Posts made in July 2017

KWAYE RELEASES NEW TRACK “SWEETEST LIFE” THAT COMPLETES HISSOLAR EP ON MIND OF A GENIUS 

“KWAYE is bringing back pop sounds from a bygone era with a resoundingly modern twist.” – HIGH SNOBIETY

Zimbabwe-born artist Kwaye has released his debut Solar EP, out today via Mind of a Genius/Warner Bros. Records. The EP features his previous hits “Cool Kids” and “Little Ones,” which have earned over 2.3 million streams to date.The final track in this trilogy, “Sweetest Life,” debuted today as Zane Lowe’s World Record premiere on Beats 1.
LISTEN TO “SWEETEST LIFE” HERE.
SOLAR EP AVAILABLE AT RETAIL HERE.
Mind of a Genius recently signed this dynamic talent following a chance encounter. The 22-year-old had moved to the States, pursuing a dual major at UCLA in African American studies and the music industry. One night, he hopped in an Uber whose driver happened to be a former A&R executive. Kwaye played “Cool Kids” in the car, and the driver decided to share it with Mind Of A Genius label founder David Dann. A deal followed, making him the company’s very first UK signing.

 

As a child, Kwaye developed an encyclopedic musical taste, devouring everything from Zimbabwean traditional songs to D’Angelo, John Legend, Thundercat, Tracy Chapman, and The Eagles. He taught himself viola, saxophone, and guitar and cut his teeth playing open mic nights in London and in the famed West End. His personal fashion mirrors the melting pot at the heart of his music, merging bright Zimbabwe-style colors and London refinement.

 

Kwaye arrives as a new global voice in 2017 with the power to shake things up.

 

Revisiting the Sumer of Love, Rethinking the Counterculture;An Academic Conference on the 50th anniversary of the Summer of Love

Northwestern’s Center for Civic Engagement, with the California Historical Society, is hosting an interdisciplinary academic conference July 27 through 29
WHAT: Key local academics will gather this week to discuss the counterculture and reexamining events that led to the Summer of Love and its legacy and impact. Scholars will discuss what the counterculture means 50 years after the Summer of Love forever transformed San Francisco, California and the country.

                 

Professors from Stanford, Cal-Berkeley, and San Francisco State will be joined by academics around the country at the conference “Rethinking the Counterculture/Rethinking the Summer of Love,” hosted by Northwestern/San Francisco and the California Historical Society.

 
Three prominent Northwestern University scholars will be among several dozen historians, journalism, arts and gender studies experts from around the country gathered to offer lectures and discussion. A wide range of topics includes the Beats to hippies, the Black Panthers, media, music, and more. They will also delve into the lessons contemporary society can take from the events that occurred in the 1960s.

 
The summer of 1967 in San Francisco went beyond sex, drugs and rock-n-roll. 100,000 young people came for the music and the culture, and left changing the face of American society forever.

 
The three-day interdisciplinary academic conference will celebrate and reexamine the Summer of Love, its associated events and their contexts and implications on today’s world. The conference’s major theme is community: building community; portraying community; analyzing community; healing community; and envisioning community; done so through a variety of mechanisms from activism to the arts, from esotericism to drugs.   

 WHO: 

* Fred Turner, Stanford University

* Richard Candida Smith, University of California Berkeley

* Peter Richardson, San Francisco State University

* Stephen Eisenman, Northwestern

* Abe Peck, Northwestern

* Michael Kremer, Northwestern

* Anthea Hartig, California Historical Society

WHEN/ Thursday, July 27, 2017 (6:00 pm-7:00 pm) Lecture:

WHERE:       

Hot Fun in the Summertime: Microcosmic and Macrocosmic Views on the Summer of Love

Event Location: California Historical Society, 678 Mission St.

 
Friday, July 28, 2017 (9:00 am – 5:30 pm) Lectures & Panels:

Event Location: Northwestern University San Francisco, 44 Montgomery St.

 

  • From Counterculture to Cyberculture: The Dream of a World Beyond
  • From Subculture to Counterculture: Paths through Postwar Art to the Summer of Love
  • The Long 60s
  • Rooting the Counterculture: Rural Communes and Back to the Land
  • The Black Power Revolution and the Summer of Love 
  • Engendering Social Change: Feminism, Sexual Freedom, and Gender-Transgressive

              Fashion in the Age of Aquarius

  • From Punishment to Protection: Human Service Innovation in the Summer of Love
  • Agency, Activism, and Clash in the Ideology of the Counterculture
  • The Sound of the Counterculture: Rock Music and Its Resistances
  •  Presenting the Counterculture: Portrayals, Perceptions, Problems 
  •  Reimagining America: Identity, Transformation, and the Politics of Community in the

    Counterculture

 
Saturday, July 29, 2017 (9:00 am – 3:45 pm) Lectures & Panels:

Event Location: Northwestern University San Francisco, 44 Montgomery St.

