Peabody Jazz Students
Nathan Hook, saxophone
Alex Fornier, bass
Jonathan Baez, percussion
Performing in our first floor gallery.
Nathan Hook, saxophone
Alex Fornier, bass
Jonathan Baez, percussion
Performing in our first floor gallery.
Playing Jazz Favorites, Swing, Showtunes, and songs from the “American Songbook”, Time for a Change is a hit wherever they perform. Comprised of four of the finest jazz musicians in the Baltimore-Washington area, they bring you back to the days of Swing, Big Band and Bebop. From Sinatra to Charlie Parker, they are comfortable in all popular music from today and yesterday. Leading the sound is Jim Voshell on the Tenor Saxophone. Backing up his formidable technique is Larry Haavik on the piano and synthesizer, Mike Morris on drums and Bill Pachucki on the Upright Bass.
The sounds of Jacqueline Marie Butler's world come to life through new lobby experiences pre and post-show. Enjoy a fun, festive, lounge after the play every Friday night in June. The bar stays open and music continues. Be introduced to incredible local musicians, bands, and other artistic organizations showcasing work inspired by the powerful narrative of the Queens Girl Rep.
Fresh off his jaw-dropping performance at our annual Django Jazz Fest, clarinet virtuoso Giacomo Smith brings his entire group from London for a swinging mid-week show.
From the moment they played their first note five years ago, the Kansas Smitty's House Band has set out to reinvent how audiences experience jazz. The House Band is a tight-knit outfit that make jazz inclusive with an emphasis on camaraderie, spontaneity, and joy.
Mariah Bonner is a Baltimore born actress, singer and producer. She was classically trained at The Guildhall School of Music& Drama in London, and has appeared in films, television and theater productions in Los Angeles, London, Paris and New York. She is best known for her leading roles in John Hyams’ UNIVERSAL SOLDIER: DAY OF RECKONING and STARVE, directed by Griff Furst.
Television credits include CSI, Rules of Engagement, Switched at Birth and Scorpion.
Closing out a month of jazz, Baltimore-born, award-winning saxophonist, Birckhead steps away from the Lauryn Hill touring band to present his own group.
“ONE OF THE MOST RIVETING YOUNG IMPROVISORS IN NEW YORK” -NY TIMES
Germano's PIATTINI collaborates with Heavy Seas Brewery in a pre-4th of July celebration of the Land of the Free with 4 piattini incorporating and paired with 4 beers. Each course is served with the beer featured as an ingredient. $50, all inclusive.
1st Course: "Covfefe" coffee roasted beets and carrots with Loose Cannon IPA vinaigrette.
2nd Course: Tropi Cannon Citrus IPA "AOC" avocado, octopus and citrus salad.
Step aboard a Watermark yacht for the annual Inner Harbor Fireworks Cruise. Enjoy the Baltimore City Skyline and spectacular Fourth of July fireworks from the best seat in town as you cruise the Harbor. Light snacks will be served. Full cash bar on board. Vessels feature a climate controlled lower deck, open air top deck and restrooms.
Maine native and Comedy Cellar regular, Emma is one of the top comedians in New York City. Emma made her late night debut on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert in 2016 and has also performed standup on Fuse’s Uproarious, Seeso’s Night Train with Wyatt Cenac,and The Guest List and AXS TV’s Gotham Comedy Live. In 2017, Emma had the opportunity to record a set for the CNN series The History of Comedy. Later this year you can catch Emma on the MTV International talking head series Vidiots and the web series Gay Girl Straight Girl.
Just as life, their love sprung from triple darkness. Two diasporic spirits, being guided by ancestral forces, persevere blindly through blight and despair into the collective memory of black love. Every form of life is cradled by darkness.
In this film, Amethyst Love Godz: Wedding of the AfroFuture, Black Skin is celebrated as proof of survival, ancestral acceptance, and divinity. The term “dark” or “black” has been negatively repurposed by the colonized world and this incorrect narrative has dominated the societal view of Blackness as a color and a global race of people.
In conjunction with the Forced Intimacy exhibition, join us on Wednesday, July 10th for two very special events:
Chit Chat: A Conversation about Baltimore Queer Nightlife, 7-9pm
Hosted by Levity artist’s Perri B.B & Alejandra Nuñez
The panel will feature artists and organizers from the Baltimore queer scene specifically DDm, Kotic Couture, Trillnatured, Randi misfit, hunter hooligan, & Baby.
Panelists have all played a unique part in shaping the scene we have today.
Levity After party with Dj Genie and live visuals, 9:30- Midnight
Carl Grubbs will take you on a trip down memory lane performing Music of the Visitors (Carl & Earl Grubbs) and selections from his latest project The Inner Harbor Suite Revisited: A Tribute to Baltimore. He has developed a passion for the alto sax, and from the influences of his brother Earl Grubbs, Charlie Parker and John Coltrane he has crafted his own distinct sound. Carl Grubbs has collaborated with eminent artists such as Julius Hemphill, Odean Pope, Reggie Workman, Rene McLean and John Blake.
Tickets: https://instnt.us/cg75
The Boys are coming back to Baltimore for two wild shows at The Creative Alliance! Created and produced by Mr. Gorgeous, Ben Franklin, Jason Mejias, Joshua Dean & hosted by Eve Starr, this Burlesque Hall of Fame winning revue is celebrating 8 years of playful and saucy extravaganzas showcasing the arts of circus and burlesque. “The Boys” entertain packed houses with diverse aerial and ground performances with a wink, a smile and a lot of creativity.
In their debut performance, Matthew Gray and Hailey Bricker will explore the premise of young love and it’s many misadventures through works that span countless centuries - from Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro to Justin Paul and Benj Pasek’s Dear Evan Hansen. The duo invites you to partake in this experience at Germano’s, and they look forward to performing for you!
“How does one achieve eternal bliss? By saying dada. How does one become famous? By saying dada.” -Hugo Ball, Dada Manifesto, 1914
Artist Hugo Ball first read his Dada Manifesto on July 14, 1914 at the first Dada Soiree in Zurich.
Join us on the 105th anniversary of the birth of Dada to celebrate this anti-art movement, which gave rise to the avant-garde.
The Hugo Ball will be held in the historic garden at the Peale, and will feature amusements, delights, and surprises.
Dada or Surrealist attire is strongly encouraged.
6:17pm – 9:04pm
Latinx genre-defyers and oft-collaborators with CA favs Las Cafeteras mix Afro-Latino rhythms with psychedelic rock.
The Baltimore Improv Group has improv comedy shows every Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 7, 8 & 9 p.m. All Thursday shows are free. Friday and Saturday shows are $10.
Improv comedy shows are made up entirely on the spot using audience suggestions! No two shows are alike!
From Friday, March 22 – Saturday, March 30, 2024, enjoy fun for the whole family during Spring Break Skate — Downtown Baltimore’s pop-up roller rink, located in Hopkins Plaza (next to CFG Bank Arena).
Grab the little ones and skate the afternoon away, or gather a group of your besties and skate into the evening. Good tunes will be plentiful, and food and beverages will also be available for purchase.You don't want to miss this! Spring Break Skate is in town for a limited time only.