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Page 2 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Wednesday, November 27, 2019 In the month of Thanksgiving, Portal To Hope sends special thanks to our program supporters and volunteers! For more information about Portal To Hope, or to get involved in the cause to end domestic violence, please call: (781) 338-7678 or visit: www.portaltohope.org Linden Tree’s Winter Potpourri Concert featuring the World of Folk and Acoustic Music T he Linden Tree Coffeehouse continues its 35th year of acoustic music concerts on Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. Join us for Winter Potpourri, 2019 an evening of discovering new talent! Eight local singer/songwriters will play two songs each, and one or more of those folks will be chosen to perform during next year’s season. Audience input will play a big part in the decision-making process, so please come help us make this choice while enjoying new music and new faces. What is folk music these days? It can be traditional or contemporary with roots in bluegrass, country, jazz, gospel and blues. Our contestants will provide a range of music in the genre we call folk. Performing in this year’s potpourri are Bill Anderson, Mark Bishop Evans, John Ferullo, Kathleen Healy, Roberta Lamb, Rick Drost, Toast & Jam, and Wild Maple. Samples of their music can be found on their web and facebook pages. The evening will again be hosted by Wakefield singer/songwriter Kirsten Manville, who will perform a few favorite songs from her album, Some People Sing, and introduce a few new ones. Manville creates songs that feel like they might have come straight from journal entries: deceptively simple lyrics that paint pictures, tell stories, and evoke a range of emotions. Manville is a refreshing, straightforward folk-rock-country-singer-songwriter with stage presence audiences love. Entertainment will include a 25-minute set by one of last year’s winners, Peter Lehndorff. He writes folk and jazz songs about everyday life. Lehndorff is now mixing his humorous observations with the serious; the romantic with the eccentric. There are stories about cars, what he eats, and the places he has lived. His car-related songs have been on NPR’s Car Talk radio show. Besides winning last year’s Linden Tree Coffeehouse’s Winter Potpourri, Lehndorff has been a finalist in the Boston Acoustic Underground competition. The Springfield Union wrote about his performance, “intelligent lyrical vignettes of everyday life and the comical trappings of suburbia, delivered with an acute sense of comedic timing.” Bill Anderson is a former resident of Wakefield. Anderson has been playing music all his life, in bands and orchestras around the world. Trained as a classical oboist at the New England Conservatory as well as Boston University, 10 years ago, to achieve his ambition of performing the songs he’d always written, as a singer/songwriter, he attended song-writing conferences around the United States and workshopped with artists from John Gorka to Livingston Taylor to Kathy Mattea, constantly striving to put the truth and heart of the subject in his lyrics. His style is often described as telling a story, giving the listener a clear, mental picture of events and emotions common to us all. Julie Charland is one-half of the duo Toast and Jam. She is playing solo this evening, and writes and performs origiCONCERT | SEE PAGE 10 Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield to host Shabbat Potluck J oin members of Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield for a Special Community Shabbat Potluck on Friday, December 6 at 6:30 p.m. Following dinner, members of the musical group Bashert will perform, filling the evening with joy, meaning and spirit. New Temple members will also be recognized. Bashert is led by Rabbi Howard Mandell and features a group of seven talented singers and musicians who are members of Congregation Beth Israel of the Merrimack Valley in Lawrence, Mass. They draw on a variety of sources for their musical Friday night services. Potluck main dishes and sides should be vegetarian, dairy or fish. Challah, desserts and beverages will be provided by the Temple. Please let Susan S. know if you are coming and what dish you would be bringing – Sbreger94@gmail.com or 919-605-0523 – by December 4. There is no charge for attending; all are welcomed. Temple Emmanuel of Wakefield is a member of the Jewish Reconstructionist Communities. Members come from many towns on the North Shore. Rabbi Greg Hersh is the spiritual leader. There is a chairlift to the social hall. Temple Emmanuel is located at 120 Chestnut St. in Wakefield; www.WakefieldTemple.org; 781-245-1886. ���� ������ ����� ������ ���� ����� Saturday, December 7 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM ��� �� ������ ����� ���� ����� ���� ����� ��������� �������� �� �� ������� ��� ���� �������� �� ��������� �������� ����� ������ ���� ��� �� ��� ������ ��� ������� ��� ���� ������ ����� ���� ������ ����� �������� ���� �� ��������� ����� ����� ���������� ��������� �� �������������� ������ ���� ��������� ������ ������� ���� �������� �� ���������������������� �� �������� �������

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