4 March 2016

Christine Lavin & Don White

On Friday March 4, we present a co-bill featuring Christine Lavin and Don White, a very funny duo of comedy and song. Christine Lavin’s smart and funny songs nail our lives and foibles on the head. She possesses a comedienne’s arsenal of irony and a ton of delightfully skewered songs that cover a lot of territory. Don White stays right at home to mine comic gold. Coming from the world of standup comedy, he is a family man whose concerts can turn what happens at home into an onstage biopic. His funny and touching songs go straight to an audience’s heart.

Concert starts at 8:00 pm

Christine Lavin and Don White
Photo: James Madison Thomas

Christine Lavin is a singer/songwriter/​guitarist/​recording artist living in New York. She has recorded 20 solo albums. She has also produced nine compilation CDs showcasing the work of dozens of songwriters whose work she loves — one of them, the food-themed One Meat Ball, includes a 96-page cookbook that Christine edited. For four years she hosted “Slipped Disks” on XM satellite radio, playing CDs slipped to her backstage by compatriots. Christine also writes essays for various publications (including The Washington Post, The St. Petersburg Times, The Performing Songwriter, and Delta Sky Magazine).

Her song “Amoeba Hop” has been turned into a science/​music book by illustrator Betsy Franco Feeney, received the stamp of approval from The International Society of Protistologists, and a “Best Book Award” from the American Association for The Advancement of Science. The new book The Pluto Files: The Rise and Fall of America’s Favorite Planet, written by Neil deGrasse Tyson, head of the Hayden Planetarium in NYC, includes the complete lyrics to Christine’s song “Planet X,” which details Pluto’s history and planetary status debate in rhyme.

Christine performs concerts all over the US, Canada, and points beyond, and hosts knitting circles backstage prior to many shows. Songs of hers have been performed by artists as diverse as Broadway stars Betty Buckley, Sutton Foster, and David Burnham, cabaret divas Andrea Marcovicci. Barbara Brussell, and Colleen McHugh, the college a cappella Dartmouth Decibelles, and The Accidentals, winners of the National Harmony Sweepstakes championship.

. . .

If you laugh and cry within the same ten minutes, you either need a vacation or you are sitting in the audience at a Don White show. This working class family man from Lynn, Massachusetts has emerged as the thoughtful songwriter of the decade whose relevance to our lives is evidenced by the powerful reaction he evokes at every concert. In 1974, Don started hitch-hiking around America. “I went to Alaska and Newfoundland. That first trip I was gone eleven months and I only spent $1,100,” he says gleefully. His wife—then girlfriend—Theresa joined him on the road. They backpacked around the country for three years with a guitar and their dog — a female whose first “heat” inspired the breathtakingly funny “The Shameful Ballad of Lijah The Orchard Queen” — finding occasional work as itinerant farm hands and laborers. “The freedom was addictive,” he says. Since settling down in Lynn, Don has worked on a craft of songwriting and performing.

Don learned his art in the trenches: often doing nine shows a week at Catch A Rising Star in Harvard Square over two and a half years. Studying the masters who passed though that fabled club, he developed his own infectious brand of humor and pathos that rivets the crowd wherever he plays. Don White illuminates the human experience though his writing and performing. Whether he is singing, speaking, or setting up the sneakiest punch line of the night, Don has the hearts of his audience. They know they have his.

  • . . . when Christine Lavin and Don White make us laugh, there is always a warm shimmer of community beneath the silliness. Of all the gifts great entertainers can bring to the stage, I think this is perhaps the rarest and most valuable. Many can dazzle us; but only the very, very best can befriend us, and remind us that, in the end, we are all wary acrobats in the great human circus. And really, when have we ever needed laughs like that more? Scott Alarik, Author of Deep Roots: Adventures in the Modern Folk Underground
  • . . .there is an honesty and self-deprecating wit in [Don’s] material that is an immediate tonic. The Boston Herald
  • I’ve never seen a comedian [Don White] that made me both want to laugh AND go home and hug my kids. a fan
  • Lavin is the central force in the most visible segment of the contemporary folk music scene. Captivating. Billboard
  • Two of the funniest entertainers on today’s music scene. The Boston Globe
  • [Christine Lavin]‘s a folkZinger! The Orlando Sentinel

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