Friday, September 30, 2011

The Traveling Bluejayes Perform on Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Sunday, October 2, 2011 at 4 pm. Free!



Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome the Traveling Bluejays back to the Plaza Stage. The Bluejays will play on Sunday, October 2, 2011 at 4 pm. It's free!

The Traveling Bluejays is a great band that plays Folk, Rock, Rockabilly, Originals, Blues. The band members are Arlene Jaye, George Hardman, Karen Hardman, Rick Kanton, Michelle Murray, and Joyce Ettingoff. George Hardman, rhythm guitar and vox..they call him Elvis..veteran of many bands in the Washington DC area..loves to do rockabilly and Elvis and keep the audience entertained...Arlene Jaye, vocalist..veteran of many DC bands as a vocalist..also former member of CSA Jamboree...Karen Hardman, percussionist..has played with many bands and loves to sinng Cher Songs, Michelle Murray, songwriter and very active in SAW as well as fantastic perfomer on guitar and vox..she gives the Blue Jayes an original sound...Rick Kanton, guitar..one of those guitar guys who can play just about anything in any style..has played with many bands...Joyce Ettingoff, harmonica player..endorsed by Lee Oskar..was part of CSA Jamboree..will also play anything and take the harmonica where people think it shouldn't go.

For more information, check them out on Facebook or at http://www.reverbnation.com/thetravelingbluejayes

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Stealing Liberty Plays Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Sunday, October 2, 2011 at 1 pm. Free


Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome "Stealing Liberty" to the Plaza Stage on Sunday, October 2, 2011, at 1 pm. The performance is free.

Stealing Liberty is Jeff Snyder – Rhythm Guitar, Vocals, Tracy Beer – Lead Guitar, Trevor Specht – Saxophone, Vocals, Leah DeLano – Vocals, Bill Cahill – Bass, Todd Newell – Drums, and Jeff DLB - Keyboards.

Stealing Liberty, founded in January 2011, is a cover band focusing on jazzy, up-tempo versions of material by the Grateful Dead, Rat Dog and associated musicians. Founder Jeff Snyder of Baltimore, also in Shakedown Suite, provides crisp vocals and Bob Weir-style rhythm guitar. Saxophonist Trevor Specht, also in Silver Spring-based Chopteeth Afrofunk Big Band, adds vocals and a new element of sax lines weaving around and through the music. Lead guitarist Tracy Beer, also in August First, provides the soulful Jerry Garcia solos. Other personnel include Leah DeLano (formerly of The Wharf Rats and the Washington Revels) on harmony vocals, Jeff DLB (formerly Wharf Rats and Shakedown Suite) on keys, Bill Cahill (formerly Shakedown Suite, Deny Everything) on bass, and Todd Newell (Creek Shore Ramblers) on drums.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Salsa on the Plaza - Video



Ricardo Loaiza leads the Salsa on the Plaza program. Mr. Loaiza, a native of Colombia, is the originator the Latin Dance Company DC SALSEROS/LATIN VIBES which was launched in 1996 in Washington, DC. Ricardo has taught, choreographed and performed in more than 500 events in the Washington DC Metropolita, area as well as in over 20 cities in the USA. He has taught and Performed in various major SALSA international events in Holland, England, Germany, Dubai, Ireland, Puerto Rico, Japan, Aruba and Colombia. Currently he teaches Salsa-Aerobics (Dance Aerobics) at various Washington Sports Clubs, as part of a High and Low exercise program, for young and old.

For the last 10 years, he has helped organize and host the Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) Latin Dance Competition which has had as many as 10 schools participate in the past. As a result of this competition in November of 2010, he co-founded “The After School Latin Dance Fund”(ASDF), a non-profit organization that provides artistic, technical and financial support for the establishment of after school Latin dance programs with the hope of expanding the program to all 25 MCPS.

