers Association), and large venues across the country including The House of Blues (Orlando and Myrtle Beach), B.B. Kings (New York City), The Fillmore (Charlotte, NC), The Downtown Cabaret (Bridgeport, CT), and Speaking Rock Casino, (El Paso, TX) to name only a few.

Make no mistake: Natural Wonder is the Ultimate Stevie Wonder Experience, an epic endeavor that brings real musicianship, a dynamic stage show, and a deep, studious love of the Stevie Wonder legacy to audiences who know that good, authentic music is “a language we all understand.”

August 23, 2017
Event Date2017-08-23T19:00:00 - 2017-08-23T20:30:00

Dorothy Curran Concert Series: Disco Night Featuring Stardust

The Dorothy Curran Concert Series is Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series.

August 16, 2017
Event Date2017-08-16T19:00:00 - 2017-08-16T20:30:00

Now celebrating 45 years as Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series, these performances feature exciting entertainment for music lovers of all ages. This series is presented by Mayor Walsh in partnership with the:

  • Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and
  • Mayor’s Office of Tourism, Sports, and Entertainment.

The title sponsor for this series is Bank of America.

About Stardust The Band 

Stardust is, in essence, a “Super-Band,” formed by gathering some of the most talented and experienced musicians in the entertainment industry and honed by over a decade of active rotation. The band is in high demand and performs regularly at fine venues and hotels throughout the country. Important distinctions about the Stardust Band are:

  • Stardust is exclusively comprised of full-time, professional musicians — no weekend warriors.
  • The band personnel do not change from engagement to engagement.
  • All band personnel are members of the Musicians Union.
  • Our references are impeccable; see for yourself.

We believe that the excitement level, dancing energy, and general feel of the party are directly related to the skill and ability of the band, and that the music should be “recording quality.” We will compromise neither quality nor expertise.

August 16, 2017
Event Date2017-08-16T19:00:00 - 2017-08-16T20:30:00

Dorothy Curran Concert Series: Strictly Sinatra by Michael Dutra

The Dorothy Curran Concert Series is Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series.

July 12, 2017
Event Date2017-07-12T19:00:00 - 2017-07-12T20:30:00

Now celebrating 45 years as Boston’s longest-running outdoor concert series, these performances feature exciting entertainment for music lovers of all ages. This series is presented by Mayor Walsh in partnership with the:

  • Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and
  • Mayor’s Office of Tourism, Sports, and Entertainment.

The title sponsor for this series is Bank of America.

About Michael Dutra and The Strictly Sinatra Band 

Michael Dutra is a Rhode Island native, since 2002 he has been performing his tribute to Frank Sinatra all over the United States, from Las Vegas, to Miami to Boston, in supper clubs, dinner theaters, performing arts centers and corporate events and private parties.

Michael has been hailed as one of the finest interpreters of the Sinatra sound in the world, as said by Boston Globe Columnist Wesley Morris “ his sound is velour to Sinatra’s velvet, you really can’t tell the difference." Ron Della Chiesa of WPLM Boston Radio and Sinatra Guru said “Michael literally channels Sinatra."

Most of Michael’s influence comes from his dad, “dad was always singing Sinatra songs throughout the house and I would remember the lyrics and join him from time to time, even at the early age of 7."

Michael recently recorded the vocals for a “twix candy bar commercial” being viewed in South America by millions of people every day.  He has also performed at the world famous Waldorf Astoria Hotel in NYC opening for Howie Mandel.  

Michael continues to perform regularly from Maine to Miami approximately 275 nights a year in all types of venues.   His true passion comes out when he is performing with his own Strictly Sinatra Band who appear with him touring primarily in Summer season  in New England and Winter in Florida.

July 12, 2017
Event Date2017-07-12T19:00:00 - 2017-07-12T20:30:00

Tito Puente Latin Music Series: Los Hacheros

The Tito Puente Latin Music Series is celebrating 11 years of bringing live Latin music with a strong salsa influence to Boston parks.

August 10, 2017
Event Date2017-08-10T19:00:00 - 2017-08-10T21:00:00

The events take place Thursdays in July and August at outdoor locations across Boston. The six-concert Tito Puente Latin Music Series presents a soundscape of live Latin music with a strong salsa influence in parks around the City. The series is coproduced by Berklee, City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and IBA Boston. Performers include:

  • Berklee faculty, students, and alumni, and
  • world-renowned artists.

There are free salsa lessons led by MetaMovements at select concerts.

