Music & Arts August 2016

Page 1

STORY MILL BECOMES BACKDROP & SUBJEC T

OF GIANT VIDEO

PROJEC TION

AUGUST 2016 EDITION

MUSIC THEATER & FILM VISUAL ART DANCE LITERARY EVENTS

S P E C I A L A D V E R T I S I N G P U B L I C AT I O N O F T H E B O Z E M A N D A I LY C H R O N I C L E


2

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

CON T EN TS AUGUST

2,

2016

|

MUSIC

&

ARTS

Sweet! It’s Sweet Pea Week! ........................................................................................3

COV ER FE AT URE

Symphony Announces 2016-17 Season .......................................................................4 Free Baroque Concert ......................................................................................................5

P.6

Symphony Auditioning for Musicians, Singers ..........................................................5

Story Mill Becomes Backdrop & Subject of Giant Video Projection

Story Under the Stars & Jane Austen Delight!..........................................................8 Steep Canyon Rangers Take Over Ellen Stage Aug. 12............................................9 Movies & Music at the Ellen in August ........................................................................9 Montana Ballet Company Begins Adaptive Dance Program August 4 ...............9

Your Real Estate & Community Connection

Emerson Hosting Three Exhibits & Lunch on Lawn ...............................................10 Four Winds Gallery Presents Susan Stewart’s New Mixed Media Works..............................................................................................10 Stroll the Art Walk August 12 .......................................................................................10 Gill & Crowell & Opera, Plus ‘Broadway Bound’ .....................................................11 Music on Main Welcomes 3 New Headliners This Month ...................................11 EDITOR/WRITER Lisa Reuter DESIGN Christine Dubbs ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Cindy Sease

406-586-1321 Offices in Big Sky, Bozeman, Livingston & Ennis Robyn Erlenbush CRB, Broker Owner Each office independently owned and operated.

ADVERTISING MANAGER Sylvia Drain

EDITORIAL SUBMISSIONS Submissions are welcome and will be considered for publication. Query by emailing lreuter@dailychronicle.com or by calling 406-582-2642. ADVERTISING INQUIRIES can be made at 582-2640


Big Sky Publishing | Music & Arts | August 2, 2016

3

SWEET! IT’S SWEET PEA WEEK!

T

HE SWEET PEA FESTIVAL TAKES OVER Lindley Park Friday afternoon through Sunday this week, featuring music of all kinds, performances by local theater and dance troupes, workshops, family friendly entertainment and activities, a flower show, a beer and wine garden featuring Montana micro brews and an arts and crafts show with more than 100 vendors.

SATURDAY: The Parade begins at 10:05 a.m., Main Street. The 5K and 10K Sweet Pea Runs begin at 7:15 a.m., Main Street; the Children’s Run at 10 a.m., and the Bozeman Running Film Festival is 8:30 a.m.-10 p.m. at Main and Bozeman Ave.

Festival gates open at 3:30 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday. Arts and Crafts Booths are open 4-8 p.m. Friday, A SERIES OF FUN, FREE EVENTS LEADS UP TO THE FRI 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday. DAY OPENING, INCLUDING: Music, Dance, Theatre & Family Stage Performances are DAILY: The Juried Art Show at Bozeman Public Library. open 4-10 p.m. Friday; 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday, 10:30 ALL DAY TODAY: Chalk on the Walk, on Main Street. a.m.-7 p.m. Sunday. Chalk will be handed out 9:30-10:30 a.m. in the Jacobs Festival Food Concessions are open 4-9:30 p.m. Friday; Crossing Lobby, 424 E. Main and in participating businesses 10 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Saturday; 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday. Beer (look for the Chalk on the Walk window posters). New this and Wine Garden is open 4-9 p.m. Friday, noon-9 p.m. Satyear: Professional chalk artist Bill Spiess will design in front urday, noon-4 p.m. Sunday. The Pancake Breakfast begins of US Bank. at 10 a.m. Sunday. WEDNESDAY: Bite of Bozeman, 5:30-8:30 p.m. WednesChildren’s Activities are noon-3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. day on Main Street. Sample the best of Bozeman eats all along the street.