  • William Blake and the Age of Aquarius 
  • The Intellectual Origins of the Counterculture: How Theory Shaped Practice
  • The Soundtrack of the Summer of Love: Ideas, Albums, and Issues
  • Expanded Mediums and the Summer of Love: Objects, Performance, and Film
  • From Innocence to Experience: LSD, the Counterculture and Sustainable Lives 
  • The Counterculture and the Written Word: Was the Movement a Literary Movement Too?
  • The Media and the Summer of Love: From Street to Straight
  • Visualizing the Summer of Love: The San Francisco Poster Renaissance

For complete program times and registration details visit: engage.northwestern.edu

My Moment With Myrtle Moore…

This was a human being of unfathomable beauty… She’s inspired thousands and lived an incredibly full life which left behind a huge legacy! 

I Samari Robinson am honored to share her blood!  

Come check out my Instagram page to learn more! 

My Page!

MYRTLE ‘MIMI’ HARRIET LIGGETT-MOORE

A Los Angeles Legend + National Icon.

Myrtle Moore was born in Detroit on May 18, 1920. She passed on July 12, 2017.
She married Dr. Charles H. Moore (CHM Westminster Arms Senior Housing) and went on to have four children: Charles, Jean, Ernest and David.

She was a social worker at the Los Angeles Unified School District, serving as a Pupil Attendance Officer.

An extremely active member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. and founding member of their Theta Mu Omega Chapter.

Board Member of the Southeast Symphony.

Active member of Westminster Presbyterian Church, Dental Wives Association and Knoxville College Alumni.

*Mrs. Moore is predeceased by her husband Dr. Charles H. Moore (former President of the Black Dental Association); two sons – Charles and David and two siblings – Sue and John.

MAKING AN IMPACT

ELLE Canada‘s September issue is all about MAKING AN IMPACT, featuring an exclusive interview with Hollywood star Jessica Chastain. In a powerful interview, Chastain shares her views on the status of women in the movie industry and the world, her experience of fame, and why she publicly called out the paparazzi who took pictures of her on her recent wedding day. Read the full interview here. 

Other issue highlights:

  • Discover how ELLE Canada team planned their September cover during a LIVE editorial meeting at Facebook
  • Red fashion shoot featuring model Herieth Paul
  • How to shop the trends to instantly upgrade your fall wardrobe
  • Why we’re over stilettos and soulmates

 The September Issue of ELLE Canada, featuring Jessica Chastain, hits newsstands August 7th, 2017.

LEADERSHIP CHANGE AT TV ONE

SILVER SPRING, MD…JULY 25, 2017 – Urban One CEO Alfred C. Liggins, today announced the transition of leadership at TV One. Effective immediately, Michelle Rice will be the Interim General Manager with full management oversight of the 13-year-old entertainment and lifestyle network targeting Black adults. She succeeds Brad Siegel, former President of TV One. The announcement was made after Siegel, who served the network for two and a half years, recently informed the company of his departure and announced to the TV One leadership team today that he will be leaving the network.  Urban One, Inc., formerly Radio One, is the parent company of TV One.

Michelle Rice, Interim General Manager, TV One

Rice was one of the inaugural employees of TV One, hired as the Vice President, Distribution Strategy and Operations.  She was later promoted to Senior Vice President and ultimately to Executive Vice President, Content Distribution and Marketing.   In this position, Rice was responsible for approximately 50% of the network’s revenue and has successfully negotiated all of the network’s affiliate deals and increased its content distribution across all platforms. Rice came to TV One with a wealth of progressive leadership experience in cable television spanning affiliate sales and marketing at BET, NBC Cable Networks and iNDemand. Rice is a graduate of Temple University with a degree in Journalism and also holds an M.A. degree in Communication Management from the University of Southern California. She is an alumnus of Women in Cable and Telecommunications’ (WICT) Betsy Magness Leadership Institute, Senior Executive Summit program at Stanford University and the National Association for Multi-Ethnicity in Communications’ Executive Leadership Development Program.

Alfred Liggins said, “Michelle is business savvy, understands our demographic and has the energy, vision and discipline to position TV One for the future. She has the respect of our industry and I believe in her ability to provide leadership for our network during this time of intense competition, increased platform availability and growing content targeting the Black viewer.”