After School Dance Fund provides artistic, technical and financial support for the establishment After School Latin Dance Programs in all Montgomery County Public Schools (“MCPS”). ASDF offers its programs in an effort to combat the troubling prevalence of preventable social and health issues; particularly in the Latino community, including childhood obesity, teen pregnancy, high rates of high school drop-outs, and the devastating influence of gangs in our communities. The ASDF initiative aims to create a permanent space for participating MCPS students to be involved in a positive group activity with their peers after school. The GOAL is for students to learn to showcase popular Latin dances, as well as the importance of living a healthy mental and physical life style. To this end, dance becomes a vehicle for increased cultural awareness and pride, while fostering exercise and having fun. In addition, participants learn teamwork and gain leadership skills in preparation for competition with individuals dancers and dance teams from other schools. The artistic progress and continuous improvement in dance technique will have a positive impression in each participant's personality, manners and etiquette. Also, by participating in a structures program, students learn to be part of a team, to be responsible, on-time, respectful to their team members, adults and their parents.

As a result of last year MCPS High School 11th Annual Latin Dance Competition, which was held at the Strathmore, The ASDF proudly partnered with HIPtv, who produced a Documentary “The Road to Strathmore” which features the lives of four students from two different schools and their sponsors. The documentary will be PREMIERE in Silver Spring this Fall 2011 and will be submitted to local, regional, national and international film festivals. The Documentary elaborates on the struggle, success and importance of students to be involved in a positive group activity with their peers.


This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit their blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow them on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

County renews Silver Spring’s designation as arts district - Gazette

The Montgomery County Council approved an application Tuesday to renew an arts and entertainment district designation for Silver Spring, which has become a mecca for music and cultural events in the past decade.

Silver Spring was first given the title 10 years ago. The designation provides tax breaks for businesses, theaters and arts nonprofits in Silver Spring. It must be renewed every decade.

“We want to continue building the vibrant place that all these trailblazers started,” said Reemberto Rodriguez, director of the Silver Spring Regional Services Center. “That’s what the arts and entertainment designation will do.”

This summer, for example, downtown hosted about 20 festivals, as well as the weekly Fenton Street Market.

The Fillmore music hall, which opened Thursday, joins other performance venues such as Round House Theatre, Bonifant Theatre Space and Lumina Studio Theatre. Other arts venues include The AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center and the Regal Majestic 20 for movies and Pyramid Atlantic Art Center for visual arts.

Veterans Plaza, the open space in front of the Silver Spring Civic Building, also hosts a weekly program of concerts and game nights.

Mike Diegel, member of the Arts and Entertainment Advisory Committee in Silver Spring, said the designation is an economic development tool that will bring more money to the arts community, local businesses, the county and the state.

“From my perspective, we need to continue to focus and keep in mind that the idea is, by bringing more and more people to downtown, everyone makes more money,” Diegel said.

Alan Bowser, president of Silver Spring Town Center Inc., which plans programs for the Civic Building and Veterans Plaza, said the title helps build community solidarity.

“We live in a very diverse community, and we have seen first-hand how arts and cultural entertainment can strengthen the community,” Bowser said. “It makes people more knowledgeable and accepting of certain cultures. It helps people learn about different people and the way they dress and sing and dance, and that’s absolutely essential for the community.”

Diegel said the arts and entertainment committee is discussing adding even more culture options to Silver Spring in the next 10 years. He said members would like to see art studios that house artists in Silver Spring. Diegel also said committee members would like to see the brand of Silver Spring as an entertainment destination spread across the East Coast.

“Our vision for Silver Spring is to become a regular destination, not just for the surrounding county, but down to Richmond, [Va.,] and up to Philadelphia and Harrisburg, [Pa.],” Diegel said.

In the next decade, Bowser said he would like more public art in Silver Spring, for example local artwork displayed at bus stops. He said he’d also like more local, small music venues that support community bands as well as an expanded Silver Spring Blues Festival.

“I’d like to see Silver Spring go for more indigenous music,” Bowser said. “We have a lot of local people who are very talented.”

There are 19 arts and entertainment districts in the state. Bethesda and Wheaton are the only other two in Montgomery County.

Rodriguez said the application must be submitted to the state by Oct. 1, when the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development will make the final decision.

“After a decade of building the arts and entertainment district, now our challenge, if you will, is to coordinate collaboration and make what we are building that much more useful to our area residents and the region,” Rodriguez said.

Published: Wednesday, September 21, 201 by kristi tousignant, staff writer, ktousignant@gazette.net

Strings for Joy! perform on Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 7 pm. Free!


Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome Strings for Joy! to the Plaza Stage on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 7 pm. The performance is free.

Sligo Chamber Players began about 25 years ago with the mission to develop the talent of young string players via the mentoring of professional musicians. Sligo Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Takoma Park is considered home and its students, from the studio of Evonne Lindquist-Baasch.

