Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Buju ''Gargamel'' Banton's new album hits charts


Gargamel album hits charts within hours of its release in North America.
Before the Dawn is the ninth studio album by international reggae artist Buju Banton.

Since his extraordinary entry into the music business over 20 years ago, the 10 powerful tracks that make up this special project are without question some of the most prophetic songs written by reggae icon Buju Banton. 

Before The Dawn was recorded at Gargamel studio in Kingston, Jamaica.

Gargamel Music Inc statement
Despite his current incarceration, Buju was heavily involved in choosing the final track and laboring over the phone with producers and engineers to get the mixes just right, to conceptualize the projects distinguished packaging.

The release date for UK, and France has been set for Monday, October 4, and will be available in the rest of Europe this Friday, October 1.


By Ras Joseph

Monday, September 27, 2010

Judge declares mistrial in Banton drug case




TAMPA - A judge has declared a mistrial for the Jamaican reggae star Buju Banton, who was accused of conspiring to buy cocaine from an undercover police officer last year.
U.S. District Judge James Moody declared a mistrial after the 12-person jury sent him a second note on Monday saying they couldn't reach a verdict. They had been deliberating since Thursday afternoon after a four-day trial.
Banton's attorney has asked Moody to release Banton on bond. He has been held without bond since his December arrest in South Florida.
Banton had been charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine and aiding two others in possessing a firearm during the course of cocaine distribution. He faced up to life in prison.

Source The Associated Press

Buju Banton News: Court Trial May End with Hung Jury

Posted by Jason Moore I thenewsoftoday


Today, marks the third straight day in court that the jury in the Buju Banton trial have been unable to reach a verdict. The jurors have written to the judge in the trial, informing him that they can not reach an agreement on the verdict.
The jurors appear as though they are all locked in on their opinion of whether Banton is innocent or guilty. If a verdict can not be agreed upon, the case may hit a standstill. A hung jury is looking like a good possibility in this trial.
In the note that jurors gave to Judge James Moody, they explained, “Just for informational purposes, we are still split on a decision and after reviewing evidence, nobody has changed their minds from our original vote on Thursday.”
Buju Banton, is currently being held for federal drug trafficking and weapons charges. He is known mostly as a famous Jamaican Reggae singer who has been nominated for 4 Grammys.
It should be interesting to see what happens, as right now it appears as though there will be no verdict reached. Banton is set to release a new album tomorrow no matter what happens in the trial.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Buju Banton's drug trial the talk of Jamaica


KINGSTON, Jamaica — The U.S. drug trial of reggae star Buju Banton is the talk of Jamaica, where islanders are debating his guilt or innocence on street corners, in offices, in letters to the editor and on social networking websites.
Banton, a four-time Grammy nominee who rose from the slums of Kingston to success in the 1990s, was arrested on federal drug charges in December and a Florida jury is deliberating whether he conspired to buy cocaine from an undercover police officer. The 12-person panel reconvenes Monday in Tampa federal court.
In the Jamaican capital, some people are dissecting every detail of Banton's case, a few even comparing him to the late reggae legend Bob Marley.
"I've been following it close because Buju is big in Jamaica, like a Bob Marley. Way I see it, they need to free the man cause they don't have any concrete evidence against him," Charles Barrett, a resident of the capital, said Sunday.
For others the case is more of a curiosity, a media-fed sensation that distracts from weightier news.
His most ardent fans are talking of conspiracy theories — that he was framed by the U.S. government or gay activists who have protested violent, homophobic lyrics from early in Banton's career as a brash dancehall singer.
"We all know it was a government set up. Just because of your beliefs they want to imprison you," wrote a person identified as R. Johnson on a Web page titled "Free Buju Banton."
The husky-voiced Rastafarian singer has long been a star in his homeland with the brash reggae-rap hybrid of dancehall music and, more recently, a traditional reggae sound.
"He's a major, major figure here, so his trial has dominated the media and people's conversations," Jamaican musicologist and disc jockey Bunny Goodison said. "He's been extremely important through the years because he's represented Rastafari and black consciousness in a very focused way."
On Friday, a false story that Banton had been found innocent was broadcast on an island radio station. Tumultuous applause broke out at an elite prep school when the rumor was announced as fact on the public address system. People across Kingston spread the false bulletin on Facebook and Twitter.
"The best illustration of Buju's importance is the broad sympathy for him and the desire for his release," said Carolyn Cooper, a professor of literary and cultural studies at the Mona campus of the University of the West Indies.
Others are far less sympathetic to the 37-year-old entertainer, whose real name is Mark Myrie.
"No matter how the trial turns out, Mr. Myrie has already let down himself and his fans," the Jamaica Observer said in an editorial Sunday.
Banton is charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute cocaine and aiding two others in possessing a firearm during the course of cocaine distribution. He faces up to life in prison.
In closing statements Thursday, Banton's attorney argued that an undercover U.S. government informant managed to connect only the two other men, but not Banton, to the conspiracy. Banton's team of lawyers has tried to prove the singer was a victim of entrapment.
The singer testified that he talked a lot about cocaine with a U.S. government informant, but said he was just trying to impress the man, who claimed to have music industry connections.
Assistant U.S. Attorney James Preston argued that Banton's conversations with the informant put the conspiracy into motion. Prosecutors said Banton was an established drug trafficker by the time he met the informant and the singer was looking for "more, new and different money through a new conspiracy he was shopping for" in addition to drug deals he had already financed.
Banton's arrest derailed plans to tour Japan after a tumultuous U.S. tour for his Grammy-nominated 2009 album, "Rasta Got Soul." Shows in several U.S. cities were canceled because of protests over his early homophobic lyrics and unapologetic anti-gay stance through the years.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Gyptian to 'Hold You' at BBC Concert

