5. October 2000
19.00

O Little Town of East New York

Shelley
Hirsch is one of the most well known vocal improvisers from the New York
Downtown scene. Labelled by some as “an obscure mix between Judy Garland and
Laurie Anderson”
, this remarkable voice-wizard has collaborated with
virtually every major experimental Downtown musician. To namedrop only the best
known in Slovenia: Anthony Coleman, Ned Rothenberg, John Zorn, Elliott Sharp,
Ikue Mori, DJ Olive, David Shea, Susie Ibarra, Zeena Parkins.
Besides
her improvisations and collaborations, she writes and performs her own original
compositions, amongst them three radio-plays: #39 (based on a text by
Angela Carter), The Vidzer Family, and O Little Town of East New York.
The Vidzer Family portrays a Jewish family with roots in Russia, who
travelled to South America and ended up in Brooklyn's East New York in the
‘sixties. O Little Town of East New York is a sort of sequel to it. It
is a semi-autobiographical docu-musical about growing up in mid-century East
New York. Hirsch recreates and inhabits remembered environments, situations and
characters. She evokes the ethnically diverse neighbourhood: her Russian
schoolmate's living room; the home of her own working class Jewish family; the
synagogue; high school; the rallies against the Vietnam War; drugs. It's a
hilarious, nostalgic, touching composition, merging avant and pop
sensibilities. Critics praised her “dazzling technique” as well as her “wild,
beautiful energy”
. The piece (released on Tzadik) won the prestigious PRIX
FUTURA in Berlin (1993).
In
addition to her – illustrated - theatrical version of O Little Town,
Shelley will perform a  recent twenty
minute (“but very intense”) solo, her tribute to the composer, video and
performance artist Jerry Hunt, who died in 1993.
“Hirsch
celebrates in the joy of song while conveying the chaos of everyday life
through technical and emotional extremism.”
- The Village Voice

Organised and financed by City of Women
In cooperation with Cankarjev dom

Artists and collaborators
Shelley Hirsch