All I can tell you for sure is that Béla Fleck is bae and his banjo skills are dope. But you can’t really expect anything else from the man who holds the most Grammys across all categories.

Fleck’s Friday concert kicked off with a number conducted by Conductor and Music Director Mark Davis Scatterday and the Eastman Wind Ensemble. Let me tell you, these kids have skills. It’s insane to think about how the best and brightest young musicians across the country go to UR. (I don’t think Eastman kids like being lumped in with River Campus students, but I’m just going to go ahead and do that, because it bumps up our coolness factor.)

Then Béla came out, and it got real. He played a song with his Eastman accompaniment called “The Landing, which sounded very similar to “Waves” by Mr. Probz.

Listening to “The Landing” was the most relaxed I have felt all week. It was almost as though the music was going in one ear and pushing all the stress and worries occupying my mind out the other. Next thing I know, this woman, Colleen Bernstein, brings out this huge instrument that I’ve never seen before in my life, apparently called a marimba. Basically, marimbas are sick.

Buying the tickets to go to this banjo concert was a spur-of-the-moment decision, fueled by the fact that I was told that he was the most famous banjo player in the world. I imagined a bunch of people getting down and having a good time at the bayou. (Because that is the only time you would listen to a banjo, right? Besides listening to Mumford and Sons, I can think of no other instance where I would be jamming out to a banjo.) I did not expect this crossover collaboration with the Wind Ensemble (something I probably would have known, had I actually read the event description).

Junior and french horn player for the Eastman Wind Ensemble Rennie Cotner had the opportunity to work with Fleck.

“As a classical musician raised listening to bluegrass, it was really incredible to collaborate with one of my first musical heroes in a very different setting,” Rennie said. It’s safe to say that I will now be adding Fleck to my list of musical heroes, as well. (He’s up there with Beyoncé, Shakira, and Billy Joel. )

And, if you’ve never been to Kodak Hall, then you should go online and see what concerts are available, because it’s not an experience you want to miss out on. Just sitting in this beautiful soon-to-be-century-old auditorium makes you feel classy. Even with nosebleed balcony tickets.



Banjo star entertains and inspires in equal measure

As proud Americans, we often look down upon authoritarian governments for enforcing censorship on music, but under the Trump administration, free speech and the right to information is slowly but surely being squeezed from our grasp.  Read More

Banjo star entertains and inspires in equal measure

I had hoped that Lanthimos would make more substantial changes than swapping the gender of the central character and adding a dramatic musical score to make this story his own. Over its two-hour runtime, this thrilling comedy dabbles in the world of conspiracy theories, aliens, and human existence, but fails to leave a lasting impact. Read More

Banjo star entertains and inspires in equal measure

Perhaps if this movie had good music or better dialogue it would be slightly enjoyable, but the real culprit was the exceedingly cliche plot lines, uninspired characters, and the overwhelming lack of Christmas authenticity.  Read More