Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The Charlie Parker Jazz Festival returns to Tompkins Square Park this Aug. 24

Somehow, it's nearly the middle of August, which means we're getting close to the annual Charlie Parker Jazz Festival in Tompkins Square Park. 

The multi-day event will be here on Sunday, Aug. 24, from 3-7 p.m. (A DJ will start at 2 p.m.) 

Here is this year's lineup (hit this link for details on the performers):

• Bill Charlap / Dee Dee Bridgewater 
• Gary Bartz and NTU Troop 
• Jazz Gallery Allstars 
• Lucía

If you're a big Parker fan, there are many other events taking place around the city beginning on Sunday. 

The festival, which started in Tompkins Square Park in 1993, holds a significant place in the jazz community. It takes place near or on Parker's birthday on Aug. 29. Additional dates were added in Harlem in 2000, further expanding its reach. 

Parker, who died in 1955 at age 34, lived at 151 Avenue B from 1950 to 1954. That residential building between Ninth Street and 10th Street is landmarked.

Croc stump tree well gets a refresh on Avenue A

Yesterday, we discussed the status of the incoming Corner Bistro at 94-96 Avenue A and Sixth Street. 

A reader later informed us that work was happening in the tree well outside the storefront. (The initial report was that the stump had been completely removed.) 

It turns out that workers cleaned up the area, added a barrier, and moved (and anchored) the crocodile-shaped tree stump...
This is the work of Ian Dave Knife, who has created art from dead tree stumps around the neighborhood and other locations. The croc arrived in December 2019

In August 2020, the owners of the now-closed August Laura reportedly painted the stump green and gave it a pink tongue. None of this pleased the artist. Article here. The paint has mostly worn away over the following years.

Anyway, we're happy to see that someone values the street art enough to keep it here. 

Monday, August 11, 2025

Monday's parting shot

An EVG reader shared this photo from earlier today... as crews for the Lena Dunham-directed Netflix rom-com "Good Sex" were filming a fire-escape scene with lead Natalie Portman on Seventh Street between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

Crews will be in the neighborhood for the next two days, as we mentioned in this post.

Video: Fight spills onto the tracks at 1st Avenue L stop

A video clip posted to X this evening by @NyShittyNews shows two men fighting on the tracks at the First Avenue L train stop. 

The cause of the fight is unknown, but both men were lucky a train wasn't coming.

One of the men is able to get back to the platform by himself... the other needs help from a fellow rider. 

The arguing continues on the platform, with one man tossing the other's belongings onto the tracks.
Although the video was posted at 6:22 this evening, it isn't clear when the fight actually happened. It looks a bit sparse for that time of day. 

H/T Kent

RIP Michael Lydon

Photo by Steven 

Michael Lydon, a longtime East Village resident, musician, author and rock journalist, died on July 30. He was 82. 

According to The New York Times, he passed away from complications of Parkinson's disease.

Residents are probably familiar with him from recent years, as he and his longtime wife, Ellen Mandel, were active in the local community, performing as Lydon & Mandel at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, Third Street Music School Settlement, the Tompkins Square Park tree lighting, and various block parties.

However, for many generations of music fans, he was known for his writing about the top music events of the day and bands such as Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead, and the Rolling Stones.

He was an early top editor at Rolling Stone and wrote some 20 books, including "The Rolling Stones Discover America," "Ray Charles: Man and Music," and "Rock Folk: Portraits From the Rock 'n' Roll Pantheon." 

It's no surprise he chose a life surrounded by music. As he wrote on his website
I love music. We had a piano in my big Boston Irish family; my mother sang Handel, my father loved John McCormack. An aunt gave us the Benny Goodman's Carnegie Hall LPs — I flipped for "Sing Sing Sing." In high school, I wore out my Billie Holiday and Duke Ellington records, but convinced I'd never learn to play jazz, I became a writer instead. 
Here's an excerpt about his early career and a college-era pan of the Beatles ... via the Times
As a young Newsweek correspondent fresh from Yale University, he arrived in London in the mid-1960s — a time when the postwar generation, with its taste for avant-garde fashion and rafter-rattling rock, was aiming to blast the bowler hats from the heads of the country's traditionalists. 

It was there that he met the Beatles, whom he had derided as "poor foreign imitations" of the American rock 'n' roll originals in a 1964 article for The Yale Daily News
"Whenever the first strains of ‘I Want to Hold Your Hand’ begin to twitch my stirrup bones,” Mr. Lydon wrote, "I send out silent screams for help to Chuck Berry, Elvis" and others "who have long defended the American way of rock." 

