Category: Brooklyn

  • On Air Fest Announces New Wave of Speakers For Feb 2025

    In February 2025 over three days, four nights and held in six locations (with 80+ Sessions & 200+ speakers) On Air Fest’s Annual Sound and Storytelling Festival will take place, where podcasts are elevated into an art form and expanded through voice, visuals and multi-sensory experiences.

    On Air Fest

    Over February 19-21, 2025, these 80+ live performances and podcast tapings, exhibitions and multi-sensory experiences, intimate talks and interactive workshops are designed to help those in the music industry level up skills and more. Thousands of creators and creative professionals working in audio, visual and new media will all come together as part of the annual event’s most dramatically expanded line up to date, and today, On Air Fest announces its next wave of featured talent.

    From artists to industry leaders to the influential voices defining the medium, each session will be focused on the ways in which audio is being used to shift culture, build brands, and shape the future of storytelling, social media and self-expression.

    Taking over multiple floors at its returning headquarters of the Wythe Hotel, as well as first-time locations like the 15,000 square-foot Creator Hall at XXV, iHeartPodcasts’ Official Party at 74 Wythe, music and arts venue National Sawdust, and Dolby88’s VIP theater for film screenings, 

    On Air Fest’s 2025 newest additions to the lineup include:

    Dan Taberski on the making of his breakout hit, Hysterical (Wondery & Audacy’s Pineapple Street Studios), named Apple Podcasts’ Show of The Year and TIME’s #1 Podcast of 2024.

    A keynote conversation from tech and culture journalist Taylor Lorenz, about media’s new mainstream, the creator economy, and power. 

    on air fest

    A creator session with Kareem Rahma, of SubwayTakes and Keep The Meter Running. 

    Acclaimed musician, mystic and new age legend Laraaji, leading the audience in a guided laughter meditation. 

    Live podcasts of Wondery’s Lemme Say This with Peyton Dix and Hunter Harris, Slate’Death, Sex & Money with Anna Sale, SiriusXM’s Vibe Check with Sam Sanders, Saeed Jones, and Zach Stafford, NPR’s It’s Been a Minute with Brittany Luse, TED’s How to Be a Better Human with Chris Duffy, Pushkin’s Broken Record with Justin Richmond and a musical guest, and WaitWhat’s Pioneers of AI, where Dr. Rana el Kaliouby will demonstrate the making of an AI clone, and consider the applications and philosophical implications of “digital twins” in the real world.

    on air fest

    NPR’s Throughline will present cinematic soundscapes, Twenty Thousand Hertz’s Dallas Taylor will deliver a workflow workshop, The Atlantic’s Hanna Rosin and Lauren Ober will conduct an “Anatomy of a Scene,” Craig Finn and Jody Avirgan will debut their brand new Talkhouse Network podcast in an exclusive first-look, and Elliot Krimsky and Benjamin Louis Brody will perform and discuss Shared Spaces, a musical exploration of collective loss and memory.

      Previously revealed programming ranges from SNL’s James Austin Johnson and Jokermen to The Kid Mero’s Victory Light Podcast, Alex Goldman of Hyperfixed and Reply AllDesign Matters’ Debbie Millman, Modern Love’s Anna Martin, Radiolab creator Jad Abumrad, The New York Times’ Jenna Wortham, Snap Judgment’s Anna Sussman and many more, as well as KCRW and On Air Fest’s inaugural KCRWWW – a pop up radio lounge that will live-stream music, talks and sonic experiments, free and open to the public through a dedicated microsite. 

      Exact schedule details will be announced in the coming weeks – as well as more lineup additions from media and programming partners at NASA, WNYC, WBUR, Talkhouse and Radiotopia/PRX, and presenting sponsors such as iHeartPodcasts, Patreon, Dolby, ESPN 30 for 30, PAVE Studios, Shure and Bumper. But it all begins on February 19th, with the On Air Fest Podcast Business Summit. Co-presented by Bloomberg and reporter Ashley Carman, the invite-only gathering of business, tech, advertising and publishing executives will explore and forecast the latest trends, challenges, and opportunities.

      Learn more and purchase tickets here.

    • The Felice Brothers To Rock from Brooklyn to Kingston to Close Out the Year

      After a hugely successful European tour, 2024 will be culminating with five highly anticipated shows for The Felice Brothers.

      The band’s end of the year run of shows kicks off Friday, December 27 in Williamsburg at Brooklyn Bowl, followed by a show at Brooklyn Bowl in Philadelphia. December 29 finds the group in Rockville Centre at Centre Station, and round the year out with two hometown shows for this incredible Americana band at brand new venue Assembly Kingston.

