WWOZ brings together our local, national and international supporters into a distinctive community that celebrates and strengthens the music, musicians, culture and culture bearers of New Orleans.
In the aftermath of Katrina, the growing film industry of New Orleans
suffered some setbacks. Many prospective productions relocated from New
Orleans to places like Shreveport and out of state.
A year later and at the close of a much calmer hurricane season, the film
indu...
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The Black Men of Labor organize a second line parade each Labor Day weekend
to honor the city's workers, including the many brass band musicians who work
to make New Orleans' culture distinct.
Black Men of Labor formed in 1993 after the death of jazz musician Danny
Barker...
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Political pranksters the Yes Men perpetrate a special brand of political
activism and social commentary; they impersonate representatives of corporate
or government groups and literally put words in their mouths.
At the recent Gulf Coast rebuilding and Hurricane Preparedne...
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This year, the spiritual celebration of White Buffalo Day fell on the first
anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
WWOZ DJ and Street Talk reporter George Ingmire reports on how that
coincidence gave a special gravity to the performances and rituals enacted
by Mardi Gras Indi...
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Street Talk sent Christian Roselund to check out the 14th Annual Cutting Edge
Music Business Conference and Roots Music Gathering, August 24 - 27, 2006, at
the Contemporary Arts Center.
But "cutting edge" in New Orleans often means new ways of interpreting our
venerable t...
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Sousaphone player Jeffrey Hills is a family man with a wife and three kids.
Before the storm, they lived in public housing and Jeffrey was known for
playing with the big time Olympia Brass Band.
Since Katrina, the Hills have lived in three states, unable to find a way to
...
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Trombonist Craig Klein talks about his new group — the Arabi Wrecking
Krewe. They're a volunteer team dedicated to helping musicians gut their
homes and get back to New Orleans. And they're getting a lot of support from
outside the city.
Click here to read Alison Fensters...
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As one of our first Street Talk stories, we covered a new initiative by the
international affordable-housing charity Habitat for Humanity. The New
Orleans Musicians' Village was to be a grouping of Habitat homes in New
Orleans' Upper Ninth Ward, centered around a $2.5 milli...
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After Hurricane Katrina, the Tipitina's Foundation sought to expand its
mission to address the needs of New Orleans musicians with a variety of new
programs.
From hosting open meetings for the New Orleans music community to discuss the
challenges the faced to opening the...
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This week on Street Talk, we invited Zaccai Free to tell us about the work of
the International Association for Human Values, or IAHV, and their work in
the Crescent City post-Katrina.
IAHV certified teachers have been offering sessions in relaxation and
breathing techniq...
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