
It’s Complicated: New York’s 400-year Relationship with its Waterfront
Pier 57, Daffodil Room 15th Street at Hudson River Park, New York, NY, United StatesPresented by The Village Trip, this panel discussion examines New York's waterfront from a range of perspectives and is made possible through the support of DutchCultureUSA, a program of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the United States.
From its piers, canals, landfills, and seawalls, New York City has interacted in complex ways with its ever-changing waterfront. Now climate change and rising sea levels are forcing the city to address its water’s edge with new strategies and expensive plans for the future.

Thunder in the Village: Dylan and The Making of a Musical Rebellion
Café Wha? 115 MacDougal St, New York, NY, United StatesA celebration of the 1970s Greenwich Village folk scene and the fiftieth anniversary of the Rolling Thunder Revue. Curated by Rolling Stone senior journalist David Browne, author of Talkin' Greenwich Village, and Fabio Fantuzzi, co-editor of Bob Dylan and the Arts, the evening will feature musicians and special guests directly involved in the genesis of that visionary, freewheeling tour—shaped in Village venues as a liberating artistic circus that defied the constraints of the commercial music industry.

Fight the Power! 15 Years of HOMOCATS
LGBTQ Center 208 W 13 Street, NY, United StatesHOMOCATS and the Bureau of General Services—Queer Division are excited to present Fight the Power! 15 Years of HOMOCATS, an art exhibition celebrating 15 years of the HOMOCATS zine series. Morrison was inspired during Obama’s presidency to create a zine advocating for affordable health care, marriage equality, and equal rights. Paying homage to historic queer symbols such as the rainbow flag and pink triangle, Morrison’s work also engages pop art and pop culture with playfulness and humor.

Poetica Musica: Inspired by the Village
St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United StatesNew York-based chamber group Poetica Musica presents a concert celebrating composers inspired by Greenwich Village and the East Village – among them Astor Piazzolla, George Gershwin, Charles Ives, Bela Bartok, and William Anderson. Featuring guitarists Oren Fader and William Anderson; flutist Barry Crawford; pianist Molly Morkoski; and soprano Eleanor Valkenburg, artistic director of Poetica Musica.

ETHEL at the Met
Mezzanine at the Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, United StatesAs part of their regular residency at the Met, acclaimed string quartet ETHEL with guitarist Kyle Miller offer a preview performance of Miller’s Plea and A Minimum of Mountain, new works for electric guitar and string quartet commissioned by The Village Trip.

The Original: A Chinese Bohemian in the Village, Walking Tour
Stonewall National Monument 38-64 Christopher Street, New York, NY, United StatesThe Original is an immersive walking tour through Greenwich Village with Michael Salgarolo following the strange, hilarious life of Chinese American author H T Tsiang. Alternatively ignored and ridiculed in his own time, Tsiang is now known as a visionary forebearer of modern Asian American literature. His two major novels, The Hanging on Union Square (1935) and And China Has Hands (1937) challenged mainstream representations of Chinese Americans and presented a deeply unhinged satire of the American Dream. The Original explores how the cafeterias, hand laundries, and radical arts scene of the Depression-era West Village inspired Tsiang’s writing and made him an “original.”

Sloan and the Ashcan School: The Art that Shook the World, Walking Tour
Washington Square Arch at Fifth Avenue & Washington Square North NY, United StatesJohn French Sloan arrived in Greenwich Village in 1904 and joyfully proceeded to observe and record in oils the rollicking daily life of the neighborhood. Along with his painter friends, dubbed “The Ashcan School,” Sloan changed American art forever. Walk led by artist and historian Marc Kehoe.

The 1960s and ‘70s Music of the West Village from Dylan and Springsteen to Woodstock and Beyond, Walking Tour
1 West 4th Street at the corner of Mercer and W 4th Street 1 West 4th Street, New York, NY, United StatesBob Dylan, Judy Collins, Simon & Garfunkel, Joni Mitchell, The Mamas & The Papas, Bruce Springsteen…. So many great careers were launched on the rickety stages of Greenwich Village. Join Ann McDermott for a trip “down the foggy ruins of time” to learn the real stories behind A Complete Unknown and the lives of Dylan, Pete Seeger and Joan Baez. Hear how The Woodstock Festival of Music and Art had its origins on Village streets.

