Categories
Entertainment Lifestyle Living NYC

Summer Date Ideas in New York City 2021

It’s about to get romantic

Have you been searching for some new summer date ideas in New York City? Well, we’ve got you covered! Here are our picks for romantic summer dates in New York City.

Coney Island

Image by Guusje Weeber on Unsplash

For a fun-filled day with your significant other, visit Coney Island. Complete with rides, a beach, and shops, there are fun activities that all couples will enjoy. Also, while you’re here be sure to visit Nathan’s Hotdogs. Founded in 1916, the original Nathan’s Hotdogs is on Surf Avenue in Coney Island. These all-beef hotdogs have built a reputation, making them a famous staple of the Coney Island experience. A trip to Coney Island is the perfect date for a sunny summer day.

Classic Harbor Line Cruises

Manhattan Photo by Classic Harbor Line

How about a late-night cruise on the Hudson River? With Classic Harbor Line, you can go on relaxing cruises while enjoying the beautiful sights of the city including the Statue of Liberty, One World Trade Center, and Ellis Island. One of our favorite tours is the Jazz Cruise, a 1.5-hour cruise complete with live, talented jazz musicians. This cruise is aboard the Manhattan, a stunning 1920s style yacht. A night on the water with Classic Harbor Line is most definitely a night to remember. 

Museum of Modern Art

Image by Alex Palmer on Unsplash

Otherwise known as the MoMA, this popular museum is the perfect summer date to escape the heat. Featuring modern and contemporary art, the MoMA is open from 10:30 am-5:30 pm Sunday-Friday and Saturday 10:30 am-7:00 pm. Admission is $25 for adults, $18 for seniors, and $14 for full-time students with ID. 

Rooftop Reds

Image by Rooftop Reds

Calling all wine-loving couples: Rooftop Reds is the perfect date for you! Located on 299 Sands Street, Building 275, Brooklyn, Rooftop Reds is the world’s first rooftop vineyard. This vineyard makes around 20-25 cases of wine every year. This is a romantic rooftop date you won’t want to miss this summer.

Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Image by Yasir Eryilmaz on Unsplash

For a romantic escape into nature in the heart of Brooklyn, plan a date at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden! This 52-acre garden was founded in 1910. The Brooklyn Botanical Garden has over 14,000 taxa of plants. Admission is $18 each for adults and $12 for seniors 65 and up and for students with IDs. 

Tokyo Record Bar

Image by Tokyo Record Bar

If you and your significant other are looking for a unique date in the city, you definitely should check out Tokyo Record Bar. Tokyo Record Bar describes itself as “an underground listening room dedicated to quality and obsession through music, food, and booze.” In order to enter this lounge, you need to walk through Air’s Champagne Parlor

Tokyo Record Bar does two seatings a night, Monday through Saturday. Once seated, guests are given a song list and a drink menu. Tokyo Record Bar has a large variety of genres of music so everyone can find something they like. The song requests are handed to the DJ who then will then make the playlist for the night and sometimes add some more songs of their choice. Guests will also receive a seven-course tasting menu, complete with various traditional Japanese snacks and food. To experience a taste of Japan from New York City, Tokyo Record Bar is the perfect date.

Dreamland Roller Rink

 

Image by Dreamland Roller Rink

For a summer date that will send you back to the age of disco, visit Dreamland Roller Rink with your significant other! This themed roller skating rink encourages visitors to journey to the past by coming in retro costumes. MCs and DJs will narrate this spectacular night of disco. Dreamland Roller Rink also hosts themed parties, so that each visit is unique. Dreamland Roller Rink is a must-visit this summer for a unique and unforgettable date night.

Jetty Jumpers Jet Ski Tours

Image by Jetty Jumpers

If you and your significant other are looking for some adventurous summer date ideas, you should definitely check out Jetty Jumpers’ jet ski tours. These exciting tours are about three hours long. While jet skiing, you will see some of New York City’s most prominent landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, Ellis Island, the Freedom Tower, and more. This is the perfect date for adventurous couples who want a day out on the water.

