Encontre datas da turnê e eventos de música ao vivo para todas as suas bandas e artistas favoritos em sua cidade. Receba ingressos para shows, notícias, e confirme a presença nos shows com Bandsintown.
get app
Inscrição
Iniciar sessão
John Zorn
29.610 Seguidores
Never miss another John Zorn concert. Get alerts about tour announcements, concert tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
Seguir
Não há shows marcados
Envie uma solicitação para John Zorn fazer um show na sua cidade
Solicitar um show
Artistas semelhantes em turnê
John Zorn merch
The Hermetic Organ Vol. 9 - Liber VII
$15.99
Suite for Piano
$18.99
Perchance To Dream
$18.99
New Masada Quartet
$18.99
Teresa de Ávila
$15.19
Heaven and Earth Magick
$16.32
Ver tudo
Fotos ao vivo de John Zorn
Ver todas as fotos
concerts and tour dates
Anteriores
ABR
30
2024
Vienna, Austria
Club Porgy & Bess
Eu estive lá
NOV
02
2023
Paris, France
Philharmonie de Paris
Eu estive lá
SET
03
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
SET
02
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
SET
01
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
AGO
31
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
Ver mais eventos
Comentários de fãs
Ramon
1 de setembro de 2023
One of the most unique and amazing performances from one of music's most accomplished free jazz saxophonist and composers. Seeing Dave Lombardo, John Medeski and John Zorn duel it out on thier respective instruments was awe inspiring. Highly recommend everyone see a John Zorn performance at some point.
San Francisco, CA@Great American Music Hall
Travis
23 de agosto de 2022
Absolutely wonderful take of a concert. Intimate and amazing.
Chicago, IL@Art Institute of Chicago
Ver Mais Avaliações de fãs
Sobre John Zorn
John Zorn (born 2 September 1953 in New York City) is an American composer and saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist. He owns the Tzadik record label and has worked with a large number of experimental musicians, particularly in improvised music, incorporating modern classical music, jazz and even death metal and grindcore as well as having produced music to include most styles.
As a child, he played piano, guitar and flute. He went to college in St. Louis, Missouri at Webster College (now Webster University) where he discovered free jazz, before dropping out and moving to Manhattan. There he gave concerts in his small apartment, playing a variety of reeds, duck calls, tapes, etc; almost anything (sometimes he played "musical optics" which involved no instruments or sounds at all, but rather the arrangement of lights and objects in a dark room). In the mid 1980s he signed to the Elektra-Nonesuch label. Since then, Zorn has been quite prolific, usually putting out several new records each year. His breakthrough recording was perhaps 1985's The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone, wherein Zorn offered a number of often radical arrangements of Morricone's famed songs from various movies. The Big Gundown was endorsed by Morricone, and incorporated elements of traditional Japanese music, soul jazz, and other diverse musical genres.
In 2006, John Zorn was awarded the MacArthur "Genius" Grant, which honors a wide variety of individuals who have achieved an extreme level of excellence in their respective fields. It provides winners with 500,000 dollars over a five year period. Zorn was awarded this grant due to his progressive exploration of radical Jewish music.
-------------------
Shibboleth (1997) / Gris-Gris (2000) / Goetia (2002):
Three distinctive instrumental works touching upon themes of magic and mysticism. Goetia are spells and incantations for summoning demonic spirits and this colorful set of variations for solo violin draws upon the ancient alliance between the violin and the devil. Gris-Gris is a virtuosic work for thirteen tuned drums inspired by the music of Korean Shamanism, Haitian Voodoo and a scene from Howard Hawks’ classic film To Have and Have Not. It receives a spectacular performance by one of the world’s leading avant-garde percussionists—William Winant. Completing the program is one of Zorn’s most personal and elusive ensemble pieces. Scored for clavichord, three muted strings and percussion, Shibboleth is a stunning tribute to the enigmatic poet Paul Celan.
As a child, he played piano, guitar and flute. He went to college in St. Louis, Missouri at Webster College (now Webster University) where he discovered free jazz, before dropping out and moving to Manhattan. There he gave concerts in his small apartment, playing a variety of reeds, duck calls, tapes, etc; almost anything (sometimes he played "musical optics" which involved no instruments or sounds at all, but rather the arrangement of lights and objects in a dark room). In the mid 1980s he signed to the Elektra-Nonesuch label. Since then, Zorn has been quite prolific, usually putting out several new records each year. His breakthrough recording was perhaps 1985's The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone, wherein Zorn offered a number of often radical arrangements of Morricone's famed songs from various movies. The Big Gundown was endorsed by Morricone, and incorporated elements of traditional Japanese music, soul jazz, and other diverse musical genres.
In 2006, John Zorn was awarded the MacArthur "Genius" Grant, which honors a wide variety of individuals who have achieved an extreme level of excellence in their respective fields. It provides winners with 500,000 dollars over a five year period. Zorn was awarded this grant due to his progressive exploration of radical Jewish music.
-------------------
Shibboleth (1997) / Gris-Gris (2000) / Goetia (2002):
Three distinctive instrumental works touching upon themes of magic and mysticism. Goetia are spells and incantations for summoning demonic spirits and this colorful set of variations for solo violin draws upon the ancient alliance between the violin and the devil. Gris-Gris is a virtuosic work for thirteen tuned drums inspired by the music of Korean Shamanism, Haitian Voodoo and a scene from Howard Hawks’ classic film To Have and Have Not. It receives a spectacular performance by one of the world’s leading avant-garde percussionists—William Winant. Completing the program is one of Zorn’s most personal and elusive ensemble pieces. Scored for clavichord, three muted strings and percussion, Shibboleth is a stunning tribute to the enigmatic poet Paul Celan.