      The felice brothers kingston

      The Felice Brothers call the Catskill Mountains home, yet much of their success to their early days busking and playing in around New York City. Playing unplugged wherever they could the band found their distinct sound and style, penning such songs as “Frankie’s Gun” from their self titled album and covering “This Land Is your Land” like Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan, whom Ian Felice’s songwriting has been compared with.

      With three new brilliant records the past three years and an entire catalogue from the past 20 years, The Felice Brothers have been leaving audiences in awe with their foot stomping sing alongs, to tender ballads and everything in between.

      The felice brothers kingston

      Through 18 official releases and gosh knows how many secret recordings (check out their black limo recording), The Felice Brothers have stuck to their roots, while experimenting (“Celebration, Florida”), finding new form and maturing as musicians all while capturing the heart of American life, strife, beauty, grit, struggle and the knowledge that each soul has their own unique story. From the rowdiness of their live record Tonight at the Arizona (which was also re-issued ten years later as part of a special record store day recording) to the more produced Yonder is the Clock during their first decade as a band is amazing to go back through as a listener.

      This writer was lucky enough to attend the 2019 and 2023 NYE concerts at Colony Woodstock and the band brought in many special guests, playing on songs old and new, amazing covers and so ,many special moments that left all smiling from ear to ear right into the New Year. The Felice Brothers are sure to bring out many more such more moments in celebration of their 20 year Anniversary as America’s top Americana band and the critically acclaimed songwriting that stands the test of time as well as the appreciation of their peers.

      The band shared their thoughts on the upcoming shows: “Friends and loved ones, we are doing it again! Holiday shows! Some old favorites and a NEW never before rocked venue in Kingston. Now you know what you’re doing to close out 2024.”

      The Felice Brothers have had a few lineup shakeups as their brother Simone moved along very nicely with a solo career, and the band found a new stride in 2014 with the release of Favorite Waitress. The new lineup also but out an incredible record Undress in 2019 and in the past few years has put out From Dreams To Dust (2021), Asylum On The Hill (2023), and Valley of Abandoned Songs (2024) which they have just finished a European tour supporting. Each record is a set of new treasures, and both Ian and James Felice have truly found their voices and are complemented so well by the backline and backing vocals of Jesske Humme (bass), Will Lawrence (drums).

      Located in Kingston’s vibrant Uptown/Stockade District, Assembly Kingston is poised to become avcornerstone of the region’s burgeoning arts and culture scene. These New Year’s Eve performances will be a special homecoming for the band, who will take the stage to ring in 2025 with their signature blend of folk, rock, and heartfelt storytelling.

      The Felice Brothers’ return home this December will surely lead to an unforgettable New Year’s Eve celebration. The beloved Americana band will perform two back-to-back shows on December
      30 and 31, marking the highly anticipated inaugural event at the brand-new venue, Assembly Kingston.

      Tickets are available now for the entire tour, and are selling quickly. There is a low ticket alert for both Assembly Kingston shows. You can find them here.

    • Dogs In A Pile Announce Extensive Spring 2025 Tour

      Up and coming jam band Dogs In A Pile have announced their plans for a 2025 Spring Tour which includes an opening two-night stand at Brooklyn Bowl in New York City. The spring tour also includes a number of return trips to cities with shifts up in venue sizes as well.

      The two tour opening shows at Brooklyn Bowl will mark the band’s headlining debut there and first visit back since October 2021. The band will then make stops in Bethlehem, PA (April 3) and Buffalo, NY (April 5). In between those dates, they’ll play their largest indoor space in Western PA yet at Mr. Smalls in Pittsburgh (April 4).

      The spring tour then sees Dogs In A Pile playing exclusively Midwest gigs with shows in Ferndale, MI (April 8), Cleveland, OH (April 9), and Columbus, OH (April 11), before heading further west to Kalamazoo, MI (April 12), Madison, WI (April 13), and Indianapolis, IN (April 15). The spring run also includes several Southern shows, including Charlottesville, VA (April 18) – where a massive October 2023 performance at The Southern Café and Music Hall has earned them a headlining slot at the Jefferson Theater.

      The tour later wraps up with two shows in New Orleans, LA during Jazz Fest at Chickie Wah Wah on April 29 and May 3, before the band heads to Mexico for Viva El Gonzo in San José Del Cabo on May 8, 9, and 10. See below for all newly added dates.

