January 12
Going to this on Wed night anyone want to join me?
Hillel to bring the Afro-Semitic Experience to URI, Jan. 28-29, 2009
Media Contact:
Jhodi Redlich, 401-874-2116
KINGSTON,
RI -- January 9, 2009 -- In celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. week
at the University of Rhode Island, Hillel - The Jewish Student Center
will present The Afro-Semitic Experience, a jazz ensemble of Jewish and
African-American musicians, in a two-day residency, January 28-29,
2009. This presentation is in association with the URI Multicultural
Center and the Jazz Music Program.
The Afro-Semitic Experience will perform on Thursday, Jan. 29 at
7:30 p.m. at the URI Fine Arts Concert Hall, 105 Upper College Rd.,
Kingston, RI. Tickets are $3 for students and $10 for the general
public and may be reserved by calling 401-874-2740 or emailing
hillel@urihillel.org. Tickets may also be purchased at the door by cash
or check.
In addition, members of The Afro-Semitic Experience will conduct a
participatory workshop on Wednesday, Jan. 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the URI
Multicultural Center Hardge Forum, 74 Lower College Rd., Kingston, RI.
The workshop is free and open to the public.
Ensemble members also will be guest artists at the Music
Department Convocation on Thursday, Jan. 29 from 12:30 - 2 p.m. in the
Fine Arts Concert Hall. The Convocation is free and open to the public.
The Afro-Semitic Experience is dedicated to preserving, promoting
and expanding the rich cultural and musical heritage of the Jewish and
African diaspora. The band presents interpretations of music from the
rich traditions of Gospel, Klezmer, Yoruban drumming, Nigunim (wordless
Jewish chants), Spirituals, Funk and Swing. They transform the concert
hall into a "whoopin', hollerin', testifyin' celebration of
multicultural soul music." In concert, the band frames its music by
telling stories about what the pieces mean, how they relate to
individual members of a community, and how they reflect upon the
relations between Blacks and Jews both as ethnic and religious
communities.
The Thursday night concert will feature all six members of the
band. At the Wednesday night workshop, David Chevan and Warren Byrd
lead a discussion about race and interfaith dialogue and how music can
serve as a bridge builder. Baba David Coleman will distribute a variety
of African percussion instruments and engage the audience in a massive
jam session while teaching them traditional rhythmic patterns and
techniques. At the Convocation on Thursday afternoon, Chevan, Byrd and
Coleman will teach the process of creating inter-cultural music as well
as infusing spirituality into performance.
"I think it is wonderful that through this concert URI will play host
to the sweet aspects of Black and Jewish cultures," said Robert
Weisbord, URI professor of history and author of Bittersweet Encounter:
The Afro-American and the American Jew.
Members of The Afro-Semitic Experience
Will Bartlett has thirty years of experience as a professional woodwind
performer and educator. He has led saxophone master classes and
workshops on jazz improvisation, jazz theory, arranging and composing
for the small ensemble, and klezmer clarinet interpretation.
Warren Byrd is a pianist, composer, and vocalist with an extensive and
eclectic background. He has led workshops in Jazz Composition and
Theory, Jazz Piano, as well as Gospel Arranging and Composition, and
Vocal Training.
Dr. David Chevan holds a Ph.D. in Musicology and specializes in the
history and performance of jazz and Jewish music. He has experience
teaching workshops on world and jazz improvisation, Jewish music,
klezmer ensemble performance, music and spirituality.
Baba David Coleman is a Yoruban priest, African drummer, and African
drum builder. He has studied with Baba Femi and continues to be a
disciple of the legendary Chief Bey, the oldest African-American hand
drummer.
Babafemi Alvin Carter, Jr. plays drum set, Afro-Caribbean percussion,
and the drums of the West Afrikan djembe drum ensemble. He has
developed an innovative and exciting workshop for merging
Afro-Caribbean, West Afrikan and Klezmer drum styles with contemporary
percussion patterns.
Stacy Phillips is a Grammy winning multi-stylistic steel guitarist and
violinist. His Klezmer Collection was the first book of accurate
transcriptions of early klezmer music.
The residency of the Afro-Semitic Experience is funded in part by the
Jewish Federation of Rhode Island and the New England States Touring
program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with
funding from the National Endowment for the Arts Regional Touring
Program and the six New England state arts agencies, URI College of
Arts and Sciences and the URI Student Senate. The events are
co-sponsored by the URI Student Affairs Diversity Committee, the URI
Chaplains Association, the Bureau of Jewish Education and the Rhode
Island Chapter of Hadassah.
For more information, please contact Amy Olson, Executive Director of URI Hillel at 401-874-2740 or amyolson@mail.uri.edu.
Hillel at the University of Rhode Island seeks to create artistic
opportunities that illuminate the Jewish experience as well as build
cultural bridges among campus groups of varying backgrounds.