In Performance at the White House in Washington, DC


 

 

 



THEWHITEHOUSESPIN.COM
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2010 – VOL. 2010 NO. 1



White House Photography by Pete Souza, Feb. 5, 2010.

President Barack Obama delivers remarks during a memorial service at the CIA in Langley, Virginia.
 





 

 

 


 

"In Performance at the White House in Washington, DC"
POSTED BY KAREN ANN CARR
 

 

  
WASHINGTON–
In Performance at the White House: A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement” this evening, marks the continuation of White House Music Series by celebrating Black History Month in February 2010.    

    The 2010 White House Music Series begins today, Tuesday February 9th, when President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama host  the “In Performance at the White House: A Celebration of Music from the Civil Rights Movement.”
 
    The concert celebrating Black History month will include participants Yolanda Adams, Joan Baez, Natalie Cole, Bob Dylan, Jennifer Hudson, John Legend, John Mellencamp, Smokey Robinson, Seal, the Blind Boys of Alabama, the Howard University Choir, and The Freedom Singers, featuring Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon, Rutha Harris, Charles Neblett and Toshi Reagon. 

    Robert De Niro, Morgan Freeman and Queen Latifah will be guest speakers for this concert, which will feature songs from the Civil Rights Movement as well as readings from famous Civil Rights speeches and writings. 

President Obama will make opening remarks at the concert, which will be held in the White House East Room.
The concert will be streamed live on
www.whitehouse.gov starting at 8:00 p.m. ET.
 
    This concert will be televised on February 11th, 2010 at 8:00 p.m. ET, on the public broadcasting stations nationwide as part of WETA Washington, D.C.’s “In Performance at the White House” series. 

    NPR will also produce a one-hour concert special from this event for broadcast nationwide on NPR Member stations throughout the month of February, beginning February 12th, 2010. The special will also be available on
www.npr.org/music
 
    As part of this special event, the White House will host “Music that Inspired the Movement,” a workshop that several of the event’s performers will lead for high school students from across the country toady, Tuesday, February 9TH from 3:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. ET. 

    The students have come to learn about the continuing relevance of music from the Civil Rights Movement to today’s generation and the Civil Rights Movement's original impact in the 1960s. 

    Robert Santelli, the executive director of The Grammy Museum, and Smokey Robinson, the legendary Motown singer, will facilitate the workshops.  Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon, one of the original Freedom Singers in the 1960s, will perform.  Dr. Reagon has traveled around the country carrying stories in song of local Civil Rights Movement campaigns to national audiences. 
 
    Students all over the country have been invited to watch the workshop live and submit questions for the performers and facilitators leading up to the event. Several questions received through the online form will be answered at the workshop and following the event. 

    Questions may be submitted prior to the workshop at
www.whitehouse.gov/civil-rights-music. The livestream embed code will also be available on this webpage.


 

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