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It's the latest star turn for former Ify Nwadiwe co-star Timothée Chalamet! We're joined by musician and educator Enrique Chi (of the appropriately-named band Making Movies) with us to share notes on the Bob Dylan origin story that isn't really an origin story at all. Then we'll have fun pitching our own ideas for musical biopics.What's GoodAlonso - Erotic Vagrancy by Roger LewisDrea - 5Calls.orgEnrique - arts as public healthIfy - youngest brother's bachelor weekendThe Super Bowl was on…Tubi (and here was Tubi's ad)Prince's Estate Has Blocked the Release of a New DocumentaryPharrell and Gondry Musical Scrapped“The Prince We Never Knew” (Sasha Weiss's NYT article)Staff PicksAlonso - I'm Not ThereDrea - SuzeEnrique - QuincyIfy - SelenaCheck out Enrique's band, Making Movies Follow us on BlueSky, Twitter, Facebook, or InstagramWithDrea ClarkAlonso DuraldeIfy NwadiweProduced by Marissa FlaxbartSr. Producer Laura Swisher
Making Movies is a band based out of Kansas City, Missouri that mixes Afro-Latino rhythms and psychedelic rock'n'roll. The group members have roots in Panama and Mexico. It's composed by two sets of brothers, lead singer and guitarist Enrique Chi and bassist Diego, and Juan-Carlos and Andres Chaurand on percussion and drums.In this edition of our series “How I Made It," Latino USA sits down with Enrique and Juan-Carlos to discuss, "Locura Colectiva," one of the band's most ambitious tracks. They discuss how the track came to be and why they felt the album at one point was cursed.This episode originally aired in 2019.Subscribe to our newsletter by going to the top of our homepage. Follow us on TikTok and YouTube.
A Happy Thursday From YOUR KC Morning Show!On the show today, we're joined by friend of the show, Enrique Chi, lead singer for Making Movies & Founder of Art As Mentorship! Joining Enrique is another KCMS homie, Addie Sartino, lead singer of The Greeting Committee! Join Art As Mentorship TOMORROW at The RecordBar for "MORE COWBELL!"LINK: Art As Mentorship - artasmentorship.orgA Good Day To Be A Kansas Citian.xoxo - @hartzell965, @holeyhearts
Esta carta tiene como protagonistas a dos grandes del cine. Dos artistas a los que el mote de genio no les queda para nada grande. Me refiero a Ingmar Bergman y Akira Kurosawa. Poco antes de cumplir los 70 años, el sueco publicó el libro de memorias “Linterna mágica”. En esas páginas decía, entre otras cosas, que “probablemente lamentaría el hecho de no hacer más películas”. El director japonés aprovechó esa oportunidad para saludarlo por su cumpleaños con esta carta y expresarle toda su admiración. Y hace una reflexión profunda sobre la creación artística y la vejez. Por supuesto, también le sugiere que siga trabajando por el bien del cine. Por suerte, Bergman cambió de opinión después de aquella sentencia en su libro y dirigió “Saraband”, su última película. Lee el actor Enrique Chi. *** Estimado Sr. Bergman: Por favor, permítame felicitarlo en su septuagésimo cumpleaños. Su trabajo toca mi corazón profundamente cada vez que lo veo y he aprendido mucho de sus obras y han sido alentadoras. Le deseo que permanezca en buen estado de salud para que pueda crear más películas maravillosas para nosotros. En Japón, había un gran artista llamado Tessai Tomioka que vivió en la era Meiji (finales del siglo XIX). Este artista pintó varios cuadros excelentes mientras todavía era joven, y cuando llegó a la edad de 80 años, de repente comenzó a pintar cuadros que eran muy superiores a los anteriores, como si estuviera en su gran etapa de florecimiento. Cada vez que veo sus pinturas, me doy cuenta perfectamente que un ser humano no es capaz de crear obras extraordinarias hasta que llega a los 80. Un ser humano nace como bebé, se convierte en un niño, pasa por la juventud, la flor de la vida y, finalmente, vuelve a ser un bebé antes que termine su vida. Esta es, en mi opinión, la forma ideal de la vida. Yo creo que estaría de acuerdo en que un ser humano llega a ser capaz de producir obras puras, sin restricción alguna, en los días de su segunda infancia. Ahora tengo setenta y siete años de edad y estoy convencido que mi verdadero trabajo apenas comienza. Mantengámonos juntos por el bien de las películas. Con los más cordiales saludos, Akira Kurosawa.
