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  • Sarah Karp is a reporter at WBEZ. A former reporter for Catalyst-Chicago, the Chicago Reporterand the Daily Southtown, Karp has covered education, and children and family issues for more than 15 years. She is a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism. She has won five Education Writers Association awards, three Society of Professional Journalism awards and the 2005 Sidney Hillman Award. She is a native of Chicago.
  • Mark has been a host, reporter and producer at several NPR member stations in Delaware, Alaska, Washington and Kansas. His reporting has taken him everywhere from remote islands in the Bering Sea to the tops of skyscrapers overlooking Puget Sound. He is a diehard college basketball fan who enjoys taking walks with his dog, Otis.
  • Jazz Power Initiative (JPI), a non-profit organization that transforms lives through jazz music education and performing arts, is opening its doors to new students, with a series of free OPEN STUDIO classes in voice, dance and theatre arts on Thursdays, January 20, February 17 and March 10 from 4:30pm-7pm at United Palace located at 4140 Broadway and 175th Street in Washington Heights. There is no charge to attend but parent/guardians must register their young person age 10-17 at jazzpower.org/youth. Our OPEN STUDIO classes will be led by the community-oriented jazz pianist, composer and educator Eli Yamin, along with acclaimed jazz vocalist Antoinette Montague and veteran theater director and choreographer Mickey Davidson, introducing young performers ages 10-17 to blues and jazz, to activate their imagination and creative self-expression through song and dance. Students who complete one or more Open Studio classes are eligible to participate in Jazz Power’s 12-week after-school training program starting in late March. Classes are offered at no charge to families in need through our Youth Education programs, funded in part by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the New York State Council on the Arts, with the support from the New York State Legislature. Registration and attendance are open to all students at no charge. Guardians can register their youth by contacting arlene@jazzpower.org or registering at jazzpower.org/youth. “Jazz Power Youth Online is a ‘creative life-line’ connecting students and families, to lift our spirits and resilience, especially over this very challenging past two years,” notes Jazz Power Initiative’s Managing and Artistic Director, Eli Yamin. “We are thrilled to be able to welcome new students to join us for our OPEN STUDIO classes, so they can stay active, singing, and dancing in the community-oriented, artistic tradition of jazz and blues music.” Jazz Power Initiative’s Managing and Artistic Director, Eli Yamin, is a pianist, composer, singer, author and educator who has been spreading the joy of jazz through his work for 30 years, including 10 years as founding director of Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Middle School Jazz Academy and 18 years directing Jazz Power Initiative. Eli tours with his jazz quartet, and has published three musicals for young performers and released eight CD’s. He has performed at The White House, Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center and in over 20 countries as a cultural ambassador for the U.S. Department of State. Eli sincerely believes learning about jazz should feel as creative as playing jazz, and consistently shares this experience with students of all ages. He holds a Master's Degree in Music Education from Lehman College and is working towards his doctorate at Stony Brook University (SUNY). Eli is also the author of “So You Want To Sing The Blues: A Guide For Performers,” published by Rowman and Littlefield in collaboration with the National Association of Teachers of Singing (NATS). Senior Dance Teaching Artist Mickey Davidson won an Audelco award for choreography of “For Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf” directed by Ntozake Shange. She joined Dianne McIntyre’s groundbreaking “Sounds In Motion” in 1975 and danced with the company for eight years. She has worked closely with jazz artists Sun Ra, Cecil Taylor, the World Saxophone Quartet and was mentored by original Savoy Ballroom dancers Frankie Manning and Norma Miller. A beloved New York veteran of arts education, Ms. Davidson has an extensive background in African American dance styles and led the African American Dance program at Wesleyan University for 17 years. In addition to teaching with Jazz Power Initiative, she teaches at the Louis Armstrong Jazz Camp in New Orleans, and is a passionate advocate for making the authentic jazz dance traditions available to the next generation. Senior Voice Teaching Artist Antoinette Montague, “Jazz Woman to the Rescue,” is an esteemed award-winning jazz and blues singer and entertainer who has performed internationally as a cultural ambassador for the U.S. Department of State. Ms. Montague is a Level III Certified Teacher of Somatic Voicework, the LoVetri Method(tm). She teaches at Jazz Power Institute for artists and educators and led Jazz Power Initiative’s first residency at Administration for Children’s Services (ACS). She is also a WHCR radio host and educator teaching at The New School, Marymount College Manhattan, Newark School of the Arts, Music on the Inside and Jazzmobile. Ms. Montague is the co-producer and host of the Zoom series “Music While We’re Inside;” in the process of developing Jazz Woman to the Rescue Radio Station; host on Heat FM radio, and a member of the WBGO Community Advisory Board. She has mentored dozens of young jazz musicians and vocalists over the past twenty years, passing on the knowledge of her experience and what she learned from her mentors Carrie Smith and Etta Jones. Her latest CD is “World Peace in the Key of Jazz,” with Danny Mixon, Paul Beaudry, Winard Harper, Jay Hoggard, and King Solomon Hicks.
  • Celebrating the release of her latest album Aire, Mexican jazz singer Magos Herrera  performs with her phenomenal sextet and chamber orchestra The Knights. Magos is “one of the great modern singers of our time” (Latin Jazz Network), who “stretch[es] the very notion of jazz singing … into a sound that’s bold, thrilling, and effortlessly global.” Her latest recording features original compositions (commissioned by Chamber Music America’s New Jazz Works) as well as selections from the Great Latin American Songbook. Written largely during pandemic isolation and now performed live for audiences in Bryant Park,  Aire  has become “a way to reach out … to heal each other by coming together and celebrating our humanity with compassion and gratitude.” 

    Magos Herrera, Vocals
    Ingrid Jensen, Trumpet
    Vinicius Gomes, Guitar
    Matt Penman, Bass
    Alex Kautz, Drums
    Gonzalo Grau, Percussion

    The Knights
    Colin Jacobsen, Artistic Director and Violin
    Eric Jacobsen, Artistic Director and Conductor

    Carnegie Hall Citywide presents five nights of music, featuring six-time Grammy Award winner Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra, violinist Tessa Lark and bassist Michael Thurber, an album-release show with renowned Mexican vocalist Magos Herrera featuring chamber orchestra The Knights, Champe-Soukous Collective, South African vocal group and America's Got Talent finalist Ndlovu Youth Choir.

    Bryant Park Picnic Performances presented by Bank of America is a free outdoor festival that welcomes all New Yorkers to experience the city’s vibrant arts and culture. The series provides a platform for extraordinary artists and serves as a vital outdoor venue for a wide array of New York’s cultural institutions.
  • Ask Governor Murphy is re-broadcast on WBGO this Sunday night, April 3 on WBGO
  • The U.N. Security Council meets in emergency session a day after 60 Palestinians were killed in Gaza. Israel says the world should be blaming Hamas for provoking the violence.
  • The IOC says it will get closer to gender balance among Olympic athletes, boosting women to nearly 49 percent of the total at the Tokyo 2020 Games, from 45.6 percent in Rio.
  • The Detwiler Fire has already burned approximately 45,000 acres and is just 7 percent contained. "I haven't seen these conditions in a long time," said a Cal Fire spokesman.
  • Those of us not heading to San Francisco this weekend can stream sets from headliners Bon Iver and Future, as well as Father John Misty, Mac DeMarco, Margo Price, Tycho and more.
  • A knife-wielding man attacked a group of elementary school children as they were boarding a bus around 7:45 a.m. local time in the city of Kawasaki, according to news reports.
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