Color Factory

Image by the Color Factory

The Color Factory is the perfect date for couples looking for a unique experience and a lot of photo opportunities. The Color Factory is an art exhibit that revolves around the beauty and varying palettes of color. Each room is a different experience of color and encourages guests to embrace their imagination and creativity. The Color Factory is an experience unlike any other, the perfect date to escape into air conditioning. In addition, all summer you can visit Eataly Downtown and Color Factory’s collaboration.

Bryant Park Movie Nights

Image from the Bryant Park Corporation Website

Bryant Park movie nights are back this summer, the perfect romantic date under the stars. Admission to these movies, are free. The concession stands open at 5:00 pm and the movie starts at sundown. The movie schedule can be found on the Bryant Park website. If you and your significant other are movie buffs looking for a romantic movie night, be sure to check out Bryant Park movie nights this summer.

 

For more New York City date ideas, click here

Categories
Culture Events

May 12 to 15: Moustapha Alassane’s Debut North American Retrospective

In collaboration with MoMA, the Cultural Services of the French Embassy is organizing the very first North American retrospective of Moustapha Alassane, a pioneer of populist cinema in newly independent Niger in the 1960s and 1970s. The exhibit will be taking place from May 12 through 15.

A fabulist who sheathed the sharp sting of his political satire within playful stories of water genies, pugilistic frogs, cowboys, and brave fishermen, Alassane parodied colonialist attitudes toward black Africans, the corrupt despotism of local officials, and the shallow materialism of Niger’s youth in a series of animated, fictional, and ethnographic films that remain beloved and influential even today.

Alassane’s earliest animated films were simple projections of cardboard cutouts, but his work quickly matured, leading to friendships and collaborations with the dean of Nigerian movie acting Zalia Souley, the French documentarian Jean Rouch, and the Canadian animator Norman McLaren. His films are vital and imaginative records of Nigerian traditions and rituals. His first feature, 1962’s Aoure, presents the married life of a young Zharma couple on the banks of the Niger River. His 1973 film Shaki documents the ascension of a Yoruban king and the syncretic intermingling of traditional customs and beliefs with those of Islam and Protestantism.

More information on this exhibit can be found on the MOMA website.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZfSyW4duyM

Categories
Culture Events LA Music

The Los Angeles Guitar Quartet talks to Downtown about its Nov. 5 show at the 92Y

Los Angeles Guitar Quartet with Pat Metheny
Los Angeles Guitar Quartet with Pat Metheny

The Los Angeles Guitar Quartet is a Grammy-winning ensemble that formed in 1980. Its current lineup of John Dearman, William Kanengiser, Scott Tennant and Matthew Greif — Matthew replaced original member Andrew York in 2006 — has toured around the world, playing everything from bluegrass to Bach. The ensemble’s worldwide acclaim has led to notable composers writing music for the LAGQ to perform, one recent example of such being by guitar hero Dweezil Zappa.

On Nov. 5, the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet makes a return to 92Y, a venue the group has a long-standing history with. This evening will feature a performance of the Pat Metheny composition Road To The Sun, which 92Y co-commissioned. Mr. Metheny will be in attendance for the event, which opens 92Y’s Art Of The Guitar series.

Downtown caught up with John Dearman, William Kanengiser and Scott Tennant for some Q&A about their Nov. 5 show, their personal histories with our city, and what else is coming up for the LAGQ. More info can be found at www.lagq.com.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_d0Bep9xf0

What do you remember about the first time you ever performed live in New York? Where was it?

Scott Tennant: I don’t know if it was our first New York City performance or not, but I strongly recall our Merkin Hall debut. I remember walking up to the hall excited, not nervous at all. Couldn’t help but be energized by the New York musical vibe!

William Kannengiser: My New York City performance was at my Senior Recital upon graduating from the Mannes Conservatory Preparatory School in May 1977. I was a high school senior living in New Jersey, and I studied guitar, Music Theory and Ear Training at Mannes for three years, making the trek into the big city every Saturday. It was my first complete solo recital, and right in the middle of it a huge storm hit, replete with lightning and huge claps of thunder. Somehow I maintained my composure and got through it.