About Los Hacheros

This Puerto Rican and Cuban influenced band is reviving Latin folkloric styles like son montuno, guaracha, and salsa by combining them with the fiery rhythms of bomba. Though only consisting of 6-musicians, this conjunto makes up for size with their explosive enthusiasm. They are widely known for their improvisation that keeps audiences on their toes.

August 10, 2017
Event Date2017-08-10T19:00:00 - 2017-08-10T21:00:00

Tito Puente Latin Music Series: Jesús Pagán y Conjunto Barrio

The Tito Puente Latin Music Series is celebrating 11 years of bringing live Latin music with a strong salsa influence to Boston parks.

August 3, 2017
Event Date2017-08-03T19:00:00 - 2017-08-03T21:00:00

The events take place Thursdays in July and August at outdoor locations across Boston. The six-concert Tito Puente Latin Music Series presents a soundscape of live Latin music with a strong salsa influence in parks around the City. The series is coproduced by Berklee, City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and IBA Boston. Performers include:

  • Berklee faculty, students, and alumni, and
  • world-renowned artists.

There are free salsa lessons led by MetaMovements at select concerts.

About Jesús Pagán y Conjunto Barrio

Led by local star, Jesús Pagán, this nine-man band has played at some of the best Latin and Jazz Festivals in the world for nearly a decade. Performing a myriad of Latin styles, including salsa, jazz, merengue, bomba, cumbia, and more, their music has landed them on Top Ten Latin Song lists and earned them 3 award-mentions in the 2014 Latin Grammys.

August 3, 2017
Event Date2017-08-03T19:00:00 - 2017-08-03T21:00:00

Tito Puente Latin Music Series: Eric Germán y su Orquesta

The Tito Puente Latin Music Series is celebrating 11 years of bringing live Latin music with a strong salsa influence to Boston parks.

July 6, 2017
Event Date2017-07-06T19:00:00

The events take place Thursdays in July and August at outdoor locations across Boston. The six-concert Tito Puente Latin Music Series presents a soundscape of live Latin music with a strong salsa influence in parks around the City. The series is coproduced by Berklee, City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department, and IBA Boston. Performers include:

  • Berklee faculty, students, and alumni, and
  • world-renowned artists.

There are free salsa lessons led by MetaMovements at select concerts.

About Eric Germán y su Orquesta

A well-known timbalero across the Massachusetts festival scene, Eric Germán and his 12-piece orchestra bring audiences to their feet with their high energy and swinging Salsa music. A prodigious musician, Germán has been performing since age 10 with renowned artists such as Cheo Feliciano, Andy Montañez, Ismael Miranda, and Tony Vega. In 2017, he’s slated to release his debut solo album.

July 6, 2017
Event Date2017-07-06T19:00:00

Mobius Presents: Concrete Actions

Experience artworks by thirteen artists throughout City Hall during this one-time event.

May 25, 2017
  • 5:00pm - 9:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Boston, MA 02201
  • Contact:
    Tom Johnston
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Downtown
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Published Date
Event Date2017-05-25T17:00:00 - 2017-05-25T21:00:00

Join the Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture for "Concrete Actions," an evening of site-inspired original works responding to the striking concrete modernist design of City Hall and the democratic ideals that continue to animate it. 

Commissioned by The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture, City of Boston as part of the HEROIC ENCOUNTERS Series, "Concrete Actions" will unfold on Thursday, May 25, at Boston City Hall, from 5-9 p.m.  Thirteen Mobius artists will activate the interior of the building through a diversity of media. The civic landmark will be transformed through aesthetic experimentation in interactive performance art, video, installation, sound and movement.

May 25, 2017
  • 5:00pm - 9:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Boston, MA 02201
  • Contact:
    Tom Johnston
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Downtown
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Published Date
Event Date2017-05-25T17:00:00 - 2017-05-25T21:00:00

About the event

Recent shifts in our current national political landscape and challenges to core values of inclusion have revived civic engagement in local democratic processes and institutions. It is therefore an appropriate moment to celebrate the architectural legacy of Boston City Hall, opened in 1969. 

The building’s innovative design reflected the architects’ ethical commitment to active public involvement and access to City government, as Mark Pasnik, Chris Grimley, and Michael Kubo emphasize in their book, "Heroic: Concrete Architecture and the New Boston," that inspired the HEROIC ENCOUNTERS Series.  Against this background, the Mobius Artist Group is honored to create Concrete Actions as part of the series.

