The Hot Water Quartet is a collection of gifted musicians performing fresh compositions in the jazz idiom. First forming as the house band for a long-running public jam session, the HWQ has long held the mission of fostering community in the Boston jazz scene. From the banks of the Charles esplanade to church halls to jazz clubs institutions, the HWQ has performed original jazz across New England. The band is made up of Kohlert Saxophone artist Brett Walberg, pianist Hidemi Akaiwa, bassist James Heazlewood Dale, and drummer Henry Godfrey, all mainstays of the New England jazz scene.<br/><br/>Join us for an evening of music, wine, and food. Registration is encouraged for this free event.<br/><br/>Registration is encouraged for this free event. <br/>
Heidi Slyker told
the New York Times she left the Brannen Brothers flute valued at $10,000 she had performed with since she was a little girl inside a taxi cab on the night of her first rehearsal with the New England Philharmonic after a chair had recently opened in 2012. I immediately knew, Slyker said of the car pulling away with her instrument in the back seat at the time.
Slyker said she called the cab company but employees said they couldn t locate the driver and hadn t received reports of any lost musical instruments. She eventually filed a police report and was featured in a
Heidi Slyker told
the New York Times she left the Brannen Brothers flute valued at $10,000 she had performed with since she was a little girl inside a taxi cab on the night of her first rehearsal with the New England Philharmonic after a chair had recently opened in 2012. I immediately knew, Slyker said of the car pulling away with her instrument in the back seat at the time.
Slyker said she called the cab company but employees said they couldn t locate the driver and hadn t received reports of any lost musical instruments. She eventually filed a police report and was featured in a
Heidi Slyker told
the New York Times she left the Brannen Brothers flute valued at $10,000 she had performed with since she was a little girl inside a taxi cab on the night of her first rehearsal with the New England Philharmonic after a chair had recently opened in 2012. I immediately knew, Slyker said of the car pulling away with her instrument in the back seat at the time.
Slyker said she called the cab company but employees said they couldn t locate the driver and hadn t received reports of any lost musical instruments. She eventually filed a police report and was featured in a