Carnegie Hall's MUSICAL EXPLORERS Begins 12/9
Musical Explorers, an education program for New York City students in grades K-2 developed by Carnegie Hall's Weill Music Institute (WMI), builds basic music skills in the classroom as children learn songs from different cultures, reflect on their own communities, and develop singing and listening skills. Each year, the program culminates in a series of concerts held in Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall at the end of the fall and spring semesters, with artists representing the wide variety of cultures and styles found throughout New York City's five boroughs. Artists performing in this year's concerts include Haitian singer Emeline Michel, Michael Farkas and his jug band The Wiyos, Argentinian musicians Sofia Rei and Sofia Tosello, Yiddish folk violinist Yale Strom, Mexican harpist Celso Duarte, and classical tenor Dan Snyder. This season's concerts are scheduled for December 9-12, 2014 and May 5-8, 2015.
New this season, Carnegie Hall will transmit a fully-produced webcast of these concerts to participating schools that are unable to attend the culminating concerts, offering the opportunity for virtual participation in the Musical Explorers program for the first time. These webcasts will be available online the week following the performances at carnegiehall.org/MusicalExplorers. Expanding the Musical Explorers program beyond New York City for the first time, Carnegie Hall has now partnered with the Savannah Music Festival in Savannah, Georgia and The Broad Stage in Santa Monica, CA, with each organization adapting the program's curriculum for use in their own communities. These new partnerships elevate the total number of students served by Musical Explorers to nearly 15,000 across the US during the 2014-2015 season. Link Up, WMI's orchestral program for grades 3-5, already reaches 300,000 students around the world each year through partnerships with over 70 orchestras.
Videos