Tuesday, September 11, 2018

PRINCE 4U: A Symphonic Celebration

Fans in Richmond, VA got another chance to delight in the music of Prince Rogers Nelson.

A tribute to Prince at the Altria Theater. Photo CD Brown. (More pics here.)
Purple-clad concert goers took to the Altria Theater last Sunday to hear renditions of the late singer's music during a concert event titled 4U: A Symphonic Celebration of Prince, courtesy of The Richmond Symphony.  Fans were thrilled to hear their Prince favorites.

"I love all of Prince's music", said Paulette Wyatt, dressed in a zippered sweatshirt with the star's face prominently displayed. "They played Controversy, Take Me With You", she said as she began to list the many songs played on the evening.

Prince had an array of songs and a musical catalog that spanned a career of nearly fifty years.

"They did so many, it was amazing", said Kimmi another 4U concert attendee. 

Attendees wore purple shoes, Prince t-shirts, ruffled blouses and even  purple hair to commemorate the world renown, multi-talented superstar. 

A 4U concert goer wears a T-shirt with the PRINCE Love Symbol. (We love it!)

The event ended with the orchestra playing Prince's signature song, Purple Rain, named after his 1984 film.

"It was insane. It was really emotional", Kimmie said.

The 4U celebration (named after Prince's April 7, 1978 album of the same) performed at Wolf Trap (outside Washington, D.C.) the weekend before. More performances are scheduled across the country. Check the tour site for a performance in your area.

The event is sponsored by LIVE NATION, the only 'Estate-approved' symphonic production of the Purple One's music. The Root's QuestLove helped curate the music for the performances.

For more info on the amazing work of our beloved PRINCE, (please, I beg you), head on over to https://www.princeestate.com. You won't be disappointed.

Before you go, we have to ask: What's your fave PRINCE song? Let us know in the comment section below.

Related

RVA remembers PRINCE

Monday, January 16, 2017

LeVar M. Stoney, Richmond's New Mayor, Sworn In

January 16, 2017 (Richmond, VA) - Richmond has sworn in its newest mayor, The Honorable Levar M. Stoney.

"I'm humbled", Stoney said in a jammed-packed ceremony at City Hall on Saturday.

In his swearing-in speech Stoney, Richmond's youngest mayor at age 35, described Richmond as a "diverse city", an "inclusive city", and "a welcoming city."

New mayor of Richmond, Levar M. Stoney remarks during 
his swearing ceremony Saturday.


But Stoney also said that there is "another city", one he described as a city where 1 in 4 residents and nearly 40% of the city's children live on the poverty line.

"And that has to change", he said to applause from attendees. Stoney has championed the proposed 'One RVA' campaign, which suggests 'opportunities for all' who lives in the city.

Stoney is the 80th mayor of Richmond. He is the product of two teen-aged parents and was raised by his father and grandmother who he credits for his victory.

Stoney with his brother and public officials
attend swearing in ceremony.
"Instead of anger and apathy, they gave me hope and opportunity", Stoney said. "That's why I'm here today."

Stoney's brother joined him at the podium during his swearing in. Governor Terry McAuliffe and Senator Tim Kaine were also present at the ceremony.

Stoney defeated former mayor Dwight C. Jones who had been the city's mayor since 2009. Jones was not in attendance.


Stone(y) cold facts:

Graduate of James Madison University
First African American Secretary of the Commonwealth of Virginia
Youngest member of Governor Terry McAuliffe's cabinet
Worked to restore civil and voting rights
Served as McAuliffe's Deputy Campaign Manager

Youngest leader of a state Democratic party in the country
2006 graduate of Richmond's Minority Political Leadership Institute
VCU Massey Cancer Center Advisory Board member
Member of  the NAACP and Richmond Crusade for Voters
Born March 20, 1981
First in his family to graduate both high school and college
(Source: Stoney Inaugural program)


Packed house for Stoney swearing in at City Hall.



Public officials attend Stoney swearing in.



A Levar Stoney yard sign adorns the front yard of an RVA home.





Photos:CD Brown



Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Black History Month, 2016. Can We Talk About Successes?

Another year, another chance to CELEBRATE the successes and accomplishments of a people who rise and do great things in the face of challenge and adversity. Keep moving forward.

2016 Black History Month artwork VCU News.
Can we talk about the successes? Modern day success stories?  Feel free to ad yours.  Because Black History is made every day.