On this week's episode of the Northeast Newscast, we're sitting down with Art as Mentorship's founder Enrique Chi and Operations Director Peter Beatty.Art as Mentorship is a Northeast Kansas City-based non-profit organization that takes an innovative approach to fully grasp young students' full potential through music programs. They envision an inclusive community where under-represented artists are emboldened to raise their voices through music.Enrique and Peter share info about the upcoming Rebel Song Academy, the heart of their programming. The 12-week music camp takes an innovative approach to exploring young artists' full potential through creativity, mentorship opportunities, and fostering their inherent sense of exploration and achievement. Students work directly with industry-professional mentors to write, record, publish, and perform an original song. Find more info at artasmentorship.org.
A Happy Thursday From YOUR KC Morning Show!On the show today, Enrique Chi with Making Movies and Art As Mentorship is back, and gets us ready for the Celebrate Ameri'kana Music and Arts Festival, THIS Saturday, at Grinders KC! LINKS:https://artasmentorship.org/ DON'T FORGET! NOMINATIONS ARE NOW OPEN FOR THE PITCH, "BEST OF" FOR 2022. LETS RUN IT BACK AS BEST PODCAST...AGAIN!LINKS:https://vote.thepitchkc.com/arts-and-entertainment/best-local-podcastA Good Day To Be A Kansas Citian. Always.xoxo - @hartzell965, @holeyhearts, @kcmorningshow
One artist spent his early years in Panama and the other used the Spanish language as a tool to connect with the community.
Joined by Enrique Chi of the band Making Movies to discuss the latest Instagram update, Trump possibly being brought up on charges and also hinting at a 2024 presidential run, Obama jumping on the Bad Bunny bandwagon, and more!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Acelia de la Peña y Enrique Chi nos platican de "La Cenicienta". El Ballet de la Ciudad de México lo presentará en el Auditorio Nacional este 30 de abril y ellos nos cuentan los detalles.
Join us for an intimate evening with Enrique Chi and Juan Carlos of Making Movies.Known for an innovative approach to music inspired by American and Latin cultures, Latinx rock'n'rollers Making Movies are “breaking down walls in the U.S” (Rolling Stone). From their Panamanian & Mexican heritage to their fusion of international sounds and genres, Making Movies melds reinterpretations of cumbia, mambo, son, and salsa with blues and rock'n'roll, as well as traditional Mexican and Panamanian folclór, while singing in Spanish and English. Making Movies “synthesizes what's happening in Latin music better than anyone else out there today” (MTV), having collaborated with salsa legend Rubén Blades on the Latin Grammy nominated song “No Te Calles”, as well as Steve Berlin of Los Lobos, and the late Lou Reed.
Happy Friday and a Yippie Fri-YAY From YOUR KC Morning Show!On the show today, Chris Mowry with Journey Pro Wrestling: Professional Wrestling in Kansas City. JPKC's "Die Hard 2 Is Also A Christmas Movie" happens TONIGHT, 6pm at Blip Coffee. journeyprokc.com for tickets!Enrique Chi, with Making Movies and Art As Mentorship fills us in on his show, "Everything In Its Right Place" taking place Saturday night, 12/18 at The Truman. makingmovies.world for tickets!We wrap with A Sports Thing With Betsided.com's Benny Heisler!A Good Day To Be A Kansas Citian. Always.xoxo - @hartzell965 & @holeyhearts
This week on the Streetwise podcast we discuss piracy self-deception, enjoy a reading of Emily Cox's piece on romance author Elle Jackson, vibe to Taylor Lenz's track "Boomerang," and chat with musician Enrique Chi from Making Movies about their upcoming Kid A tribute show.
When concerts dried up last year, the band Making Movies went all over the U.S. to ask legendary musicians what makes their music "American." The resulting documentary airs July 1 on Kansas City PBS.
We Were Christian Kids with Justin Randall and Calvin Arsenia
Justin Randall (@imjustinrandall) and Calvin Arsenia (@calvinarsenia) talk with Enrique Chi and Diego Chi (@iamdiego) from the band Making Movies (@mkngmvs). They discuss leaving the church, creating music and connecting with audiences, as well as the harm Christianity has wrought on humanity. Stream their new single, "Listening Wind" now!!
