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Children Teach Survival in Music and Dance
1/02/08 Children Teach Survival in Music and Dance
The Spirit of Uganda, youthful ambassadors of East African culture, will present a colorful program of music and dance at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 29, in Yardley Hall of the Carlsen Center, Johnson County Community College. Previously at the Carlsen Center under the name Children of Uganda, the Spirit of Uganda offers a stunning performance with a goal to raise awareness of Uganda’s dual crises, AIDS and civil war. With a vibrant cast of 20 performers, ages 8-18, the concert features drums, dramatic choreography and gorgeous call-and-response vocals, which bring to life the sounds and movements of East Africa. Considered ambassadors for Uganda’s 2.4 million orphans, these children personify the resilience and promise of African’s next generation. In bare feet and colorful native costumes, children play a variety of drums, xylophones, horn trumpets and harps. Songs with exotic names like Titi Katitila, which celebrates an exotic bird, or Anjolinaye, which praises the beauty of an African girl, are sung in native languages while others are in English. Members of the East African troupe will be in residency Feb. 27-29 conducting a dance and drumming workshop and lecture demonstration for students of all ages in the community. For more information, call Angel Mercier, ArtsEducation program director, 913-469-8500, ext. 4221. |