Ten year-old works on her PhD.
Jackson State Students Develop Technology to Reduce Diabetes-Related 
Triplets Set to Attend Ivy League School
New Orleans to take down Confederate flag
Triplets Graduate Magnum Cum Laude
Retired NBA star builds affordable housing
Fox News reveal Black History, founders of America

Celebrate Black History 365, dailyBecause of Them We Can.


Thursday, November 12, 2015

VCU students share stories of inequity in wake of University of Missouri racism claims

Virginia Commonwealth University students staged a rally Wednesday to show support for students at the University of Missouri.

 "We want them to know we're fighting with you", said an organizer of the rally.

University of Missouri (MIZZOU) students cited claims of racism on their campus that they say went unaddressed by university officials, most notably the university's president Timothy Wolfe.  The students' protest led by members of the university's football team, and others at the school, led to Wolfe's resignation.

Reports indicate death threats had been made to students by a MIZZOU student.

"This could be us", the VCU organizer said to a gathering of hundreds of students.  "What they're dealing with we could be dealing with right now."

Nineteen year-old Hunter Park, was charged with making terrorist threats on social media.


 
More video.

The VCU rally bought out representatives from the office of the president who addressed student concerns that they say include the lack of teacher diversity at the school.

"I have no Black teachers", one student at the rally said.

Wanda Mitchell, Vice President of Inclusive Excellence serving as the Chief Diversity Officer at VCU, said her office has been "working to ensure there is teacher diversity at the school" citing that her office has "strategies surround recruitment retention, graduation and promotion of faculty of color."

"We have plans", she said.

 Wanda Mitchell, Vice President of Inclusive Excellence serving as the Chief Diversity Officer at VCU speaks to the assembled students over their concerns of  lack of teacher diversity at the university.
The university held a speaking engagement headlined by Dr. Fred Bonner who Mitchell said "has done research on Black faculty and faculty of color to look at strategies to increase inclusion in higher education."

In addition to lack of diversity at the teacher level, and other concerns, the students also shared their experiences and encounters with campus police.

"I've been to a lot of rallies where there have been rallies for student debt and and homosexual rights, a student said. "Why is there no police presence for that, but whenever there's a rally with a lot of people of color, the Feds come out of, like, the woodwork?", asked the student of VCU Chief of Police John Venuti who was also in attendance to address the student's concerns.

Venuti, who said he was at the rally because he "wanted to be there" and not because he "had to be there", said the police presence is there "to make sure you are allowed and afforded the opportunity to your right to free speech."

An emotional student (left) is being consoled by another student after VCU police chief John Venuti referred to the mostly African American students and rally organizers as "you people."  He later apologized for the comment.  
[See a different 'free speech' result for MIZZOU students]

Another student shared his experience where he said a VCU police officer asked him for his ID while he and friends were standing on the front porch of a residence.  The student said the officer told him to put his hands on the patrol car and offered no answer as to why he was being detained.

Venuti said he didn't know why the officer acted that way, but told the students they could report any acts of bias or profiling to the police at either the VCU police web site or by calling the VCU police station.

In the wake of  the events at the University of Missouri VCU president Michael Rao issued a campus-wide email to students on Wednesday supporting the students for taking a stand with Missouri students.
Though other universities have made national headlines, I am mindful that these issues are no less important here. And I urge the VCU community to remember that these are not issues for only some of us, but for all of us. Every single member of our university must always feel free, empowered, engaged and respected—and when even one of us isn’t, then we all lose. That is because we lose the chance to learn from and to be inspired by the experiences of all members of our community.
We must always stand together as one VCU, with one mission:  to advance the human experience for all people, through teaching, research, creativity, engagement, and care.
VCU students hold handmade signs to show solidarity with University of Missouri students' plight with campus racism.
Rao's email states that his office is planning a Presidential Forum on Diversity and Inclusion (PFLD&I) on Wednesday, November 18 in the Student Commons that will include senior members of his leadership team along with student leaders and members of VCU's Board of Visitors, "for whom diversity and inclusion remain paramount."

Rao did not attend Wednesday's rally, and his email to students did not make clear whether he will attend the November 18th scheduled event which is slated to be both live streamed and live Tweeted, the email states.

Organizers of Wednesday's student rally say they also plan to take a group photo and send a letter of support to MIZZOU's Black student leadership organizations to show their solidarity.

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Also

VCU students "make it real", keep it real.

Organizers invoke a must-win attitude for freedom.