      Presale ticketing is already underway and tickets will go on sale to the general public this Friday, December 20 at 10 am ET. To view all tour dates and learn more, visit dogs-tour.com.

      Dogs In A Pile Spring Tour 2025

      3/8 – Chicago, IL – Salt Shed (indoors)*

      3/28 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Bowl

      3/29 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Bowl
      4/3 – Bethlehem, PA – Musikfest Cafe
      4/4 – Pittsburgh, PA – Mr. Smalls
      4/5 – Buffalo, NY – Buffalo Iron Works
      4/8 – Ferndale, MI – Magic Bag 

      4/9 – Cleveland, OH – Beachland Ballroom
      4/11 – Columbus, OH – Woodlands Tavern

      4/12 – Kalamazoo, MI – Bell’s Eccentric Cafe

      4/13 – Madison WI – High Noon Saloon
      4/15 – Indianapolis, IN – HI-FI

      4/16 – Chattanooga, TN – Barrelhouse Ballroom

      4/18 – Charlottesville, VA – Jefferson Theater

      4/19 – Raleigh, NC – Lincoln Theatre

      4/20 – Wilmington, NC – Bowstring Wilmington

      4/22 – Charleston, SC – Charleston Pour House

      4/24 – Fort Lauderdale, FL – Revolution

      4/25 – St. Petersburg, FL – Jannus Live
      4/26 – Orlando, FL – The Social
      4/27 – Jacksonville, FL – Jack Rabbits

      4/29 – New Orleans, LA – Chickie Wah Wah

    • Skeleton Krewe Trio Announces Debut Tour, Two Shows In NY

      A tour-de-force combination of acclaimed jam band artists, the Skeleton Krewe Trio composed of Rob Barraco, Barry Sless, and Stephen Inglis have announced their debut tour along the east coast, including dates in Williamsburg and Woodstock.

      Born from what was intended to be a one-off performance partnership, the Skeleton Krewe Trio is possibly one of the most exciting collaborations of today’s jam band scene. 

      Comprised of Rob Barraco of Dark Star Orchestra, Phil Lesh & Friends, and The Dead, Barry Sless of Bob Weir and Wolf Bros, David Nelson Band, and Phil Lesh and Friends, and the GRAMMY-nominated Hawaiian slack key guitarist Stephen Inglis, the Skeleton Krewe is a set of individually talented artists whose skills, distinct backgrounds, and natural musical connection culminate in a sound definitively their own.

      In an exciting development, the Skeleton Krewe Trio has announced their debut tour across the east coast, including nights at the Brooklyn Bowl on February 22 and the Bearsville Theater on February 28.

      In addition to their own talents, the unit will expand to a quintet for two nights with the addition of Barraco’s DSO bandmate Skip Vangelas on bass and his son Tom Barraco on drums- one of which includes the Brooklyn Bowl.

      “This collaboration represents a unique moment in time where three distinct musical paths converge. We’re creating something entirely new while honoring the traditions we each bring to the table.” 

      – Rob Barraco

      The Skeleton Krewe Trio’s debut tour promises a variety of sounds spanning original compositions, interpretations of works by the Grateful Dead, and dynamic improvisations that span genres from traditional Hawaiian to psychedelic Americana.

      Tickets for the Trio’s tour are on sale now. For more information on the tour and the Skeleton Krewe Trio as well as ticketing information, visit their official page here.

      The full list of tour dates are available below.

      TOUR DATES

      Feb. 20 • The Hamilton  • Washington, DC

      Feb. 21 • 118 North • Wayne, PA

      Feb. 22 • Brooklyn Bowl • Williamsburg, NY

      Feb. 23 • Newton Theatre • Newton, NJ

      Feb. 24 • Rams Head On Stage • Annapolis, MD

      Feb. 26 • Space Ballroom • Hamden, CT

      Feb. 27 • Portland House of Music & Events • Portland, ME

      Feb. 28 • Bearsville Theater • Woodstock, NY

      Mar. 1 • Narrows Center for the Arts • Fall River, MA

      Mar. 2 • Iron Horse • Northampton, MA

    • The Upstart Crows Release Gritty Single “House Fire”

      The Brooklyn-based alternative rock band The Upstart Crows have returned with their newest single “House Fire” on the frustrations of the creative process ahead of their upcoming EP.

      Rooted in Brooklyn, The Upstart Crows have brought their unique combination of folk, punk, and Americana sounds throughout New York City and beyond in live shows spanning haunting acoustic solo performances to the full effect of a rock unit.

