American musician
POPULARITY
On today's show, we're joined by organizers Wassim Hage of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center, and Rami Ibrahim of Palestinian Youth Movement to discuss the various direct actions locals have taken in protest of Israel's expanding war in the Middle East. We're also joined by Cheryl Rivera, a Brooklyn- based writer and editor of Lux Magazine who works on the New York War Crimes project. Learn more about that campaign here: https://newyorkwarcrimes.com/ Two of the three officers involved in the killing of Mario Gonzalez recently had their manslaughter charges dropped on a technicality. Judge Scott Patton ruled on Monday that the District Attorney failed to file arrest warrants against the two officers, James Fisher and Cameron Leahy, within the three-year statute of limitations. Jerry Gonzalez, brother of Mario Gonzalez and Edith Arenales, mother of Mario Gonzalez join us to speak about the case against the third officer, Eric McKinley. The next hearing is set to take place tomorrow. Gonzalez's family and supporters are packing the court and rallying outside the Alameda County Superior Courthouse tomorrow—Friday, October 11 at 8 AM, 661 Washington St, Oakland, CA 94607. The post Residents Take Action Against Local Institutions Supporting Israel; Two of Three Officers Involved in Mario Gonzalez Killing Avoid Prosecution appeared first on KPFA.
New York City has long been a major incubator for Latin music with its large populations of Puerto Rican, Dominican, Panamanian, Cuban, and Colombian musicians and music fans. We celebrate some of the giants of New York's Latin music scene—Ray Barretto, Larry Harlow, Jerry Gonzalez—as well as less well known artists. Topics include the cross-pollination between Latin music and jazz, the Panama connection featuring Rubén Blades among others, the Latin-Jewish connection and much more. Produced and co-hosted by author and Afropop producer veteran Ned Sublette with special guest Dr. Ben Lapidus, musician and author of New York and the International Sound of Latin Music, 1940 to 1990. Produced by Ned Sublette APWW #845
This week Joe is featuring Pianist, Composer and Vocalist Henry Roeland Byrd a.k.a. “Professor Longhair,” from the 1980 Alligator Records recording, titled “Crawfish Fiesta.”
This week, Joe is featuring Trumpeter Jerry Gonzalez from his 1995 Sunnyside Records recording “Ya Yo Me Cure.”
Former Rays Matt Joyce as well as Eddie and Jerry Gonzalez joins us live in studio to chat all things baseball, what life is like in the minors, Gary Sheffield, hypothetical HR Derby, the Amed Rosario signing and more!
Reaction to Lavonte David on Ronnie & Tkras, Matt Joyce, Eddie and Jerry Gonzalez talk all things baseball, Bolts lose 3rd straight, Captain Mike's fishing report, NFL Salary Cap news, and more!
El saxofonista i compositor valenci
El saxofonista i compositor valenci
Blowing the dust off soulful rare grooves, collectibles and some stone cold classics that you've either forgotten or didn't even know about ! No re-mixes, no re-edits, just 7", 12" and LP track originals from back in the day ! We'll be hearing from the Buddy Miles, Gene Ammons, Jeff Tyzil, Memphis Horns and Jerry Gonzalez to name but a few. PLAYLIST Artist Title Year Buddy Miles I'm just a kiss away 1975 Gene Ammons Jungle Strutt 1970 Mystic Moods Cosmic Sea 1973 Powerline Journey 1981 Jeff Tyzik The way you move me 1981 Instant Funk Got my mind made up 1978 Walter Jackson It's cool ??? Paulins Da Costa Simbora 1977 Jade Music Slave 1975 Experience Free yourself 1977 Flourescent Smog All my life 1976 The Originals Good lovin is just a dime away 1975 Incognito Parisienne Girl 1980 Steve Parks Movin in the right direction 1981 Don Julian and the Larks Shorty the pimp 1973 Manchild Walk with me 1978 Rick Holmes Remember to remember 1981 Memphis Horns Just for your love 1977 Jerry Gonzalez Evidence 1980 Louisiana Purchase Baby come back Larry Sanders Where did peace go 1971 Barbara Mason Yes I'm ready (Moulton Hand Dance Re-mix) 2005
Seguimos con la percusión De Milton Cardona, Jerry Gonzalez, Bobby Sanabria, Ray Armando, Poncho Sánchez, Airto, Naná Vasconcelos y otros. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is the fourth episode of 2023 and this one is designed to give you Something To Consider. Consider how to keep your like In The Flow. What is meant by... "in the flow"? Listen and learn young grasshopper, listen and learn. Brian "Katzpheno" Phoenix featuring: Next Collective - Africa (2013) Chick Corea Trio - Alice In Wonderland (2014) Elijah Jamal Balbed - What Matters Most - In Life (2015) Katreese - Something To Consider (2016) 4-Sight - In The Flow (1998) Ben Williams - Toy Soldiers (2015) Orrin Evans - A Secret Place (2015) Geri Allen - Baby I Need Your Loving (2013) Bobby McFerrin - Moondance (1982) Cyrus Chestnut - U.M.M.G. (2014) Jerry Gonzalez - Tenderly (2010) Herlin Riley - Be There When I Get There (2019)
Finis Stribling, Nathan Harris, Jerry Gonzalez, Justin Sanchez, and Mya Bustos (off camera) breakdown the first half of week 4 of the NFL Sunday Night Football matchup: Kansas City Chiefs v Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Jerry Gonzalez, Paul Angulo, Brooke Angulo, & Brittney Ramirez talk about how they got into shoes, plans for the future, and more with host Finis L Stribling IV Uncle Strib is a podcast brought to you by "IV Talks". Hosted by Finis Stribling IV, bringing on various guest speakers to talk about their life experiences, adversity, motivation and/or expertise in educational topics.
