For Immediate Release
15 August 2016
Contact: Jodi Joseph
Director of Communications
413.664.4481 x8113
jjoseph@massmoca.org
Benjamin Clementine
Mercurial Genius
NORTH ADAMS, MASSACHUSETTS — Benjamin Clementine — the uncategorizable London-based singer-poet, pianist, and composer who won England’s coveted Mercury Prize for his 2015 debut album At Least for Now —has been compared to Nina Simone, Antony, and Édith Piaf for his striking, otherworldly vocal delivery. A once-homeless teen who now has cult status in the French music and art world, he’s on the brink of becoming a global phenomenon. Clementine’s solo performance was organized by the artist Nick Cave, on the occasion of the opening of Cave’s major MASS MoCA exhibition Until. Experience Benjamin Clementine’s vocal storm live in the museum’s Hunter Center on Saturday, October 15, at 8:30pm.
With a voice that The Quietus calls “a force to be reckoned with — throaty, powerful, and theatrical to the point of histrionic,” Clementine tugs at every heartstring, one resonant crescendo at a time. An autobiographical singer of the poetic tradition, Clementine’s songwriting is ambitious, soulful, and uncompromising in its sincerity — and his piano-playing bears all the hallmarks of unorthodoxy that you would expect from a successful autodidact. “If someone asks me what’s my real ambition,” Clementine says, “I’m an expressionist right, and I want my voice to sound like that violin playing The Lark Ascending.”
Clementine’s robust music is wrought with the turbulent odyssey of his past. After leaving school at age 16, disagreements with his family inspired a move to Paris, where the young musician with nothing to his name — including a fixed address — began busking around the Place de Clichy metro to scrape by, honing his public singing voice and persona. Clementine’s musical career was sparked by a chance encounter, which led to a recording contract. In 2013, Clementine’s song Cornerstone rose to the most shared song on Spotify practically overnight. His most recent album At Least For Now (2015) has sensationalized listeners with its poignant “declaration of selfhood” (The New York Times) since the day it dropped.
Catch Benjamin Clementine’s spellbinding performance in MASS MoCA’s Hunter Center on Saturday, October 15 at 8:30pm, following the opening reception for Nick Cave: Until. Dinner and snacks are available from Lickety Split before the show. A full bar serves Bright Ideas Brewing beers and Berkshire Mountain Distillery spirits. Tickets are $16 for students, $26 advance, $33 day of, and $45 preferred. The opening reception is free for members and $8 for not-yet-members. Tickets for all events are available through the MASS MoCA box office located on Marshall Street in North Adams, open 10am to 6pm every day, with extended evening hours to 7pm on Thursdays through Saturdays through September 5. Beginning September 7, the box office is open 11am to 5pm every day except Tuesdays. The museum is closed on Tuesday, September 6. Tickets can also be charged by phone by calling 413.662.2111 during box office hours or purchased online at massmoca.org.
Images
High-resolution images of MASS MoCA’s fall 2016 events are available through this link: bit.ly/mmfall2016
Sponsorship
This event is sponsored by The Porches Inn at MASS MoCA.
About MASS MoCA
MASS MoCA is one of the world’s liveliest (and largest) centers for making and enjoying today’s most important art, music, dance, theater, film, and video
Gallery admission is $18 for adults, $16 for veterans and seniors, $12 for students, $8 for children 6 to 16, and free for children 5 and under. Members are admitted free year-round. The Hall Art Foundation’s Anselm Kiefer exhibition is open seasonally, spring – fall. For additional information, call 413.662.2111 x1 or visit massmoca.org.
Hours
Summer (June 25–September 5)
Sundays–Wednesdays, 10am–6pm
Thursdays–Saturdays, 10am–7pm
Fall/Winter (beginning September 7)
11am to 5pm, six days a week (closed Tuesdays)