Enrique is the lead singer of the internationally acclaimed band Making Movies known for its Latinx activism. They were nominated in 2019 for the Latin Grammy Album of the Year for the collaboration they had with Ruben Blades. They've had their music featured on NPR's best songs of 2019. He is also the founder of Arts as Mentorship a non-profit that helps young artists explore their full potential. We discuss mentorship, excellence, activism, and the freedom and power of knowing that just because something is a certain way it doesn't mean it has to stay that way. A lot of laughter and a lot of insight in this one. Check out Making Movies here: https://mkngmvs.com Help support the Art As Mentorship GoFundMe for a Recording studio https://gofund.me/8d6ab389 Find out more about Art As Mentorship artasmentorship.org ⚫️ ⚫️ ⚫️ ⚫️
As a young latino male into indie-rock from Lee's Summit MO, Enrique Chi could not imagine that his KC band Making Movies would be nominated for a Latin Grammy with Ruben Blades and make records with the likes of Steve Berlin of Los Lobos, but also could've never seen himself running a non-profit Arts As Mentorship that reaches out to underserved kids and shows them the important beauty of learning to make music.
En el Día Nacional del Libro, conoce los detalles del Festival de Literatura Infantil y Juvenil 2020. Recordamos el natalicio de Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz en voz de Don Carlos Vega Sánchez. El nutriólogo David Manrique habla del síndrome metabólico y cómo favorece el naturismo. José Antonio Valdés Peña con las mejores recomendaciones cinematográficas para este fin de semana. Enrique Chi te invita a disfrutar de "El Hombre de La Mancha" vía streaming.El Dr. Ignacio Javier Orozco García, médico geriatra, platica sobre el Congreso Internacional de la Asociación Mexicana de Gerontología y Geriatría.Janett Arceo y La Mujer Actual es uno de los pocos programas radiofónicos que desde 1982 y hasta la fecha actual se mantiene en el cuadrante,constituyéndose en un concepto de gran éxito gracias al talento y experiencia de la mujer que le da vida a la radio y televisión y a su gran familia de especialistas quienes, diariamente, apoyan al auditorio y lo motivan a elevar su calidad de vida.La Mujer Actual es el único concepto radiofónico que ayuda a lograr la superación integral de la familia en las diferentes etapas de su vida y, diariamente, realiza un recorrido por ámbitos tan diversos como desarrollo humano, nutrición, salud (en todas las especialidades), asesoría legal, neurociencias, finanzas personales, estimulación temprana, escuela para padres, hábitos y técnicas de estudio, bolsa de trabajo, turismo, entretenimiento, gastronomía, sexualidad, tecnología, astronomía, belleza, moda, astrología y más.La Mujer Actual siempre está a la vanguardia, por eso atendemos puntualmente las necesidades del público con teléfonos abiertos y nuestras redes sociales, creando así una completísima revista radiofónica en vivo.La Mujer Actual es pionera en programas de contenido para la familia, por eso muchos han intentado imitarlo, sin embargo, gracias a su estilo único no solo ha permanecido sino que continúa siendo uno de los programas preferidos que ha evolucionado al ritmo de los tiempos. Esto se debe en gran medida a su conductora Janett Arceo, que gracias a su frescura y a su capacidad de convertirse en la voz del auditorio, ha logrado consolidar una fórmula de comunicación verdaderamente exitosa, donde interactúan el público, la conductora y el especialista, basándose en un principio fundamental: ¡la prevención!
On this week's episode of Eight One Sixty, we turn our attention back to a special Facebook livestream event happening this Friday, May 15 and Saturday, May 16 — KC Bands Together • A Livestream Concert Event! It’s happening both nights at 8:30PM, featuring 10 acts each night. The event is a fundraiser for Midwest Music Foundation, but bigger than that, it’s a celebration of Kansas City by great musicians that either live here now or are from here, playing for you in comfort of your home. You can watch the Facebook livestream on these Facebook pages: 90.9 The Bridge, MMF and You Found Music. We'll play music from several of the acts, including — recently added to the lineup — Samantha Fish, and we’ll also have an interview with Enrique Chi of Making Movies. We’ll talk to Enrique about his nonprofit organization, Art As Mentorship, and the work he’s doing to change the lives of kids. We'll also talk about Making Movies playing a 10,000-capacity room in Mexico City opening up for their hero, Rubén Blades, and an inspirational story about his band being touched by Midwest Music Foundation. We’ll hear music from Samantha Fish, Danielle Nicole Band, The Greeting Committee, Fritz Hutchison, Making Movies, and we’ll kick of the show with a new project from David George. It’s a song called “When We All Come Together," featuring 100+ KC musicians playing and singing a song that he wrote. Also, how long has it been since you bought a new band tee? Maybe it’s time! And do you have a face mask yet? Head over to KCbandstogether.com and to snag some great merch courtesy of Seen Merch, with all proceeds going to Midwest Music Foundation.
