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If you happen to be in Washington, DC June 30-July4
or July 7-11, you might want to take in the
Smithsonian's Folklife Festival on the National Mall.
This is the announcement regarding the Nuestra Musica
program. The other programs will be on Alberta, Canada
and Native American Basketry.
The Festival website can be found at:
www.folklife.si.edu
(This is one of my favorite activities of the summer,
and I try to volunteer for a few days each year - a
very rewarding experience.)
(Joseph - is this an appropriate use of this forum?)
- Natalie
Nuestra Música: Latino Chicago is the third of four
Smithsonian Folklife Festival programs of the
multi-year Nuestra Música: Music in Latino Culture
project, an initiative that explores and presents the
diverse, evolving, and expanding universe of música
Latina, which often unites and defines the largest
minority group and fastest growing population in the
United States. Other project components include the
Smithsonian Folkways Recordings series
Tradiciones/Traditions, Latino music sections in the
Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and
Folkways websites, and multimedia features on the
recently launched Global Sound website.
The 2006 program will highlight the music and cultural
expressions of Chicago's diverse Latino communities
and explore the role they play in shaping contemporary
society, creating community, and confirming cultural
identity. Two premier grassroots Latino music groups,
researched and documented by Smithsonian Folkways
Recordings, will complement the Chicago artists and
reference the wider panorama of musical life in Latino
USA.
Musicians and dancers will engage the public in a
variety of settings, including demonstrations,
workshops, narrative sessions, and concerts that
suggest a variety of community music events. The
"coffee house" setting of La Peña, first introduced in
the 2004 Festival program, will feature
once-in-a-lifetime opportunities to hear musical
exchanges between musicians from Chicago and recorded
Folkways artists from other parts of the country.
Mural and graphic artists will complement musicians
and dancers by evoking the visual imagery of Chicago's
Latino neighborhoods. Additional workshops will
highlight Chicago's Latino radio traditions, foodways,
and artisans whose crafts are related to music and
dance.
This program, produced in collaboration with Chicago's
renowned Old Town School of Folk Music, complements
the 10th anniversary of the School's Latino weekly
musical event La Peña. California-based bilingual
radio station, Radio Bilingüe, will continue to
collaborate with the project and broadcast live from
the Festival.
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Nuestra Musica at Smithsonian Folklife Festival
natalie coleman wrote:
>If you happen to be in Washington, DC June 30-July4
>or July 7-11, you might want to take in the
>Smithsonian's Folklife Festival on the National Mall.
>This is the announcement regarding the Nuestra Musica
>program. The other programs will be on Alberta, Canada
>and Native American Basketry.
>The Festival website can be found at:
>www.folklife.si.edu
>(This is one of my favorite activities of the summer,
>and I try to volunteer for a few days each year - a
>very rewarding experience.)
>
>(Joseph - is this an appropriate use of this forum?)
>- Natalie
>
Absolutely. . .I wish I was going to have more time when I attend DC on
the 4th for the parade I'll be in so I could attend this. It sound very
interesting.
joseph
>
>Nuestra Música: Latino Chicago is the third of four
>Smithsonian Folklife Festival programs of the
>multi-year Nuestra Música: Music in Latino Culture
>project, an initiative that explores and presents the
>diverse, evolving, and expanding universe of música
>Latina, which often unites and defines the largest
>minority group and fastest growing population in the
>United States. Other project components include the
>Smithsonian Folkways Recordings series
>Tradiciones/Traditions, Latino music sections in the
>Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and
>Folkways websites, and multimedia features on the
>recently launched Global Sound website.
>
>The 2006 program will highlight the music and cultural
>expressions of Chicago's diverse Latino communities
>and explore the role they play in shaping contemporary
>society, creating community, and confirming cultural
>identity. Two premier grassroots Latino music groups,
>researched and documented by Smithsonian Folkways
>Recordings, will complement the Chicago artists and
>reference the wider panorama of musical life in Latino
>USA.
>
>Musicians and dancers will engage the public in a
>variety of settings, including demonstrations,
>workshops, narrative sessions, and concerts that
>suggest a variety of community music events. The
>"coffee house" setting of La Peña, first introduced in
>the 2004 Festival program, will feature
>once-in-a-lifetime opportunities to hear musical
>exchanges between musicians from Chicago and recorded
>Folkways artists from other parts of the country.
>Mural and graphic artists will complement musicians
>and dancers by evoking the visual imagery of Chicago's
>Latino neighborhoods. Additional workshops will
>highlight Chicago's Latino radio traditions, foodways,
>and artisans whose crafts are related to music and
>dance.
>
>This program, produced in collaboration with Chicago's
>renowned Old Town School of Folk Music, complements
>the 10th anniversary of the School's Latino weekly
>musical event La Peña. California-based bilingual
>radio station, Radio Bilingüe, will continue to
>collaborate with the project and broadcast live from
>the Festival.
>
>
>__________________________________________________
>Do You Yahoo!?
>Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
>http://mail.yahoo.com