Notes on the Christmas Cavalcade and Harry and the Potters
By JIM SULLIVAN | December 3, 2007
 A scene from last year's Harry and the Potters' Yule Ball |
Chandler Travis calls himself “an aggressive agnostic,” but that hasn’t kept him from assembling a Christmas Cavalcade for Cambridge’s Bread & Roses charity, a multi-act benefit featuring two of his own bands, the CHANDLER TRAVIS PHILHARMONIC and the INCREDIBLE CASUALS, along with WILLIE ALEXANDER, ANDY PRATT, the DOWNBEAT 5, and others TBA. “One of the things I like most is that Christmas is the only holiday that comes with its own bunch of music,” he explains. “I always try and have people do as many originals as possible, and certainly there’s some classics. I appreciate the cheesy aspects, too — some people take a song they do all the time and put Santa into it.” It’s a season Travis calls “the most wonderful and excruciating time of the year.” His own favorite song is “If We Can Just Make It Through Christmas,” which deals with “the despair you feel a few days before, wandering around like a zombie at the mall looking for some special knickknack.” What if one of the acts tries to slip in a non-Christmas song? “It’s all-Christmas-all-the-time or I boot ’em the fuck off.”
At the Cutler Majestic Theatre December 13-16, WGBH’s BRIAN O’DONOVAN brings his fifth CHRISTMAS CELTIC SOJOURN to town, with Solas and six other acts . . . JOHNNY CARLEVALE hosts his fifth annual CHRISTMAS ODYSSEY — six bands with the music centering on rockabilly — at T.T. the Bear’s Place on December 22. The DAZZLING DAMES BURLESQUE kick things off at 8 . . . And on December 9 at the Middle East upstairs, HARRY AND THE POTTERS throw their third annual Yule Ball, a five-band affair starting at 5 pm, with proceeds going to the Harry Potter Alliance, which raises funds to combat genocide, poverty, and AIDS.
Related:
Boston music news: May 18, 2007, Heroes of our time, Neo-hoodoo and street kabuki, More
- Boston music news: May 18, 2007
“I’m 57, I live out on Cape Cod, and I don’t know what’s going on in the real world,” says singer-songwriter Chandler Travis.
- Heroes of our time
In interviews promoting The Bourne Ultimatum , Matt Damon has argued that his Jason Bourne has supplanted James Bond as the hero of our time.
- Neo-hoodoo and street kabuki
Tradition: how to preserve it in a globalized modern culture.
- Mystic rivers
Was Georges Ivanovitch Gurdjieff a charlatan?
- Conservatives refuse to give in to Gore
February was a rough month for global-warming deniers.
- Guest lists
What small, private lists like this remind us is that big, honking institutional lists are largely fictions, mirages of a consensus that no longer exists, if it ever really did in the first place.
- Karma chameleon
“Kesa” is the term for the traditional, oblong prayer robes worn by Buddhist monks in Japan — and this spiritually rich garment is the subject of Betsy Sterling Benjamin’s “A Sense of Place, an Artist's Tribute to the Seven Continents,” which opens at the Peabody Essex Museum on December 16.
- Africa's invisible slaves
This article originally appeared in the June 30, 1995 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
- Higgins at large
This article originally appeared in the February 17, 1976 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
- Great gifts
Knussen’s interludes, barely seven minutes, are a complex but attractive mix of the seductively creepy and the intricately lively.
- Was it all a dream?
The Phoenix can find no evidence that the senior Romney actually marched with King, nor anything in the public record suggesting that he ever claimed to do so.
- Less

Topics:
New England Music News
, Culture and Lifestyle, Religion, Harry Potter, More
, Culture and Lifestyle, Religion, Harry Potter, Chandler Travis, Brian O'donovan, Johnny Carlevale, Less