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Sid Sriram with special guest Keyon Harrold featuring James Francies & Eric Harland
Sun, 27 Apr, 8:00 PM EDT
Doors open
6:00 PM EDT
Blue Note Jazz Club
131 W. 3rd St, New York, NY 10012
TICKET SALES TERMINATED
Tickets are currently unavailable on TicketWeb
Description
Sid Sriram with special guest Keyon Harrold
Featuring James Francies & Eric Harland
$20 Minimum Per Person
Full Bar & Dinner Menu
NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES.
All seating is first come, first served.
Bar Area seating is limited and first come first served. When all available seats are occupied, the remaining bar area is standing room only.
Table Seating is all ages, Bar Area is 21+. Bar Area tickets for patrons under 21 will not be honored.
Group Reservations:
Groups larger than 8 must purchase a group package at club@bluenote.net, or by calling 212.475.8592.
Groups larger than 8 without a group package will be subject to group surcharges added to your bill.
Groups arriving late or separately are not guaranteed to be seated together. All seating is first come, first served. Arrive early for best seats.
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Event Information
Age Limit
All Ages
Refund Policy
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R&B
Sid Sriram
Sid Sriram
R&B
For Sid Sriram, there is a quality inherent in the Carnatic music of South India that he describes as "universal truth." The 32-year-old singer/songwriter has spent years imparting this truth to audiences in India and across the world; today, he ranks as one of the most popular Bollywood singers of the past decade. On his new English-language album Sidharth, however, he departs from the musical lineage of his family's home country, where he has lived since 2015, and draws on the R&B, indie rock, and American pop styles he grew up with as an immigrant kid in Fremont, CA, in the '90s and 2000s. Through doing so, he hoped to find a way to communicate "truth" in music through deeper personal exploration.
"For maybe the first time, I was able to make music where all these different elements that feel like part of my DNA breathed through the songs," Sid explains. "I didn't have to try and think about how to express these things. It started to come out on its own."
Sidharth is a massive-sounding record: soulful, ethereal, and emotionally dense. Many of its 14 tracks sound like they are echoing down from a mountaintop. However, the album was recorded in an intimate context. In the summer of 2021, Sid took a leap of faith and hopped on a plane to Minneapolis, where he and producer Ryan Olson (Poliça, Gayngs, Bon Iver), who had previously only met on Instagram, spent an intensive week in the studio. Most of the songs were tracked live by a small team of Olson associates, including Bon Iver's Justin Vernon, of whom Sid was a longtime fan. "There was no ego," Sid remembers. "Everyone was just really happy to be back in a room making music with each other. Granted, I didn't know any of them at the time. But it felt really quickly like a family."
Fronting this band, Sid threw his entire creative self into crafting vocal hooks and elaborate songforms on the fly. "I had to trust in chaos and let it guide me," he recalls. The music that resulted from that studio joyride is a dizzying combination of pop anthems and progressive experiments, centered on Sid's heart-wrenching vocal performances and Olson's adventurous electronics. Hook-forward tracks with dance floor energy, like the Afrobeat-inflected "Friendly Fire," slot in next to unexpected diversions like "The Hard Way," a celebration of family and loved ones featuring a hyperactive drum 'n' bass groove that splits the difference between Janet Jackson in her Velvet Rope era and post-Kid-A Radiohead.
All this may seem like a far cry from the music that has made Sid famous with Bollywood fans worldwide since breaking out with his first hit soundtrack song, "Adiye" (from 2013's Kadal), just a year out of music school. Indeed, many of the million-plus-viewed videos of Sid feature him singing ragas backed by traditional instruments, not freestyling personal narratives over glitchy 808s and Auto-Tune beds. But before his sudden success, Sriram was an American 20-something obsessed with pop and R&B; he found early viral success by posting a Frank Ocean cover ("We All Try") to YouTube. In many ways, Sidharth highlights the ways in which the musical personalities of that younger version of Sid and the Carnatic music star Sid relate to and complement one another.
During some of the record's most breathtaking moments, Sid combines contrasting these musical modes to moving effect. "Dear Sahana," a song about "yearning for companionship," mixes R&B and gospel with Indian classical melismas and country music flourishes. In a nod to his earliest musical memories, the children's choir his mother has led since Sid's youth lends support at the song's climax, a moment that always makes him tear up while listening back. Country music, on the other hand, was mostly alien to Sid, but he found that it fit naturally into his musical universe. "I realize that pedal steel lends itself to the way my voice moves," he explains. "The way it can bend felt like a cool mirror to the Carnatic-based melodies."
Though its songs often look resolutely towards an open-ended future, Sidharth also represents a homecoming of sorts for Sid, re-embracing American culture after spending years absorbed in the musical traditions of his ancestral homeland. This return to his roots is reflected in the album title, which relates to a moment of childhood self-actualization. "When we first moved to the Bay, in second grade, I decided to change my name to Sid since so many people fucked it up," he says. "Sidharth, in a way, is me reclaiming the name and everything that comes with it, not just culturally, but for me personally." It is a fitting title for a record across which Sid seems to be — as he puts it — "excavating" his life experiences in search of clues that can help him on an uncertain and exciting journey ahead.

Jazz
Keyon Harrold
Keyon Harrold
Jazz
Award-winning trumpeter, vocalist, songwriter, and producer Keyon Harrold is touring in support of the GRAMMY nominated recording 'Foreverland' on the Concord label. This is an outstanding crossover album with features a bevy of collaborators. British R&B vocalist Laura Mvula sings on the title track 'Foreverland'. Emerging young singer Malaya is featured on 'Don't Lie'. Common and Robert Glasper contribute to the song 'Find Your Peace', and GRAMMY winning musician, producer, and singer-songwriter PJ Morton lends a wistful vocal to the nostalgic single 'Beautiful Day'. The single 'Beautiful Day' has been receiving world wide radio play.
Keyon Harrold first came into the International spotlight for his work as the trumpet voice behind the GRAMMY winning Don Cheadle film 'Miles Ahead', and his critically acclaimed album, 'The Mugician', (Sony Legacy / Mass Appeal). As a bandleader, he has created a compelling new statement with a riveting mix of jazz, Afrobeat, soul, spoken word, hip-hop, blues, rock, and even American folk. As a soloist, his distinctly warm trumpet sound simmers in the middle register; creating drama without aggrandizing, and mesmerizing live audiences with an emotionally charged concert presentation. Wynton Marsalis has stated "Keyon Harrold is the future of the trumpet".
In addition to being one of the leading voices in Jazz Music, Keyon Harrold has collaborated with many of the top hip hop and pop artists including: Snoop Dogg, Jay Z, Beyonce, Rihanna, Eminem, Maxwell, and Anthony Hamilton, and rock legends Keith Richards and Jeff Beck. These experiences broadened his musical horizons beyond jazz to include funk, Afrobeat, R&B, rock and roll, and hip hop.
He is currently touring an ensemble that is making one of the strongest artistic statements of any musical group today, rooted in jazz music, the band freestyles and solos with authority and weaves the spectrum of African American music into a sonic expression that can best be described as Bop Pop Hip-Hop Jazz!!! Audience members often reference his concerts as among the best they have ever attended.