About this Performance
Part devotion, part defiance — Meshell Ndegeocello’s Grammy-winning album arrives at Little Island as a live experience that blurs the line between concert, ritual and tribute.
Celebrating 100 years of James Baldwin, No More Water weaves together voices, text and sound with urgency and love. Propulsive rhythms, spoken word and choral textures collide to create something vital and alive— a meditation, a call to arms, an act of survival.
Stay Out Late
Little Island has two venues. After the June 21 performance of No More Water in The Amph, head to The Glade for a free performance Curated by Amy Sherald. After the June 22 performance of No More Water in The Amph, head to The Glade for a free performance Curated by Cécile McLorin Salvant.
After every performance of No More Water, stay after the show for a nightcap. The Play Ground, our open-air plaza, stays open until 11pm with local wine, beer, cocktails, non-alcoholic options, and snacks—set against skyline views and summer greenery.
Creative Credits
Meshell Ndegeocello
Creator & Performer
Meshell Ndegeocello has survived the best and worst of what a career in music has to offer. She eschewed genre for originality, celebrity for longevity, and musical trends for musical truths. Fans have come to expect the unexpected and follow her on sojourns into soul, R&B, jazz, hip-hop, rock, all bound by the search for love, justice, respect, and resolution. Those sonic investigations have defied and redefined the expectations for women, for queer artists, and for black music for over 30 years and she remains one of few women who write the music, sing the songs, and lead the band.
A bass player above all else, Meshell brings her warm, fat, and melodic groove to everything she does. She has earned a Grammy award along with numerous nominations, and has played alongside the Rolling Stones, Madonna, Alanis Morrisette, James Blood Ulmer, The Blind Boys of Alabama, Tony Allen, John Medeski, Billy Preston, and Chaka Khan. As for her own bass-playing influences, she credits Sting, Jaco Pastorius, Family Man Barrett, and Stevie Wonder. Meshell is always grateful for the opportunity to share the stage and believes music is a fellowship. She looks to spread that gospel with every creation and collaboration.