Nelson_W_Wicas
Fri, 17 May 2002 07:46:04 -0700
Also, don't forget the free jazz concert at the Firehouse tonight. ---------------------- Forwarded by Nelson W Wicas/Corp/VGI on 05/17/2002 10:43 AM --------------------------- "Amy L. Dalton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 05/17/2002 08:53:59 AM To: WC Outreach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> cc: (bcc: Nelson W Wicas/Corp/VGI) Subject: Reminder: Demais & Yaren at Calvary Church Tomorrow Night! Join Demais and Yaren for an evening of Turkish and Afro-Latin folk music on Saturday, May 18, 7:30 pm at West Philadelphia
ıs Calvary Church. The Calvary Center for Culture and Community, the Cherry Tree Music Co-op, and the Renaissance Arts Network invite you to our fourth concert in our collaborative WorldCommunity Music Series, an innovative project that seeks to give voice to the world-community of West Philadelphia. Turkish folk music duo Yaren will join the dynamic Afro-Cuban / Afro-Brazilian percussion ensemble Demais for an evening of experimentation, tradition, and camaraderie. More details are below. Tickets will be sold on a sliding scale from $5 to $15, and the doors will open at 7pm. Calvary is located at the corner of 48th and Baltimore Avenue along the 34 trolley route. The WorldCommunity Music Series is a collaborative, community-based effort taking place at Calvary every third Saturday from January through May, 2002. Questions? Call Chris at 215-729-4851 or Ed at 215-724-1702. * * * * * * * * * * Yaren is a Turkish term that means ³a special friend,² ³pal² or ³buddy.² It evokes good times shared with music and friends. The Ensemble Yaren
ïa duo consisting of Çagri Haksöz (pronounced CHAH-reh HAK-soz) and Gerardo Razumney
ïplays traditional Turkish folk music. Haksöz sings and plays saz, a string instrument with three sets of strings and movable frets, and Razumney plays dumbeq (a vase-shaped hand drum), bendir (a frame drum) and davul (a base drum played with sticks), all traditional Turkish percussion instruments. Turkish music involves musical scales that include quarter tones and sound rather unusual to Western ears, and asymmetric rhythms that are at the same time elusive and compelling. Demais means ³too much² in Portuguese
ïas in ³they are too much!² Demais is a dynamic percussion ensemble made up of Jill Galman, Josh Robinson, Elizabeth Sayre, Alex Shaw, and Mike Stevens
ïall younger musicians who have steeped themselves in the study of Afro-Latin disciplines of capoeira, samba, and pagode (from Brazil) and conga and batá drumming (from Cuba). The groupıs performances feature newly created fusions of traditional elements, as well as new ideas inspired by traditional music
ïa single piece might include both a four hundred-year-old African song and a rhythmic groove invented last week, or anything in between. Demais was formed in order for group members to share with each other and audiences the excitement inherent in Afro-Cuban and Afro-Brazilian music. With each composition, Demais draws from multiple traditional sources, as well as from the imaginations of the performers. Through compositions that combine Cuban and Brazilian styles, the group also seeks to explore connections in the African roots that underlie the music of both countries, as well as much of the popular music of the US. Demaisı study of the Afro-Cuban and Afro-Brazilian traditions is ultimately an exploration into the rich cultural history of the Americas. Renaissance Arts Network ³Renaissance² means a rebirth or revival, for example, of culture, skills, or learning forgotten or previously ignored. The Renaissance Arts Network is a new artist-led forum for artists and musicians to provide opportunities for learning, teaching, and practicing skills in arts and music to Philadelphia residents in order to improve the quality of life and to strengthen the presence of arts in the community. We are currently offering programs at local schools, churches, and community centers, and are looking to create more symbiotic relationships between artists and the community at large. As a project of The Squirrel Hill Community Association, a 501(c)(3) organization, RAN seeks to reflect and value our neighborhoodıs incredible diversity in religion, ethnicity, language and culture. For more information, visit www.renaissanceartsnetwork.org. Calvary Center for Culture and Community The Calvary Center for Culture and Community (CCCC) is a non-profit organization, founded in 2000 by a coalition of church members and community residents. CCCC has a dual mission: to initiate creative, community-based efforts to restore and preserve the edifice of Calvary United Methodist Church (particularly the breathtaking but dilapidated sanctuary) and to facilitate the use of the building for arts, educational, and social service programs in a way that sustains the church and nurtures the community. Following in the Calvary Churchıs legacy of acceptance and inclusion of all people, the CCCC seeks to renew and revitalize the church building as a sanctuary for community engagement and involvement across lines of race, class, gender, and sexuality. For more information, visit www.libertynet.org/uchs or, coming soon: www.calvary-center.org Cherry Tree Music Co-op The Cherry Tree Music Co-op is a volunteer collective that has organized performances of traditional, ethnic, international, and related non-commercial music in West Philadelphia since a group of local musicians established it in 1975. By the mid-80s, the Co-opıs Sunday night concert series had become one of the countryıs leading medium-sized folk venues. In addition to the Sunday series, the Cherry Tree works with other organizations
ïincluding the Friends of Clark Park, the Spruce Hill Community Association, and the Clark Park Music and Arts Community
ïto organize free musical performances at neighborhood events and festivals. For more information, visit www.cherrytree.org.