James Harrison Monaco is the "James" of James and Jerome. ("Jerome" is Jerome Ellis). James too time out of rehearsals for their show Piano Tales to answer our 6 Questions. Piano Tales comes to The Club @ La MaMa for three performances only, November 18 - 20, 2016.
1. What
should we expect from Piano Tales?
Well, on a simple level, it's stories told with words and music.
But I've been describing it as, ideally, like an explosive and intimate jazz
concert but with stories instead of jazz standards. We have thirteen possible
tales to tell, and the audience chooses which three we tell each night and in
what order, and then we tell those three each in a way we've never told them
before. So there's a lot of play back and forth inside of it – heavy
improvising together on the piano end and on the storytelling end. Hopefully
there's a strong sense that the night you attended will never happen again.
2. How do you describe the style of your performance?
I call what Jerome and I make "hyper-literary live-music
storytelling spectacles." Our friend Jaclyn Backhaus just described our
work as "mighty art made of simple elements", which I liked a bit
better. I also think there's an athleticism to watching the two of us use our
instruments and ourselves to make rather literary forms into an entertaining
stage performance. Also Jerome really likes playing one chord for a long time,
and I look the audience in the eyes a lot.
3. How did you and Jerome meet?
We actually grew up on opposite sides of a swamp lake from each
other in southeastern Virginia, and went to school together from about age ten
on. But I'm a year older than Jerome, and we didn't really start hanging out
and collaborating until we both came to New York for college. At first we
primarily functioned as mutual enablers, encouraging each other to spend way
too much money on records and books. The work came soon after.
4. Who inspires you?
As far as what's been inspiring me lately...
Music: Hildegard Von Bingen, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil,
Charles Mingus, Rossini, Toumani Diabaté.
Theater/performance: Mariano Pensotti, The SilverCloud Singers,
Dave Malloy, JACK in Clinton Hill, Royal Osiris Karaoke Ensemble, and all my
friends of course.
Writers: Isak Dinesen, Colette, Fleur Jaeggy, Simone Weil,
Herodotus, Sergio Chejfec, Rilke, and an extraordinary book of tales from
Sudan.
Visual art: I go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art probably every
two weeks and love every section, but for this project Caravaggio and the whole
Chinese painting wing have been big (they're both all stories).
In the arena of the world, I've been inspired by the work of the
White Helmets in Syria, the Spanish-language events at McNally Jackson
bookstore by Javier Molea, and following the fierce humanitarian work of my
girlfriend Cayce.
5. What 3 albums would you want with you on a desert island?
"Caetano Veloso" by Caetano Veloso (The one from 1986
with just acoustic guitar)
I feel like these would all be good for guarding my sanity.
6. What does working at La MaMa mean to you?
Gosh, at the season launch party back in September I just freaked
out at how happy I am we're part of this place right now. Literally every kind
of human being was in that room and in love with the place. So many venues and
institutions claim they value "diversity", and then you walk into
their space and it feels like they're just paying it lip-service. But with La
MaMa it feels genuine and in their blood. I couldn't believe at that launch
party how many different kinds of artists, different ages, different walks of
life, different nations of origin were packed into that space and reveling in
each other's work. And the work was so good! This place feels like a
real artistic conversation between so many different circles of folk. It felt
vital and cosmopolitan and messy in the most thrilling way. I'm so moved to be
doing this show as part of that.
La MaMa presents
Piano
Tales
Written, Performed, & Composed by James Harrison Monaco and Jerome Ellis
Directed by Andrew Scoville
November 18-20, 2016
Friday and Saturday at 10pm; Sunday at 6pm
The Club @ La MaMa
74A East 4th Street
(between Bowery and Second Avenue)
New York, NY 10003
Tickets: $20 Adults; $15 Students/Seniors
For Tickets and Info: CLICK HERE
_____
Piano
Tales
Written, Performed, & Composed by James Harrison Monaco and Jerome Ellis
Directed by Andrew Scoville
November 18-20, 2016
Friday and Saturday at 10pm; Sunday at 6pm
The Club @ La MaMa
74A East 4th Street
(between Bowery and Second Avenue)
New York, NY 10003
Tickets: $20 Adults; $15 Students/Seniors
For Tickets and Info: CLICK HERE
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