John Dearman: I think the first time we played in New York City was for the Concert Artists Guild competition held annually at Carnegie Hall. I remember that we stayed in a hotel across the street from Carnegie and someone told me that Van Cliburn lived in that hotel — not, like, stayed there when in town, but LIVED there! That impressed me, that a classical musician was living like a rock star.

And on the evening of our performance in the competition, just beforehand, I decided to stop in at the Russian Team Room, right next door to the entrance to Carnegie. And who did I see? Woody Allen himself — who famously was a regular there — with Mia Farrow. So, even being from L.A., I was pretty starstruck on my first visit to the Big Apple.

What’s to be expected from your upcoming show at 92Y?

ST: An intoxicating drink of hip and sexy music from Latin America, plus what we think will become one of the more important guitar works from one of the most important and influential guitar players of our generation.

WK: This would be the “troisiéme”, or third performance of Pat Metheny’s amazing Road To The Sun. Having gone through the first-performance jitters at the world premiere in Denver two weeks before, and with a ton of tweaks suggested by Pat and another performance under our belt in Santa Barbara, I’m looking forward to us just sitting back and enjoying the ride. It’s also going to be fantastic to work with Pat again on little details and having him in the house to inspire us.

JD: Well, it will of course be very special because of the Metheny performance with Pat in attendance. So we’re pretty psyched about playing there as it’s really one of our “home” concerts where we have a very loyal following. I think this will be something like our seventh or eighth appearance at 92Y.

Any restaurants or attractions in New York you’re hoping to check out while in town?

ST: My absolute favorite place is gone. You’ll think I’m crazy, with all the foodie shrines in Manhattan. But I always went to Big Nick’s on Broadway and West 77th! The flight from L.A. would always land at JFK [Airport] in the evening, and my routine was to check into my hotel across the street and immediately head to Big Nick’s for a huge Greek salad and a burger — usually around 11:00 PM or midnight. No matter what the weather was I would sit out in front under the seemingly-eternal scaffolding and eat while watching people walk by.

WK: My wife is celebrating a big birthday today, and in honor of her I’m planning on having a nice spinach and goat cheese omelet at the lovely Sarabeth’s Kitchen on Madison and 92nd. I’ve had many memorable breakfasts there with my wife and daughter when we’ve come to New York City to play.

JD: Eating and museums are always top priority for me when I visit. I always pay a visit to MoMA and then try to fit in something extra like the Frick or some galleries. Haven’t done my research on restaurants yet but one thing I’ve always loved about New York City is the abundance of great old-style Italian, so-called red-sauce joints, so I’ll try to hit one of those. Also have never been to Peter Luger’s, so I may head out to Brooklyn…

What is coming up for you after the show at 92Y? Other projects?

WK: We’re planning on a recording project featuring Road To The Sun as the centerpiece, as well as a piece recently written for us by Dweezil Zappa. In April we’ll be premiering a piece for LAGQ and guitar orchestra by former LAGQ member and acclaimed composer Andy York. We’re going to do a three-concert tour in Arizona with a 40-member orchestra of talented student guitarists from all over the state. It will be partly based on traditional Havasupai chants.

When not busy with work, how do you like to spend your free time?

ST: I will have a little dog soon and that will take over my free time. But otherwise I like collecting and riding odd recumbent trikes. I also like lifting weights. It focuses me and calms me down like nothing else can.

WK: I love to cook. I just made my wife some cast-iron seared sushi-grade ahi with a sesame, chia and nigella seed crust, topped with a soy, miso and olallieberry reduction, along with grilled Japanese eggplant and roasted Yukon gold potatoes with chives and crème fraîche. Cooking for others is a creative, relaxing and rewarding respite for me.

JD: I’ve got a serious motorcycle habit: three bikes including a restored 1973 Norton 850 Commando. Also, spending too much spare time — and money — on golf these days! Played in Ireland last summer when we were on tour there. Why do otherwise sane people play golf in the wind and the rain?

Los Angeles Guitar Quartet with Pat Metheny
Los Angeles Guitar Quartet with Pat Metheny

What is your favorite album of 2016?