Through the years Sligo Chamber Players have performed in Wales, Scotland, Canada, Jamaica, Bermuda, Iceland and about 20 of the United States, the United Nations, the Westminster and Coventry Cathedrals of England.

Most recently her student group, Strings for Joy! performed at the White House for President and Mrs. Obama and recorded for the television program, Kids Time Praise.

Tonight's performers are Alexandre Paintsil, Jepthalyne Senas, Kevin Gopala-Rao, Stephanie Birmingham, Aniza Moore, Breanna Roth, Evonne Baasch, violins and Dr. Ekatrina DiPinto, cello.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.
http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif
Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Dimensionz of Bluz on Veterans Plaza, Thursday, September 29, 2011, 7 pm. Free!


Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome Dimensionz of Bluz to the Plaza Stage. The performance is free.

Dimensionz of Bluz has been playing together for a year and live up to their name. Each of the members brings his own style of blues to synthesize a unique sound. Mike Baytop has a long history in the Washington area as a Piedmont or country blues musician. Time Nolte comes from the Midwest and brings a Chicago / rock style of blues. Willie Leebel has long been a student of the delta style of blues. And Marcus Childs-Moore has a strong background in jazz providing an additional element to the group. Plan to hear some blues standards performed in an inimitable way.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Thursday, September 22, 2011

The Archie Edwards Blues Ensemble on Veterans Plaza



The Archie Edwards Blues Ensemble is a group of musicians representing the Archie Edwards Blues Heritage Foundation, also known as the Barbershop, who perform for the public. The ensemble consists of foundation veterans as well all musicians who are new to the Barbershop. The AEBHF is dedicated to preserving the Piedmont or east coast style of blues. Performers for Tuesday, September 20 include: Chris Anderson, Mike Baytop, Eleanor Ellis, Jeff Hawkins, Willie Leebel and Adam Oppenheim.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

The Social Ramble Plays Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Thursday, September 22, 2011 at 7 pm. Free


Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome The Social Ramble to the Veterans Plaza Stage. The performance begins at 7 pm. It's free!

The Social Ramble is David Byrd, guitar, Jim Lande, clarinet, saxaphone, bones, and Howard Moss, harmonica.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit our blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

County renews Silver Spring’s designation as arts district - Gazette

Wednesday, September 21, 2011 by Kristi Tousignant, Staff Writer

The Montgomery County Council approved an application Tuesday to renew an arts and entertainment district designation for Silver Spring, which has become a mecca for music and cultural events in the past decade.

Silver Spring was first given the title 10 years ago. The designation provides tax breaks for businesses, theaters and arts nonprofits in Silver Spring. It must be renewed every decade.

“We want to continue building the vibrant place that all these trailblazers started,” said Reemberto Rodriguez, director of the Silver Spring Regional Services Center. “That’s what the arts and entertainment designation will do.”

This summer, for example, downtown hosted about 20 festivals, as well as the weekly Fenton Street Market.

The Fillmore music hall, which opened Thursday, joins other performance venues such as Round House Theatre, Bonifant Theatre Space and Lumina Studio Theatre. Other arts venues include The AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center and the Regal Majestic 20 for movies and Pyramid Atlantic Art Center for visual arts.

Veterans Plaza, the open space in front of the Silver Spring Civic Building, also hosts a weekly program of concerts and game nights.

Mike Diegel, member of the Arts and Entertainment Advisory Committee in Silver Spring, said the designation is an economic development tool that will bring more money to the arts community, local businesses, the county and the state.

“From my perspective, we need to continue to focus and keep in mind that the idea is, by bringing more and more people to downtown, everyone makes more money,” Diegel said.

Alan Bowser, president of Silver Spring Town Center Inc., which plans programs for the Civic Building and Veterans Plaza, said the title helps build community solidarity.

“We live in a very diverse community, and we have seen first-hand how arts and cultural entertainment can strengthen the community,” Bowser said. “It makes people more knowledgeable and accepting of certain cultures. It helps people learn about different people and the way they dress and sing and dance, and that’s absolutely essential for the community.”

Diegel said the arts and entertainment committee is discussing adding even more culture options to Silver Spring in the next 10 years. He said members would like to see art studios that house artists in Silver Spring.

