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Balmaination Took Over Lincoln Center as Olivier Rousteing Accepted the Couture Council Award
Fashion

Balmaination Took Over Lincoln Center as Olivier Rousteing Accepted the Couture Council Award

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

“I never had an example, so I became my own,” Olivier Rousteing told the crowd at Lincoln Center as he accepted the 2025 Couture Council Award for Artistry of Fashion. For the Balmain creative director—who, as a young, Black designer, carved his path in an industry that offered few role models—those words carried particular resonance. Speaking with characteristic power and poise, Rousteing set the tone for a luncheon that celebrated both his artistry and his barrier-breaking career.

As creative director of Balmain, Rousteing has long forged his own path, and The Museum at FIT’s annual Couture Council luncheon recognized exactly that. “We’ve been having the Couture Council benefit luncheon for about 15 years now,” Valerie Steele, director and chief curator of the museum, told Vogue ahead of the event. “We’ve honored people like Mr. Valentino and Karl Lagerfeld, and I’m so thrilled to honor Olivier this year. He really emphasizes diversity, reaching out, and encouraging people that they can make it too.”

In the green room before the reception, Rousteing spoke candidly: “Being here today with FIT is beyond an honor. It’s so prestigious. It is a dream of a child. It is a dream of a creative director. It’s something I never believed would happen in my life.”

Soon, Lincoln Center began to fill with luminaries—Martha Stewart, Jeremy Pope (who presented Rousteing with the award), and a host of fashion and art patrons. The cocktail reception was awash in Balmain signatures: sharp tailoring, glinting gold buttons, pristine pleats. That aesthetic carried into the grand dining room, where guests dined on watermelon carpaccio and halibut with zucchini garnish.

On stage, Rousteing captivated the audience with his thoughtful words, humility, and evocative storytelling. More than accolades, it was clear his true aim is to inspire. Following the luncheon, he planned to address FIT students. “More than just getting the prize today, I am so proud to talk to the students,” he told Vogue. “I started at 24 as a creative director, so giving advice to younger people is such an incredible moment of my life. What I have done in my career is all to help the future generation not go through what I went through. I’m proud of that today.”

When asked what advice he would impart, Rousteing offered three points: “One: Be yourself. We are in a world where it’s not easy to be yourself. It sounds cheesy, but with social media and everything happening in the world, you can be influenced by what surrounds you. Two: Don’t give up. Whatever the industry, always fight for success and stick to your values. There are a lot of obstacles, but resilience will help you reach your goal. Three: Find your own wisdom. In life, no matter what you do, you need to find your wisdom, peace, and serenity with yourself. Something I always say at Balmain with my team is that I would rather be hated for who I am than loved for who I’m not. That is really important, because life is about taking risks and being disruptive.”

Disruptive and daring—Rousteing will settle for nothing less. To the Couture Council, it is precisely those who break barriers who are most deserving of recognition. For the FIT students, his words promise to be as unforgettable as his designs.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Liniker on Career Success, Lincoln Center Show, Brazilian Stardom
Music

Liniker on Career Success, Lincoln Center Show, Brazilian Stardom

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

The three-block stretch between Columbus Circle and Grand Army Plaza just on the southern border of Central Park is so busy that it’s hard to know where to look. Near the entrance on 59th street, horse-drawn carriage drivers vie for the attention of tourists, while across the road, serious-looking people in business attire idle in front of the Carnegie Hotel, presumably waiting for someone important. 

The Brazilian singer and songwriter Liniker, who has just landed in muggy New York to perform at Lincoln Center’s Brazil Week, has questions: Who are the suits going to meet? Are they famous? And is anyone shelling out upwards of $100 for the ride? The more she thinks about it, the less likely it seems that she’ll arrive at an answer, so she opts to capture this tableaux on her film camera instead.  

As we enter Central Park to find a spot to sit down, she points at a squirrel gripping the side of a tree trunk, and stops to take a picture before it beetles upwards and disappears into the canopy. When another one crops up — this time on the grass — she snaps another photo. 