MUSICAL PERFORMERS INCLUDE: AUBRIE SELLERS: Garage country; 6 p.m. Friday. ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL: Grammy-winning band combines blues, Texas Swing and traditional fiddling; 8 p.m. Friday. JAMES MCMURTRY: rock, folk-rock, Americana; 6 p.m. Saturday. SONNY KNIGHT & THE LAKERS, R&B; 8 p.m. Saturday. HARD WORKING AMERICANS, American rock supergroup; 3 p.m. Sunday. PLUS: HOLLOW WOOD, from Boise; noon Saturday. PAA KOW, Afro-fusion. 1:30 p.m. Saturday. JOSHUA JAMES, folk; 3 p.m. Saturday. MONTANA JAZZ COLLECTIVE; noon Sunday. ETHAN TUCKER BAND, guitars and soulful, bluesy vocal; 1:30 p.m. Sunday.

ALL-WEEKEND WRISTBANDS AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNT UNTIL WEDNESDAY NOON Admission to events leading up to the festival are free. Purchase a wristband for events in Lindley Park. Cost is $20 for a weekend adult pass if purchased before noon Wednesday at many area stores or online at www. sweetpeafestival.org. Or admission is $30 on Friday, $25 on Saturday, $15 on Sunday at the gate. Kids’ full weekend access is $10 in advance; $15 on Friday, $10 on Saturday, $5 on Sunday at the gate. Children 6 and under admitted free. For more on events and performances, visit

www.sweetpeafestival.org


4

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

SYMPHONY

ANNOUNCES

2 0 1 6 - 2 0 1 7 S E A S ON

T

HE BOZEMAN SYMPHONY ORCHES TRA & Symphonic Choir’s 49th concert season will include performances of some of the greatest and most powerful music written between the 17th and 21st centuries. Season tickets are now on sale for: Symphonic Fireworks: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 24; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 25: Bozeman favorite Spencer Myer returns to perform Serge Prokofiev’s “3rd Piano Concerto.” Then the orchestra tackles Carl Nielsen’s bestknown work, “The Four Temperaments.” Sinfonia Concertante: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct, 30: Miklós Rózsa’s “Sinfonia Concertante” features Dallas Symphony members Jolyon Pegis and Maria Schleuning. It’s followed by Dvorak’s “Festival March.” Holiday Collage: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11: The symphony’s 2016 holiday offering promises to celebrate the best of Bozeman’s musical talent and be as innovative and charged as its predecessors. Signs of Life: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 4; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 5: The intimacy and richness of the chamber orchestra is on display in a program including Russell Peck’s “Signs of Life II,” Mozart’s “Serenade in C minor” and Haydn’s “Farewell Symphony.” Songs of Destiny: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 4; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, March 5: The Symphonic Choir joins the symphony for one of Brahms’ most profound compositions, “Schickslaslied” (Song of Destiny) and for Leonard Bernstein’s joyful, beloved “Chichester Psalms.”

Renowned cellist Adrian Daurov takes the stage for Dvorak’s “Concerto in B minor.” This one is a must see, must hear. The Titan: 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 8; 2:30 p.m. Sunday, April 9: The season closes with the monumental drama of Gustav Mahler’s first symphony, “The Titan,” plus the Bozeman debut of esteemed violinist Stephanie Chase performing the virtuosic Bruch “G minor concerto.” ADDITIONAL PERFORMANCES INCLUDE: “O Magnum Mysterium” at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 11, and 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13, with Symphonic Choir Director Jon Harney leading a program of glorious and profound choral masterpieces. Special guests are Bozeman soprano saxophonist Ryan Matzinger, organist Tim Bell and cellist Julia Cory Slovarp. “Heroes and Villains,” a free family concert, at 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 11. Each 50-minute performance includes kid-friendly orchestral selections and popular tunes, plus actors, gags and special effects. Season tickets are available for purchase for current and new subscribers, with discounts up to 35 percent on orders postmarked by Aug. 22. Individual tickets go on sale Sept. 1. All performances are at Willson Auditorium, 404 W. Main St. Call 406-585-9774, visit bozemansymphony.org, or stop by the symphony office at 1001 W. Oak St., Suite 110.


Big Sky Publishing | Music & Arts | August 2, 2016

FREE BAROQUE

CONCERT IS AUGUST 21

Baroque Music Montana and the Bozeman Symphony Orchestra will present a free public concert as a finale to their upcoming Period Performance Workshop for musicians. It begins at 4 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 21, at First Presbyterian Church, 26 W. Babcock St. Workshop participants will perform compositions by Lully, Vivaldi, Bach, Purcell and Pachelbel. Workshop leaders Carrie Krause and the I-90 Collective will present three concerts of sophisticated and quirky Baroque music after that, at Big Sky Chapel on Aug. 22, in Helena on Aug. 23 and at Cikan House in Bozeman on Aug. 23. Visit i90collective.com for details.

