Chicago Children’s Choir honors Juneteenth with virtual concert
A New Freedom: Black Voices Honoring Juneteenth in a Time of Struggle
Free livestream on Friday, June 19, at 6 p.m. on Facebook and YouTube
(June 12, 2020) –
Chicago Children’s Choir (CCC), a nationally recognized nonprofit
founded in Hyde Park in direct response to the Civil Rights Movement in
1956, announces
A New Freedom: Black Voices Honoring Juneteenth in a Time of Struggle, a free virtual concert of music and spoken word in honor of Juneteenth on
Friday, June 19 at 6 p.m. Featuring performances from Black CCC
alumni, the concert is curated by CCC Englewood Neighborhood Choir &
In School Conductor Lonnie Norwood, CCC Alumna Tramaine
Parker, and CCC Associate Artistic Director Mark Myers. The concert will be livestreamed on CCC’s
Facebook and
YouTube. For more information, visit
ccchoir.org.
Featured
artists include Phillip Armstrong, Jonathan Green, Nicole Heaston,
Chloé Johnson, Keanon Kyles, Brandon Lampkin, Jonita Lattimore, Avilla
Martin, W. Mitchell Owens, III, Tramaine
Parker, Michael Preacely, Isaiah Robinson, Rachel Robinson, Allison
Semmes and Jonathan Swain.
Founded
in direct response to the Civil Rights Movement in 1956, Chicago
Children’s Choir unequivocally asserts that Black Lives Matter.
Juneteenth is CCC’s call to action to persist
and insist on the fullness of freedom promised to some 250,000
emancipated Africans in Texas in 1865 and all ancestors of African
descent, who were repeatedly denied equality and opportunity. Juneteenth
celebrates dutiful resistance to systemic oppression
and criminalization of Black skin and the resilience of the ancestors
who endeavored to stand at fatal risk for the freedoms that Civil Rights
leaders and Black Lives Matter protesters fight for today. Change does
not happen without struggle and demonstration.
“We are thrilled to augment
our robust programming around Black history with a new, virtual concert
honoring Juneteenth. We must amplify Black voices. Our singers use the
power of music to build meaningful relationships,
to shed light on social issues, and to demand progress. We hope that
our group of acclaimed Black CCC alumni inspires others to take action
against long-standing injustice,” said
Josephine Lee, Chicago Children’s Choir President and Artistic Director.
About Chicago Children’s Choir
Founded
in Hyde Park in direct response to the Civil Rights Movement in 1956,
Chicago Children’s Choir (CCC) has grown from one choir into a vast
network of in-school and after-school
programs driven by one mission: to inspire and change lives through music.
CCC has impacted the lives of more than 50,000 diverse youth throughout
its 62-year history. Since its founding, CCC has focused on building
programs that reflect the racial
and economic diversity of Chicago. Eighty percent of youth served are
from low-moderate income homes, with over 4,000 students annually
participating completely free of charge. All singers in CCC programs
receive some level of subsidy. High school seniors
enrolled in CCC have a 100% graduation and college acceptance rate,
becoming global ambassadors who carry on CCC’s core values in a wide
array of professional fields.
Learn more at
ccchoir.org.
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Video and photos of CCC performances and participating alumni
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