His view changed after the Beatles' landmark 1965 album, Rubber Soul, with its nuanced and introspective songwriting. The album seemed to change the Beatles' view of themselves, too. "You don't know us now if you don't know 'Rubber Soul,'" John Lennon told Mr. Lydon in a 1966 interview. "All our ideas are different now."
Read more about his life at the Times here

Previously on EV Grieve

At look at the coming-soon Corner Bistro

Photos by Stacie Joy 

In late July, someone wrote "Corner Bistro Coming Soon" in green paint on the windows at the currently vacant 94-96 Avenue A at Sixth Street. This likely was not the official coming soon signage the business had planned.
Anyway, the West Village burger institute is opening an outpost in the East Village, as we first noted here

We've been waiting to get more information on timing, etc. However, we haven't heard back from ownership or the attorney who represented Corner Bistro during the May Community Board 3 meeting. CB3 signed off on the liquor license application in May

There is also a public notice on the door for a 500-foot hearing with the State Liquor Authority (SLA) dated Aug. 1.
According to the SLA website, the license remains pending...
To date, we haven't seen much activity from the storefronts, which housed the sports bar Offside Tavern until late last year. Before that, August Laura had a brief run beginning in October 2019 but faced a stop-start schedule during the pandemic and finally closed in December 2021. 

The address is best known as the longtime home of Sidewalk — the restaurant, bar, and live music venue (and host of the Antifolk Festival) that closed in February 2019 after a 34-year run. 

Corner Bistro opened in 1961 on West Fourth Street in the West Village. Elizabeth McGrath — daughter of Corner Bistro's original owners, Bill and Lorraine O'Donnell — took over the business in 2015. 

This wouldn't be the burger institution's first time branching out. Corner Bistro opened a location in Long Island City in 2012, which shuttered in 2020 due to pandemic-related pressures. An outpost at the Gotham West Market food hall in Hell's Kitchen also closed in 2020. 

Taggers target white-box storefronts on Avenue B

Earlier this year, workers gutted the storefronts at 106 Avenue B between Sixth Street and Seventh Street ... now available for rent in white-box condition. 

The other night, multiple people tagged the storefronts...
... including the interior of the space to the north...
There wasn't any sign of forced entry, so some people think the door was left unlocked. 

The northern storefront was previously Anwar/Akter Grocery, which sold a wide range of items, including sodas, snacks, religious amulets, sombreros, school supplies, and hardcore adult DVDs with titles like "Anal Pleasures." 

The grocery suffered an unceremonious ending in July 2022

In the photos below from the spring by Stacie Joy, you can see the extent of the interior gutting...

This week in Dodging film crews

Crews for a production called Dodging Productions are back this week (Monday-Wednesday) on streets around Tompkins Square Park...
As we noted, this is for the Lena Dunham-directed Netflix rom-com "Good Sex" with Natalie Portman, Mark Ruffalo, Rashida Jones, and Meg Ryan. 

You can find some paparazzi shots of the cast in and around Tompkins here. Not really our thing, unless it is Keanu Reeves.

Openings: Baos & Bowls on 13th Street

Baos & Bowls recently debuted at 401 E. 13th St. just east of First Avenue. (H/T Ryan!

The menu, described as "Shanghainese in New York," includes dim sum, rice bowls and soup dumplings. (A beer-wine license is on the way for dining inside.)
You can check out some of the menu items via the Baos & Bowls Instagram account

Daily hours: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. 

The space had been vacant since Ichibantei relocated to Third Avenue in 2023.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Week in Grieview

Posts this past week included (with an early morning look at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery).
Get the Week in Review via email every Sunday. Details.

• Remembering Oswald "Ozzie" Rodriguez Jr. at LaMama (Tuesday, Aug. 5)

• At the opening of Lidl on the Lower East Side (Monday, Aug. 4)

• Report: 1 of the young hawks from Tompkins Square Park has died (Thursday, Aug. 7)

• Historic 9 Bleecker St. has a new owner (Wednesday, Aug. 6) 

• See some free live music this weekend in Tompkins Square Park at the Show Brain Festival (Thursday, Aug. 7) … More portraits of bands playing the Show Brain stage in Tompkins Square Park (Friday, Aug. 8)

• Photos from the Tompkins Square Park riot reunion (here and here)

• Openings: KEBABISHQ on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday, July 6) … The Re:Shop on 12th Street (Wednesday, Aug. 6) … Stashed Goods on Houston (Thursday, Aug. 7)

• A tree grows on 1st Avenue (Thursday, Aug. 7)

• Quitter tosses Christmas tree (Tuesday, Aug. 5)

• Signage alert: Boongs Grab & Go on 3rd Avenue (Monday, Aug. 4) … Godunk on the Bowery (Wednesday, Aug. 6)

• Tonight's fiery sunset (Tuesday, Aug. 5)

• At the National Night Out Against Crime event on 5th Street (Wednesday, Aug. 6)

• La Fleur Café has moved on from 9th Street (Monday, Aug. 4)
 
• Tiki Tiki closes East Village space (Monday, Aug. 4)

And from the EVG inbox, the owners of G's Cheesesteaks, which has an outpost on Avenue B and Houston, are featured competitors on the 18th season of "The Great Food Truck Race," which premiered last Sunday night on The Food Network...
Photo: Jessica McGowan/Getty Images via The Food Network

EVG Etc.: New safety measures for Canal and the Bowery

Tomato Day today at the Tompkins Square Park Greenmarket... 