“It’s like they’re making little waves with their bodies,” Liniker says in Portuguese, wearing a white tiered, maxi skirt and a matching white top. Here in New York, the artist gets to feel anonymous in a way that no longer feels possible back home. In her native Brazil, where her songs rack up millions of streams per month, she has become something of a pop phenomenon.  

After training as an actress, Liniker first made a name for herself as the singer for the band Liniker e os Caramelows, but has since left the group. In 2022, her first solo record, the soulful Indigo Borboleta Anil, earned her a Latin Grammy award, making her the first trans woman to receive the prize. Her latest LP, last year’s CAJU, plays with a more varied sonic palette, moving into decidedly pop territory. Melding pagode, hip-hop, samba, and electronica, it has expanded her audience significantly, and pushed her further into the spotlight.  

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Born in Araraquara, a city north of São Paulo, Liniker, who was named after the British goalie Gary Lineker (it was her soccer-loving uncle’s idea), grew up in a creative family. She found a continuous source of support and inspiration in her mother, a samba dancer who taught her that art could be a form of resistance. “In spite of everything she went through raising me and my brother by herself,” Liniker says, “she always gave me the chance to live my life the way I wanted to live it.”   

When Liniker and Fejuca, one of her trusted collaborators and a co-producer on both of her solo records met, they bonded over their similar upbringings. “She comes from a big, musical family and I do too,” he says, calling from his car in between studio sessions in Rio de Janeiro. “And so we both experienced these Black Brazilian gatherings where people listen to everything: Tim Maia, Marvin Gaye, Os Racionais.”  

In the early stages of making CAJU, a concept album based on an imaginary one day trip to Japan, Liniker, Fejuca and co-producer Gustavo Ruiz, knew they wanted to tap into this past, and make the work feel nostalgic. “So we recorded the whole thing using analog tape,” Fejuca says.  

At the park, Liniker tells me she also wanted the work to feel “cinematic.” The trio looked for a way to create a sense of continuity between songs. “If you listen closely, you’ll hear everyday sounds in all the tracks: there’s a door closing, keys, rain, footsteps, the Japanese flight attendant whose voice opens the record,” she says.

Some of these compositions start in Liniker’s journals. “I keep a diary,” she says, “and I also write poems and songs, and letters, mostly by hand.” Her lyrics are personal, introspective, and often a little tongue-in-cheek. “Have you memorized the number of tattoos I have?” she asks a lover, in earnest, in the title track “CAJU” over a smooth R&B beat. “How many shows are in my schedule? What my favorite album is? How much my heart weighs?”  

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During the pandemic, the singer Moses Sumney would occasionally go live on Instagram and add people who requested to join. One day, Liniker sent him a request and they struck up a conversation. While he had heard her name around, he wasn’t familiar with her music. Then thousands of Brazilians flooded in and started commenting. “And I thought to myself, ‘I’m clearly very late to this because this person is a huge star,’” he recalls. 

After they got off the call, Sumney checked out her music and became a fan. “It’s cool seeing how she combines R&B music with a truly Brazilian aesthetic,” he says. “What she does is so beautiful.” The two ended up becoming pen pals and when Sumney was in Brazil earlier this year, Liniker invited him to see one of her shows in Salvador, Bahia. “It was like seeing Brazilian Beyoncé,” Sumney says. “The hair whips, the outfits, the crowd.”  

The next time I see Liniker, she’s running around the stage at Damrosch Park in Lincoln Center in an asymmetrical glittery dress and knee high boots, her band members shimmying behind her in lime green outfits. People in the audience are moving, jumping, and singing along. Most aren’t sitting on the chairs the organizers set up for them earlier in the day. It’s clear this is music you can dance to.  

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Liniker feels emotional being at a venue where so many prominent Brazilian artists have performed over the years. “It’s such an achievement for any of us to be able to cross the ocean to get to any place that isn’t the place we’re from,” she said to the crowd in Portuguese. “That applies to us musicians, but it also applies to anyone who has immigrated to a country they weren’t born in dreaming of a better life. When we’re up here, we’re also dreaming a different dream, and I’m so glad that dream fits in the mouths of so many people today.”  

