
Date/Time
Date(s) - Friday, May 12, 2023
All Day
Location
BOMBYX Center for Arts and Equality
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ColliderFest is back! With a line-up that vigorously conquers space, time, and “lejania” with powerful doses of musical creativity.
It’s a weekender that runs the full length of Bombyx with Neftali Duran’s Oaxacan cooking, hyperlocal beers and ciders crafted by Florence-based brewers, Spin That! Records’ record fair on Saturday, and workshops of all kinds. We’re adding a second stage this year, so each night features four sets of music.
Don’t miss the fun. Don’t miss the Joropo (which literally means “party” in Venezuela).
Friday’s Lineup:
Brad Barr | Over a career that spans three decades, Brad Barr has cultivated a uniquely visceral, bravely intimate approach to the guitar. The Providence-born guitarist, composer, and singer-songwriter’s approach to the blues might twang like Mississippi Fred McDowell one moment, then it’s slender and rolling, Fahey-style, before picking up a North African strain of the blues, a la Mahmoud Guinea or Ali Farka Toure. Inspirations range from mainstream rock to jazz greats, from the Smithsonian Folkways to Montreal institutions like Colin Stetson and Lhasa de Sela.
dragonchild + Sunken Cages | DA Mekonnen, aka dragonchild, is the founding member and bandleader of Boston-based Ethiopian group Debo Band. dragonchild takes the exploration of Ethiopian music Mekonnen began with Debo Band and explodes it into vivid, three-dimensional space. dragonchild shatters traditions and boundaries, incorporating sampled material, field recordings, experiments in high and low fidelity, and the throughline that unites the diverse sounds, layers of Mekonnen’s rich and ecstatic saxophone. Ravish Momin, aka Sunken Cages, is an Indian-born drummer, electronic music producer and educator residing in New York City. Momin started working under the moniker Sunken Cages in 2019, in order to showcase his unique production style which involves layering live-loops and manipulating them in real-time to blur the lines between composition and improvisation. While rooted in Indian folk and Black Music traditions, Momin is also influenced by the street sounds of South African G’com, Angolan Kuduro and Egyptian Mahraganat.
AMAYO | Duke Amayo came to the US from Nigeria when he was 17 on a soccer scholarship and settled in NYC, where he opened up his own “Afrospot temple” inspired by Fela Kuti’s Shrine – he is widely credited for bringing afrobeat to a global audience as the frontman of Antibalas.
Hyperlocal Florence brewers Jake Mazar of Artifact Cider Project and O’Brian Tomalin of BLDG8 Beer will be serving on both nights of the festival.
We are grateful for our sponsors: Secret Planet, Northampton Arts Council, Ruthie Oland Real Estate, Spin That! Records, The Creation Station, and Ana Bandeira Chocolate.