Puerto Rico Jazz.Revisitamos Music for Big Band, segunda grabación de Jerry González en España.Puerto Rico Jazz. Comprometidos con la Excelencia Musical.TuneIn Radio http://tun.in/pjADHApple Podcasthttps://podcasts.apple.com/.../puerto-rico-jazz/id1508259152Sounder FMhttps://puertoricojazz.sounder.fm/show/puerto-rico-jazzLo Mejor del Jazz Boricua en Puerto Rico Jazz Radio @ Brave New RadioPrimer programa en la radio dedicado al Jazz Boricua!Todos los Domingos 8am (New York Time) @ Brave New Radio WPSC 88.7 William Paterson University, New Jersey@TuneIn Radio! http://tun.in/seoPJDomingos 6 p.m. @ Radio Prócer 1380AM y 98.5FM Barranquitas, Puerto Rico www.radioprocer1380.com*Diseño de logo de Puerto Rico Jazz por @Shaney LaraPara enviarnos su música; jazzinmagazine@gmail.com
Jerry Gonzalez, the executive director of GALEO (Georgia Assoc. of Latino Elected Officials), discusses a new report that highlights the 2020 growth and engagement of the Latino voters in Georgia. Plus, Atlanta City Planning Commissioner Tim Keane and Vanessa Lira, the design assistant director for the City of Atlanta, discuss repurposing parking spaces into outdoor seating areas. Plus, ecologist Nissa Sylvatica shares the concerns Defend the Atlanta Forest has about the Old Atlanta Prison Farm's future.
Recordamos al Apache Mayor Jerry González a 72 años de su natalicio (Junio 5, 1949) revisitando su grabación Avísale a mi contrario. Comprometidos con la Excelencia Musical.Apple Podcasthttps://podcasts.apple.com/.../puerto-rico-jazz/id1508259152Sounder FMhttps://puertoricojazz.sounder.fm/show/puerto-rico-jazzPrimer programa en la radio dedicado al Jazz Boricua!@TuneIn Radio! http://tun.in/seoPJ*Diseño de logo de Puerto Rico Jazz por @Shaney Lara
Jerry Gonzalez (There's Something In The Woods, Generation LatinX) joins us for the notorious Super Mario Brothers (1993). We go full Marvel and make our own Mario Cinematic Universe, the REAL MCU. Don't miss the introduction of Donky Kong, Peach, StarFox, and ... MegaMan? It's time to smash some bros! Art by Kira Redzinak Jerry on YouTube: JankyJerr
One of music’s leading jazz saxophonists Miguel Zenón joins Tim talk about his journey in music and life. Miguel has been nominated multiple times for Grammy Awards and has carved a place for himself among the elite jazz saxophonists and composers of our time. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/shapingopinion/Miguel_Zenon_II_auphonic.mp3 Miguel was born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In high school, he found himself listening to the sounds of John Coltrane, but at that point, it was just an interest, not yet a passion. He didn’t get serious about actually making a career in jazz until he went to college at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. That’s where he met drummer Bob Moses, who asked him to join him with the Either/Orchestra. This gave Miguel his first taste of professional experience as a saxophonist. He would later earn awards and grants that allowed Miguel to continue his education, earning a master’s degree in 2001 from the Manhattan School of Music in New York City. But it all goes back to when he first discovered John Coltrane and other jazz legends, and it captivated him. Links Miguel Zenón (official website) Miguel Zenón (New England Conservatory) Gratitude Our thanks to Miguel Zenón for sharing some tracks from his latest album for this episode. You find it here: About this Episode’s Guest Miguel Zenón Multiple Grammy Nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenón represents a select group of musicians who have masterfully balanced and blended the often-contradictory poles of innovation and tradition. Widely considered as one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists of his generation, he has also developed a unique voice as a composer and as a conceptualist, concentrating his efforts on perfecting a fine mix between Latin American Folkloric Music and Jazz. Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Zenón has built a distinguished career as a leader, releasing twelve albums under his own name. In addition, he has crafted his artistic identity by dividing his time equally between working with older jazz masters and the music’s younger innovators –irrespective of styles and genres. The list of musicians Zenón has toured and/or recorded with includes: The SFJAZZ Collective, Charlie Haden, Fred Hersch, Kenny Werner, David Sánchez, Danilo Pérez, The Village Vanguard Orchestra, Kurt Elling, Guillermo Klein & Los Guachos, The Jeff Ballard Trio, Antonio Sánchez, David Gilmore, Paoli Mejías, Brian Lynch, Jason Lindner, Dan Tepfer, Miles Okazaki, Dan Weiss, Ray Barreto, Andy Montañez, Jerry Gonzalez & The Fort Apache Band, The Mingus Big Band, Bobby Hutcherson and Steve Coleman. As a composer he has been commissioned by SFJAZZ, The New York State Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, NYO JAZZ , The Logan Center for The Arts, The Hyde Park Jazz Festival, The John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, MIT, Jazz Reach, Peak Performances, PRISM Quartet and many of his peers. Zenón has been featured in articles on publications such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, Bloomberg Pursuits, Jazz Times, Jazziz, Boston Globe, Billboard, Jazz Inside, Newsday and Details. In addition he topped both the Jazz Artist of the Year and Alto Saxophonist of the Year categories on the 2014 Jazz Times Critics Poll and was selected as the Alto Saxophonist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association in 2015, 2018, 2019 and 2020 (when he was also recognized as Arranger of The Year). His biography would not be complete without discussing his role as an educator. In 2003, he was chosen by the Kennedy Center to teach and perform in West Africa as part of their Jazz Ambassador program. Since then, he has given hundreds of lectures and master classes and has taught all over the world at institutions which include: The Banff Centre, Berklee College of Music, Siena Jazz, Universidad Veracruzana,
One of music's leading jazz saxophonists Miguel Zenón joins Tim talk about his journey in music and life. Miguel has been nominated multiple times for Grammy Awards and has carved a place for himself among the elite jazz saxophonists and composers of our time. https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/shapingopinion/Miguel_Zenon_II_auphonic.mp3 Miguel was born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In high school, he found himself listening to the sounds of John Coltrane, but at that point, it was just an interest, not yet a passion. He didn't get serious about actually making a career in jazz until he went to college at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. That's where he met drummer Bob Moses, who asked him to join him with the Either/Orchestra. This gave Miguel his first taste of professional experience as a saxophonist. He would later earn awards and grants that allowed Miguel to continue his education, earning a master's degree in 2001 from the Manhattan School of Music in New York City. But it all goes back to when he first discovered John Coltrane and other jazz legends, and it captivated him. Links Miguel Zenón (official website) Miguel Zenón (New England Conservatory) Gratitude Our thanks to Miguel Zenón for sharing some tracks from his latest album for this episode. You find it here: About this Episode's Guest Miguel Zenón Multiple Grammy Nominee and Guggenheim and MacArthur Fellow Miguel Zenón represents a select group of musicians who have masterfully balanced and blended the often-contradictory poles of innovation and tradition. Widely considered as one of the most groundbreaking and influential saxophonists of his generation, he has also developed a unique voice as a composer and as a conceptualist, concentrating his efforts on perfecting a fine mix between Latin American Folkloric Music and Jazz. Born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Zenón has built a distinguished career as a leader, releasing twelve albums under his own name. In addition, he has crafted his artistic identity by dividing his time equally between working with older jazz masters and the music's younger innovators –irrespective of styles and genres. The list of musicians Zenón has toured and/or recorded with includes: The SFJAZZ Collective, Charlie Haden, Fred Hersch, Kenny Werner, David Sánchez, Danilo Pérez, The Village Vanguard Orchestra, Kurt Elling, Guillermo Klein & Los Guachos, The Jeff Ballard Trio, Antonio Sánchez, David Gilmore, Paoli Mejías, Brian Lynch, Jason Lindner, Dan Tepfer, Miles Okazaki, Dan Weiss, Ray Barreto, Andy Montañez, Jerry Gonzalez & The Fort Apache Band, The Mingus Big Band, Bobby Hutcherson and Steve Coleman. As a composer he has been commissioned by SFJAZZ, The New York State Council for the Arts, Chamber Music America, NYO JAZZ , The Logan Center for The Arts, The Hyde Park Jazz Festival, The John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, MIT, Jazz Reach, Peak Performances, PRISM Quartet and many of his peers. Zenón has been