The Siyg On the list of things that are tough to get youths on board with - right up there with meeting curfew and putting down their cell phones - attending the ballet has to rank near the top. Consequently, Ballet Quad Cities Executive Director Joedy Cook has, for years, been bringing the ballet to them.

"The majority of our performance now has some type of outreach component," Cook says of Ballet Quad Cities' public output, "whether we have a special school matinée, or we have programs that we go into schools with."

So when the time came to prepare Ballet Rocks II - a follow-up to last autumn's high-energy, rock-heavy collaboration between local rockers and Ballet Quad Cities - Cook was looking to capture the attention and interest of younger audiences, and to showcase her organization's second company of high-school dancers.

Chee-Yun When Chee-Yun takes the stage this weekend with the Quad City Symphony Orchestra, she'll be performing a Saint-Saëns violin concerto she first picked up 24 years ago - when she was just nine years old.

But don't think the Korean-born violinist has tired of the piece after all these years, or that she's done exploring the music.

"How much of an expert can you really be on a piece unless you've spent time with the composer or spent your whole life on a piece?" she said in a recent phone interview. "I'm still young and I'm still learning. Great music always gives so much to work on, so much to be fascinated by, so much to discover every time you play. I never get tired of it."

Nnenne Freelon Following last year's lament for Hurricane Katrina victims, this year's Chicago Jazz Festival - which ran from August 31 to September 3 - honored the birthplace of jazz, featuring performers from New Orleans and celebrating the impact of that city in the creation and evolution of jazz music.

Additionally, the festival this year was woven around tributes to four brilliantly creative and powerful musicians who forever impacted the nature of our relationship to jazz music. The first tribute was a ticketed concert Thursday at Chicago Symphony Center for John Coltrane's 80th birthday anniversary: "Ballads and Brass," featuring the Joshua Redmond Quartet and Kurt Elling with special guest Ari Brown.

Reader issue #599 Songs for Older Women - the second of, thus far, seven albums by Chicago rockers Umphrey's McGee - includes a "secret track" on the CD, a song titled "Baby Honey Sugar Darling." And when he first auditioned for the band in 2003, Umphrey's McGee drummer Kris Myers discovered that the group, as it turned out, was no stranger to secrets.

"Yeah, that was really interesting," Myers says with a laugh during a recent phone interview. The audition took place in the basement studio of Umphrey's McGee guitarist Jake Cinninger, with other band members in attendance. "I knew a song of theirs - 'Hurt Bird Bath' - but I never played it before. So I played it, and then we talked." Afterwards, the band went upstairs while Myers, given new songs to practice on his own, played downstairs.

But to Myers' later surprise, the group hadn't left Myers completely alone; as he reveals, "It turns out they had a hidden mic in the basement."

Alejandro Escovedo It is in times of crisis that a person learns who his or her true friends are. Alejandro Escovedo discovered he has a lot of friends.

Even if you haven't heard of Escovedo, you've likely heard of them: John Cale of the Velvet Underground, Los Lonely Boys, the Cowboy Junkies, Son Volt, Charlie Musselwhite, Lucinda Williams, Calexico, Steve Earle. Those people and more than two dozen others cut tracks for Por Vida: A Tribute to the Songs of Alejandro Escovedo. The goal wasn't merely to honor the man, or just offset some of his medical bills, but perhaps to save his life.

Singer/songwriter Escovedo is widely and deeply respected in the alt-country community, and he has the meager bank account to prove it. He even called his live disc More Miles Than Money. The alternative-country magazine No Depression called him its artist of the decade for the 1990s.

Bo Ramsey I've always thought of Bo Ramsey as the Bob Dylan of Iowa. And not just because of their hats - late additions, both.

No, it's the way both can write a song whose images and music stay with you after only one listen, cover a song and make it their own, and deliver a hybrid American music that has their particular sound stamped all over it. When I first heard the start of Ramsey's just-released CD Stranger Blues, I thought I'd mistakenly put on Dylan's new release Modern Times instead. And Dylan's "From a Buick 6" (blues from Highway 61 Revisited) fit right in to Ramsey's live set the other week in Des Moines.

Susan Tedeschi The covers album is time-honored stopgap, and Susan Tedeschi's Hope & Desire CD from last year fits the mold perfectly. The blues belter/guitarist signed with the Verve Forecast label in 2004 when she was pregnant with her second child, Sophia, and her own material wasn't yet ready to record. It had been several years since she'd put out new songs - Wait for Me came out in 2002 - and the label wanted some product.

"They were sort of in a hurry to get one together," Tedeschi said in an interview last week with the River Cities' Reader. So the label gathered Tedeschi and producer Joe Henry to pick some songs.

The Black CrowesNow in its second year, the River Roots Live lineup has grown by half - from 12 bands in 2005 to 18 this year. And it's also a stronger group of artists.

The inaugural festival seemed geared to Boomers, with its biggest names - Edgar Winter, Rick Derringer, and Little Feat - planted firmly in the 1970s. This year's version boasts one bona fide commercial giant (The Black Crowes) and one artistic triumph (Alejandro Escovedo, named by Paste magazine as one of the 100 greatest living songwriters).

This week's River Cities' Reader features interviews with four festival performers: Bo Ramsey, Susan Tedeschi, Umphrey's McGee, and Alejandro Escovedo. Past interviews with Junior Brown and Martin Sexton can be found below. 

Death Ships On the cover of the Death Ships' Seeds of Devastation, a resplendent Midwestern farm scene - complete with stalks of wheat, a dragonfly, and a red barn - sets the tone. But on the inside panel, as the barn burns down behind him, a boy in a blue winter coat pokes a white paper boat with a stick.

The band's name and multiple visual and verbal contradictions create an eerie haze around Death Ships' debut CD, but the songs are anything but dark. With its roller-rink keyboard, start-stop beat, tambourine, and hand-claps, "Symmetrical Smiles" is a hip-swiveling rocker. The song is fleshed out by a twangy guitar and Death Ships singer Dan Maloney's clear, bright voice. Similar to bands such as Essex Green, Ladybug Transistor, and Beulah, Iowa City's Death Ships honor the tradition of '60s icons the Kinks and the Zombies.

William Elliott Whitmore Sallow red roses adorn the withered remains of a small crow on the cover of Song of the Blackbird. The image of the crow is carried throughout the album and serves as an apt metaphor for the turmoil in Whitmore's songs. A magnificent bird with gleaming black feathers and supple curves, the crow's shrill cry seems to contradict its splendor.

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