This week on Core Conversations we hang out with Enrique Javier Chi and talk about his story and the exciting work he is doing with youth at Art As Mentorship.
This season it’s all about música SO be ready to move your hips to artistas como Making Movies, the Grammy-winning all-female Mariachi Flor de Toloache, Migrant Kids, Reggae prodigy Zion, the multilingual band The Brazilionaires and Appalatin. We’re not only showcasing their music and work but also conversations about current topics that affect us all. We talked to them about the migrant caravan, racism, their muses, their instruments and how they see the Latino community in the US. Jackie Coleman from Flor de Toloache talks to us about her role as a negra in the mariachi, Enrique Chi from Making Movies talks about the separation of children from their parents that were traveling with the migrant caravan and Zion talks to us about how religion shaped his future. Don’t miss the exclusive content on our newsletter!
We celebrate our 200th show! Thank YOU for tuning in and listening! We kick off the show with Billy Brimblecom Jr. to talk about Thundergong, happening this Saturday in KC at Uptown Theater featuring special guests Chance The Rapper, Jason Sudeikis, Will Forte and more. All money raised from the event benefits Steps Of Faith Foundation. There are still some tix left! We also hear music from some musicians that are playing Apocalypse Meow 11 this weekend, Friday at Mills Record Company and Saturday at recordBar, Chase The Horseman and Chris Meck. Also, check out a brand new track from OLIVIA FOX, it’s an impressive treatment of Zombie by The Cranberries, just in time for Halloween. Then we are joined by special guest Robert Castillo of the band The Sextet as we talk about a new FREE concert series happening at a great non-profit here in KC called Cross-Lines Community Outreach, Inc at 736 Shawnee Ave in KCK. The first FREE concert is this Sunday at 4PM featuring Enrique Chi of Making Movies and Miki P - hear music from those musicians too. It's a great show and as a special treat Jon Hart co-hosts!!!
Los chicos de El Meneo hablan con Enrique Chi de Making Movies antes de la Feria Nacional de la Familia Latina de UNIDOS.
This is a bonus episode of #TamarindoPodcast featuring [Making Movies](https://mkngmvs.com/), an American Rock band from Kansas City, Missouri. The band is made up of two sets of brothers: Enrique Chi, Diego Chi, Juan Carlos Chaurand, and Andres Chaurand, whose Latin roots influence the band's unique sound. Brenda met with Making Movies during a stop on their #ImmigrantsAreBeautiful tour and discussed the power of music in activism. In this episode, you will hear "Brave Enough", "Locura Colectiva" and "Spinning Out" from the band's latest album I am Another You. Melinna and Brenda will both be back for our next episode so be sure to subscribe! This episode is brought to you by Intimalena. Listeners of Tamarindo receive 30% off with offer code TAMARINDO. Go to www.intimalena.com to shop. Don't forget to rate and review us on [Apple Podcast](https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/tamarindo/id1102882792?mt=2) Keep up with us on all our social media platformsL Instagram: TamarindoPodcast Twitter: TamarindoCast website: [www.tamarindopodcast.com](www.tamarindopodcast.com) Other music in this episode includes "Boracha" by Utopia
Kyle speaks with Enrique Chi of the band Making Movies. This episode features some tracks off their new EP 'You Are Another Me' featuring innovative covers of Los Tigres Del Norte, Manu Chao, and a psychedelic son version of Bob Marley's "Redemption Song".
Kyle speaks with Enrique Chi of the band Making Movies. This episode features some tracks off their new EP 'You Are Another Me' featuring innovative covers of Los Tigres Del Norte, Manu Chao, and a psychedelic son version of Bob Marley's "Redemption Song".
Kyle speaks with Enrique Chi of the band Making Movies. This episode features some tracks off their new EP 'You Are Another Me' featuring innovative covers of Los Tigres Del Norte, Manu Chao, and a psychedelic son version of Bob Marley's "Redemption Song".
It has been a breakthrough year for Making Movies, the Kansas City-based band, and Latino Rebels talks with singer/guitarist Enrique Chi about the group's success—from hitting #3 on the Latin Billboard charts to releasing a series of new protest songs and earning some love from THE Rubén Blades. For more about this band we love, go to http://makingmoviesband.com. Featured image: Brian Slater