featured in articles on publications such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, Bloomberg Pursuits, Jazz Times, Jazziz, Boston Globe, Billboard, Jazz Inside, Newsday and Details. In addition he topped both the Jazz Artist of the Year and Alto Saxophonist of the Year categories on the 2014 Jazz Times Critics Poll and was selected as the Alto Saxophonist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association in 2015, 2018, 2019 and 2020 (when he was also recognized as Arranger of The Year). His biography would not be complete without discussing his role as an educator. In 2003, he was chosen by the Kennedy Center to teach and perform in West Africa as part of their Jazz Ambassador program. Since then, he has given hundreds of lectures and master classes and has taught all over the world at institutions which include: The Banff Centre, Berklee College of Music, Siena Jazz, Universidad Veracruzana,
Runoff elections in Georgia are approaching, as well as the end of the semester! Social Work Votes speaks with the CEO of a large organization, GALEO, Jerry Gonzalez as we talk about the importance of Latinx voters in Georgia as well as how things are looking in Georgia. Learn concrete ways to get involved in GA as well as what GALEO is up to now and in the future. GALEOSocial Work Votes
This story is part of "Every 30 Seconds," a collaborative public media reporting project tracing the young Latino electorate leading up to the 2020 presidential election and beyond.Growing numbers of Latinos in Georgia have come out to support the Black Lives Matter movement over the past few months — and increasingly, it's shaping how they could vote in the upcoming US general election. Jerry Gonzalez, the executive director of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials, recently took part in a recent Black Lives Matter protest in Atlanta. GALEO is focused on getting Latinos in Georgia to the polls.“Police killing unarmed Black and brown people is really something that has not been addressed systemically,” he said at the protest. “And Latinos stand in solidarity with the African American community in making sure that justice is served.”Racial justice and police brutality are also important to 20-year-old Leticia Arcila, a first-generation, Mexican American who will vote in her first presidential election this November. “It's just so frustrating to see how many people have to die and have to face fear every day in order for you to understand that this is wrong,” she said. “It's just so hard to wrap my mind around that some people truly don't believe that Black lives matter.” Related: For this young Latina voter, pandemic highlights need for 'Medicare for All' The Latino vote could be pivotal in this election and could help turn some red states blue — or at least more purple. Most Latinos in the US tend to vote for Democratic candidates, but around a third voted for Trump in 2016. As a bloc, their votes — and the issues they care about — could be influential, particularly in a close election. In Georgia, a battleground state, there are more eligible Latino voters than there were in the 2016 midterm election. And in 2016, Donald Trump won Georgia by just over 211,000 votes; now, there are more than 240,000 Latinos registered to vote in the state.On Friday, Trump visited Atlanta, where he appealed to Black voters by unveiling his plan for Black economic empowerment and expressing his support for making Juneteenth a federal holiday. The president also spoke about police brutality and the recent deaths of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery at the hands of police — though he said the Black Lives Matter movement is hurting the Black community. He did not address Georgia's Latino community, though he also recently made a campaign stop in Florida to appeal to Latino voters there. Related: How Puerto Ricans in central Florida may decide the US electionArcila, for her part, said she doesn't like the way US officials nationally and locally have handled the coronavirus pandemic. She's watched how other countries have approached it and seemed to be containing the coronavirus more effectively. That's influencing how she votes, too. “Other countries are getting their things together and they're actually taking care of their people and they're looking out for their citizens,” she said. “And I'm over here struggling, working a cashier job, risking my health and my family's health because I have to pay my car, because I have to pay my school, because I have to help my mom with rent.”