Diegel also said committee members would like to see the brand of Silver Spring as an entertainment destination spread across the East Coast.

“Our vision for Silver Spring is to become a regular destination, not just for the surrounding county, but down to Richmond, [Va.,] and up to Philadelphia and Harrisburg, [Pa.],” Diegel said.

In the next decade, Bowser said he would like more public art in Silver Spring, for example local artwork displayed at bus stops. He said he’d also like more local, small music venues that support community bands as well as an expanded Silver Spring Blues Festival.

“I’d like to see Silver Spring go for more indigenous music,” Bowser said. “We have a lot of local people who are very talented.”

There are 19 arts and entertainment districts in the state. Bethesda and Wheaton are the only other two in Montgomery County.

Rodriguez said the application must be submitted to the state by Oct. 1, when the Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development will make the final decision.

“After a decade of building the arts and entertainment district, now our challenge, if you will, is to coordinate collaboration and make what we are building that much more useful to our area residents and the region,” Rodriguez said.

ktousignant@gazette.net© 2011 Post-Newsweek Media, Inc./Gazette.Net

Monday, September 19, 2011

Archie Edwards Blues Ensemble Plays Veterans Plaza, September 20, 2011, 7 pm. Free


Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome the Archie Edwards Blues Ensemble to the Plaza Stage. The program is Tuesday, September 20, 2011 at 7 pm. The performance is free!

The Archie Edwards Blues Ensemble is a group of musicians representing the Archie Edwards Blues Heritage Foundation, also known as the Barbershop, who perform for the public. The ensemble consists of foundation veterans as well all musicians who are new to the Barbershop. The AEBHF is dedicated to preserving the Piedmont or east coast style of blues. Performers for Tuesday, September 20 include: Chris Anderson, Mike Baytop, Eleanor Ellis, Jeff Hawkins, Willie Leebel and Adam Oppenheim.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit their blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow them on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Friday, September 16, 2011

Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. and Montgomery County to Partner on Silver Spring Community Programming


The Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. and Montgomery County have concluded a Memorandum of Understanding to promote community programming at the Silver Spring Civic Building and Veterans Plaza.

“This is very good news for Silver Spring,” said Alan Bowser, SSTCi’s President and member of the SSTCi Board of Directors. “The signing of the MOU is the culmination of many years of hard work by the SSTCi Board of Directors and Montgomery County officials to provide a viable framework for low-cost community access to the building. We’re dedicated to the proposition that the Silver Spring Civic Building and Veterans Plaza are vitally important public spaces for our neighbors and that they should serve as our community’s collective “living room.” We have a wonderfully diverse, local culture of community partnerships and artistic expression that needs to be nurtured and celebrated. With the MOU, we’ll be able continue our work to ensure that there are many exciting things to do, see and learn in downtown Silver Spring, and that the community has ready access to the building.”

The Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. (SSTCi) was established in 2004 to promote community-based arts & entertainment programming for the Silver Spring Civic Building and Veterans Plaza that was completed in 2010. The vision of the non-profit’s founders was to ensure that Silver Spring residents would have access to the new civic building after its completion and to promote community arts, entertainment and cultural uses in the new facility.

The Memorandum of Understanding, which became effective on September 15, 2011, facilitates the organization’s community-serving agenda by permitting SSTCi to use space in the building and on the Veterans Plaza at no-cost when its programs and activities are supporting a community project or program. SSTCi plans to partner, initially, with local non-profit arts & organizations to facilitate their access to the Civic Building and Plaza at no cost.

According to the MOU, SSTCi and its partner organizations would have to pay any required maintenance, security and other costs associated with the use of the space. SSTCi will coordinate the programming through the Director of the Silver Spring Regional Center and the County’s Community Use of Public Facilities (CUPF) program.

The Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. has been very active in promoting the arts and humanities in Silver Spring and in greater Montgomery County. It has organized the very successful Silver Spring Blues Festivals at Downtown Silver Spring which have entertained thousands of neighbors and visitors, the annual benefit concerts in support of Montgomery County’s veterans, community dance classes, and its popular Plaza Performances on Veterans Plaza. This year, alone, SSTCi’s Plaza Performances have brought nearly 50 free musical acts to the public, featuring jazz, blues, folk, classical, and rock music.