Ver mais
Géneros:
Jazz
Não há shows marcados
Envie uma solicitação para John Zorn fazer um show na sua cidade
Solicitar um show
Artistas semelhantes em turnê
Fotos ao vivo de John Zorn
Ver todas as fotos
John Zorn merch
The Hermetic Organ Vol. 9 - Liber VII
$15.99
Suite for Piano
$18.99
Perchance To Dream
$18.99
New Masada Quartet
$18.99
Teresa de Ávila
$15.19
Heaven and Earth Magick
$16.32
Ver tudo
concerts and tour dates
Anteriores
ABR
30
2024
Vienna, Austria
Club Porgy & Bess
Eu estive lá
NOV
02
2023
Paris, France
Philharmonie de Paris
Eu estive lá
SET
03
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
SET
02
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
SET
01
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
AGO
31
2023
San Francisco, CA
Great American Music Hall
Eu estive lá
Ver mais eventos
Comentários de fãs
Ramon
1 de setembro de 2023
One of the most unique and amazing performances from one of music's most accomplished free jazz saxophonist and composers. Seeing Dave Lombardo, John Medeski and John Zorn duel it out on thier respective instruments was awe inspiring. Highly recommend everyone see a John Zorn performance at some point.
San Francisco, CA@Great American Music Hall
Travis
23 de agosto de 2022
Absolutely wonderful take of a concert. Intimate and amazing.
Chicago, IL@Art Institute of Chicago
Ver Mais Avaliações de fãs
Sobre John Zorn
John Zorn (born 2 September 1953 in New York City) is an American composer and saxophonist/multi-instrumentalist. He owns the Tzadik record label and has worked with a large number of experimental musicians, particularly in improvised music, incorporating modern classical music, jazz and even death metal and grindcore as well as having produced music to include most styles.
As a child, he played piano, guitar and flute. He went to college in St. Louis, Missouri at Webster College (now Webster University) where he discovered free jazz, before dropping out and moving to Manhattan. There he gave concerts in his small apartment, playing a variety of reeds, duck calls, tapes, etc; almost anything (sometimes he played "musical optics" which involved no instruments or sounds at all, but rather the arrangement of lights and objects in a dark room). In the mid 1980s he signed to the Elektra-Nonesuch label. Since then, Zorn has been quite prolific, usually putting out several new records each year. His breakthrough recording was perhaps 1985's The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone, wherein Zorn offered a number of often radical arrangements of Morricone's famed songs from various movies. The Big Gundown was endorsed by Morricone, and incorporated elements of traditional Japanese music, soul jazz, and other diverse musical genres.
In 2006, John Zorn was awarded the MacArthur "Genius" Grant, which honors a wide variety of individuals who have achieved an extreme level of excellence in their respective fields. It provides winners with 500,000 dollars over a five year period. Zorn was awarded this grant due to his progressive exploration of radical Jewish music.
-------------------
Shibboleth (1997) / Gris-Gris (2000) / Goetia (2002):
Three distinctive instrumental works touching upon themes of magic and mysticism. Goetia are spells and incantations for summoning demonic spirits and this colorful set of variations for solo violin draws upon the ancient alliance between the violin and the devil. Gris-Gris is a virtuosic work for thirteen tuned drums inspired by the music of Korean Shamanism, Haitian Voodoo and a scene from Howard Hawks’ classic film To Have and Have Not. It receives a spectacular performance by one of the world’s leading avant-garde percussionists—William Winant. Completing the program is one of Zorn’s most personal and elusive ensemble pieces. Scored for clavichord, three muted strings and percussion, Shibboleth is a stunning tribute to the enigmatic poet Paul Celan.
As a child, he played piano, guitar and flute. He went to college in St. Louis, Missouri at Webster College (now Webster University) where he discovered free jazz, before dropping out and moving to Manhattan. There he gave concerts in his small apartment, playing a variety of reeds, duck calls, tapes, etc; almost anything (sometimes he played "musical optics" which involved no instruments or sounds at all, but rather the arrangement of lights and objects in a dark room). In the mid 1980s he signed to the Elektra-Nonesuch label. Since then, Zorn has been quite prolific, usually putting out several new records each year. His breakthrough recording was perhaps 1985's The Big Gundown: John Zorn Plays the Music of Ennio Morricone, wherein Zorn offered a number of often radical arrangements of Morricone's famed songs from various movies. The Big Gundown was endorsed by Morricone, and incorporated elements of traditional Japanese music, soul jazz, and other diverse musical genres.
In 2006, John Zorn was awarded the MacArthur "Genius" Grant, which honors a wide variety of individuals who have achieved an extreme level of excellence in their respective fields. It provides winners with 500,000 dollars over a five year period. Zorn was awarded this grant due to his progressive exploration of radical Jewish music.
-------------------
Shibboleth (1997) / Gris-Gris (2000) / Goetia (2002):
Three distinctive instrumental works touching upon themes of magic and mysticism. Goetia are spells and incantations for summoning demonic spirits and this colorful set of variations for solo violin draws upon the ancient alliance between the violin and the devil. Gris-Gris is a virtuosic work for thirteen tuned drums inspired by the music of Korean Shamanism, Haitian Voodoo and a scene from Howard Hawks’ classic film To Have and Have Not. It receives a spectacular performance by one of the world’s leading avant-garde percussionists—William Winant. Completing the program is one of Zorn’s most personal and elusive ensemble pieces. Scored for clavichord, three muted strings and percussion, Shibboleth is a stunning tribute to the enigmatic poet Paul Celan.
Ver mais
Géneros:
Jazz
Vive a experiência completa com a app Bandsintown.