WK: I have two, but they actually share the same title. Sephardic Journey by Apollo’s Fire has some incredibly evocative early music from the Jewish diaspora, reminiscent of the work of Jordi Savall that inspired me so much in adapting our Don Quixote project. Sephardic Journey by the flute/guitar husband-and-wife team Cavatina Duo features world premiere recordings of new chamber works commissioned especially for this heartfelt CD. All the works are inspired by Hebraic themes, including wonderful pieces by my friends Clarice Assad and Carlos Rafael Rivera.

JD: Not sure about a favorite album…I’m on Spotify most of the time now. Listened to a lot of Bowie after his passing, in catch-up mode; I missed out on a lot of great moments from the past when I was obsessing about becoming a classical musician. One of my favorite new discoveries was Rene Jacobs, conductor/early-music specialists. I watched all the YouTube videos of a guy who has a channel called 80-20 drummer where he does lessons in how to play like Jack DeJohnette, or Mark Guiliana, Stewart Copeland, gospel licks, rap drummers — I’m kind of all over the place in my tastes.

Finally, any last words for the kids?

WK: It going to be quite a night for us, helping to realize Pat Metheny’s creative vision, with him sitting right there in the hall. It’s thrilling, inspiring, humbling and terrifying all at the same time!

Categories
Dining Events Living

enCourage Kids Foundation to host 2nd annual Serving Up Smiles Tasting Event on Oct. 24 at CURRENT

enCourage Kids Foundation at Citi Field
enCourage Kids Foundation at Citi Field

On Oct. 24 at 6:30 PM, the enCourage Kids Foundation is hosting their 2nd annual Serving Up Smiles Tasting Event at CURRENT, Chelsea Piers’ newest venue located at Pier 59 18th Street & Hudson River.

Master of Ceremonies, “Culinary Bad Boy” Chef Chris Nirschel, will emcee the evening aimed at raising awareness for the 275,000 children and families that enCourage Kids Foundation serves, supports and uplifts.

Proceeds from this event will help kids facing health challenges to be carefree kids by creating environments and experiences that help them through each step of their medical journey.

31 years ago, enCourage Kids opened its doors to children battling chronic, serious, or life-threatening illnesses and injuries with the mission of improving the lives of those children and their family members. Their programs use entertainment and technology to make hospital visits a little less frightening and have created exciting family outings that make everyday life a little more fun.

“We are incredibly excited and appreciative to have the enthusiasm of these amazing chefs and restaurants who are supportive of our mission. We’re looking forward to an incredibly successful evening,” says Michele Hall-Duncan, Executive Director, enCourage Kids Foundation.

Guests can mix and mingle with the city’s hottest chefs and sample signature dishes, delectable cocktails and delicious wines from an elite roster of restaurants.

Participating restaurants include:

  • Butter – Chef Michael Jenkins
  • El Toro Blanco – Chef Josh Capon
  • Ben & Jack’s Steakhouse – Chef Admir Alibasic
  • Robert Restaurant – Chef Luisa Fernandes
  • Melt Shop – Chef Spencer Rubin
  • Buns Bar – Chef Viko Ortega
  • Arcade Bakery – Baker and Owner Roger Gural
  • Jewel – Chef Tom Schaudel
  • Bryant Park Grill – Pastry Chef Anne-Marie Noonan
  • Café 2 & Terrace 5 at MoMA – Chef Dan Jackson
  • The City Bakery – Baker and Owner Maury Rubin
  • Melt Bakery – Pastry Chef and Owner Julian Plyter
  • Carlo’s Bakery (“Cake Boss”) – Baker and Owner Buddy Valastro

    For tickets and more info, please visit https://encourage-kids.org/serving-smiles-2016.

  • Categories
    Culture Featured

    Black History Is Restored to Life at MoMa’s “One Way Ticket: Jacob Lawrence Migration Series”

    main-lawrence
    Elie HIrschfeld‘s “Harlem Diner” is one glowing example of Jacob Lawrence’s definitive depictions of the African American experience.

    One Way Ticket: Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series,” a dazzling collection of the work of the celebrated African American painter, offers a unique entry point on American history at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMa) through September 7!

    Lawrence, who’s work is considered seminal for its documentation of the black experience in America, was just 23 years old when he completed a series of 60 small paintings with educational captions about “The Great Migration” of African Americans from the rural South to the Urban North in the early 20th Century in 1941.