Reflecting upon Siegel’s tenure at TV One, Liggins said, “Brad has made many valuable contributions to the network during his tenure and we’re grateful for his work ethic, creativity, professionalism and support of our mission to inform, inspire and entertain the Black community. He’s also an all-around good guy and we wish him well in his future endeavors.”

Miracle Treat Day

All day Thursday, July 27, 2017, participating Dairy Queen® and DQ Grill & Chill® locations throughout the United States will host, Eat Dessert First-themed 12th annual Miracle Treat Day to benefit Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals.

Dairy Queen® encourages fans to Eat Dessert First for a great cause. During DQ®‘s 12th annual Miracle Treat Day, $1 or more from every Blizzard® Treat sold at participating locations will be donated to local Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals (CMN Hospitals).

CMN Hospitals raise funds to help save and improve the lives of kids treated at 170 children’s hospitals across the U.S. and Canada.All donations collected on Miracle Treat Day stay in the communities in which they are raised to support pediatric patients and their families in local CMN Hospitals.

The featured Miracle Treat Day “Blizzard of the Day” will be Oreo®, which is still the most popular Blizzard Treat to date. All other Blizzard Treat flavors are also available that day.

Visit Miracle Treat Day Official for the nearest participating Dairy Queen or DQ Grill & Chill locations.

Blizzard_Large

During a 33-year partnership with CMN Hospitals, the Dairy Queen system has raised more than $120 million for local hospitals.

SANDWICH-THEMED RAPID FIRE CHALLENGE

August is National Sandwich Month, and to celebrate, The Western Foodservice & Hospitality Expo has selected sandwiches as the theme of their 2017 Rapid Fire Challenge, presented by Great Taste Magazine. Three chefs will face off on Monday, August 28th during the Western Foodservice & Hospitality Expo, running from August 27 – 29 at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
After a round of peer voting hosted on the Western Foodservice & Hospitality Expo’s Facebook page, a total of 1,115 votes were cast and the three chefs to compete in the rapid fire challenge are:
“Congratulations to Chef’s Cao, Agosto and Schlutz on being chosen to participate in this high energy and exciting event at the Show. We know that the audience and judges are looking forward to tasting and judging these three sandwiches,” said Tom Loughran, Event Director.  “The Rapid Fire Challenge is one of the highlights of the Center Stage where the likes of Emeril Lagasse, the Too Hot Tamales, Thomas Keller, Guy Fieri and more have been featured.”
The battle for the best sandwich will be moderated by Great Taste Magazine and will take place on the Center Stage on Monday, August 28 at 3:30pm. The competitors will put their sandwich to the test by demonstrating their recipe and providing tastes for the audience and three esteemed judges.  The winner will be crowned the Western Foodservice Expo Rapid Fire Champion and receive $1,000. Judges include:
 

Katsuji Tanabe

Chef Katsuji Tanabe, the owner of MexiKosher restaurant located in Los Angeles. Although Tanabe is not Jewish, he said it was his calling and stays true to the culture in his restaurant, but cooks a variety of other dishes and styles outside of the restaurant. Chef Katusji Tanabe is a two-time competitor on Bravo TV’s Top Chef.  He is very active within the community, and works to promote well-being for adults and children alike.

Brian Huskey

Chef Brian Huskey spent 3 years with the Patina group at Cafe Pinot and helped open Leatherby’s Cafe Rouge in Costa Mesa as sous chef. Brian competed on BRAVO’s nationally acclaimed TV hit show Top Chef season 11: New Orleans. Two years ago he opened his first concept Tackle Box, a local grub shack in Orange County at Corona del Mar state beach which was acknowledged as one of OC’s “Best Restaurants of the Year” by Orange Coast Magazine.

Shirley Chung

Chef Shirley Chung opened her restaurant in Orange County, Twenty-Eight. Shirley
competed on season 14 of BravoTV’s Top Chef and was rewarded by being named the runner up. Shirley is currently working on opening her next concept, Steamers Co., a fast-casual counter service seafood driven restaurant with an oyster bar.
Added Loughran, “We would like to thank all of the chefs that submitted a sandwich this year and for helping to elevate the level of competition.”  Submissions were received from Chef Bert Agor of King’s Hawaiian, Chef Abraham Arreaga of Working Class Kitchen, Chef Peter Avedissian of I Bake Um, Chef Ben Diaz of Rosa Mexicano LA Live, Chef Richard Hirshen of Mooney Farms and Bella San Luci, Chef Steve Kling of Stillwater Spirits and Sounds, Chef Felix Nappoly of the Hyatt Regency Long Beach, Chef Kevin Roberts (aka Food Dude) of Café Paleo Brio, and Chef Whitney Werner of Roast.
Click here to register for the 2017 Western Foodservice & Hospitality Expo. California Restaurant Association members receive one complimentary registration per $100 of CRA membership dues paid when they register with their membership ID Number.
The Western Foodservice & Hospitality Expo gathers thousands of restaurant and foodservice professionals to gain experience and knowledge on how to become more informed, more educated, more competitive, and more profitable in the industry. The tradeshow and conference, started in 1936 is produced by Urban Expositions and sponsored by the California Restaurant Association. The 2017 event will take place August 27-29 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. For more information, visit Western Food Expo Official.

