Alabama’s Andrea Carlisle Does It All in Gospel Music
Get our free mobile app
Andrea Carlisle was born in 1978 in Birmingham, Alabama to Anthony and Patricia Carlisle. She began her singing career at the age of 5 in the church that she attended. From that age she sang in choir in jr high school Where she was voted Most Talented. Also she continued on in high school where she sang in several programs in her school she was a member of WJ Nichols ensemble, Minor High School Gospel Choir also she was active in her church Rising Star Baptist Church under the leadership of her godparent’s Reverend James and Debra Kelley. Andrea passion for gospel music has been inspired by many greats such as Mahalia Jackson, The Barret Sisters, James Cleveland, Katie Sankey and many others. God also begin adding songwriter to her gift when he was preparing her for future. In 2015 Andrea began her career working with Murray Productions she posted a song she wrote on Facebook social media page called
Originally published on May 22, 2021 11:53 am
In an empty lot along the railroad tracks in Baltimore, the passing train horn competes with the reverberating buzz of dirt bikes.
The buzz is coming from a Saturday morning class for students at B-360, a nonprofit that uses dirt bikes to teach elementary and high school students math and science.
Brittany Young, CEO and founder of the nonprofit B-360, speaks with a couple of people from the neighborhood, who heard the dirt bikes and came to the parking lot to ride themselves.
André Chung for NPR Fixing and repairing a bike is mechanical engineering, says Brittany Young, an engineering sciences educator who founded the program. Most people don t realize when dirt bike riders pop a wheelie, it s actually like a physics equation.
In an empty lot along the railroad tracks in Baltimore, the passing train horn competes with the reverberating buzz of dirt bikes. The buzz is coming from
André Chung for NPR
toggle caption André Chung for NPR
Instructor Harold Toms (left) and participant Tathaiso Martin, 18, ride wheelies in a Baltimore parking lot. B-360, run by founder Brittany Young, is a program that seeks to offer alternatives to recklessly riding dirt bikes and ATVs on city streets. André Chung for NPR
In an empty lot along the railroad tracks in Baltimore, the passing train horn competes with the reverberating buzz of dirt bikes.
The buzz is coming from a Saturday morning class for students at B-360, a nonprofit that uses dirt bikes to teach elementary and high school students math and science.
A Baltimore Youth Program Mixes A Passion For Dirt Bikes With Science wfae.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wfae.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.