Other Info:
Friday the 27th $10 each, dinner and prime time shows ; $5 Late night
will be a night of amazing music. this is the norm at Jardine's. Simply mind-blowingly great performing artists stop in t there ALL the TIME. Friday is no different.
Dinner starts at 6:30 with young Tulsa chanteuse, Annie Elicott and Jeffrey Rukaman playing standards and hopefully Annie's new work. This will be a treat as she's been writing the pieces in an Abbey.
Prime Time - 8p.m. ---ish Wee Small Hours. Right. We have even a new Go! Indy Go! Cocktail. Looks like a blue .....heron in flight, but tastes like a dream... and did I mention T-Shirts?
Late Night - 10:30 Sir Threadeus Mongus. Also from Tulsa, composer and performing artist Jeff Davis brings the rest of the band out for some 'nu skuhl' free Jazz. Annie and even possibly I will make some appearances during this fun, slightly chaotic late night show.
It'll be a night to remember. the first two shows are 10$ each and the late night show is $5. If you want to stay for the whole evening, we can work out a deal. AND you'll have your table.
About Wee Small Hours
________________________________________________________________
Operatic tenor nathan granner one of Sony/BMG Masterworks recording trio The American Tenors has put together a new band “SpoonBlender”, headed by avant-pop composer Jeffrey Rukaman.
The new group has been electrifying audiences with their new arrangements of Iconic Idols. First in the volume is Frank Sinatra.
Nathan Granner and SpoonBlender take the 16 classic songs from Sinatra’s 1955 smash record “In the Wee Small Hours” and turn them into a triple dip pop show that is at once stadium rock fantasy, at second a delightfully humorous turn and at thrice is an emotionally impactful performance that leaves audiences gasping, cheering, thanking and wanting more.
The impeccably crafted arrangements of Jeffrey Rukaman are masterfully played by Gerald Spaits on electric and standup Bass, Scotty McBee on Drums, guitarist Greg Singleton and P. Alonzo Conway on percussion and a plethora (el guapo) of instruments, as well as Rukaman himself, also on a number of instruments and Nathan Granner, who is his own instrument.
From Tibetan Monk to David Coverdale to Torme’ or even Sinatra or Buble’, not to mention the warm tone of his classical chops, Granner’s voice delivers emotion and words as if he’s lived every single note.
_____________________________________________________________________
Here’s to living in a dream for a little while,
Nathan Granner and Spoonblender - In the Wee Small Hours