SYMPHONY

AU DI T ION I N G

FOR MUSICIANS

& SINGERS The Bozeman Symphony Orchestra is holding auditions for the 2016-2017 concert season. Musicians are sought for the violin, viola, cello and bass sections. Some wind, brass, percussion and principal positions are also open; inquire for information. The Symphonic Choir is auditioning sopranos, tenors and basses but not altos, with choir auditions scheduled for Aug. 29. For additional information or to schedule an audition, email info@bozemansymphony.org or call 406-585-9774, or check the website, www.bozemansymphony.org.

5


6

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

S

B

G

AT A GL ANCE "FLOW: A Public Artwork� by Mary Ellen Strom, offered free to the public by Mountain Time Arts, will be presented on the Story Mill grain terminal at 9 p.m., Aug. 17-18, at E. Griffin Dr. and Story Mill Rd. It is a large-scale sound and video projection. GETTING THERE: By foot or bike, take Story Mill Spur off the Main Street to the Mountains Trail. By car, park at the Gallatin County Fairgrounds lot at 901 N. Black. Bus shuttles will depart the parking lot for the Mill between 8 and 9 p.m. and return people there after the event. BRING: Chairs or blankets, perhaps a picnic. Snacks will be available for purchase. Limited seating provided for senior citizens.


Big Sky Publishing | Music & Arts | August 2, 2016

STORY MILL BECOMES

BACKDROP & SUBJECT OF

GIANT VIDEO PROJECTION

S

TORY MILL WILL COME TO LIFE AGAIN IN SIGHT AND

“It had such immediacy and power,” Strom recalled. “It was the first time

sound at 9 p.m. Aug. 17-18, when video artist Mary Ellen Strom proj-

I saw art perform in a way that was truly collaborative with a community

ects her latest work, “FLOW,” onto the exterior of the old grain termi-

and also really doing something, giving community members a voice and an

nal. The larger-than-life video projection involves historic and contemporary

opportunity to be agents of change.”

still and moving pictures, drawings, sound and interviews with present-day

Strom, who comes from Butte, presented one of her initial projections,

Gallatin Valley residents as it reimagines the landscape from pre-settlement

“Geyserland,” here in 2003. Viewers on a passenger train experienced his-

days through the mill’s industrial heyday and into the future.

torical and contemporary sound and sight projections onto the landscape

“FLOW” is the premiere project of Mountain Time Arts, a public art

as they traveled 25 miles through Bozeman Pass. Other Strom works have

initiative based in Bozeman that plans to produce bold, engaging, temporal

been exhibited on mountain rock faces and in empty retail stores, horse are-

art projects that explore the history, culture and environment of the Rocky

nas, museums and galleries.

Mountain West. Strom’s partners are Jim Madden and Dede Taylor.

Strom uses drawing, sculpture, painting, dance and video to generate an

“A spectacle like this is an opportunity to make people aware of this site

embodied understanding of place. For “FLOW,” she conducted research at

and place not as a static, grounded entity but as a dynamic one spanning

the Montana Historical Society in Helena and the Museum of the Rockies

deep geological time to the history of what we call Montana now, and also

and Gallatin History Museum in Bozeman, and interviewed local ranchers,

perhaps thinking about smart possibilities for our future,” Strom said. Story

environmentalists, indigenous people and others. The project involved a

Mill, which operated into the 1960s, was built in 1882 to process wheat

crew of five, plus technicians and advisers.

and ship it to market via a railroad spur. A two-mile canal system delivered water to power it.

about the water cycle of Gallatin Valley, from spring runoff to the headwa-

The images will be mapped onto the exterior surface of the mill with a 30,000-lumen projector. “It’s part third-grade math problem, part a little bit of engineering knowledge and part faith,” Strom said.

Strom, Madden, Taylor and others are now creating a series of projections ters of the Missouri River. Called “Waterworks,” it will be presented as six public art projects in 2017-18.

