Get in holiday mood with ‘Creole Christmas,’ Sandoval and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy concerts

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Longing for a spectacular musical and cultural experience to help enrich your holiday season? Doral LIVE has got you covered.

This outdoor concert series features a remarkably diverse lineup of entertainment running from Dec. 3-19 in Downtown Doral Park. It’s all part of the inaugural Downtown Doral Holiday Fest, presented by the Downtown Doral Arts and Culture Foundation.

The park spans 4 1/2 acres in the heart of downtown Doral, allowing for social distancing.

“Obviously, we’re coming out of COVID, and a lot of people still feel more comfortable outdoors, so I think it’s unique from that perspective,” said Ana-Marie Codina Barlick, CEO of Codina Partners, the master developer of Downtown Doral. “It’s a beautiful setting — we have the Michele Oka Doner sculpture ‘Micco’ in the background, and the park has a large, rectangular green that makes it very conducive to having these events.”

The Holiday Fest was inspired by the success of Miami City Ballet’s performance of “The Nutcracker” at the park last December.

Partnering with Miami City Ballet

“It was so well-received that we decided this year to partner again with Miami City Ballet,” Codina Barlick said. “We’re opening the fest with Miami City Ballet’s ‘Radiance,’ a special program that they’re putting together just for us in the park, followed by a number of other concerts throughout the month of December.”

“Radiance” — a program of five works featuring the showstopper, “Rubies,” among them, as well as the famous pas de deux from “The Nutcracker” — will kick off the festival with 7:30 p.m. performances on Friday and Saturday. The first weekend comes to a close with Indonesian jazz-piano prodigy Joey Alexander, who released his first album in 2015 at age 11 and is reportedly the youngest jazz musician ever nominated for a Grammy Award. The Joey Alexander Trio is set to perform at 7 p.m. Sunday.

Miami City Ballet’s 2020 show, titled “George Balanchine’s Nutcracker in the Park,” was a live, full-length production with an outdoor audience. It paved the way for this year’s park holiday festivities, organizers say. (Photo courtesy of Brett Hufziger)
Miami City Ballet’s 2020 show, titled “George Balanchine’s Nutcracker in the Park,” was a live, full-length production with an outdoor audience. It paved the way for this year’s park holiday festivities, organizers say. (Photo courtesy of Brett Hufziger)

‘Creole Christmas’

The rest of the lineup features quite a diverse mix of groups and solo artists. Among them is jazz trumpeter and bandleader Etienne Charles, who is presenting his “Creole Christmas” show at 8 p.m. Dec. 18.

Originally from Trinidad and Tobago, Charles moved to Miami this year to become associate professor of studio music and jazz at the University of Miami’s Frost School of Music, where he directs the Studio Jazz Band and Blue Note Ensemble.

“I love it. Such great students and colleagues,” Charles said. “Miami has a great energy based on the numerous cultures here. I’m really enjoying it.”

Charles’ “Creole Christmas” show is based on his 2015 album.

“It’s a celebration of holiday traditions from the scope of my Caribbean upbringing,” said Charles “In my homeland, we have a rich tradition of parang (Afro-Venezuelan folk music), as well as calypsos about the season. So the show always features the Venezuelan cuatro which is one of the main instruments used in Trini Christmas music. We’ll also have trumpet, bass, saxophone, bass clarinet and percussion.”

So what inspired Charles to take on the holiday season musically?

“I love the season and wanted to show Christmas from a different cultural perspective — one where the songs don’t mention snow!” he said. “I did the ‘Creole Christmas’ album a few years ago, and it’s been a blessing being able to bring Trini Christmas joy to audiences worldwide during the season.”

For fans of Charles’ six other albums, all featuring his cool jazz sound, the show won’t be all Christmas music.

“We always throw a little surprise in the pot, whether it’s something from Carnival or one of my other albums,” he said.

Even though Charles no longer lives in Trinidad, it’s still home and has always influenced his sound.

“Growing up playing in a steel band is really a big influence on my music. Calypso, parang, soca, orisha music, reggae and traditional Carnival music are other styles that I’ve incorporated into my sound. I always see myself as a citizen of the world, open to being touched by many cultures,” he said.

“Music brings people together. It keeps us human, and it can remind us of the past as well as take us into the future. My mission is to bring people together through great live music and communicate through my compositions.”

Doral Live 2021 Schedule



Dec. 3-4: Miami City Ballet’s “Radiance”

Dec. 5: Joey Alexander Trio

Dec. 10: Swing-revival band Big Bad Voodoo Daddy’s Wild and Swingin’ Holiday Party

Dec. 11: Jazz legend Arturo Sandoval

Dec. 12: Soprano Elizabeth Caballero with pianist Shelly Berg (dean of UM’s Frost School of Music)

Dec. 15: Hybrid orchestra Nu Deco Ensemble

Dec. 16: Miami dance company Siudy Flamenco’s “Flamenco Intimo”

Dec. 17: Naturally 7, which music legend Quincy Jones reportedly called “the best a cappella group in the world

Dec. 18: Etienne Charles’ “Creole Christmas”

Dec. 19: Bluegrass virtuosos Chris Thile and Aoife O’Donovan

If you go

Doral’s holiday concert series is taking place from Dec. 3-19, 2021, at Downtown Doral Park, 8395 NW 53rd St. Prices start at $37 for individual tickets. Three- and five-show packages are also available. For more information, visit downtowndoral.com/holiday-fest.

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