Today, in Florence, the preview of “The Franco Zeffirelli Centre for the performing arts

Today’s preview for press and civic authorities marks an important milestone as the International Centre for the Performing Arts of the non-profit Fondazione Franco Zeffirelli, founded in the former courthouse of Piazza San Firenze, moves toward becoming fully operational. 

At 11am, Francesco Ermini Polacci, co-director of the Centre and artistic director of the concert program hosted by the Fondazione, presented to Mayor of Florence Dario Nardella, Vice Mayor Cristina Giachi and numerous figures of the Tuscan city’s institutional and cultural elite—as well as many guests from far-flung locations, including actors who worked with the Maestro or who wanted to express their fondness for his work by attending, plus representatives from the Italian and international press—this structure, which aims to be not just a hub for showcasing the work of Franco Zeffirelli, but a training ground for young generations working toward careers in performing arts, such as directing, stage design, lighting, scoring and soundtrack composition, and screenwriting.
The Fondazione’s Executive Vice President Pippo Zeffirelli said, also on behalf of his adoptive father, “We are happy that the grand gesture of love and devotion that Franco Zeffirelli made—giving his life’s work and a portion of his economic resources to the Fondazione and its educational, archival, bibliographic, museum and expository activities—is being immortalized here today.”
“You will be struck,” Pippo Zeffirelli continued, “by the extremely evocative set-up, which reorganizes and accounts for a nearly 70-year career of a man of multifaceted ingenuity; the immense value in his astonishing drafts, true works of art that immortalized his ideas before they were brought to film or theatrical or operatic stagings; or the meaning-rich costumes on display, which he dreamed up, down to their sumptuous embroidery; or the nearly 10,000 books on the most varied of subjects, which he consulted as he carried out his work; and a limitless archive of documents. In the offices, classrooms and library we were also able to repurpose the wooden furnishings of the courthouse.”
Franco Zeffirelli elected to donate the fruits of his imaginative, ingenious spirit to Florence and to the world, because none of it should be lost or ignored—all of it is vital nourishment for the creative force of young talents in various sectors of the performing arts. 
“We are excited and honored to inaugurate the International Centre for the Performing Arts,” declared Mayor of Florence Dario Nardella, “which will bring together the large-scale professional legacy of the masterful Franco Zeffirelli. A centre dedicated to the enormous amount of material amassed through his decades of cinematic, scenographic, theatrical and operatic successes, and one that will include a museum, library, courses in direction, script writing, set design, photography, costuming, and acting. Beginning today, the former courthouse of San Firenze will no longer be a beautiful but empty container in the center of Florence; instead, it will become a benchmark for all young people who want to blaze a trail in the performing arts, and will be a genuine cultural jewel in the heart of the city.”
The guests wove their way through room after room, getting to see the classrooms, the Library and Archive, as well as the reception and refreshment areas, all on the ground floor. The ground floor is also the location of the Baroque oratory, which the Centre will use as a music room for 120 days through an agreement with the City of Florence, which will reserve the space for other uses during the remainder of the year.
The first floor holds the actual Museum, with a layout that captivates and engages the visitor, who will enter into the creative “furor” of Franco Zefferelli, transferred to each type of project he took on and evident from his drafts, which describe every scene down to the tiniest details, juxtaposed with synthetic and expressive director’s notes. 
The visitor route culminates in the immense Inferno room, where a full HD short film is screened, which uses digital techniques to animate the drafts and conceptual art drawings that the Maestro created to depict his personal vision of the Inferno, based on Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy. Begun as a cinematographic project in the 1970s but never brought to completion, few traces of Zeffirelli’s Inferno remain: only the 38 magnificent tables he drew depicting the Supreme Poet’s exploration of the dark forest, his meeting with Virgil, access to the infernal valley and journey through the circles of hell until exiting and returning to the surface-level world. The project was never carried out because Alfredo Bini could not find partners to support the important production effort. Zeffirelli would have chosen Dustin Hoffman to play his Dante. 
Another grand Zeffirelli success documented in the rooms is that of Jesus of Nazareth, which was screened both on television and in cinemas worldwide, with more than a half billion viewers. Many intriguing anecdotes remain in the air about this miniseries, such as the story of the actor Robert Powell (in the role of Christ), who recalls a moment of synchronicity that struck him during the Crucifixion. 
During the event, Francesco Ermini Polacci organized an evocative musical program, a prelude to the rich programming that he put in place for the Centre’s future initiatives, which can be found in the press kit. 
On the program, in collaboration with the Conservatorio Luigi Cherubini of Florence, is Claudio Monteverdi’s Toccata dall’Orfeo, truly emblematic of the birth of melodrama, performed by Giovanni Agriesti (trumpet), Damiano Giani (trumpet), Luca Pieraccini (trumpet), Matteo Spolveri (trumpet), Remi Houlle (percussion), and Tommaso Tabellini (percussion); in collaboration with the Associazione A. Gi. Mus. Firenze, violinist Pier Paolo Riccomini will perform Giga, taken from Partita n. 2 in D minor (BWV 1004) by Johann Sebastian Bach, in synthesis with the Baroque structure of the San Firenze complex. 
The International Centre for the Performing Arts was made possible by the City of Florence, which owns the property and granted a subsidized rental fee as an acknowledgment of the cultural nature of the project. Generous supporters of the project include Russian entrepreneur Mikhail Kusnirovich, through his brands Gum department store in Moscow’s Red Square and Bosco dei Ciliegi; the family of the American-Canadian financier Robert Friedland; and technical sponsors Targetti Sankey S.p.A. and Illum S.r.l. 
INFORMATION ABOUT THE FONDAZIONE FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI ONLUS 
The Fondazione Franco Zeffirelli Onlus, based in Florence, is a non-profit organization established by Franco Zeffirelli. Its objective is to make the director and producer’s artistic and cultural patrimony available to performance arts connoisseurs and enthusiasts, a legacy accumulated over his successful 70-year career. The Archive and Library are an extraordinary patrimony deemed “of particular historical interest” by the Italian Ministry for Cultural Heritage and Activities. Now this legacy has been donated to The Franco Zeffirelli International Centre for the Performing Arts as an intrinsic part of its activities. The Foundation’s President is Franco Zeffirelli, Gianni Letta Honorary President and Pippo Corsi Zeffirelli Vice President. 