      Debuting in 2018 with a 12 track self-titled album, The Upstart Crows have been performing live shows and honing their sound among a small set of single releases since they formally emerged on the scene.

      Now back and better than ever, the band has returned with new music in the form of the single “House Fire”.

      Penned during the Covid-19 Pandemic, “House Fire” captures a unique frustration felt by creatives when it seems as though no part of the act of creation is going your way. 

      With fast-paced and hard hitting drums, insistent guitar lines, and vocals that compliment the oscillating bass line, “House Fire” is a stellar example of how indulging in the negative can not only relieve personal stress but result in a work exploding with emotion.

      “The song is about the self-doubt doom spirals we all face when we are working on something… Where you start to question your own taste and ability to make something good.”

      One of many parts of the Crows’ upcoming EP slated for the spring, “House Fire” marks a promising start to the next era of The Upstart Crows.

      For more information on this release, the band’s upcoming endeavors, and all things The Upstart Crows, be sure to check out their official website here.

    • Brooklyn-Based Composer Avinoam Ettun Releases Latest EP, “Looking Into Your Soul”

      Jerusalem-native Avinoam Ettun, currently based out of Brooklyn, has announced the release of his latest EP Looking Into Your Soul, released on December 6.

      Avinoam Ettun Releases Latest EP

      Avinoam Ettun is a contemporary music performer-composer and improviser based in New York City. With a focus on creating compositions for large ensembles and his own string quartet, Avinoam combines the sounds of electric guitar and chamber music. Ettun actively collaborates with animators, painters, filmmakers, and dancers and explores the intersections of different art forms. Ettun holds a Bachelor of Music in Composition from The Jerusalem Music Academy and a Masters from the New School.

      The EP features three instrumental tracks inspired by portrait imagery, recorded in collaboration with pianist Itamar Dahan, with Avinoam on guitar. The project combines jazz, contemporary sounds, and visual art. The first song on the EP, “East West” features a powerful piano riff, coupled with somber guitar tones. The track grows and morphs, hits highs and lows, before coming to a blissfully peace-laden ending.

      Avinoam Ettun Releases Latest EP

      Similarly, the title track, “Looking Into Your Soul” presents a hearty and emotional piano with an accenting guitar that adds little nuances to each section of the song. Each song sounds familiar, like it has a classic, vintage sound of talent that existed in the past. Avinoam Ettun takes this sound and makes it his own with a blend of notes of eastern instrumentation, and golden era classical music.

      Finally, the last track of the EP, “The Dreaming Kid in the Sand” tells a story without using words, as Ettun’s other songs on the album do. The title perfectly encapsulates the theme and vibe of the song. The song truly feels like a child daydreaming in a peaceful yet whimsical place. Avinoam’s music is dynamic, powerful, unique, and inspiring. This kind of music is what today’s soundscape lacks in my opinion. True compositions about true, heartfelt, spiritual themes.

      For more information on Avinoam Ettun and to check out his newest EP, “Looking Into Your Soul,” click here.

    • Brooklyn Conservatory of Music Announces First Ever Holiday Extravaganza

      On Sunday, Dec. 15 from 3- 5 pm, the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music (BKCM) will present its inaugural Holiday Extravaganza featuring Caroling, Klezmer, Calypso, tea, dance lessons, and more.

      BKCM
Brooklyn Conservatory of Music

      Brooklyn Conservatory of Music‘s multicultural celebration invites New Yorkers of all ages to enjoy a variety of musical performances in its historic Park Slope Victorian mansion, including the surrounding gardens and front stoop. Guests can look forward to shows from BKCM’s Klezmer Hanukkah Ensemble, David Bertrand’s Calypso holiday band, and Christmas carolers, among others.

      Attendees can visit the delicious Tea Station provided by Tea Arts & Culture and can also participate in dance lessons offered by Asase Ya Cultural Arts Foundation. Additionally, everyone is welcome to join in a special sing-along of Handel’s Messiah, suitable for all ages and skill levels. Guests will also be able to engage in holiday crafts from around the world and can bring their children to explore various musical instruments available at BKCM.

      “The more, the merrier,” says Chad Cooper, Executive Director of the BKCM. “We love the holiday season at BKCM, but we truly embrace the spirit of togetherness year-round. We regularly host community events for our neighbors across the city to sing, dance, and enjoy each other’s company through the shared experience of live music. So, whether you celebrate Christmas, Kwanzaa, or Hanukkah—whether you’re a professional musician or simply a singer in the shower—we hope you’ll join our festivities. You won’t find five floors of music anywhere else!”