SSTCi is a 501(c)3 organization. The members of the SSTCi Board of Directors are: Alan Bowser, Aurelia Martin, Beth Wong, David Fogel, Don Berkemeyer, Graciela Jaschek, Harriet Weil, Jack Hewitt, Jon Lourie, Jose Dominguez, Mark Kozaki, Mary Ann Zimmerman, Reemberto Rodriguez, Sheryl Chapman, and Wanda Whiteside.

For more information, please visit SSTCi’s website at www.silverspringtowncenter.com, its blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/silverspringtowncenter or on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Save the Date - SSTCi Tribute to America's Veterans Concert, November 11, 2011 at 7 pm.!

Please save the date for SSTCi's fourth annual "Tribute to America's Veterans" Concert which will be held on Friday, November 11, 2011 at 7 pm in the Great Hall of the Silver Spring Civic Building.

Join us for a wonderful reception from 6 to 7 pm, followed by great music performances by guitar great Warner Williams, recognized by the National Endowment of the Arts for lifetime achievement in traditional music, and the Greater U Street Jazz Collective.

Details to follow.

Save the date! Friday, November 11, 2011 at the Silver Spring Civic Building.

"Salsa on the Plaza" tonight at 7 pm.

The Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. invites you to "Salsa on the Plaza," a multi-week Salsa dance class for all. And it's free! Starting Wednesday, September 14th--and continuing into October--Ricardo Loaiza and Elba Garcia will teach you how to dance the Salsa or help you improve you style!

What: Salsa Dancing on the Plaza
Where: Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Silver Spring, MD 20910
When: Wednesday, September 14, 2011, 7-9 pm.
Experience: No experience needed! Experienced dancers welcome!
Cost: Free!

Want to learn how to dance the Salsa? Want to improve your Salsa dancing? Join Ricardo, Elba and friends on Veterans Plaza for free Salsa classes, every Wednesday in September and on into October!

About Ricardo and Elba. Ricardo Loaiza, a native of Colombia, is the originator the Latin Dance Company DC SALSEROS/LATIN VIBES which was launched in 1996 in Washington, DC. Ricardo has taught, choreographed and performed in more than 500 events in the Washington DC Metropolita, area as well as in over 20 cities in the USA. He has taught and Performed in various major SALSA international events in Holland, England, Germany, Dubai, Ireland, Puerto Rico, Japan, Aruba and Colombia. Currently he teaches Salsa-Aerobics (Dance Aerobics) at various Washington Sports Clubs, as part of a High and Low exercise program, for young and old.

Joining Ricardo, the father of Esperanza Loaiza, in instruction is Elba Garcia, his life-long dance partner, wife and mother of their other 3 children--Ricardo Rey, Leonardo and Lorenza.

Mr. Loaiza has been a pioneer in his field and has facilitated many firsts throughout his career. Ricardo was the first local Latin Dance Instructor to start a Dance Company and to be invited to represent Washington, DC in various National and International events. The first in the DC Metropolitan area to provide students with progressive group and performance classes with a carefully planned syllabus and evaluation process. And the first to open a Latino Owned Latin Dance Studio in Silver Spring, MD in 2000. Ricardo is also a promoter of Salsa, Mambo and other Latin dances through WEPA Productions, who are the organizers for the International Salsa Conventions. Mr. Loaiza has paved the way for the many Dance Instructors and Dance Companies that currently exist in the DC Metropolitan Area. He is well known for his Group classes and ENERGETIC and FUN presence when teaching. Ricardo considers himself "a student of SALSA and Mambo" and takes every opportunity to learn new things everywhere he teaches.

For the last 10 years, he has helped organize and host the Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) Latin Dance Competition which has had as many as 10 schools participate in the past. As a result of this competition in November of 2010, he co-founded “The After School Latin Dance Fund”(ASDF), a non-profit organization that provides artistic, technical and financial support for the establishment of after school Latin dance programs with the hope of expanding the program to all 25 MCPS.

After School Dance Fund provides artistic, technical and financial support for the establishment After School Latin Dance Programs in all Montgomery County Public Schools (“MCPS”). ASDF offers its programs in an effort to combat the troubling prevalence of preventable social and health issues; particularly in the Latino community, including childhood obesity, teen pregnancy, high rates of high school drop-outs, and the devastating influence of gangs in our communities. The ASDF initiative aims to create a permanent space for participating MCPS students to be involved in a positive group activity with their peers after school. The GOAL is for students to learn to showcase popular Latin dances, as well as the importance of living a healthy mental and physical life style. To this end, dance becomes a vehicle for increased cultural awareness and pride, while fostering exercise and having fun. In addition, participants learn teamwork and gain leadership skills in preparation for competition with individuals dancers and dance teams from other schools. The artistic progress and continuous improvement in dance technique will have a positive impression in each participant's personality, manners and etiquette. Also, by participating in a structures program, students learn to be part of a team, to be responsible, on-time, respectful to their team members, adults and their parents.

As a result of last year MCPS Hih School 11th Annual Latin Dance Competition, which was held at the Strathmore, The ASDF proudly partnered with HIPtv, who produced a Documentary “The Road to Strathmore” which features the lives of (4) students from two different schools and their sponsors. The documentary will be PREMIERE in Silver Spring this Fall 2011 and will be submitted to local, regional, national and international film festivals. The Documentary elaborates on the struggle, success and importance of students to be involved in a positive group activity with their peers.

About Althea Grey-McKenzie. Assisting Ricardo and Elba for "Salsa on the Plaza" is Althea Grey-McKenzie, the Artistic Director for the White House Studios. Althea is an awarded artist and visiting scholar in dance and cultural event management for her work as a performer, instructor, educator, and grant committee panelist. In addition to her work for The White House Studios in Downtown Silver Spring, she is Choreographer for Caribbean Dance Traditions (CDT), a resident performing group at the studio that performs in the Washington Metro area and has been seen at The Takoma Park Folk Festival, Magical Montgomery, World of Montgomery Festival, Taste of Wheaton and Montgomery County Public Libraries. She currently serves as Chair for the National Caribbean-American Heritage Month Steering Committee for the Caribbean-American Chamber of Commerce in the Greater Washington Area and has coordinated several successful programs regarding Caribbean culture which were featured in the Washington Post, ‘Montgomery Extra ‘ section, the Silver Spring Gazette, and the Rockville Patch.

Ms. Grey-McKenzie directed successful programs including: the Caribbean Dance Genre Program for several years at the Gilchrist Center for Cultural Diversity in Wheaton, Maryland, and co-directed the Caribbean Cultural Youth Association in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Both programs brought folk and traditional dance and cultural workshops representing Caribbean and Latino Heritage to underserved families in the Washington Metro area. She was also instrumental in bringing theatrical arts and workshops to The CaribFest in Richmond, VA, The Neal-Marshall Black Cultural Center at Indiana University and the Murphy Fine Arts Center at Morgan State University for a wide range of audiences. Ms. Grey-McKenzie continues to bring the awareness of this rich artistic culture to audiences in the Washington Metro area and Baltimore and produced “Caribbean Carnival Experience” for a 750 audience assembly of elementary school and middle school agers in July 2011.

As a professional dancer, member performer and former member of two dance companies, Ms. Grey McKenzie has an extensive background in dance. She was member of La Musicale Dance Works (DC) for eleven years, Soul in Motion Players, Inc. (MD) for five years and currently a member of the Zomema Dance Ensemble in Prince George’s Maryland, and a continuing five-year member of Carivision Community Theatre, a Caribbean theatrical company in College Park, Maryland, Althea has a passion for dance and the arts, as well as celebrating the interrelated aspects of African, Caribbean, Hispanic, European, Asian and African-American dance, musical, and theatrical art forms and traditions.

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc.

Visit their blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow them on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/

Friday, September 9, 2011

For Guitar Man Warner Williams, passion outshines spotlight - Washington Post, September 5, 2011

By Justin Jouvenal, Published: September 5

To find the guitarist recently honored alongside B.B. King and John Lee Hooker as one of the nation’s greatest traditional artists, bypass the big clubs and head for a more unlikely spot: the Shady Grove Metro station.

Warner Williams just might be there picking his guitar, a bucket set in front of him for tips. It’s one of the last places you’d look for major talent, but Williams’s stage is wherever he is.

Williams can slide between styles as easily as the arm of an old jukebox snaps a fresh 45 on the spindle. Piedmont blues flows into hillbilly. R&B segues to bluegrass. Vintage rock gives way to gospel. His fingers are nimble but as unhurried as a country ramble. His voice is warm and weathered.

At 81, Williams is perhaps the greatest living example of a musician who grew up playing in the style of the songster — the largely African American tradition of troubadours that is older than the blues. And he may be among the last. Songsters once dotted the South. Some roamed far and wide playing on train platforms, dusty crossroads and as warm-up acts for medicine shows.

Before the rise of the record industry and radio, they were human iPods, able to pick out a dizzying array of popular songs for whoever had enough cash to call the tune.

This summer, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded Williams the nation’s highest honor for a traditional musician, a National Heritage Fellowship. The recognition is a departure for Williams, who released his first major-label album at the age of 74 and never pursued a full-time career in music in his earlier years. Instead, he drove a garbage truck for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission to support his wife and eight children.

In the spirit of the earlier songsters, Williams has spent most of his music-making years working a circuit that took him through the heart of a bygone musical Washington: suburban Maryland juke joints, rough-and-tumble house parties known as “house hops” and the District’s golden era of street-corner pickers.

The Guitar Man, as he bills himself, is an enigmatic character who rarely answers questions about himself with more than three words. (As a fellow musician put it, “You’d be fortunate for him to corroborate his date of birth.”) When he does speak of his youth, the stories sometimes change.

Williams wears wraparound shades and a cowboy hat, sometimes with a jackknife tucked in the band. He has had some minor scrapes with the law.

His commercial success has been limited, because he refuses to fly on planes and has an aversion to recording his own songs — not that the spotlight seems to matter much to him.

“I see him as one of the torchbearers,” said Rick Franklin, a blues guitarist who has played with Williams. “He learned his music and played his music in the community. He remained the neighborhood-type fixture. You can still find him playing on the street.”

A ‘country boy’

On a recent Wednesday night, Williams was to play a gig at the Armed Forces Retirement Home in Northwest Washington. Fifteen minutes before showtime, he sat down and plowed into his set, just as the sound man was trying to do a check. Williams blasted through everything from Fats Domino’s hit “Blueberry Hill” to his signature jaunty blues shuffle “Hey Bartender, There’s a Big Bug in My Beer.”

“Hey Bartender, there’s a big bug in my beer. . . . Big ole bug drinkin’ all my brew,” Williams crooned.

He stopped only once during the set to say: “My name is Warner Williams, and I’m from the country.”

Williams is from Takoma Park. When he was born May 7, 1930, the idea of a country boy from Takoma Park was less improbable. The city was near the edge of the D.C. suburbs. Williams said that cornfields stretched not too far from his home and that “old New Hampshire Avenue was nothing but woods and country.”

The son of a cement finisher and a house cleaner, Williams was one of 11 children raised in a musical family. He picked up the guitar at 4, spurred on by his father, who also taught music and played the fiddle. Williams’s older brothers, who served in the Navy, brought home the blues. He said he learned some songs by listening to records on a windup Victrola phonograph.

Relationships with white people could be combustible in Takoma Park. Williams said he was sometimes jumped in the street, but he also learned to play country with white neighbors. He sees country and blues flowing from the same source.

“They both got meaning,” said Williams. “Country ain’t nothing but the blues.”

By his early teens, Williams was hopping streetcars and buses to get to the District, often paying his fare with a song. He’d wander through the city, playing tunes for change until police shooed him away. A staple of Williams’s sets is a Piedmont blues classic, “Step It Up and Go,” which he has said is reminiscent of his early days as a street-corner player: “Up come the law and knocked on the door / You gotta step it up and go.”

At 22, he won an on-air talent show on WWDC hosted by Jackson Lowe, a white DJ who was an early champion of R&B. Williams started playing juke joints and house hops around the Maryland suburbs soon after.

At house hops, somebody would make food, another might bring the liquor and Williams was called on to provide the music. He would pick songs and people would dance, paying him tips in whiskey they would lay at his feet. Sometimes, the rowdy partying would spill into fistfights. Williams said he learned to play through the commotion, because stopping “makes it worse.”

When Williams married his wife, Karoline, and started his family, he continued to play on weeknights and weekends, said his daughter Sheila Williams. Many of Williams’s children live in the area.

“When he walked in that door from work, the first thing he did would be to pick up his guitar. He would just play for a couple of minutes, then go on about his business,” Shelia Williams said. “Anything tragic that happened in the family — whatever he felt — he expressed through music.”

New fame and an old gig

Tom Mindte first caught Williams at an open-mike night at a hole-in-the-wall bar in Olney in 1989. Mindte, who owns the small label Patuxent Records, had no idea who Williams was, but he was stunned by what he saw — something akin to walking into karaoke night and finding Placido Domingo on the mike.

“I wrote down every song that he did,” Mindte said. “It was amazing someone that great was at an open mike playing for free.”

Mindte later recorded a set of Williams’s music, but the quality of the recordings was not good enough to release. It took eight more years before Mindte could corral Williams to sit for another session. It turned into his first album, “Little Bit a Blues.” The album features Williams’s sidekick, Jay Summerour, on harmonica.

Williams’s major-label debut, “Blues Highway,” was released in 2004 and helped bring him to wider attention. Summerour has also helped guide Williams to bigger gigs at Wolf Trap, the National Folk Festival and other spots in recent years, but Williams is still more likely to be found playing a house party or a small club or busking on a street corner.

Williams’s sky-blue mobile home on Mount Zion Road in Gaithersburg sits on land owned by his grandmother, who Williams sometimes says was a slave.

Down the road, Williams regularly picks his guitar during the open-mike night at a small restaurant called Dave’s American Bistro. He has played there for roughly 25 years, said Kevin Sheehan, the owner.

Under other names and in earlier times, Sheehan said, the spot was a dirt-floored honky-tonk — or, as a sign once proclaimed at its entrance, “the honkiest-tonkiest beer joint in town.”

Williams played for white bikers, who bellied up to the bar for Pabst Blue Ribbon and pig knuckles. It wasn’t a place that always welcomed African Americans, but Williams had a loyal following, Sheehan said.

There’s nothing honky-tonk about the place now. Suburban families sit around handsome, stained-wood tables eating mahi-mahi tacos and charbroiled ribeye steaks.

During open-mike nights, Williams regularly sails past the 30-minute time limit, but no one seems to mind, Sheehan said. The Guitar Man and his guitar can still keep audiences rapt after 70 years.

“He’s a legend around these parts,” Sheehan said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/guitar-man-warner-williams-strums-the-blues-in-the-district/2011/08/15/gIQAu1qF4J_print.html

© The Washington Post Company

Machines on Vacation Plays Silver Spring's Veterans Plaza, Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at 7 pm. Free

Please join us for another exciting Plaza Performance as we welcome "Machines on Vacation" to the Plaza Stage.

Like building a house in the limbs of a tree, Machines on Vacation takes things that seem incongruous, incompatible, and even a bit dangerous and makes something uniquely awesome. Vocal harmonies, string quartet, acoustic guitar, and electronic beats and blips create a sound that is both new and accessible.

A DC-area band founded in 2009, Machines on Vacation played its first shows during the worst winter in the region’s history. Opening for touring artists like Ha Ha Tonka and headlining local shows, Machines on Vacation gained a devoted following and honed their fun, unique act. After a year of playing to enthusiastic audiences, Machines on Vacation recorded a three song EP ‘Oh Not Goodbye.’ The three songs featured on the EP – Oh No, Not Today, and Waving Goodbye – provide an excellent sample of how the group intertwines memorable melodies with non-standard chord progressions. The unique blend of strings and electronics on ‘Oh No,’ the energizing pulse of ‘Not Today,’ and the soaring harmonies of ‘Waving Goodbye’ demonstrate why Machines on Vacation is the band to watch in the D.C. area.

Machines on Vacation has five primary members and two alternates:

Ethan Balis – vocals, acoustic guitar, beats, blips
Melanie Miller – vocals, violin
Theresa Schlafly – violin
Kellie MacDonald – viola
Amanda Melara – cello
Rochelle Carpenter – violin
Jodi Balis – vocals

Contact Machines on Vacation by email at machinesonvacation@gmail.com, or on Facebook.com/MachinesonVacation

This program is a production of the Silver Spring Town Center, Inc. Visit their blog at www.silverspringtowncenter.blogspot.com, follow them on Twitter at www.twitter.com/sstowncenter or on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/groups/8305814081/

See our Plaza videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/TheTownCentre

See our Plaza pics at http://www.flickr.com/photos/alanbowser/collections/72157626644003377/