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2 Kenny Washington: Jazz fans and fellow musicians around the country are in love with this Bay Area singer’s outsized talent and commitment to his craft. He can tackle soul and R&B and jazz standards and scat like nobody’s business. On Jan. 21, you have a chance to catch the New Orleans native in an intimate and lovely setting as he opens the new Jazz at the Chimes season at Oakland’s Chapel of the Chimes. Details: 2 p.m.; $15; www.jazzatthechimes.com. 3 Kenny Broberg: It’s fair to say the 23-year-old pianist has a bright future. Last year, he snagged the silver medal at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, winning raves for his creative and nuanced performances there. With a new album just released, Broberg heads to San Jose this weekend as a late replacement for Michel Dalberto in a Steinway Society recital. The programs includes works by Franck, Bach, Liszt and Debussy.

Details: 2 p.m, Jan, 21, Trianon Theatre, San Jose; $40-$60; www.steinwaysociety.com, 4 “Megabytes the Musical”: This new comedic song and dance revue devoted to the ways technology has enriched and screwed up our lives was created by Morris Bobrow, He’s the guy behind such hits as “Foodies the Musical” and “Shopping the Musical,” which, depending on your tastes in musical little ballerina earrings-ballet studs-ballet gift-ballerina gift-art earrings-dancer earrings-dangling earrings-dancer gift comedy, should have you eager to snap up tickets to “Megabytes” or run screaming from the room, If you’re among the first group, know that the new show opens Jan, 19 at the Shelton Theatre in San Francisco..

Details: Through March 3; $25-$36; www.megabytesthemusical.com. 5 Arsenio Hall: The actor, comedian, groundbreaking talk-show host, producer and winning contestant on “Celebrity Apprentice” can trace his stand-up roots back the 1970s. He’s back on the stand-up circuit now, and brings his tour to San Jose Improv for a weekend run. Details: 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. Jan. 19, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Jan. 20; $25; sanjose.improv.com. 6 Marc Cohn: The singer-songwriter whose soulful voice made “Walking in Memphis” a popular hit in the early 1990s, has something of an eclectic recording history. His last two releases are a 2010 collection of 1970s covers (“Listening Booth: 1970”) and a 2016 collection of old rarities and B-sides. He’s touring with the Blind Boys of Alabama and lands at Livermore’s Bankhead Theater on Jan. 19.

Details: 8 p.m.; $60-$110; 925-373-6800, lvpac.org, 7 “Peter and the Starcatcher”: The hit play about the origins of Peter Pan is a wildly imaginative work with pirates and orphans and an evil king and lost of mysterious secrets, Hillbarn Theatre Company opens a new production of “Starcatcher” this week, Details: Jan, 18-Feb, 4; Hillbarn Theatre, Foster City; $28-$52; 650-349-6411, www.hillbarntheatre.org, 8 Sarah Cahill: The Bay Area avant-garde pianist has long championed the work of composer Lou Harrison, Next week, she comes to The Strand theater in San Francisco with the Alexander String Quartet and William Winant Percussion Group to perform a six-song little ballerina earrings-ballet studs-ballet gift-ballerina gift-art earrings-dancer earrings-dangling earrings-dancer gift all-Harrison program, The musicians will be on hand for a Q&A following the concert..

Details: Presented by San Francisco Performances; 8:30 p.m. Jan. 24; $25-$40; sfperformances.org. 9 Island City Opera: The Alameda company dedicated to works off the beaten path presents of a night of two one-acts by Russian composer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov — “Kashchey the Immortal,” based on a children’s folktale (featuring tenor Alex Boyer) and “Mozart and Salieri,” about the rival composers. Details: Jan. 17-28; Elks Ballroom, Alameda; $40-$60; islandcityopera.org. 10 “Spontaneous Sitcom”: Hot diggety! The entire cast from that cool 1990s sitcom “The Junie Ray Show” just reunited for a nostalgia tour. Well, OK, there actually never was anything on TV by that name. But it’s a clever front for a night of improv comedy by Synergy Theater, which will re-enact favorite episodes of the fictitious show suggested by audience members. The improv show comes to Walnut Creek’s Lesher Center for a weekend run.

The VTA rolled out some changes at the start of the year, and it’s the usual mixed bag, Some routes have better frequency, regular fares went up 25 cents but youth fares dropped to $1, But there’s one change that stands out among the rest for me and that’s the long-awaited introduction of a free transfer for bus riders, This improvement — a feature in many big-city transit systems — is overdue for VTA, which sprawls across so many communities that many trips require more little ballerina earrings-ballet studs-ballet gift-ballerina gift-art earrings-dancer earrings-dangling earrings-dancer gift than one bus, Now, riders who pay their fare with a Clipper card or the VTA’s new EZfare app get a two-hour window to board another regular VTA bus or light-rail train (express service does cost more)..

It’ll be interesting to see how the change works in the long run, as one of the barriers to making it happen was the extra revenue produced by the transfers. But it has the potential to boost ridership since shorter trips that would have required two fares will, in essence, be half-price. And if you’re weighing the cost and hassle of parking in some areas, that could make a big difference. Is it enough to get more people out of their cars and riding VTA? I don’t know, but it’s a good start.

WE’VE GOT YOUR BACH: Chamber Music Silicon Valley is attempting a rare feat on Saturday at the Triton Museum in Santa Clara: A performance of the complete set of J.S, Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos, presented by 19 musicians from around the world, The six 18th century pieces are considered some of the best compositions of the Baroque era, Ray Furuta, Chamber Music Silicon Valley’s artistic director, said he expects the performance — pairing dynamic music with the rich visual environment of the Triton — to be one for the books. “The fact we’re performing works that are known to be the most dynamic of their time is no mistake, “ Furuta added, “In many ways we strive to be the most dynamic performers and purveyors of classical music of our current little ballerina earrings-ballet studs-ballet gift-ballerina gift-art earrings-dancer earrings-dangling earrings-dancer gift time, so The Brandenburgs are a perfect reflection of our cause.”..



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