Movies Under the Stars @ Old Sacramento

When
Thu, October 31 2024
Where
Old Sacramento State Historic Park
1000 Front Street
Time
7:00 pm
Admission
$10-$35
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Description

Movies Under the Stars

Watch Halloween-themed movies outside in Old Sacramento State Historic Park every Thursday night in October.

Movies Under the Stars is a fast-selling outdoor movie night Thursdays in October. We choose movies with Halloween settings and bring in themed vendors to ring in the spirits. The movie is projected on a large wall and starts at sundown. Put on your provided headphones, grab your popcorn or dinner, and prepare for shivers down your spine. Bring your blankets or indulge in VIP seating — there are three ticket levels to choose from. Tickets go on sale in September; mark your calendars before they sell out!
Dates

Thursdays in October
Old Sacramento State Historic Park
1000 Front Street, Sacramento CA 95814

Check-in opens at 6:00 PM
Movies starts promptly at 7:00 PM

Admission is $10 with the option to upgrade your seats for an additional cost.

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🚨✨S P E C I A L S H O W✨🚨 >> repost @thetorchclub 

Tomorrow we will opening our doors, to host the one and only @wattfrompedro and the trio band Corsano Baiza Watt Trio. Don’t miss the opportunity to see them on their “Tiny Tour 2024”.
➡️8p - 11p, $20 (doors open @ 7p)

💥”In 2023, Chris Corsano played about 125 shows. One of the most eagerly anticipated of those was a meet-up with bassist Mike Watt and guitarist Joe Baiza, whose work Corsano followed since their days with Minutemen and Saccharine Trust respectively. This sounded like a trio gig with real possibilities, and the album resulting from their initial convocation is as fine as anticipated, mixing a few tracks from their first live show with a follow-up studio session.

Watt and Baiza were first documented playing together on Saccharine Trust’s 1985 album Worldbroken and they’ve worked together regularly since then. Watt’s bass playing in that time has often headed in a Mingusoid direction (witness his work with MSSV) and Baiza’s post-Saccharine attack has dialed back the extreme outward spiraling of his early days for contained melodicism. Baiza still has a unique way of spinning notes, but he displays much more control than he once did. Corsano’s work here has less rock action than he employs with Rangda, and the way he splits time between cymbals and skins does much to define the music’s stylistic parameters.

All three of these guys were birthed amid the brambles of punk rock, but even the youngster in the pack (Corsano) now has three decades of serious improvising behind him. And it’s a real pleasure to hear them creating such vital and exciting sounds. Like recent work by Nels Cline - who organized the summit between Minutemen and Charlie Haden four decades ago - this trio combines essential pieces of out rock and out jazz into a truly syncretic post-punk form.”

🚨✨S P E C I A L S H O W✨🚨 >> repost @thetorchclub

Tomorrow we will opening our doors, to host the one and only @wattfrompedro and the trio band Corsano Baiza Watt Trio. Don’t miss the opportunity to see them on their “Tiny Tour 2024”.
➡️8p - 11p, $20 (doors open @ 7p)

💥”In 2023, Chris Corsano played about 125 shows. One of the most eagerly anticipated of those was a meet-up with bassist Mike Watt and guitarist Joe Baiza, whose work Corsano followed since their days with Minutemen and Saccharine Trust respectively. This sounded like a trio gig with real possibilities, and the album resulting from their initial convocation is as fine as anticipated, mixing a few tracks from their first live show with a follow-up studio session.

Watt and Baiza were first documented playing together on Saccharine Trust’s 1985 album Worldbroken and they’ve worked together regularly since then. Watt’s bass playing in that time has often headed in a Mingusoid direction (witness his work with MSSV) and Baiza’s post-Saccharine attack has dialed back the extreme outward spiraling of his early days for contained melodicism. Baiza still has a unique way of spinning notes, but he displays much more control than he once did. Corsano’s work here has less rock action than he employs with Rangda, and the way he splits time between cymbals and skins does much to define the music’s stylistic parameters.

All three of these guys were birthed amid the brambles of punk rock, but even the youngster in the pack (Corsano) now has three decades of serious improvising behind him. And it’s a real pleasure to hear them creating such vital and exciting sounds. Like recent work by Nels Cline - who organized the summit between Minutemen and Charlie Haden four decades ago - this trio combines essential pieces of out rock and out jazz into a truly syncretic post-punk form.”
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