Filmmaker and comedian Jerry Gonzalez stops by the show to make a Mrs. Doubtfire money-grab sequel. This is one of Steve's favorite movies and one of our favorite episodes yet!
This story is part of "Every 30 Seconds," a collaborative public media reporting project tracing the young Latino electorate leading up to the 2020 presidential election and beyond.Leticia Arcila didn't want to take any chances when it came to casting her vote in the Georgia state primary Tuesday, June 9. This year, state officials pushed back the primary twice due to the coronavirus pandemic. Then they sent absentee ballot request forms to all of the state's nearly 7 million registered voters — an unprecedented step to “prioritize the health and safety of Georgians,” said Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. But Arcila, a 20-year-old first-generation Mexican American living in Atlanta, insisted on voting in person Tuesday. This year is her first time voting in a presidential election cycle. Related: For this young Latina voter, pandemic highlights need for 'Medicare for All'Arcila said she looked forward to casting her vote, but it's bittersweet: she had planned to vote for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who dropped out of the race in April. To make matters worse, Georgia voters faced chaos at many polling locations Tuesday amid reports of broken voting machines, lack of provisional ballots and hours-long lines.Georgia's primary was originally scheduled for March 24. State officials pushed it back to May 19, due to fears about COVID-19. Finally, they pushed it back even further to June 9. In the meantime, Sanders left the race. “I literally needed, like, three days just in my room after I saw that Bernie dropped out. I just didn't want to see Twitter. I didn't want to see CNN. I didn't want to do anything.”Leticia Arcila,20-year-old voter“I literally needed like three days just in my room after I saw that Bernie dropped out,” Arcila said. “I just didn't want to see Twitter. I didn't want to see CNN. I didn't want to do anything.”Eventually, she recovered. If she wanted to, she could still vote for Sanders. His name is still on primary ballots in some states, including Georgia. If Sanders earns 25% of the Democratic Party's delegates, he can secure representation on committees at the party's convention — allowing him to heavily influence the Democratic platform on issues like health care and college tuition. Despite her admiration for Sanders, Leticia has resigned herself to vote for former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee.“If you know that the country is going to go a certain way, it makes sense to do everything possible to try and get Trump out,” she said. “[That's] basically what I'm trying to go for.”Although Leticia is determined to vote, that might not be the case for every Latino in Georgia. “I think Joe Biden still has a lot of work to do in the Latino community and reaching out to the Latino community.”Jerry Gonzalez, executive director, GALEO“The polling indicates that the Bernie supporters among the Latino community were upset about the [primary] outcome, but they're not necessarily not going to participate in the election,” said Jerry Gonzalez, the executive director of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials, or GALEO. “I think Joe Biden still has a lot of work to do in the Latino community and reaching out to the Latino community.”Related: Can Biden turn out Latinos to vote? Advocacy groups aren't sureGALEO is a nonprofit, nonpartisan group focused on engaging Latinos in Georgia in the voting process. Gonzalez says as a group, young Latinos haven't coalesced around Biden's candidacy yet.“I've seen the staff changes that are happening and additions that are happening on the [Biden] campaign,” Gonzalez said. “So, I certainly think that there's going to be a significant amount of outreach associated with that.”There are signs the Biden campaign is finally investing in targeting Latino voters. It recently hired Julie Chávez Rodriguez as a senior adviser working on Latino outreach. Chávez Rodriguez, the granddaughter of civil rights leader César Chávez, has previously worked for Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris of California and served as deputy director of political engagement for the Obama administration.Investing in Latino voters in Georgia could pay off big for any campaign. According to Gonzalez, when GALEO began in 2003, there were about 10,000 Latinos registered to vote in Georgia. Now, there are almost 240,000. Gonzalez points out that some recent elections in Georgia have been won by thin margins. For example, President Donald Trump won the state in 2016 by 211,141 votes.“If we show up to vote, the Latino community can determine a competitive statewide race.”Jerry Gonzalez, executive director, GALEO“If we show up to vote, the Latino community can determine a competitive statewide race,” Gonzales said.Getting people to vote during the pandemic, though, could be a challenge. Gonzalez says because Latinos haven't traditionally voted via absentee ballots, GALEO will spend time explaining that process. “The particular instructions are confusing and there's a lot of ways in which your vote can be disqualified if you don't follow all the particular steps associated with that process, so there's going to be a lot of education around that,” he said.Arcila doesn't need to be convinced that voting is important. She just wishes she had a candidate who promises the things Sanders did, including universal access to healthcare. Arcila was laid off shortly after the pandemic spread in Georgia and doesn't have health insurance. But even though she thinks Biden lacks bold ideas, she's committed to voting for him. “The country is going to vote one way or another, and so I guess we might as well just go for the thing that's going to help us in the end and if that's Biden, then it's Biden,” she said.Still, Arcila says Georgia's delayed primary makes her feel like she missed out on shaping who the Democratic candidate would be.“It's hard to kind of accept because you kind of feel like it's your future,” she said. “And you want to conquer it and make something amazing out of it. It kind of feels almost, like, taken away from you."