      This inaugural holiday event follows in the tradition of other beloved celebrations at the Conservatory, including its annual benefit, House Party, and the yearly outdoor summer music festival, Open Stages.

      Proceeds from the event will support the nonprofit’s programs and its mission to transform lives and build community through the expressive, educational, and therapeutic powers of music. To ensure accessibility for all, the Conservatory is offering pay-what-you-wish ticket pricing for the Holiday Extravaganza, with a suggested donation of $20 per ticket for those who are able. You can RSVP and learn more here.

    • Ciao Malz Releases “Two Feet Tall” Ahead of New EP

      On Nov. 15, Brooklyn-based multi-instrumentalist Ciao Malz (Malia DelaCruz) released her newest single “Two Feet Tall.” The single is the first from her debut EP, Safe Then Sorry, to be released via Audio Antihero on Dec. 6.

      Ciao Malz

      The memorable melodies and infectious chorus sticks in your head long after the song ends while the emotionally rich lyrics leave you with much to think about. In true Bedroom Pop fashion, the cheerful verses are complemented by thoughtful, albeit pessimistic, moments of sheer honesty as the chorus comes back around.

      Each time the tempo slows, the song avoids hitting a resolving note until it returns to the verse. As the song ends, DelaCruz’s repetition of the phrase “I can never tell” hits home in a genuine way that most songs lack. The production on the song is top-tier and makes the track fit comfortably on any college radio rotation, or indie pop playlist you can imagine. All this, combined with the thematically resonant vocal delivery and wobbly guitars, strikes a distinct note, helping “Two Feet Tall” quickly become her most-streamed song since its release.

      Ciao Malz draws inspiration from artists such as Elliott Smith, Jerry Jeff Walker, and Men I Trust, blending witty introspection with a dynamic musical style. While her self-released demos garnered attention from NPR, WFUV, Loud Women, and others, this latest work is her most mature, eclectic, and polished to date.

      Her music first reached the Audio Antihero label when she issued a cover of Frog’s “You Know I’m Down” in 2023, and the label then offered to work with her on this debut. In addition to numerous other collaborations at her Lower East Side studio, Malia DelaCruz has also been played bass for the acclaimed Sister. group (with Hannah Pruzinsky, Ceci Sturman, and James Chrisman).

      Learn more here.

    • Ski Team Release Experimental Song “Me”

      Brooklyn-based Indie Pop artist Ski Team (Lucie Lozinski) has announced Dec. 3. as the release date for the music video of “Me”.

      Ski Team

      “Me” is about “the struggle of adjusting someone’s role in your life, or your own role to them, and giving up control in that process,” shares Lucie Lozinski, otherwise known as Ski Team. “It’s about realizing if you have to assign roles, maybe it’s not as special as you think. And, like, challenging this idea of roles being the whole of someone’s identity. It’s scary to not know who’s on your roster, or who you are without a particular person/job/trait/whatever, and just go forth into life’s abyss as a human, but it’s often better for everyone involved to get on with it.”

      While the song is classified as experimental, there is enough common elements to make the song relatable to the average listener. The saxophone that begins the song is a nice touch and each time the sax makes an appearance in the mix it is always a welcome addition. The lyrics take the song to a personal level that gives the feeling of listening to a journal entry.

      The video reflects the isolation and mundanity of the roles we play in everyday life by the use of the grey office space, escalators, and packed public transportation. Lozinski wears her hair pinned back as tight as can be and an all-white suit and tie combined with a long flowing skirt and a fo-leather jacket. All this draws stark connections to Apple’s famous “1984 Macintosh” commercial in the sense of routine and technology controlling life. With fantastic editing and shots that beautifully depict the liminal, the music video is an incredibly impressive achievement.

      Lozinski found the saxophone player on Hinge. He had a bunch of videos of him playing sax, and she reached out saying, “hey I don’t want to date each other, but can you come put down some saxophone on this song?” And he did. Ski Team collaborated with popular producer Daniel Knowles (Sharon Van EttenCigarettes After Sex) on the new single. Ski Team has received praise from the likes of American Songwriter, Atwood Magazine and more.

      Learn more about Ski Team here.

    • New York Series: Samara Joy’s Shirley Chisholm-Inspired “Why I’m Here”

      On Monday, November 18, the New York City Council passed a resolution designating every November 30 as “Shirley Chisholm Day,” honoring the longtime Bedford-Stuyvesant resident, political pioneer, as well as the first Black woman elected to Congress and first woman to run for President.

      shirley chisholm
      Chisholm speaking at the 1972 Decmocratic National Convention – photo via Library of Congress

      The honor arrives a week that would have ended with Chisholm’s 100th birthday, on Saturday, November 30.

