Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!

Subject: Count Basie

  • Black and White in Focus

    November 27, 1997
  • Horn of Plenty

    February 26, 1998
  • Wynton Marsalis To Play Two South Florida Dates, Miami on Thurs. and West Palm Next Wed.

    On the current southern tour of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, the 16-piece band is focusing on the 70th anniversary of the original Blue Note records. The New York-based label founded by Alfred Lion and Max Margulis in 1939 that  became seminal for musicians like Thelonious Monk, John Coltrane, and Herbie Hancock, who all cut albums for it during their fruitful careers. In addition to that project, they have also been working on a lot of material generated by the bandmembers themse

    January 20, 2009
  • Harry Connick Jr.

    July 12, 2007
  • Wynton Marsalis

    January 22, 2009
  • Spanks for the Memories

    The Asylum Street Spankers

    June 23, 2005
  • A Really Big Shoe(shine)

    Fort Lauderdale's once-booming black business district still has sole

    September 11, 2003
  • Events for February 27-March 5, 2003

    February 27, 2003
  • End of the Road

    Thirty years later, Harry Belafonte finds closure in a once-lost project

    August 23, 2001
  • The City and Mr. Jones

    Developer Milton Jones confronts Sistrunk's segregation-induced funk

    June 7, 2001
  • "Moms" Said Knock You Out

    This hilarious tribute to seminal comedienne Jackie "Moms" Mabley leaves audiences wanting more

    November 23, 2000
  • Welcome to the Comfort Zone

    Nick Funk pushes all the right buttons

    October 14, 1999
  • Between Heaven and Earth

    Nicole Yarling and the Weld

    September 16, 1999
  • PB Historian Fights to Save Haley Mickens House

    Somebody really important slept here​If you happened to be a highly prominent person of color visiting West Palm Beach in the first half of this century, chances are you would have stayed at Haley Mickens's house at 801 4th Street. Mickens and his wife Dr. Alice Frederick Mickens, a well known civil rights activist, played host to dozens of African American athletes, musicians and political figures during the years they lived in their spacious two story wood frame house, in part because no lo

    October 22, 2009