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Stanford funds community projects to address pandemic challenges

Norah Jones Talks Her First Live Album

Oh and Sorey aren t mere collaborators or accompanists; they re educators and composers in their own rights. Of Sorey s drumming, Iyer cites a life-sustaining kind of magic. And of Oh s bass playing, Her awareness of and relation to pulse, it s like micro-detail, he says. Those qualities and more can be found on  Uneasy, the trio s first studio record, which drops April 9 on ECM Records. The album is a mix of topical material Children of Flint with Iyer originals ( Combat Breathing ) and standards ( Night and Day ) from deep in their wheelhouse. Most importantly, Iyer considers the pair to be his musical family; together, they re his stronghold through a racially and sociopolitically turbulent time. And with the tragic Atlanta spa shootings in the rearview, the cover where the three musicians  names float around an out-of-focus Statue of Liberty is a side-eyed glance at what it means to be an American.

Work of diverse artists showcased in new series

Kilbride based Centre for Creative Practises has launched a diversity series celebrating the work of migrant and culturally diverse artists living in Ireland. The new online series is called Against the Odds2 and is part of the Centre for Creative Practices (CFCP) annual New Voices of Ireland series. Now in its eight-year, the New Voices of Ireland Series is an annual project that provides a platform for migrant and culturally diverse artists to present their work to the wider community. The initiative is supported by the Arts Council of Ireland. The award-winning CFCP is a not for profit organisation is dedicated to connecting, integrating, and promoting migrant and culturally diverse artists and inter-cultural arts practices in Ireland, having been established in 2009.

God Desires Healing – Episcopal Cafe

by Christine Aroney-Sine As we traverse this second year of COVID with fears about the possibilities of more restrictions conflicting with our desire to get rid of masks and start gathering together, I know that many of us are wondering, “Does God believe in healing?” The rising death toll, and the devastation to the lives of so many of our loved ones has left us wondering if God cares. It’s not just COVID that makes us struggle either. It’s the friends with cancer, chronic illnesses or mental illnesses. Then as we look at the broader world, we realize the need for healing in relationships, in racial injustices, in environmental pollution.

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