OneBeat + Shodekeh

41949905_10160830925605331_8771073115426914304_o.jpgOneBeat 2018 brings together 24 adventurous musicians from 17 countries to reimagine NASA’s landmark Voyager Golden Record through the lens of digital culture and global folklore.

38003751_10160633875320331_4204914403172155392_nEarlier this Spring I was invited to come on board as a Baltimore representative & music collaborator for OneBeat, a musical ambassador cultivation program, which is an extension of the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs + the legendary New York-based music organization Bang on a Can’s Found Sound Nation initiative.

Teaching young musicians how to serve as ambassadors of sound across the globe, while staying rooted in their original source of personal & professional cultural context? Twist my arm why don’t you?

They’re coming to the Creative Alliance & the Eubie Blake National Jazz Institute and Cultural Center, right here in Baltimore next month, so stay tuned for much, much more.  – Dominic Shodekeh Yalifero, Professional Beatboxer, TU Department of Dance & Board Member for TU Asian Arts + Culture Center

“Now in its seventh year, OneBeat brings musicians (ages 19-35) from around the world to the U.S. for one month each fall to collaboratively write, produce, and perform original music, and develop strategies for arts-based social engagement. OneBeat begins with an opening residency, when Fellows collaborate to create original material, record new musical ideas, and incubate their projects. OneBeat fellows then go on tour, performing for a wide array of American audiences, collaborating with local musicians, and leading workshops with youth. During the month, each OneBeat musician also sets out their plans for the future, developing projects in their home countries linked to a mutually-reinforcing network of music-driven social enterprises…” – OneBeat

The Baltimore Trio at Carnegie Hall, March 6

Picture1Faculty members Jeffrey Howard (violin), Cecylia Barczyk (cello), and Yoon-Wha Roh (piano) will perform at New York’s Carnegie Hall on Tuesday, March 6 for a 7:30 pm concert in the Weill Recital Hall. Featured on this program will be the Piano Trio by Claude Debussy. Composed when Debussy was only 18 years old, this four movement work combines the romanticism of Debussy’s youth with an ever growing Impressionist harmony. Dr. Howard will also perform with pianist Anna Soukiassian in two solo works; Tsirani Tsar, or Apricot Tree, by the famed Armenian composer and religious leader Komitas, and the hauntingly beautiful Nigun  from the Baal Shem Suite by Ernest Bloch. This combined chamber music concert will also feature music by Schubert, Brahms and Tchaikovsky, and is organized by Leo Management in New York. Tickets can be purchased through Carnegie Hall at www.carnegiehall.org/Events under Leo Artists Showcase.

In residence at Towson University since its founding in 1983, The Baltimore Trio has received critical acclaim for its diverse repertoire, refined tone, musical spontaneity and unanimity of style. These internationally renowned concert artists are all Professors of Music at Towson University where they teach individual lessons and coach chamber music.