FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 27, 2015 CONTACT: Rebecca

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 27, 2015

CONTACT:

Rebecca Bailey, Publicity Coordinator/Writer

Hopkins Center for the Arts, Dartmouth College rebecca.a.bailey@dartmouth.edu

603.646.3991

Stirred, shaken, or on the rocks, Pink Martini cools hot summer temps July 14

Photo: Pink Martini, with China Forbes and Thomas Lauderdale at center. Photo by Autumn de Wilde.

HANOVER, NH—Pink Martini, the internationally celebrated “suave salon orchestra” (New York Times) returns to the Spaulding stage on Tuesday, July 14, at 8 pm, with its expert cocktail of meticulous musicianship, sparkling showmanship and globe-spanning repertoire, served with a twist of humor.

A sold-out Hop hit in 2007 and 2011, the Portland, Ore.-based band returns with vocalist China Forbes, a

“pitch-perfect chanteuse who…tempers heartbreak with savoir-faire” (New York Times).

Pink Martini embraces popular song from around the world and across the decades—a “highly polished combination of class and kitsch, swooning nostalgia and deliriously romantic melodies”

(The Telegraph, UK). While most of the neo-swing acts that emerged in the 1990s favored a combination of jump blues and early rock ‘n’ roll, Pink Martini offers a risk-taking blend of jazz

(mainly swing), world music, cabaret, lounge, and 1940s-1950s film music. With an ensemble that includes brass, strings and multiple percussionists, the group can dip and dive from Cole Porter and Duke Ellington to French icon

Edith Piaf to Latin greats such as Xavier Cugat, Beny Moré and Tito Puente. Forbes, a handy linguist, slips in and out of various languages with convincing flair.

Wrote The Times (London), “Multilingual and defiantly cosmopolitan, Pink Martini have vacuumed up songs from Turkey, Japan, Romania and beyond, using lush string and horn arrangements that hark back to the days

before rock ‘n’ roll…Pink Martini concerts are all about striking an insouciant pose in the face of life's vicissitudes, as if nothing has changed since the age of Fred and Ginger.”

Says pianist and bandleader Thomas Lauderdale, “We’re very much an American band, but we spend a lot of time abroad and therefore have the incredible diplomatic opportunity to represent a broader, more inclusive

America…the America which remains the most heterogeneously populated country in the world…composed of people of every country, every language, every religion.”

Formed more than 20 years ago in Portland, Ore., by college friends Forbes and Lauderdale, Pink Martini performs its multilingual repertoire on concert stages and with symphony orchestras throughout Europe, Asia,

Greece, Turkey, the Middle East, Northern Africa, Australia, New Zealand, South America and North America.

More recent splashy appearances include the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s 2011 New Year’s Eve concert; the

Governor’s Ball at the 80th Annual Academy Awards in 2008; the opening of the 2008 Sydney Festival in

Australia; two sold-out concerts at Paris’ legendary L’Olympia Theatre in 2011; and Paris’ fashion house

Lanvin’s 10-year anniversary celebration for designer Alber Elbaz in 2012. In its twentieth year, Pink Martini was inducted into both the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame and the Oregon Music Hall of Fame.

Pink Martini’s debut album Sympathique, released in 1997, quickly became an international phenomenon, garnering the group nominations for “Song of the Year” and “Best New Artist” in France’s Victoires de la

Musique Awards in 2000. Pink Martini released Hang On Little Tomato in 2004, Hey Eugene! in 2007 and

Splendor In The Grass in 2009. In November 2010 the band released Joy To The World, a festive, multidenominational, multilingual holiday album that received glowing reviews and was carried in Starbucks stores during the 2010 and 2011 holiday seasons.

In 2011 the band released two albums: A Retrospective, a collection of the band’s most beloved songs, including eight previously unreleased tracks, and 1969, an album of collaborations with legendary Japanese singer Saori Yuki. Pink Martini’s seventh studio album, Get Happy, released in 2013, features 16 globespanning songs in nine languages, with vocalists Forbes and Large plus a cavalcade of special guests including

Rufus Wainwright and Shapiro—as well as four great-grandchildren of Captain and Maria von Trapp, made famous by the movie The Sound of Music. Pink Martini albums have sold over 3 million copies worldwide.

Lauderdale built the band’s eighth studio album, Dream a Little Dream (2014), around the von Trapps, with guest appearances by The Chieftains, Wayne Newton, “Jungle” Jack Hanna, and Charmian Carr (who played

Liesl in the original Sound of Music).

The band has collaborated and performed with numerous other artists, including Jimmy Scott, Carol Channing,

Jane Powell, Rufus Wainwright, Martha Wainwright, Joey Arias, puppeteer Basil Twist, Michael Feinstein, filmmaker Gus Van Sant, Mamie Van Doren, the original cast of Sesame Street. Singer Storm Large began performing with Pink Martini in March 2011, when Forbes took a leave of absence to undergo surgery on her vocal cords. Forbes made full recovery and now both she and Large continue performing with Pink Martini.

RELEVANT LINKS http://pinkmartini.com

https://hop.dartmouth.edu/Online/pinkmartini

Download high-resolution photos: https://hop.dartmouth.edu/Online/default.asp?doWork::WScontent::loadArticle=Load&BOparam::WScont ent::loadArticle::article_id=A14ACB33-679C-469F-9E07-

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CALENDAR LISTING:

Pink Martini

A Hop favorite, this “little orchestra” combines retro glamour with a sophisticated songbook of classical, jazz, world music and timeless pop in multiple languages. Their cocktail of meticulous musicianship and sparkling showmanship, served with a twist of humor, have won them audiences spanning nations and generations. This concert features vocalist China Forbes, a “pitch-perfect chanteuse who…tempers heartbreak with savoir-faire” (New York Times).

Tuesday, July 14, 8 pm

Spaulding Auditorium, Hopkins Center for the Arts, Hanover NH

$35/50/60, Dartmouth students $10

Information: hop.dartmouth.edu or 603.646.2422

* * *

Founded in 1962, the Hopkins Center for the Arts is a multi-disciplinary academic, visual and performing arts center dedicated to uncovering insights, igniting passions, and nurturing talents to help Dartmouth and the surrounding Upper Valley community engage imaginatively and contribute creatively to our world. Each year the Hop presents more than 300 live events and films by visiting artists as well as Dartmouth students and the Dartmouth community, and reaches more than 22,000 Upper Valley residents and students with outreach and arts education programs. After a celebratory 50 th -anniversary season in 2012-13, the Hop enters its second half-century with renewed passion for mentoring young artists, supporting the development of new work, and providing a laboratory for participation and experimentation in the arts.

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