Lately, while reflecting on her career, it’s dawned on her that she never wants to take anything for granted. “What an honor,” she told the crowd as the night drew to an end and she prepared to leave the stage. “I’m so happy.”  

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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Wynton Marsalis to Premiere 'Afro!,' to Open Jazz at Lincoln Center
TV & Streaming

Wynton Marsalis to Premiere ‘Afro!,’ to Open Jazz at Lincoln Center

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Jazz at Lincoln Center will launch its “Mother Africa” season with the world premiere of “Afro!,” a new commission by managing and artistic director — and jazz legend — Wynton Marsalis, on Sept. 18–20 at 7:30 p.m. in Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s New York home, Frederick P. Rose Hall.

Performed by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Marsalis, Djembefola (master of the djembe drum) Weedie Braimah, and vocalist Shenel Johns, “Afro!” opens Jazz at Lincoln Center’s 2025-26 season of concerts, education programs, and other events celebrating Africa’s influence on jazz.

Following its New York premiere, the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis alongside drummer Herlin Riley, Braimah, and Johns will take Afro! and other selections from its celebrated repertoire on the Orchestra’s first multi-city tour of Africa.

Nearly 20 years ago, in 2006, Marsalis premiered “Congo Square,” which evoked the spirit of the historic New Orleans site — at one time, the only place in America where African slaves were allowed to dance and play drums. Composed for the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and Odadaa!, a nine-piece Ghanaian percussion and vocal ensemble, the piece celebrated the cultural roots and mythic birthplace of jazz.

“Afro!” explores the deep ties between jazz, the African continent, and its diaspora, a leitmotif that the Orchestra previously addressed in other past Marsalis opuses as “Blood on the Fields” (1996), “Ochas” (2014), and the fresh big band arrangements comprising its “The South African Songbook” concert (2019).

Tickets for Wynton Marsalis’ Afro! with Weedie Braimah and Shenel Johns: The Ertegun Jazz Concert include access to a pre-concert lecture in the The Agnes Varis and Karl Leichtman Studio at 6:30 p.m. on Sept.18-20. Audiences are welcome to a free performance by the Zwelakhe-Duma Bell le Pere Quartet in the Ertegun Atrium at 6:30 p.m. and during intermission on Sept.18 and 19. Ticket prices begin at $30.

The Sept. 18 performance will live stream exclusively on jazzlive.com.

In addition to concerts in convention centers and open-air venues, the Orchestra will perform or collaborate with local musicians in each city, and host education initiatives at local schools.

“The earliest and most fundamental human mythology is African,” Marsalis says. “From Venda to Igbo to a host of other belief systems across the continent, there are viable solutions to today’s challenges.” 

“Our ancestors had cogent and powerful thoughts on who we are as individuals as we pass through the natural cycles of life, how we should relate to one another socially, and how to be one with the universal spirit that inhabits all,” he continues. “In their globally influential music and dance concepts, we can perceive how to find harmony and balance with nature, how to perceive and interact with the supernatural, and how to create endless variations on fundamental themes in pursuit of a good time.”

Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Tour Dates

Thursday, September 18-Saturday, September 20, 2025
Rose Theater in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall

New York, NY

Friday, September 26, 2025
Standard Bank Joy of Jazz
Johannesburg, South Africa

Sunday, September 28, 2025
Standard Bank Joy of Jazz
Johannesburg, South Africa

Wednesday, October 1, 2025
BC International Jazz Festival
Tamarind Tree Hotel: Misumi Garden  
Nairobi, Kenya

Thursday, October 2, 2025
BC International Jazz Festival
Tamarind Tree Hotel: Misumi Garden 
Nairobi, Kenya

Sunday, October 5, 2025
Landmark Centre
Lagos, Nigeria

Friday, October 10, 2025
+233 Jazz Bar and Grill / Ghana Jazz Foundation
Accra, Ghana

Saturday, October 11, 2025
+233 Jazz Bar and Grill / Ghana Jazz Foundation
Accra, Ghana

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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