Indie singer/songwriter Sam Valdez shares her debut single “Hours”

The song was premiered yesterday on Black BookStream and share “Hours” Soundcloud, Spotify, iTunes.

“Hours” is a warm and dark track, like nighttime in summer. Sam Valdez’s voice has been compared to Lana Del Rey and Cat Power, and the melody of “Hours” stands front and center of a minimalistic composition, with the keys, guitars and other instruments adding color to her lyrics, rather than taking turns between words and music. The song was produced, mixed and mastered by Max Braverman at his studio in Los Angeles.

“This song is about the hold loss can have on us, while simultaneously being in love with someone who shares a similar experience. I wanted “Hours” to convey the feeling of being aware of pain and the dependencies it can create, and learning to just give into it sometimes and then let it go,” says Sam.

“Hours” is the first single of Sam Valdez’s debut EP, due out late 2017.
LISTEN AND SHARE “HOURS”

About Sam Valdez
Sam Valdez is a 23 year old indie/folk singer based in Los Angeles. After playing with several bands and outfits, she found the essence of her solo sound and decided to run with it in both music and performances. Her unique voice and singing style has set her apart in and created great expectations for music to come.
Sam grew up at the edge of the desert, in Las Vegas (NV), and credits the desert as a major influence in her writing and composing. Classically trained in violin, the instrument also makes an appearance in some of her songs. Sam has been writing her own music for the past 3 years, mostly Americana material, but over the course of these years her style has evolved, letting her new influences have a sway over her music.
Sam listens to a lot of “old school folk stuff” such as Leonard Cohen and Emmylou Harris, but nowadays she’s more influenced by grunge and indie rock, such as The National, The War On Drugs, etc. Also a lot of downtempo, indie music make it onto the mix.
Approximately one year ago Sam Valdez decided to write and perform under her own name, to change the style and create more music. Being able to indulge in her own creative process has made this period of time very fruitful, and after gathering a band of talented musicians around her, she has been performing her own material around Los Angeles for the last 6 months. Aside from her own performances, she has collaborated with many musicians and projects in LA, either with her violin\ or as backup vocals.
Next Show

August 3rd at The Bootleg Theatre, L.A w/ Loyal Lobos and Aldre Williams. Tickets.

Connect with Sam Valdez