Bringing It All Back Home to Washington Square
Garibaldi Plaza Washington Square Park, New York, NY, United StatesThe Village Trip’s signature event, this free concert in Washington Square Park anchors the festival’s final weekend. This year, it will bring the soulful sounds of Kennedy Administration, whose sonic tapestry weaves together jazz, R&B, hip-hop, and pop. Also on the bill: Dali Rose.

ETHEL at the Met
Mezzanine at the Metropolitan Museum of Art 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, United StatesAs part of their regular residency at the Met, acclaimed string quartet ETHEL with guitarist Kyle Miller offer a preview performance of Miller’s Plea and A Minimum of Mountain, new works for electric guitar and string quartet commissioned by The Village Trip.

The Bergamot Quartet: Three World Premières
St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United StatesThe ever-innovative Bergamot Quartet performs world premières – by Samuel Adler, Louis Karchin, and Eli Greenhoe. The virtuosic yangqin player Cheng Jin Koh joins the quartet for a performance of her work Mountain of Echoing Halls.

Greenwich Village to Woodstock: The Greenwich Village Rock and Pop Scene of the 1960s, Walking Tour
Bagel Pub 815 Sixth Avenue, New York, NY, United StatesTake a trip to the Mod, Pop, Happening world of 1960s Greenwich Village, when the streets turned from black and white to Technicolor. Visit the Night Owl Cafe, where the Lovin’ Spoonful re-invented folk music, the Cafe Bizarre, where the Velvet Underground re-invented rock and roll, and the Cafe Wha? where Jimi Hendrix re-invented guitar playing. Discover Trude Heller’s, New York’s most swinging go-go dance club, and delve into Bruce Springsteen’s garage rock beginnings. Experience the era’s explosive energy that ignited revolutions in music, art, and fashion that directly led to the 1969 Woodstock Festival, with 400,000 souls the biggest “happening” of the decade. Join Marc Catapano to relive this magical, transformative time.

ETHEL with Kyle Miller, electric guitar
St John’s in the Village 218 W 11th St, New York, NY, United StatesAcclaimed guitarist-composer Kyle Miller joins the ever exciting and eclectic string quartet ETHEL for a dynamic program rooted in their shared New York City songbooks.

Composers Concordance: Ciabatta Cantata
St Mark’s in the Bowery 131 East 10th Street, New York, NY, United StatesComposers Concordance and friends explore themes of food and politics in new music for chorus, guitar and theorbo. The program includes music by Gene Pritsker, Dan Cooper, and William Anderson. Enjoy fresh ciabatta from the Grandaisy Bakery during the performance.

Unsung Heroes and Untold Stories: Another Side of the Village Folk Scene
Café Wha? 115 MacDougal St, New York, NY, United StatesLong before Dylan electrified Newport and folk-rock became a mainstream cultural movement, Greenwich Village was already humming with voices, stories, and songs that rarely made the headlines—but shaped a generation. Cafés and clubs echoed with the music of Fred Neil, Karen Dalton, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Pat Sky, Tim Hardin, Bonnie Dobson, Richie Havens, Dave Van Ronk, and many others who helped define the soul of a movement.

The Queen of Bohemia Looks Forward to Meeting You!
The Francis Kite Club 40 Avenue C (between 3rd and 4th streets), New York, NY, United StatesThe Occasion: The publication of author Eve Kahn’s Queen of Bohemia Predicts Own Death a biography of Lower East Side activist journalist and party person Zoe Anderson Norris (1860-1914)
The Event: There will be cocktails, mocktails, signed books, tiaras, music by DJ Pepe Flores, a presentation of Zoe Anderson Norris’s life and works and an extraordinary panel of contemporary “Queens of Bohemia” in conversation with Eve Kahn.
The Topic: If the Past is Prologue (yes, talking about you Zoe) what will we do about the Future?