Tag Archives: Inwood Hill Park

Inwood Hill Park: Forest Song

Please support our Kickstarter campaign here.

PERFORMANCES (each performance is about an hour long)
Saturday, October 14, 2023: 2pm & 4pm
Sunday, October 15, 2023: 1pm & 3pm
Inwood Hill Park, Manhattan, New York: A to Inwood / 207 or 1 to 215th St. Enter at Shorakkopoch Rock (Google Maps)

Forest Song is a free music performance that takes place in the last, original site of pre-Columbian Mannahatta: Inwood Hill Park. Nestled within a valley, near ancient glacial potholes, caves, and cold springs, musicians are spread throughout the forest, performing a variety of sonic materials. Harmonies are reflected, words appear, and the melodies from revolutionary hymns are re-cycled, all conjuring a human and arboreal conversation. A Forest Song gathers everyone together over distance, a unitary statement that underscores the fundamental relationships that foster all our existences in this world. Over the course of an hour performance, the audience is free to wander the park, to hear the musicians at a distance, while also observing them close-by.

Myths and stories swirl around our forests, some of them fanciful and fantastic, others feed into age-old tropes of colonial settlement. They have been many things to humans: a source of fuel, shelter, fear. They are a place of mystery and repose. Forest Song takes these many iterations of human conception of the forest to fashion a poly-narrative: a Native American home, a European folk drama, a technocratic “shelterbelt”, and now a conserved piece of our future. Forests are a mirror for humans: the reflection of our wants and desires throughout our years of existence.

featuring
TILT Brass: Christopher McIntyre – trombone, James Rogers – trombone, Nicolee Kuester – horn, Blair Hamrick – horn, Rebecca Steinberg – trumpet, Jonathan Finlayson, trumpet
with
Iván Barenboim – clarinet
Katie Porter – clarinet
Jessica Schmitz – flute
Eva Ding – flute
Casey Anderson – saxophone

The Team:
John P. Hastings – originator
Aaron Meicht – music director, trumpet
Carolina Gomez – costuming
Benjamin Mayock – design
Shannon Sindelar – producer
Michelle Tabnick – PR (contact)

Forest Song is supported by

This project is made possible in part with funds from Creative Engagement , a regrant program supported by The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) in partnership with the City Council , and administered by LMCC. This project is made possible in part with funds from UMEZ Arts Engagement, a regrant program supported by the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone (UMEZ), and administered by LMCC.

Inwood Hill Park: Forest Song

Please support our Kickstarter campaign here.

PERFORMANCES (each performance is about an hour long)
Saturday, October 14, 2023: 2pm & 4pm
Sunday, October 15, 2023: 1pm & 3pm
Inwood Hill Park, Manhattan, New York: A to Inwood / 207 or 1 to 215th St. Enter at Shorakkopoch Rock (Google Maps)

Forest Song is a free music performance that takes place in the last, original site of pre-Columbian Mannahatta: Inwood Hill Park. Nestled within a valley, near ancient glacial potholes, caves, and cold springs, musicians are spread throughout the forest, performing a variety of sonic materials. Harmonies are reflected, words appear, and the melodies from revolutionary hymns are re-cycled, all conjuring a human and arboreal conversation. A Forest Song gathers everyone together over distance, a unitary statement that underscores the fundamental relationships that foster all our existences in this world. Over the course of an hour performance, the audience is free to wander the park, to hear the musicians at a distance, while also observing them close-by.