The presentation

Strom has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles,

lives on in the imaginations of the viewers, offering people new ways to

the ICA Philadelphia, the Contemporary Art Museum Houston, the Pompi-

imagine and relate to their social reality and environment.

dou-Metz in Paris, and in Japan and South America. She is the recipient of

One of Strom’s early exposures to the impact of outdoor video art was

an International Fulbright Scholar Fellowship and other prestigious awards

Krzysztof Wodiczko’s 1998 “Bunker Hill Monument” projection near Bos-

and the Director of Graduate Programs for the fine arts program at Tufts

ton. It drew attention to the Charlestown, Mass., Code of Silence, which

University Boston. See more of her work at www.maryellenstrom.com.

left 74 percent of local homicides unsolved for 20 years. Krzysztof projected the words and images of the victims’ mothers onto the Revolutionary War memorial.

7


8

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

STORY UNDER THE STARS & JANE AUSTEN

DELIGHT!

T

HE BOZEMAN FILM SOCIETY screens the fiendishly delightful film “Love & Friendship” on Tuesday, Aug. 9, then follows that with a Story Under the Stars! presentation of “Timber the Treasure Dog” on Saturday, Aug. 27. Based on Jane Austen’s story “Lady Susan,” published 50 years after her death, “Love & Friendship” is a comedy focused on the machi-

son ur sea o y e s a Purch ets today ! tick

Get guaranteed, priority seating and save up to 35% over individually priced tickets with the purchase of a season subscription.

Performances

Symphonic Fireworks, September 24 & 25, 2016 with special guest Spencer Myer

Sinfonia Concertante, October 29 & 30, 2016

with special guests Joylon Pegis & Maria Schleuning

Holiday Collage, December 10 & 11, 2016 Signs of Life, February 4 & 5, 2017 Songs of Destiny, March 4 & 5, 2017 with special guest Adrian Daurov

The Titan, April 8 & 9, 2017, with special guest Stephanie Chase

Subscribe Now: 406-585-9774 bozemansymphony.org

nations of beautiful widow Lady Susan Vernon (Kate Beckinsale), who takes up temporary residence with her in-laws. When she becomes matchmaker for her daughter, and herself too, two handsome suitors complicate things. The film begins at 7:30 p.m. at the Ellen Theatre, 17 W. Main St. Tickets are $8.75 for general admission, $8.50 for seniors and students, plus fees. They’re available online at www.theellentheatre.com, by calling 406-585-5885 or visiting the box office Wednesday–Saturday, 1-3 p.m., and two hours before the show. On Saturday, Aug. 27, take your blankets and low-back chairs to the Story Mansion lawn for the free, family outdoor movie screening of “Timber the Treasure Dog,” shot in Montana by Bozeman film director/writer Ari Novak (director of “Cowboys vs Dinosaurs”). The story follows Mikey and Billie on a wild treasure hunt to save the family ranch, with help from Timber, a talking dog. Starring Belgrade actors J.D. Hoppe and Sage Chase, along with award-winning actor Wilford Brimley and Kix Brooks as the voice of Timber, the evening will feature a meet & greet with the director and actors, kids’ activities and a table for the Heart of the Valley Animal Shelter. Activities and food trucks are ready at 7; the movie starts at 8:45 p.m. Dogs on leashes welcome. The rain date is Aug. 30. Visit www.bozemanfilmsociety. org for details.


Big Sky Publishing | Music & Arts | August 2, 2016

9

STEEP CANYON RANGERS TAKE OVER ELLEN STAGE AUG. 12

G

RAMMY AWARDWINNING BLUEGRASS SENSATION THE STEEP CANYON Rangers will perform at the Ellen Theatre, 17 W. Main St., at 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 12, in support of their album “Radio.” The new release is a highly anticipated project showcasing the band’s powerful songwriting, dynamic instrumental virtuosity and high-energy performance styles, and featuring bluegrass, rock, blues, country and pop sounds. The heartbeat of the album is the intriguing, invigorating songwriting of band members Graham Sharp and Charles Humphrey. Comedian and musician Steve Martin, who shared IBMA’s Entertainer of the Year Award with Steep Canyon Rangers, calls the group “great musicians who continue to explore both the new and old styles of bluegrass and bring a fresh energy to the traditions of American music.” Tickets are $26 at theellentheatre.com, or call 406-585-5885.