• Subway rider expected to survive after being stabbed twice during an altercation last night on the Second Avenue F platform (The Post

• NYC finally makes long-sought safety upgrades on Canal Street and the Bowery off the Manhattan Bridge (Gothamist ... previously on EVG

• About The Flowery, a new cannabis dispensary on 10th Street and Third Avenue (amNY ... previously on EVG

• Fake deliveryman robs Wald House resident of $20 on Fourth Street at the FDR (1010 WINS)

• Smithereens on Ninth Street finds its sea legs (Grub Street

• The Jeff Buckley doc is playing now at the Angelika on Houston (Official site)

• Cinema Village on 12th Street between University and Fifth Avenue, one of the city's oldest operating movie theaters, "is facing tough headwinds, including strife between employees and management" (The City

• Arlene Gottfried's portraits of New Yorkers in the 1970s-80s (Flashbak)

The lineup for Day 2 of the Show Brain Festival today in Tompkins Square Park

Chain reaction: Dion Lunadon yesterday in Tompkins 

Day 2 of Show Brain's free all-ages show takes place this afternoon in Tompkins Square Park.

The lineup with approximate set times:
  
The Mystery Lights (5:20-6)
Native Sun (4:20-4:55)
Pons (3:30-4:05)
Figure of Fun (2:40-3:15)
• Fine Mess (1:55-2:25)

You can follow Show Brain on Instagram for updates.

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Saturday's parting shot

Photo by Derek Berg 

The Thing today during Day 1 of the Show Brain Festival in Tompkins Square Park. 

There's another afternoon of free shows in the park tomorrow. Details here.

A glimpse of last night's almost-full Moon

A dispatch from Felton Davis of the Second Avenue Star Watchers... five months into retirement... 
Can't believe we dragged the telescope out at 9:30 pm, when the almost-full Moon rose up very low on the horizon. It disappeared behind the trees within minutes of rising and was not visible until much later, going down over the Public Hotel.
You can read more about Felton in this article by Elizabeth Kuster (who does not accept his retirement!) in Astronomy Magazine: Felton Davis: The Sidewalk Astronomer of Second Avenue.

Previously on EV Grieve

Friday, August 8, 2025

Friday's parting shot

The pedestrian safety island garden on the northwest corner of First Avenue and Seventh Street is looking splendid

Thanks to the volunteers from Tile Bar and elsewhere for maintaining this space... (and please don't pick the sunflowers).

A 'Rough' patch

 

95 Bulls are first up tomorrow afternoon for Day 1 of the free Show Brain Festival in Tompkins Square Park. 

The above video is for "It Was Rough."

More portraits of bands playing the Show Brain stage in Tompkins Square Park

Photos by Stacie Joy 

This summer, we've been taking portraits of some of the bands playing the free Show Brain-sponsored shows in Tompkins Square Park (herehere, and here). 

Going back to July 26 for this show... featuring Avishag Cohen Rodrigues ...
... and Two Man Giant Squid...
... and one of the most cinematic bands we've seen in the park — P.H.0. ...
Thanks to Show Brain's Ozzie (on the right) for organizing so many free, all-ages shows... including the Show Brain Festival this weekend.

Friday's opening shot

Thanks to Roger Bultot for this photo from along the East River... providing a sneak preview of August's full moon — aka the sturgeon moon. Details here.

Thursday, August 7, 2025

A tree grows on 1st Avenue

EVG reader William Klayer shares this photo of a freshly planted tree on the west side of First Avenue between Ninth Street and 10th Street... it's not one usually planed by the city... so perhaps a business owner, landlord or resident(s) were responsible?

Report: 1 of the young hawks from Tompkins Square Park has died

Photo from June by Steven 

Goggla has the sad confirmation of a rumor that circulated toward the end of July: One of the red-tailed hawk fledglings has died. 

The young hawk was found dead on a fire escape along Avenue C on July 27. 

Per Goggla
It's not known exactly what happened, but the situation looked a lot like one we saw in 2022 when a fledgling had to be rescued from a fire escape after displaying obvious signs of illness. In that case, the theory was it had been weakened by rodenticide poisoning and died just a few hours after being rescued.
The Department of Environmental Conservation has the deceased hawk, and hopefully, they can determine the cause of death. 

In more positive news, the other two 2025 offspring of Amelia and Charlie remain active in the park this week, Goggla reports (even nabbing their own meals!).

This marked Amelia's eighth season raising chicks in Tompkins.