      “This legislation is … an affirmation of the contribution of Shirley Anita Chisholm, who unlocked and opened doors for generations of political leaders who were excluded simply for being Black.”

      Brooklyn Councilmember Farah Louis – regarding “Shirley Chisholm Day”

      Earlier this year, breakout vocalist Samara Joy released an original single, “Why I’m Here,” a song so triumphant it was chosen for the Netflix film Shirley, starring Oscar winner Regina King as the title character.

      Co-written with GRAMMY winner PJ Morton, “Why I’m Here” captures the inspiring drive of Chisholm. with Joy noting, “For me, this song was a representation of how Shirley Chisholm’s commitment to pursuing her purpose has affected us all, whether we realize it or not.”

      The song further establishes Samara Joy as a voice to be reckoned with, both in the world of jazz and beyond. Likewise, Chisholm was a force to be reckoned with, and a passionate leader for decades.

      Photo by © CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

      Born in 1924 in Brooklyn as Shirley Anita St. Hill, Chisholm noted in her 1970 memoir “Unbought and Unbossed” that she was taken to Barbados at an early age to live with her grandmother, later returning to Brooklyn when she was 10. There, she lived with her parents and siblings in an “unheated, four-room, cold-water railroad flat” in Brownsville, a mostly-Jewish neighborhood at the time.

      Chisholm graduated from Brooklyn College and in 1951 received a master’s degree in early childhood education from Columbia University before eventually joining the League of Women Voters and the NAACP. In 1964, she became the second African American in the New York State Legislature and in 1968 she won a seat in Congress, advocating for early childhood education, among other causes.

      shirley chisholm

      Chisholm represented Brooklyn’s 12th Congressional District, which covered much of Bed-Stuy, for seven terms from 1969 to 1983. In recent years her legacy has been celebrated with various honors, including a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015 and a statue in Prospect Park approved by city officials.

      In the lead up to her run for the Democratic nomination for president in 1970, Chisholm argued, “Our representative democracy is not working, because the Congress that is supposed to represent the voters does not respond to their needs. I believe the chief reason for this is that it is ruled by a small group of old men.” Chisholm’s words from more than a half-century ago echo loudly today in the wake of the most recent presidential election.

      The lyrics to “Why I’m Here” follow the course of Chisholm’s trailblazing career, with the chorus, “An easy road was never promised, and so much has been from taken from us, but I won’t stop no matter how much I have to go through, I won’t shed one tear, I know why I’m here,” solidifying the icon’s tenacity in the face of oppression, racism and sexism.

      Photo by Ambe J. Williams

      In February 2024 at the 66th GRAMMY Awards, Samara Joy added to her accolades by taking home Best Jazz Performance for her single “Tight.” Self-produced, the winner features Joy with her working band – pianist Luther Allison, bassist Mikey Migliore and drummer Evan Sherman – recorded at the legendary Electric Lady Studios in NYC.

      Samara Joy is currently on tour, with a few upcoming New york performances, before heading to Europe to start 2025.

      December 13 – United Palace, New York, NY

      Decemeber 16 – Hart Theatre at The Egg, Albany, NY

      December 17 – “A Joyful Holiday” Feat. The McLendon Family – UB Center for the Arts – Mainstage Theatre, Buffalo, NY

      Shirley can be seen on Netflix, starring Regina King as Chisholm and directed by Oscar winner John Ridley (“12 Years a Slave,” “Jimi: All Is By My Side”). Shirley follows Chisholm’s 1972 presidential campaign and the impact she left on modern culture.

      Samara Joy “Why I’m Here” Lyrics
      Fight! Fight!
      Bending but never broken
      Knocked down but I keep going
      I’ve decided to stand my ground
      I will not be moved
      And I have no fear
      I know why I’m here

      An easy road was never promised
      And so much has been taken from us
      But I won’t stop no matter how much I have to go through
      I won’t shed one tear
      I know why I’m here

      The future is in our hands
      Now’s the time to stand
      Together we’ll pave the way
      Those who walk by faith
      With their heads held high
      Have the power to change the world

      Bending but I can’t be broken
      I’ve been knocked down
      But I choose to keep going
      I’ve decided to stand my ground
      I will not be moved
      And I have no fear
      So don’t you shed one tear
      Cause I know why I’m here

      Ooo…