Read about the MIZZOU mess.

Langston Hughes' (born in Missouri) poem, titled 'Youth' was read to the 2012 high school graduating class of Joplin, Missouri by President Obama who gave the commencement address.

The words fitting, and worth remembering, at this time.

We have tomorrow
Bright before us
Like a flame.
Yesterday
A night-gone thing,
A sun-down name.
And dawn-today.  Broad arch above the road we came.
We march.

The president said, referring to the hurricane that ravaged the city of Joplin that same year:

"The road has been hard.  The day has been long.  But we have tomorrow, and so we march.  We march, together, and you are leading the way.  Congratulations.  May God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America." 


**Updated November 18, 2015

VCU students stage walk-in to VCU president's residence, demanding changes.

VCU president holds diversity forum to discuss African American teacher retention, and more.


Saturday, September 12, 2015

VCU graduate finds history - and family - during dig at slave site

A VCU World Studies graduate with a penchant for history and foreign language finds a piece of her family's history during an excavation at the Montpelier slave grounds of president James Madison.

Michelle Taylor pieced together family photos and her Gilmore family name to make an astounding genealogical connection.

Learn more here.

Source: VCU News


Saturday, October 26, 2013

Richmond Roads Reveal Desparate Repair Needed

If you've traveled over Richmond's roads lately, you've probably hit a pot hole, or two. Richmond's road, in certain areas, have reached an all time embarrassment for the Capital of Virginia.

On Richmond's North side, we witnessed parts of Chamberlayne Avenue in need of completed repair. During the summer, road work began on a mile-long stretch of the avenue, giving the impression that the road was being repaired.  Road crews blocked much of the left side of the northbound lane, interrupting traffic flow for weeks.   The assignment was never completed and still remains a hazard to drive on.

We tried to avoid this tactless display of road repair at the intersection of Brook Road and Bellevue, also on Richmond's North side. 

Take a look at the view at the intersection, and again at the close-up view.


Intersection of Bellevue and Brook Road.  Photos/ CD Brown.



Intersection of Bellevue and Brook Road.  Photo/ CD Brown.
The downtown district doesn't fair much better.   We thought only the roads in Shockoe Slip were supposed to be bumpy and rocky because of the cobble stone roads, and don't expect the same on asphalted roads.

If you'd like to see the roads-of-Richmond in much better condition, join us by emailing the representative in your district and tell them the roads where you live and work need to be repaired (professionally) as soon as possible, and definitely by the upcoming November 5th election.

You may also contact the Mayor's office by clicking here, and selecting the 'Citizen's Request' tab.
Call the Mayor's office at 646-7970, or fax your pot hole concern to 646-7987, or email the mayor at askthemayor@richmondgov.com.

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Join our RVA pothole campaign on Twitter!

Use hash tag #RoadsInRichmond on Twitter.  Tweet your pothole sighting to help get it repaired!

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Marcus Johnson, The Hippodrome Start Off Richmond Jazz Fest Weekend

You could not have asked for a better summer evening to kick off Richmond's Jazz weekend celebration; and what better indoor venue to do so than the newly renovated Hippodrome Theatre in the city's Jackson Ward area.


Washington, D.C.'s own jazz piano extraordinaire, Marcus Johnson, performed to a sold out and nearly standing-room-only crowd in the theatre's stately Mansion 26 room where he eloquently serenaded (and funk-ti-fied) a deserving crowd of nearly 800 MJ fans.

With his mellow blend of signature jazz staples and funky, upbeat contemporary songs Johnson remains a crowd pleaser.

With 17 albums (and a line of bottled wines) to his credit, one can see why this man is one of the hardest working jazz artists in the country.

The talented band of seven performed a jazzy combination of Beyoncé's 'Me Myself and I' along with Parliament Funkadelic's 'Make My Funk the P Funk' (in this case the 'J' funk), and a rendition of Floetry's 'Say Yes'.

Can you say standing ovation?

Add in an amazing band to boot, complete with saxophone great Brian LeNair who left the crowd still wondering how he can hold a note for that long (seemingly three minutes), good food, a chic and stylish crowd, and you got a night on the town not soon to be forgotten.

The historic Hippodrome Theatre, home to vaudeville acts of the 1914s era, and acts of the 1940s that showcased the likes of James Brown, Ella Fitzgerald and Ray Charles, is located at 528 N. Second Street.

If you're looking for a good time and great performances, then The Hipp is it.