Curioso encuentro con Jerry Gonzalez en el festival de Jazz de Barquisimeto, Venezuela, en Septiembre del 2014. Donde nos dio un pequeño vistazo a su vida, hablando de anécdotas, temas personales, y demás; gran ser humano con una trayectoria igual de importante, disfruten.
A nostalgic one for best/end-of-the-decade. 3 hours of gems from across ten years of jazz, soul, broken and beyond , the likes of Jerry Gonzalez, Woody Shaw (because, the box set) Kamasi Washington, Vijay Iyer, Thandi Ntuli, Lauren Desberg, Dego and Kaidi, Sandra St Victor, Robert Glasper, Josh Milan, Tribe Called Quest, Thundercat, D’angelo, MdCL,…Read more Quiet Brilliance Lost Sessions #21
A nostalgic one for best/end-of-the-decade. 3 hours of gems from across ten years of jazz, soul, broken and beyond , the likes of Jerry Gonzalez, Woody Shaw (because, the box set) Kamasi Washington, Vijay Iyer, Thandi Ntuli, Lauren Desberg, Dego and Kaidi, Sandra St Victor, Robert Glasper, Josh Milan, Tribe Called Quest, Thundercat, D’angelo, MdCL,…Read more Quiet Brilliance Lost Sessions #21
#GALEO #ELECCIONES2020 EL LIDER #JERRYGONZALEZ DICE QUE ESTAN INSTRUMENTANDO PLANES PARA QUE LA GENTE ALCANCE A REGISTRARSE PARA VOTAR, DEBIDO A LA IMPORTANCIA DE ESTE AÑO POLITICO, ADMAS INSTA A TODOS A PARTICIPAR EN EL CENSO. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/franciscomanuelduranrosil/support
Aired on 14th of October, 2019 at Radio Campus Paris 93.9fm. Tracklist: Part 1 with George Rallis 1. Minoru Muraoka Soul Bamboo 2. Various Artists - 向井稔 &曾仲影 - 会津盘梯山 3. M .plessas - Karagouna (Thessalian Dance) 4. Natural Yogart Band - Gelato 5. Alessandro Alessandroni - Young America 6. M .plessas - megali poli 7. De Evergreens - Es Lilin 8. Yuriy Morozov - SP45-005 - Rock For Marina 9. Erkek Olana" • ERKUT TAÇKIN 10. Collage - Mets Neidude Vahel 11. Rob- I've Got To See You Again, Lord 12. Attarazat Addahabia - Al Hadaoui الهداوي 13. Pinduca - Pai Xangô 14. Tenesha The Wordsmith - Again 15. Ethnic Heritage Ensemble N2 Deep (for Randy Weston, Jerry Gonzalez, Cecil Taylor) 16. The Mabon Dawud Quintet - Abeba 17. Azymuth - Melô da Cuica 18. Mnp - Eugene ----- Part 2 with Sercan Os Paralamas Do Sucesso- Varal Sarah Vaughan- The Smiling Hour (Album Version) Sergio Mendes & Brasil '66- Righteous Life Nina Simone- Four Woman Nina Simone- Black Bird Carrousel- Oté Maloya Madala Kunene- Vila Voco George Rallis was born and raised in the 80's in a suburb of Athens . He showed his interest in music,thus in DJing in his teenage years by playing his records and cassettes to friends parties and that before he bought his first dj set. Lover of music and its different genres, his lunch money was translated into cassettes, CD's and records. After doing several jobs he finally "landed" at his current one which is sales assistant at Underflow record store-live stage without forgetting his first and long-last love of djing-which in his own mind is showing, sharing and giving to the people new music. Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/george.rallis Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/george_rall/ Sound cloud- https://soundcloud.com/themodjones
Jerry Gonzalez is a first degree black belt from Wolfpack MMA in Forney Texas. We talk to Jerry about friendships in jiu-jitsu. The different teaching styles we've seen at the Origin jiu-jitsu camp. The time he wanted to quit, and what he did to change that. Check out Jerry's gym here: https://www.facebook.com/WolfPack-MMA-Forney bjjcampaignpodcast.com facebook.com/bjjcampaignpodcast