MOVIES L & MUSIC AT THE ELLEN

IN AUGUST

OCAL FAVORITE MONTANA JAZZ COLLECTIVE WILL PRESENT SUNDAY SWING! at the Ellen Theatre at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 14. The hoppin’ concert will be led by Adam Greenberg on drums, Ryan Matzinger on sax, Luca Rodoni on trumpet, Bob Nell on piano, Craig Hall on guitar and special guest Bob Bowman on the bass. Tickets are $14. On Thursday, Aug. 18, Ireland’s popular group Makem and Spain brings the joy of Irish folk music to town. The concert begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $17 for adults, $9 for youth 17 and younger. Wrapping up the month is an Evening with Darrell Scott on Sunday, Aug. 28. Scott is a Grammy-nominated performer and ASCAP songwriter of the year whose songs include the Grammy-winning “Long Time Gone” and “Heartbreak Town.” Tickets are $25, and the music begins at 7:30 p.m. This month’s movies are “Jaws,” at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13; “101 Dalmatians,” free at 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 26; and “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 27. Tickets for all events are available online at theellentheatre.com. For questions, or to purchase tickets over the phone, call 406-585-5885.

MONTANA BALLET COMPANY BEGINS ADAPTIVE DANCE PROGRAM AUGUST 4

A

NEW ADAPTIVE DANCE PROGR AM (ADP) designed to provide creative movement and introductory ballet instruction for children ages 5 to 12 with Down syndrome begins Aug. 4 at Montana Ballet Company. There’s still time to sign up. “We believe no child should be denied access to the arts,” said MBC Artistic Director Elizabeth DeFanti. “ADP is the next step in our growth to increase the capacity to serve more children in our community.” Montana Ballet Company faculty, trained in working

with individuals with Down syndrome, teach the classes in conjunction with Board Certified physical therapists and experienced live musicians. Extensive research and planning went into the program, which is designed to enhance confidence and self-esteem and give students an empowering experience and lifelong relationship with dance, DeFanti said. Classes are at MBC studios at 2304 N. 7th Ave., Suite C-3. For details, visit montanaballet.org.


10

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

FOUR WINDS GALLERY

PRESENTS SUSAN STEWART’S

NEW MIXED MEDIA WORKS

C

ON T E MPOR A RY NAT I V E NOR T H American artist Susan Stewart is the featured artist of a show opening at Four Winds Gallery Aug. 8. Her new mixed media works and beadwork jewelry will be on display through Sept. 3, with an Art Walk Reception scheduled from 5 to 8 p.m., Friday, Aug. 12. Stewart's images emerge from her life experience as a member of the Crow tribe, growing up on and off the

EMERSON SHOWCASING

3 EXHIBITS & LUNCH

T

HR EE ST R IKING SHOWS CON T INUE TO BE ON EXHIBI T AT T HE Emerson Center for the Arts & Culture this month, and there’s music and Lunch on the Lawn on Wednesdays through Aug. 17.

In the Weaver Room Gallery through Aug. 26 is Carol Hartman’s “Challenges,” a collection of her

large square, colorful oil landscape paintings. In the Wilber Gallery through Sept. 2 is “Outdoor Adventure,” featuring Gordon McConnell’s animated brushwork interpretations of classic black and white photographic sources. Also through Sept. 2, the Lobby Gallery showcases an Emerson Tenant Exhibit featuring the work of Dana Aaberg, Bille Rose Agee, Susan Dabney, Loretta Domaszewski, David Hutchison, Duncan Kippen, Mike O’Connell, Jessica Palmer, Angela Prond, Rob-

reservation. She references concepts and forms specific to her tribe, including the Crazy Mountains, Crow Beadwork colors and geometric designs. Four Winds Gallery is at 111 S. Grand Ave., (in the Emerson Center). For more information, call 406-586-8079 or visit www.four-winds-gallery.com

STROLL THE

ART WALK AUGUST 12

T

HE DOWNTOWN BOZEMAN ASSOCIATION, Downtown Bozeman art galleries and retailers and the Emerson Center for the Art & Culture present

the next free summer Art Walk from 6 to 8 p.m., Friday, Aug. 12. New show openings, receptions and refreshments are

ert Royhl, Kelly Sullivan, Kara Tripp, Cherlyn Wilcox and Rod Zullo.

offered throughout downtown, with live jazz and rock mu-

An Art Walk Reception for all three shows is 5-8 p.m. Aug. 12.

sic played at First Security Bank, the Ellen Theatre, Soropti-

The popular summer lunch concert series is presented from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. each Wednes-

mist Park and the Emerson.

day on the Emerson’s west lawn. Performing this month are Brianna Moore & the Sasquatch Funk,

Event sponsors are First Security Bank, Blackfoot Com-

Aug. 3; Katie Careless & the Reckless Ambassadors, Aug. 10; and Into the Abyss and Saxy Soundz,

munications, KBZK, 95.1 “The Moose,” The Bozeman Daily

Aug. 17. The free community event, open to kids and adults, features live music, local food vendors

Chronicle and Allegra Printing. For more information and

and kids’ activities.

a map, visit www.downtownbozeman.org or call the Down-

The Emerson is at 111 S. Grand Ave. For more information, visit theEmerson.org.

town Bozeman Association, 406-586-4008.