Participating artists

El Putnam presents Digital Bru(i)t, an interplay of visual and aural confusion that attempts to convey complexities and challenges of maneuvering human engagement with politics through digital technology. The work incorporates excerpts from The Social Contract, by Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1762).

Jane Wang presents two works, Signs of Our Times III, a video slideshow of imagery from 95 artists and 21 composers reflecting the connecting theme of signage, and Concret concret, a duo of free-standing abstract wire sculptures, one of which she will knit live, in the main lobby of Boston City Hall.

Milan Kohout presents Spaces for Socialism, an interactive performance that engages audience members in conversation about their experience of architecture, interactive sharing of the human condition, and perspectives on how to create democratic socialist alternatives to modern life.

James Ellis Coleman presents Always Room for You, a visual art work exploring the scope and inclusion of the life histories of individuals as recorded in government documents stored in government repositories.

Joanne Rice and Tom Plsek present 42.3604° N, 71.0580° W, a sound/performance which explores the various sonic possibilities offered by the interiors spaces of several levels of Boston City Hall.

Sandrine Schaefer presents ESCALATE/DE-ESCALATE, a durational performance art piece sited on the escalators between the lobby and lower levels of Boston City Hall that explores notions of agreement and challenges ways time is experienced and perceived between bodies sharing space.

Daniel S. DeLuca presents Public Satellites: Telstar 20 BCH, an experimental communications platform designed to engage the public around City Hall.  Through the use of semiotic lures PST20BCH will capture and relay human transmissions from the public in real time.

Jesse Kaminsky presents Aposematism, an inflatable sculpture work made of brightly colored, printed and sewn tyvek material that will enhance the ground space with an anemone-like shape.

Margaret BellafioreMari Novotny-Jonesand Anna Wexler present MILK & LICENSES, a performance and installation work using three defunct services windows in Boston City Hall. The piece explores concepts of sanctuary in our present moment by transforming the windows' original function.

Sara June presents Solid Formation, a durational movement and installation work that experiment with the notion of protection and architecture through the intersection of three elements: building, boundary, and human body.

This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Heroic: Concrete Architecture and the New Boston

Join a discussion of the book, "Heroic: Concrete Architecture and the New Boston," followed by tours of City Hall. 

May 18, 2017
  • 5:30pm - 9:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Third Floor / Lobby
    Boston, MA 02201
  • Contact:
    Tom Johnston
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Downtown
  • Published Date
Event Date2017-05-18T17:30:00 - 2017-05-18T21:00:00

The book, "Concrete Architecture and the New Boston," was written by Mark Pasnik, Chris Grimley, and Michael Kubo.

Often problematically labeled as “Brutalist” architecture, the concrete buildings that transformed Boston during 1960s and 1970s were conceived with progressive-minded intentions by some of the world’s most influential designers, including Marcel Breuer, Le Corbusier, I. M. Pei, Henry Cobb, Araldo Cossutta, Gerhard Kallmann and Michael McKinnell, Paul Rudolph, Josep Lluís Sert, and The Architects Collaborative. 

May 18, 2017
  • 5:30pm - 9:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Third Floor / Lobby
    Boston, MA 02201
  • Contact:
    Tom Johnston
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Downtown
  • Published Date
Event Date2017-05-18T17:30:00 - 2017-05-18T21:00:00

More information

As a worldwide phenomenon, building with concrete represents one of the major architectural movements of the postwar years, but in Boston it was deployed in more numerous and diverse civic, cultural, and academic projects than in any other major U.S. city. After decades of stagnation and corrupt leadership, public investment in Boston in the 1960s catalyzed enormous growth, resulting in a generation of bold buildings that shared a vocabulary of concrete modernism.

The period from the 1960 arrival of Edward J. Logue as the powerful and often controversial director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority to the reopening of Quincy Market in 1976 saw Boston as an urban laboratory for the exploration of concrete’s structural and sculptural qualities. What emerged was a vision for the City’s widespread revitalization often referred to as the “New Boston.” 

Today, when concrete buildings across the nation are in danger of insensitive renovation or demolition, "Heroic" presents the concrete structures that defined Boston during this remarkable period. The product of 8 years of research and advocacy, "Heroic" surveys the intentions and aspirations of this period and considers anew its legacies — both troubled and inspired.

This event is presented by the Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture in partnership with the Nichols House Museum and the Boston Landmarks Commission. 

This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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