Welcome to the PREMIERE Episode of the Dad Report Podcast featuring Andrew Coley Jr. aka L.I.P. (father of 1) as your host joined by fellow fathers, Chezza Miller(married and father of 3), Jerry Gonzalez (single father of 1), Andrew Shilling (in relationship, father of 1) and Rohan Chambers (future father). Make sure to follow us on Instagram @dad_report
Jerry Gonzalez – Border Cages, Mass Shootings & ICE Raids: What does it mean to be Hispanic in the US today?Aired Thursday, 15 August 2019, 3:00 PM EST / 12:00 PM PSTWith a Federal Administration as divisive as it is, conspiracy theories abound in the United States. But, can it continue to be a theory when we witness overt abuses specifically against Hispanic families everyday? Are we supposed to believe that the media is only showing us ultra liberal views when, in one week, we witness ICE raids, mass shootings and continued abuses and neglect at our Southern border? Join Jennifer as she addresses the implications of recent disturbing experiences with her guest, Jerry Gonzalez, Executive Director of GALEO: Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials.About the Guest:Jerry Gonzalez, Executive Director of GALEO: Georgia Association of Latino Elected OfficialsJerry Gonzalez is the founding and current Executive Director of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials (GALEO) and the GALEO Latino Community Development Fund. GALEO, a statewide nonprofit and non-partisan organization, has a mission to increase civic engagement and leadership development of the Latino community across Georgia. Gonzalez is a native of Laredo, Texas and received his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University in 1995. He completed his Master of Public Administration at the Andrew Young School of Public Policy at Georgia State University in 2005. Due to his efforts at GALEO, Mr. Gonzalez has been recognized by Georgia Trend Magazine as one of Georgia’s 100 Most Influential Georgians for several years. Gonzalez lives in Atlanta with his husband of over 23 years, Ray, an established and practicing pediatrician, and their dogs, Jenny & Zack. Jerry’s hobbies include photography, travel, hiking, and he considers himself an avid road cyclist.Website: http://galeo.org
Welcome to the PREMIERE Episode of the Dad Report Podcast featuring Andrew Coley Jr. aka L.I.P. (father of 1) as your host joined by fellow fathers, Chezza Miller(married and father of 3), Jerry Gonzalez (single father of 1), Andrew Shilling (in relationship, father of 1) and Rohan Chambers (future father). Make sure to follow us on Instagram @dad_report
Welcome to the PREMIERE Episode of the Dad Report Podcast featuring Andrew Coley Jr. aka L.I.P. (father of 1) as your host joined by fellow fathers, Chezza Miller(married and father of 3), Jerry Gonzalez (single father of 1), Andrew Shilling (in relationship, father of 1) and Rohan Chambers (future father). Make sure to follow us on Instagram @dad_report
Welcome to the PREMIERE Episode of the Dad Report Podcast featuring Andrew Coley Jr. aka L.I.P. (father of 1) as your host joined by fellow fathers, Chezza Miller (married and father of 3), Jerry Gonzalez (single father of 1), Andrew Shilling (in relationship, father of 1) and Rohan Chambers (future father). Make sure to follow us on Instagram @dad_report
Para Antonio Lizana el flamenco es su cuna y el jazz su formación. Otro de nuestros protagonistas de hoy es el enigmático saxofonista Kamasi Washington. Disfrutaremos en esta sesión de dúos legendarios como los de Arturo Sandoval y Paquito D'Rivera o el de Jerry Gonzalez con Chano Dominguez. El valenciano guitarrista Ximo Tebar, la voz de Gal Costa y el atercipelado piano de Robert Glasper, componen el resto de una sesión que esperamos disfrutes.