Big Sky Publishing | Music & Arts | August 2, 2016

11

GILL & CROWELL

& OPERA, PLUS

‘BROADWAY BOUND’

T

HURSDAY NIGHT PROMISES A DOUBLE HEADER UNLIKE ANY YOU’LL SEE AGAIN. Then, Friday through Sunday, catch the closing weekend of “Broadway Bound,” Neil Simon’s touching, hilarious conclusion to his autobiographical “Eugene” trilogy. It’s all happening in Livingston this weekend. Kicking things off is “The Many Faces/Voices of Opera,” an entertaining, free hour of opera hits presented by Intermountain Opera Bozeman, Starring Sean Anderson, Tasha Fain and Elizabeth Croy and Lukas Graf. The curtain goes up at 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 4, at the Shane Lalani Center for the Arts, 415 E. Lewis St. Headlining Thursday night are Vince Gill and Rodney Crowell, the big guns at the Livingston Hoot, the city’s giant, free community street party on Main Street. Two of country music’s finest songwriters and musicians, Gill and Crowell take the stage with special guest Paul Franklin at 8 p.m. rain or shine. For families, the kids’ fun area opens at 4 p.m., followed by opening act Fishing Music Band with Mollie O’Brien at 6 p.m. Friday through Sunday, it’s back to the Shane for the final weekend of one of Simon’s best plays. “Broadway Bound,” set in 1949 New York’s Jewish comedy culture, stars Kevin Bueling, Steve Leuzinger, Gary Fish and Kari Blaylock. Tickets are $16 for adults, $13 for senior and college students and $10 for ages 17 and younger. Performances begin at 8 p.m. Aug. 5-6, at 3 p.m. Aug. 7. Call the Shane at 406-222-1420.

DON’T MISS LIVINGSTON THIS WEEKEND!

MUSIC ON MAIN WELCOMES 3 NEW HEADLINERS THIS MONTH

T

HE DOWNTOWN BOZEMAN ASSOCIATION presents three more Thursday nights of Music on Main this summer, with performances by the Kris Lager Band, Aug. 4; Outer Vibe, Aug. 11; and Gipsy Moon, Aug. 18. The free events begin at 6:30 p.m. with the Pepsi Co. Family Zone – including bouncy houses and face painting – on South Bozeman Avenue. Music starts at 7 and goes to 8:30 p.m. Food vendors and nonprofit groups are on hand, some stores stay open late, and popular local and regional bands also perform.

The Open Container Waiver for this event allows anyone over age 21 to have an open container of alcohol in the event area (Main Street from Black to Rouse) from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on those nights only. Anyone with an open container outside of those perimeters is subject to a $100 ticket. No glass or aluminum containers, dogs or coolers allowed. Smoking is permitted only in designated areas outside the event. Contact the Downtown Bozeman Association, 406-586-4008 or www.downtownbozeman.org for more information.


12

August 2, 2016 | Music & Arts | Big Sky Publishing

5 REASONS TO SUBSCRIBE TO YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER

1

5 4 3 2

Event Notifications

Keep up on the events happening in your community: The Christmas Stroll, The Montana Wedding Event, Farmers Markets, and Art Walks just to name a few!

Classifieds

Buy and sell items, offer skills for hire, find a new job, or find your next place to call home. Sometimes the information in the classifieds section just can’t be found anywhere else, so you don’t know what you’re missing out on.

Sales, Discounts, and Coupons!

Local businesses will buy advertisement space from a newspaper in order to promote their business with opportunities for you to save.

The Paper is Online on Your Device! You don’t have to pick up a printed version to enjoy all the benefits of reading your local newspaper!

SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL PAPER IS SUPPORTING YOUR COMMUNITY SUBSCRIBE TO THE BEST:

Voted the best daily newspaper in Montana 2 years in a row!

CALL 587-4491


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.