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Tom Chapin

December 6, 2014 @ 7:30 pm - 10:30 pm

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In a career that spans five decades, 23 albums and three GRAMMY awards, multi-talented singer/songwriter/guitarist Tom Chapin has covered an incredible amount of creative ground. In addition to his work as a recording artist and concert performer, Chapin has acted on Broadway, as well as working extensively in films, television and radio.

As a music-maker, Chapin has maintained two long and productive parallel careers, both as a highly respected contemporary folk artist and as a pioneer in the field of children’s music. In the
former role, Chapin has established a reputation for insightful, heartfelt songcraft and effortlessly charismatic live performances. In the latter, he continues to engage the hearts, minds and imaginations of young listeners with witty, life-affirming original songs delivered in a sophisticated array of musical styles. In either format, Chapin’s infectious songs, sterling musicianship and personal warmth consistently shine through, whether he’s performing on record or in a concert hall,
an outdoor festival, a school, in front of a symphony orchestra or in an intimate coffeehouse.

The New York Times called Chapin “one of the great personalities in contemporary folk music,” while Billboard called him “the best family artist around” and described him as “totally captivating.” Parents magazine stated, “Nobody today is writing and performing better kids’ songs than Tom Chapin.”

The son of noted jazz drummer and teacher Jim Chapin and the grandson of author/critic Kenneth Burke and portrait painter James Chapin, Tom grew up in a family that encouraged artistic pursuits. He began performing professionally as a teenager in the early 1960s, playing in Greenwich Village folk clubs alongside his siblings Harry and Steve as The Chapin Brothers. In 1971, he began
a five-year run as the host of the Emmy- and Peabody award-winning ABC-TV children’s series Make A Wish. Chapin and his songs were also featured in the seminal 1970 documentary film Blue Water,
White Death, for which he spent six months sailing the Indian Ocean searching for great white sharks.

Chapin launched his solo recording career with 1976’s Life Is Like That. It was the first of a string of albums that further established his reputation as both a gifted storyteller and a natural entertainer, winning him an uncommonly loyal fan base in the process. He also continued to venture into other creative areas, playing the lead role in the hit Broadway musical Pump Boys and Dinettes, working off-Broadway as musical director of both Cotton Patch Gospel and Harry Chapin: Lies and Legends, and serving as host of TV’s National Geographic Explorer. He’s also written and performed satirical topical songs for National Public Radio’s Morning Edition, and had a cameo role as the Vice
Presidential candidate in Jonathan Demme’s 2004 remake of The Manchurian Candidate. Chapin was already firmly established as a performer and recording artist when he first branched out into family music with his 1988 album Family Tree. He’s since released twelve more family CDs aimed at post-toddler, pre-teen listeners and their parents, comprised of original songs addressing such issues as family life, positive self-image and respect for the environment.

“When I was hosting Make A Wish, people had suggested to me many times that I ought to make a ‘children’s record,’ which to me meant singing songs for toddlers about little duckies and
didn’t seem particularly interesting,” Chapin explains. “Then I had children, and when they were eight and six, I realized that there was not a lot of music for that age group. They understood language and story and humor, but were too old for toddler music and too young for rebellion and love songs. So I did Family Tree with that in mind, and it won all kinds of awards. Suddenly I had a new career as a family artist.”

Chapin’s latest family release is The Incredible Flexible You, a collection of 12 new songs that help young listeners navigate the tricky waters of social interaction. It’s ʻA Songbag of Social
Clues.ʼ Each tune is designed for preschool and early elementary children with social cognitive challenges, and their parents and teachers, too. It has received a 2013 Parentsʼ Choice Gold Award,
a Family Choice Award, a Momʼs Choice Gold Award and a Creative Child CD of the Year Award. “Writing family music,” he observes, “has been a wonderful course in songwriting. You have a
dual agenda: keep it understandable and fun for kids, but well-written and intelligent and musical enough to keep adults listening as well. Within these parameters, we’ve found an enormous amount of topics and approaches and musical feels that continue to excite us to keep coming back and doing
it again.” Chapin also serves as narrator of a series of children’s books, three of which, Mama Don’t Allow, There Was An Old Lady Who Swallowed A Fly and The Train They Call The City Of New Orleans, have won GRAMMY awards in the Best Spoken Word Album for Children category.

In addition to his varied musical and media endeavors, Chapin is also a powerful advocate on behalf of a variety of charitable causes. He is an active board member of WhyHunger, the organization which the artist’s older brother, the late singer-songwriter/activist Harry Chapin, founded (as World Hunger Year) in the 1970s. He also remains active in a variety of environmental causes, as well as efforts on behalf of music and the arts in our public schools.

“I’m at that place in my life where I follow what interests me,” Chapin concludes. “I still love the guitar, I still love to sing, and I still love the thrill of creation: a good song, a good recording, a good concert. I feel blessed to be my own boss, creating my own material and performing for so many different audiences, ages and generations.”

In the spirit of the holiday season, please bring canned food to this concert for distribution to needy Long Islanders through Long Island Cares – The Harry Chapin Food Bank.

Details

Date:
December 6, 2014
Time:
7:30 pm - 10:30 pm
Event Category: