Music lovers across the country will get a taste of 蜜柚直播 when singer-songwriter Brian Lopez hits the virtual stage as part of the national series.
The series, which will present 200 diverse and visionary visual and performing artists in events livestreamed on , kicked off this week and runs 20 weeks into December.
Lopez on Tuesday said he had no idea how he came to the attention of the Kennedy Center which reached out to him two weeks ago. The center, home of the , has hosted concerts by the biggest names in entertainment. It also awards lifetime to performing artists for their contributions to American culture. Past winners have included 蜜柚直播鈥檚 own .
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Lopez and his guests 鈥 蜜柚直播 singer-songwriter and the Latinx cumbia duo Los 脠splifs 鈥 will be roughly 2,280 miles from that hallowed Kennedy Center stage when they perform Friday. But the idea of having a national audience experience 蜜柚直播 art is almost more exciting than being on that stage, Lopez said.
鈥淚 want people from across the country to get a unique sense of what this area looks like and sounds like and the things that we care about from this area, and all of that can be done through advocacy of music,鈥 Lopez said. 鈥淎nd I think that鈥檚 what you get from music.鈥
One of the goals of 鈥淎rts Across America鈥 is to showcase artists who 鈥渆xemplify unique regional artistic styles, and are using their medium as a tool for advocacy and social justice,鈥 according to the Kennedy Center.
鈥淚n these times when people are striving for liberation, I think it is very important for us as brown and Black people to show people how we can strive to keep our traditions鈥 alive and relevant, said Saul Millan of .
Friday鈥檚 concert will attract the biggest audience for Nogales native and 蜜柚直播 resident Millan and his musical partner Caleb Michel, who lives in Phoenix. The pair, whose band includes Chris Del Favero, Zach Parker, Casey Hadland, Alan Acosta and Gus Woodrow, have focused their attention on small statewide and regional festivals including appearing at HoCo Fest at Hotel Congress in 2018 鈥 the year the pair launched the band after playing together for nearly a year in several ensembles in Phoenix.
The 25-year-old Millan launched his music career playing in Orkesta Mendoza when he was 18, and the Mexican Institute of Sound. Michel, also 25, has been playing percussion with the Afro-Cuban All Stars since 2014.
Los 脠splifs fills in the musical blanks for both, borrowing influences from contemporary Latinx rhythms of cumbia and porro, as well as traditions of 19th-century Cuban chang眉铆 and early-20th-century son music.
鈥淲e are trying to incorporate those Latinx rhythms with new perspective aimed at younger people,鈥 said Millan, who said his overall goal for his music is to reach mainstream audiences without sacrificing his art.
鈥淲e want to make space for this Latin music and this new Latinx music into (the mainstream),鈥 he explained, adding that he would love to see his band included in a hip-hop or jazz festival, for example, instead of being relegated only to Latin events.
鈥淲hen this opportunity arose, I thought it was an awesome chance to showcase the universality of the music,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 want Latino kids to see that you can be into this music but also be into fashion and really hip (expletive). I want to empower Latino kids.鈥
Friday鈥檚 Kennedy Center concert starts at 1 p.m. 蜜柚直播 time. Tune in on the center鈥檚 Facebook page at .
Others showcased during the program鈥檚 premiere week have included Minnesota鈥檚 Movement Music, Virginia鈥檚 fiddle fanatics Earl White and Eddie Bond, and Dimensions Dance Theatre of Miami (Florida) with Sammy Figueroa and Celia and Paco Fonta.