Myths and stories swirl around our forests, some of them fanciful and fantastic, others feed into age-old tropes of colonial settlement. They have been many things to humans: a source of fuel, shelter, fear. They are a place of mystery and repose. Forest Song takes these many iterations of human conception of the forest to fashion a poly-narrative: a Native American home, a European folk drama, a technocratic “shelterbelt”, and now a conserved piece of our future. Forests are a mirror for humans: the reflection of our wants and desires throughout our years of existence.

featuring
TILT Brass: Christopher McIntyre – trombone, James Rogers – trombone, Nicolee Kuester – horn, Blair Hamrick – horn, Rebecca Steinberg – trumpet, Jonathan Finlayson, trumpet
with
Iván Barenboim – clarinet
Katie Porter – clarinet
Jessica Schmitz – flute
Eva Ding – flute
Casey Anderson – saxophone

The Team:
John P. Hastings – originator
Aaron Meicht – music director, trumpet
Carolina Gomez – costuming
Benjamin Mayock – design
Shannon Sindelar – producer
Michelle Tabnick – PR (contact)

Forest Song is supported by

This project is made possible in part with funds from Creative Engagement , a regrant program supported by The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) in partnership with the City Council , and administered by LMCC. This project is made possible in part with funds from UMEZ Arts Engagement, a regrant program supported by the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone (UMEZ), and administered by LMCC.

Inwood Hill Park: Forest Song

Please support our Kickstarter campaign here.

PERFORMANCES (each performance is about an hour long)
Saturday, October 14, 2023: 2pm & 4pm
Sunday, October 15, 2023: 1pm & 3pm
Inwood Hill Park, Manhattan, New York: A to Inwood / 207 or 1 to 215th St. Enter at Shorakkopoch Rock (Google Maps)

Forest Song is a free music performance that takes place in the last, original site of pre-Columbian Mannahatta: Inwood Hill Park. Nestled within a valley, near ancient glacial potholes, caves, and cold springs, musicians are spread throughout the forest, performing a variety of sonic materials. Harmonies are reflected, words appear, and the melodies from revolutionary hymns are re-cycled, all conjuring a human and arboreal conversation. A Forest Song gathers everyone together over distance, a unitary statement that underscores the fundamental relationships that foster all our existences in this world. Over the course of an hour performance, the audience is free to wander the park, to hear the musicians at a distance, while also observing them close-by.

Myths and stories swirl around our forests, some of them fanciful and fantastic, others feed into age-old tropes of colonial settlement. They have been many things to humans: a source of fuel, shelter, fear. They are a place of mystery and repose. Forest Song takes these many iterations of human conception of the forest to fashion a poly-narrative: a Native American home, a European folk drama, a technocratic “shelterbelt”, and now a conserved piece of our future. Forests are a mirror for humans: the reflection of our wants and desires throughout our years of existence.

featuring
TILT Brass: Christopher McIntyre – trombone, James Rogers – trombone, Nicolee Kuester – horn, Blair Hamrick – horn, Rebecca Steinberg – trumpet, Jonathan Finlayson, trumpet
with
Iván Barenboim – clarinet
Katie Porter – clarinet
Jessica Schmitz – flute
Eva Ding – flute
Casey Anderson – saxophone

The Team:
John P. Hastings – originator
Aaron Meicht – music director, trumpet
Carolina Gomez – costuming
Benjamin Mayock – design
Shannon Sindelar – producer
Michelle Tabnick – PR (contact)

Forest Song is supported by

This project is made possible in part with funds from Creative Engagement , a regrant program supported by The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) in partnership with the City Council , and administered by LMCC. This project is made possible in part with funds from UMEZ Arts Engagement, a regrant program supported by the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone (UMEZ), and administered by LMCC.

Friends of Inwood Hill Park: Information Meeting

WOW!! About 200 people responded to our survey! There are so many people who love and care for our green oasis!
Come to our meeting to connect with others who 💚 our park, learn about our group, and make some plans for how we can care for our park and community together!
We’ll gather briefly at the Payson and Beak entrance of the park, then take a little walk to see some of our work, and wrap-up near the Seaman and Isham entrance.
Free event! Drop ins welcome, but please register so we have an idea of how many are attending. Event is rain or shine. If the weather is severe, we will announce a nearby indoor location at the same time

Finding Art, Culture and Unique Events in Washington Heights & Inwood