Saturday, June 25, 2011

Every Day is Stellar at the International African Arts Festival

Now in its 40th year, the International African Arts Festival (IAAF) has something to bring residents and visitors back each day to Commodore Barry Park in Brooklyn, July 1 through 4, 10 AM to 10 PM. Does music with “tomate y cilantro” bring shivers to your spine? How about House music all night long? Do dancers leaping like gazelles across a sunny savanna inspire you? Will wisdom wrapped in chuckles give you the bigger picture? Then Colonel Abrams’ Dance Party will start the party quickly July 1. Performer and social activist Phyllis Yvonne Stickney will drop the knowledge July 3 & 4; Orquesta Tipica ’73 will have skirts swirling to salsa and Forces of Nature Dance Company majestically closes the weekend July 4.

July 2 three stalwarts of West African traditions will be honored. Keeper of Akan tradition Nana Okomfohene Opare Dinizulu, folklorist and percussionist Baba Chief Bey, and past artistic director of the Ishangi African Dancers Baba Kwame Ishangi all of whom were artistic and cultural pillars of the International African Arts Festival who performed virtually every year. In fact, the Dinizulu African Dancers, Drummers and Singers and the Ishangi African Dancers will perform this day. When asked about Dinizulu’s legacy, Nana Adzua Opare “wishes that he was here to see that what he believed for the future has manifested.” Of Ishangi’s legacy Kemetic priest and business executive Heru Ur Nekhet describes Ishangi’s multifacets in terms “his mental store of African cultural facts, martial arts skills and his work to build a museum in Tangi, Gambia.” Each man must be respected for his dedication to sharing the beauty and power of Africa. All three traveled to the continent to share cultural gems. Neil Clark quips, “Baba Chief Bey had a way of taking the alien, exoticness from Africa, and making it as familiar as collard greens, potato salad and fried chicken.”

Celebrating 40, or Arobaini in Kiswahili, would not be complete at this festival without a tribute to the musician, social critic, and teacher Gil Scott-Heron. Scott-Heron who passed at age 62, May 27, 2011 remains an icon to musicians, spoken word artists and social activists. Scott-Heron performed at The East, Uhuru Cultural Center and previous IAAF. The Tribute to Gil Scott-Heron featuring The Last Poets and the Midnight Band is scheduled for July 3.

Commodore Barry Park is located near the Brooklyn Navy Yard and Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, bounded by Flushing Ave., Navy St., and Park Ave. Admission is free, but $3 donations for adults and $1 donations for children are needed.

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Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Advertising Week2007

In its fourth year, Advertising Week2007 ran from September 24 – 28 in various venues in New York City. The splashy event drew advertising and media leaders from the US and Canada. This year’s focus was social impact, talent and diversity. Advertising agencies recognize the Internet’s rise as an important media that supports do-it-yourself programming. More Americans turn from ads that sell but don’t show America’s diversity in race, style and expression. New blood from different veins is needed to maintain the talent bank and address diversity in the media and the agency work place.

During the New York Times CEO Summit I – Media, held September 26, Laura Desmond CEO of StarCom Media Vest Group – The Americas stated that “There was no right or wrong way to get on the superhighway of change…we just have to commit to changing media choices…include digital and mobile channels.” Emilio Estefan shared his thoughts on connecting with Latinos during Univision’s Connect Via the Cultural Beat. Estefan, media genius and Grammy Award winner, believes music is an essential element for ads and programming to cross national boundaries. North American agencies must get off the trap of simply adding a beat and translating an ad to Spanish language. Rather, “the message requires a cultural translation.” While Estefan stressed the many nations that comprise Hispanic America, he fell short by not mentioning the ethnic diversity. Hispanics range from the light tan and slightly wavy-haired people who populate Telemundo and Univision programming to the Asian, the brown indigenous and African types who live there, too.

The highlight for September 26 for this columnist was Chaka Khan and Emily King’s appearance at Tribeca Cinemas, after the Branded Music Entertainment: How Leading Brands Activate Through Music panel. It was as if Chaka Khan was performing in my living room. Chaka Khan sang two cuts from her latest CD Funk This and classic rocking anthem “I’m Every Woman.”

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