Super fun event last night with The Element Tour, ClifBar and Kavu! We blocked off the street in front of the KEEN Garage. Got to hang out with lots of great people along with our friends at Wend, Surfrider and the Forest Park Conservancy.
Enjoy this short video montage of the festivities…
The Giving Tree Band is widely considered the “greenest” act in America. Their current album has been called the “greenest of albums” (Chicago Sun-Times) and “a virtuosic folk rock manifesto for treehuggers” (Illinois Entertainer). It was engineered exclusively with renewable solar energy at the world’s first certified carbon neutral building, where the band commuted over 500 miles by bicycle during the recording session.
The CD’s are packaged with 100% recycled materials and the music is created with instruments built from naturally fallen trees and reclaimed woods. Currently, half of the proceeds from music sales are being donated to charity. (Source: Nau’s 2010 Partners for Change candidate)
During the most recent KEEN sales meeting, our President and CEO James Curleigh invited Dominique Garcia to Portland Center Stage’s The Armory to talk about her Hybridlife – family, music and art. Dominique’s music can be heard on MySpace here. You can also check out her artwork here.
For the past four years Playing for Change has been traveling the world with recording equipment and cameras in search of inspiration. Playing for Change traveled from streets and subways to Native American reservations, through African towns and villages, up to the Himalayan Mountains, and beyond. Throughout this journey Playing for Change has created a movement connecting the world through music.
VALLEDUPAR, Colombia – Vallenato is the most popular form of traditional music in Colombia. The songs, which can be meloncholy tales of heartbreak or rousing calls to party, are dominated by the accordion. They’re all over Colombian radio.
Rather than aspiring to be guitar gods, many Colombian children dream of striking it rich with the accordion, a bulky instrument that seems to be the result of a keyboard mating with a cash register. Many youngsters in the northern city of Valledupar – the cradle of Vallenato – get their start at a music school founded by Andres “El Turco” Gil, himself an accordion legend. He takes in children as young as 3, offers them scholarships, loans them instruments and begins the long, arduous process of forming the next generation of squeeze box stars. Some of the best will be featured at Colombia’s annual Vallenato music festival that runs from April 28 to May 2.
More about Vallenato music
Vallenato, along with cumbia, is presently a popular folk music of Colombia. It primarily comes from the Colombia’s Caribbean region. Vallenato literally means “born in the valley”. The valley influencing this name is located between the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and the Serranía de Perijá in northeast Colombia. The name also applies to the people from the city where this genre originated: Valledupar (from the place named Valle de Upar – “Valley of Upar”). In 2006 Vallenato and cumbia were added as a category in the Latin Grammy Awards. Source: Wikipedia