    Lawrence’s “Migration Series,” offers 60 intimate looks at that period of upheaval in African American life between 1915 and 1970.

    The images depict both a harsh and joyful experience in a segregated nation where life couldn’t be more challenging for his people who faced not only The Great Depression with the rest of the nation, but the oppression and discrimination of the Jim Crow Laws that plagued the South.

    Within months of its creation, individual pieces of the series entered the collections of The Museum of Modern Art and the Phillips Memorial Gallery (today The Phillips Collection), with each institution acquiring half of the panels.

    Lawrence’s work is now an icon in both collections, but THIS collection represents the first time all 60 panels have been reunited in 20 years!

    “This is an opportunity for Americans to see the black experience through the eyes of a man who not only documented this tumultuous period of history, but lived it,” says noted art collector and iconic New York developer Elie Hirschfeld who has one of Lawrence’s pieces in his impressive personal collection.

    Harlem Diner holds a special place in my collection as Lawrence is the only African-American artist of the depression era in it,” says Hirschfeld. “His work speaks volumes both about that setting and the people depicted in it. It transports you to a period of time and into a culture in a way that no history book can ever approach.“

    Hirschfeld’s piece depicts a sadness and defeat that came with the problems of an era of joblessness and racial oppression – with the kind of artistic clarity that comes with a work by Lawrence.

    The hard and brittle aspects of life Harlem are known to have been a tremendous inspiration to Lawrence, who passed away in 2000 at the age of 82. But he was equally as inspired by the vivid colors of the Harlem community.

    “Even in my mother’s home,” Lawrence told historian Paul Karlstrom, “people of my mother’s generation would decorate their homes in all sorts of color… so you’d think in terms of Matisse,” he once said.

    When Lawrence died on June 9, 2000, the New York Times described him as “One of America’s leading modern figurative painters” and “among the most impassioned visual chroniclers of the African-American experience.”

    “I am proud to have one of his pieces in my New York collection,” says Hirschfeld. “His work not only chronicles a defining era of our city and nation…it restores it to life so that it can never be forgotten.”

     

    Categories
    Featured Living

    Don’t Show Up Empty Handed: 9 Gifts for Your Host

    bottle

     Arrow Bottle Stopper, $10, available at BHLDN

    Getting invited to dinner at someone’s house is, most of the time, a pleasure. Yet, at the same time, doubts arise. Unless it is a very intimate person or the invitation is extended on short notice, proper etiquette dictates that a guest should not arrive empty handed. Showing up with something in tow for your host shows respect and indicates a kind gesture of thanks in response to the invitation. The question is: What should you take as a gift for your host? There are a lot of options, actually, suggestions, because there is no one right way to go. Ultimately, in selecting a gift, the good taste of the guest and the appreciative intention behind the item is what matters most. If you are a creative person, don’t be afraid of using your inventiveness. Remember, different and beautiful surprises are always welcome. A classic suggestion for any type of event is flowers. You can take or send them to the place you will be attending. Preferably, it is best to bring flowers already in some sort of vase or receptacle, to prevent the host from searching for a vase to put the flowers in while guests are arriving. If you want to be thankful and extend a gift to the entire family, consider offering something that the whole family will enjoy. If you choose food, choose an assortment of sweet pastries or cookies or a box of assorted chocolates so that everyone can enjoy. In this case consider not only the quantity but the quality as well. Here are some suggestions to help you find the perfect gift!

    -Thais Morais, Maria Zanetti & Xavi Ocaña

    native cast DIY Round Sweet Basil Kit, $15, available at Uncommon Goods

    LindenbeautyMs. Tilly Rosalie’s Beauty Tea, $24, available at R.L. Linden & CO

    LindenThe Linden, $60, available at Bloom That.

    Moma coaster

    History of Art Coasters, $20, available at Moma Store

    Candle Sabon

    Luxury Candle, $24 , available at  Sabon

    strawberries

    Golden Edibles Drizzled Chocolates Strawberries, $60, available at Saks Fifth AvenueChalkboard vase

    Chalkboard Vase, $40, available at Uncommon Goods