![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
The First Black American Newswire Service! ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]() Thrivin' is a monthly newsletter distributed by Black PR Wire. For more information on the latest trends and happening highlights in the media, go to 'Thrivin', an excellent source for news.
Currently 8 active users
|
![]() For Immediate Release September 28, 2008 Contact Information Sonshine Communications (BPRW) Saving the Music of New Orleans (BLACK PRWIRE) (September 28, 2008) It would take an encyclopedia to list all the biographies of accomplished musical performers who were born or resided in New Orleans, Louisiana. The list would surely include Fats Domino, the Neville Brothers, the Marsalis family, Harry Connick, Jr., Mahalia Jackson, Earl King, Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton, Allen Toussaint and Irvin Mayfield, Jr., among others. As New Orleans has produced so many artists, the city also played an important role in developing jazz, blues, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and zydeco music styles.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation of New Orleans two years ago, the city faced the threat of losing future generations of native musicians since many lost their homes. In December 2005, saxophonist Branford Marsalis and singer-pianist Harry Connick, Jr. teamed up with Habitat for Humanity and various corporate sponsors to save their city’s music. Together, they planned the development of the Musicians’ Village, a housing community designed to keep the city’s musical talent. Today, the Musicians’ Village is alive and thriving, with its own homepage at www.nolamusiciansvillage.org. The village consists of over 70 single-family homes in the city’s Upper 9th Ward, mostly inhabited by musicians. The homes are financially sponsored by families and private businesses, and constructed with the help of Habitat for Humanity volunteers. The next project underway for the Musicians’ Village will be the Ellis Marsalis Music Center, named after Branford Marsalis’ father, himself a musician. Facilities will include a performance hall, a recording studio, classrooms and practice rooms. The center will nurture talent and facilitate interaction between musicians of all stripes by being open to residents and non-residents of the Musicians’ Village. Developers are also planning for a children’s park and a seniors’ community. New Orleans’ music styles are so embraced throughout the world that the city and its people deserve an embrace back. The next generation of musicians is counting on it. The content and opinions expressed within this press release are those of the author(s) and/or represented companies, and are not necessarily shared by Black PR Wire. The author(s) and/or represented companies are solely responsible for the facts and the accuracy of the content of this Press release. Black PR Wire reserves the right to reject a press release if, in the view of Black PR Wire, the content of the release is unsuitable for distribution. |
|
|
Copyright © 2001- 2008 Black PR Wire. All rights reserved. |
||