Along Came Betty is a Jazz standard written by tenor saxophonist Benny Golson. Benny wrote the song as a tribute to vocalist Betty Carter and it was originally performed by Benny while he was a member of Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. The song was also famously recorded in 1959 on the Blue Note Records label for Jazz Messengers legendary "Moanin" album. The song is this weeks podcasts title track and is performed by Jerry Gonzalez & The Fort Apache Band. As all young Jazz Lovers know, Jerry Gonzalez died in a tragic fire at his home in Spain. The Jazz world has lost a great pioneer of Jazz and in particular a front runner in Latin Jazz. Jerry was one of a kind and the Jazz world has lost another warrior. Boricua Forever! Enjoy, Brian "Katzpheno" Phoenix featuring: Ravi Coltrane - Klepto (2012) Gregory Porter - Lonesome Lover (2013) Christian Scott - Alkebu Lan (2012) Anat Cohen - Lilia (2015) James Farm - 1981 (2012) Bobby Hutcherson - I Don't Know Why (1994) Anne Walsh - So It May Secretly Begin (2009) Chick Corea - Love Castle (1976) Jerry Gonzalez & The Fort Apache Band - Along Came Betty (2005) Jerry Gonzalez & El Comando De La Clave - Someday My Prints Will Come (Back From The FBI) (2011)
An appreciation for Latin jazz musician Jerry Gonzalez.
Damon and Marcos talk to Carter about his new book, the Four Hands Drumming website, why he quit drumming and the comeback. There's some gear talk and much more! There's some new albums out, festival alerts, an iconic recording and RIP to Jerry Gonzalez, along with music news.
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles' industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA's suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles' industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA's suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles’ industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA’s suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles’ industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA’s suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles’ industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA’s suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles’ industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA’s suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Search of the Mexican Beverly Hills: Latino Suburbanization in Postwar Los Angeles (Rutgers University Press, 2018) by Professor Jerry Gonzalez challenges conventional interpretations of postwar U.S. history by focusing on the hidden story of the central role Mexican Americans played in the suburbanization of Los Angeles. Examining the expansion of Metropolitan Los Angeles along its eastern fringe after World War II, Gonzalez explains how Mexican colonias served as “stepping stones toward suburbanization” as real estate developers looked to these working-class ethnic neighborhoods as promising locations for their burgeoning master-planned communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Whereas Mexican colonias had previously been ignored by local officials—functioning as de facto segregated communities—theses spaces were desirable due to their affordability and proximate location to Los Angeles’ industrial corridor. Capitalizing on the postwar economic boom that transformed LA into a center for aerospace and automobile manufacturing, socially mobile Mexican Americans also found opportunity in the suburbs of the Greater Eastside. However, as Gonzalez reveals, the Mexican American path to the American Dream of middle-class homeownership was fraught by a mixture of inclusion and exclusion that challenges the standard “white flight” narrative of postwar suburban history. Indeed, while some were either displaced by or excluded from suburban homeownership, others pushed backed by engaging in individual acts of resistance and local politics to claim their rightful place LA’s suburbs. In the process, Gonzalez argues, Mexican Americans forged nuanced ethnic and class identities that both transformed themselves and the new suburban communities they inhabited. David-James Gonzales (DJ) is incoming Assistant Professor of History at Brigham Young University (Fall 2018). He is a historian of the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, the development of multi-ethnic/racial cities, and the evolution of Latina/o identity and politics. His research centers on the relationship between Latina/o politics and the metropolitan development of Orange County, CA throughout the 20th century. You may follow him on Twitter @djgonzoPhD. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Alain Pérez ha estado en el corazón de la mejor música cubana y del flamenco con Isaac Delgado, Van Van, Irakere y Celia Cruz. Con Paco de Lucía y Enrique Morente.PLAYLIST:Alain Pérez – La abuela quiere cocoNG Labanda – La expresiva (fragmento)Hablando de La Habana NG La Banda, IrakereVan Van – Te pone la cabeza mala (fragmento)Hablando de Team Cuba 1997, sustituyendo a Juan Formell en Van VanIsaac Delgado con Alain Pérez – La SandunguitaEl viaje a Madrid con la orquesta de Isaac Delgado (año 1998)Lewis Trio con Alain Pérez – Obba In (fragmento)Sobre Ivan “Melón” Lewis (año 2000)Jerry Gonzalez y los Piratas del Flamenco – Hubo un lugar (fragmento)Sobre Niño Josele, Piraña en el Berlín y el Clamores. La conexión con el flamenco.Enrique Morente y Paco de Lucía.Paco de Lucía con Alain Pérez – Casa BernardoGrabando con Paco de LucíaAlain Peréz con Ivan Melón Lewis – Celosa noHablando con Juana y el son. Yo vengo de esa escuela. Paco de Lucía en Cuba.Alain Pérez – El ciego sin bastón (Directo en Radio Gladys Palmera)