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Posts Tagged ‘17th Street Market’

6th Annual Tucson Musicians Museum Celebration of Music & Culture

Thursday, September 27th, 2012

What: The 6th Annual Tucson Musicians Museum Music and Cultural Event
There will be live music and a Silent Auction with appetizers and drinks available.
The Tucson Junior Strings will be playing in the lobby pre-event.

Where: The Tucson Convention Center’s Leo Rich Theatre, 260 S. Church, Tucson 85701.

When: September 30th, from 4:00pm to 7:00pm.

Who: The Inductees are:
Brian Bromberg – jazz
David Bromberg – jazz
Bobbie Kimmel – rock
Black Man Clay – world-beat percussion
Domingo DeGrazia – Spanish guitar
Ned Sutton – folk
Rev. Amos Lewis – gospel
David Rife – violinist
Sidney George – blues/zydeco
Rosemary Koshmider – country
Carlos Bedoya Saldivar – Mariachi Guitarist-Music Director
Posthumous Inductees:
Howard Bromberg – Drummer
Norman Douglas Sholin – Guitarist

Special comedic performances by Suzie Sexton, David Fitzsimmons, Elliot Glicksman. I heard all three on stage recently at the Fox Tucson Theatre, and they are very funny.

Cost: $40, Tickets available at:
www.TucsonMusiciansMuseum.org
17TH Street Market: 830 E 17th St, (520) 792-2588,
& The Chicago Store: 130 East Congress, (520) 622-3341
& 5646 E Speedway, Tucson, AZ 85712 (520) 886-1516

Tucson Musicians Museum Mentorship Program

This program is a critical component of the TMM mission – to perpetuate Tucson’s unique musical heritage and culture. By partnering with public and charter schools, established music-related organizations and youth-oriented clubs and associations, TMM shall assist in the preservation of Tucson’s sound by matching qualified professional musicians with qualified young musicians, who might otherwise be unable to afford such guidance. TMM’s Mentorship Program will undoubtedly benefit interested and underserved youth in Tucson, but will also benefit deserving musicians who have so graciously given of their time and talents for so many years.
Funds raised for the TMM Mentorship Program will assist in the purchase of instruments and books for the students, and will also go toward financially compensating professional musicians, as mentors, for their time and contribution to youths’ education.

Tucson’s “100 Thousand Poets for Change” festival

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

“The New Pueblo: A Multilingual Celebration of Voice and Culture from Tucson and the Sonoran Desert”
El Presidio Park,
160 W. Alameda St., downtown Tucson
from 3 PM – 7 PM,
on Saturday, September 24th, 2011.

In answer to the global call from 100 THOUSAND POETS FOR CHANGE, “The New Pueblo: A Multilingual Celebration of Voice and Culture from Tucson and the Sonoran Desert” will hold its first annual festival of language and action at Tucson’s El Presidio Park, from 3:00PM-7:00PM, on September 24th, 2011.

As participants at one of more than 600 simultaneously scheduled events in 450 cities and 95 countries—from Egypt to Afghanistan to the Ivory Coast to Columbia—performers and audience members alike will represent Southern Arizona in the world’s largest ever poetry reading. The New Pueblo shares the 100TPFC commitment to make September 24 the first day in a critical mission to “seize and redirect the political and social dialogue of the day and turn the narrative of civilization towards peace and sustainability.”

Here’s the schedule from website: http://www.bigbridge.org/100thousandpoetsforchange/?cat=626

*Capoeira Mandinga Tucson will be conducting all-age capoeira workshops from 3:30-5:00.

*Lisa Levine and friends from the U of A MFA program in creative writing will be painting children’s faces.

*We’ll have two 30 minute open mic sessions—at 4:20 and 5:30—so audience members can add their words to those from the following line-up:

v Ben Quick ¤ Essayist, Poet, Teacher, Activist ¤ Organizer and Host ¤ Hometown: Dixon, IL ¤ ben-quick.com

v Kristen Nelson ¤ Founder and Executive Director of Casa Libre en la Solana ¤ www.kristenenelson.com

v Mike Wilson ¤ Tohono O’odham Human Rights Activist

v Lisa Bowden ¤ Co-founder and Publisher of Kore Press ¤ Kore’s GRRLS Literary Activism Project

v Aisha Sloan ¤ Essayist, Teacher, Activist ¤ Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

v Sewing the Seeds: A Women’s Writing Collective presents: Mari Herreras ¤ Rosi Andrade ¤ Geneva Escobar ¤ Elena Díaz Bjorkquist ¤ Jenny Fiero ¤ Kaitlin Meadows ¤ Wanda Poindexter

v 4:20-4:50 OPEN MIC

v Chet Phillips ¤ Essayist, Poet, Activist ¤ Cascabel Working Group Co-Chair

v Waylon Nakai Begay ¤ Dine Poet, Scholar, Activist ¤ Hometown: Shonto, AZ

v Tucson Youth Poetry Slam and YWCA’s Nuestra Voz present: Sarah Gonzales ¤ Director of Racial Justice Programs, Tucson YWCA ¤ Alexia Vasquez, Sunnyside High Alum ¤ Amy Briseno, Sunnyside High Alum ¤ Enrique Garcia, Junior at Pueblo High

v 5:30-6:00 OPEN MIC

v Lisa O’Neill ¤ Essayist, Teacher, Musician, Activist ¤ Hometown: New Orleans, LA

v Leon De La Rosa ¤ Professor of Art at the Universidad Autónoma de CIudad Juárez ¤ leondelarosa.org

v Ocotillo Poetry Slam, Tucson’s official poetry slam presents: Maya Asher ¤ Shaikh Sammed ¤ Brian Towne ¤ Mickey Randelman ¤ Melissa Della Femina.

*Every artist and performer is Tucson-based and is giving his or her time to help make this historic event a success. We believe in Tucson. Remember:

Everyone is welcome to set up non-staked tents and booths, pass out literature, sign up volunteers, collect petition signatures, grow membership and sponsor rolls, display art of every form, and conduct peaceful campaigns for any inclusive cause.

We encourage–in fact, we need–groups or individuals to provide children’s activities such as face painting, chalk art, and any language-centered expression. Activities that showcase Non-Western cultural or ethnic traditions are especially welcome.

The New Pueblo will be especially grateful to groups willing to donate and distribute bottled water and/or prepackaged food—candy, chips, etc. Buying a few bags of pre-wrapped treats from the 17th St. Market or other grocers carrying international selections of food and passing them out to festival goers is a great way to highlight the gifts of a culture.

If you wish to go further, please contact Pima County Health Department at (866) 939-PIMA (7462) or (520) 243-7770 to ensure health code compliance. If your group possesses a current permit from the PCHD and wishes to distribute unpackaged items, please contact event organizer Ben Quick at bnquick74@gmail.com or bquick@email.arizona.edu, or 520-250-0799. (Ben Quick, Department of English,Modern Languages Building,University of Arizona 85721. Ben’s Personal Webpage and Blog: ben-quick.com).

Be part of this “world’s largest-ever poetry reading”.