Source VPRecords

(VP RECORDS, NEW YORK) - Reggae star Gyptian crosses the pond to wow British fans for the annual BBC Radio 1Xtra Live, taking place at Wembley Arena in London on Saturday, September 25. Gyptian joins a hotlist of international acts for the annual event that also includes B.O.B and Jason Derulo, in addition to local U.K. acts. 

"BBC Radio continues to show me a lot of love," reveals Gyptian. "They've always supported my music and I'm looking forward to performing at 1Xtra Live." Gyptian will be singing his tunes to even more U.K. fans during his upcoming European tour, which runs from October 13 to November 13. 

Gyptian's popularity continues to skyrocket internationally, as the videos for his smash hit, "Hold You," has now been added into rotation on MTV Base and its Major Lazer remix into play on MTV Dance, over in the UK. He is also nominated for "Reggae Artist of the Year" at the 2010 MOBO Awards, which takes place in Liverpool on October 20. He will be competing with fellow VP Records artist, Gappy Ranks, for the honor. 

Gyptian currently has two singles in rotation on U.S. radio with "Hold You" hitting Top 40 radio on Z100 in New York and his second single, "Nah Let Go" in rotation on New York's HOT97. The "Nah Let Go" video recently premiered on BET 106 & Park as the "New Joint of the Day," fueling the buzz on this star. 

For more information on the concert, log on to www.bbc.co.uk/1xtra/1xtralive. To learn more about Gyptian and to check out his tour calendar, visit his artist profile at www.vprecords.com/gyptian. Please direct all press inquiries to the VP Records Publicity Department - Rhona Fox at 718-425-1151 or rhona.fox@vprecords.com.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Buju awaits verdict


African-American juror falls ill and not taking part in deliberation
BY PAUL HENRY


A 13-member panel of jurors is now deliberating whether to find Reggae artiste Buju Banton, whose real name is Mark Myrie, guilty or innocent of conspiracy with intent to distribute five kilogrammes of cocaine.
A female African-American juror fell ill and will not take part in this afternoon's deliberation.

The jury retired at 12:40 pm.
Myrie's attorney David Oscar Markus in his final argument, told the jurors that his client was innocent and asked them to return a not guilty verdict.
"Ladies and gentlemen, he is not guilty. Mr Myrie is not a drug dealer. Please, Please find him not guilty. Not because he was at the warehouse when the drugs were being inspected means he is guilty of the conspiracy charge against him," Markus said.
Markus argued that the government could not prove its case against Myrie and pointed to the Drug Enforcement Agency's Daniel McCeaffrey's testimony that despite investigating the artiste for a year he could find no evidence against him. Markus also painted US government informant Alexander Johnson as a 'master manipulator and con man'.
"To him this was a pay day. This guy was looking for his jackpot. This is how he makes a living," Markus said.
Lead prosecutor Jim Preston countered Markus' claims by telling the jurors that Myrie was 'neck deep' in the conspiracy to distribute cocaine and said it was his fault why his co-defendants James Mack and Ian Thomas were arrested. Preston said Thomas was brought into the deal by Myrie.
During his address to the jury, Preston walked over to Myrie and pointed at him for emphasis.
Thomas was expected to testify this morning but was not called to the witness stand by Markus.
"We felt we had it without him," Markus told the Observer.
Presiding Judge Jim Moody in his summation to the jury, instructed them that not because Banton was on the spot when the contraband was being inspected meant he was guilty of conspiracy. He instructed them to carefully weigh the evidence of a convicted person or a government informant because they may have a motive to give false statements.
He also informed the jury that their decision had to be unanimous to stand and instructed them that in cases of entrapment they had to find Myrie not guilty if he was not previously willing or if it was because a Government agent enticed him, they should return a not guilty verdict.


Source jamaicaobserver

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Buju says he’s nervous, scared



Stephen Marley says artiste is no drug dealer
By PAUL HENRY, Source jamaicaobserver

TAMPA, Florida — Reggae star Buju Banton denied being a drug dealer when he took the stand during his drug trial in the Gibbons US Court here this afternoon.
Banton said he was “talking crap” during the conversation with Alexander Johnson, the prosecution's main witness, on a flight they shared from Madrid to Miami. He said the incident has caused him and his family indescribable pain.
Banton, whose real name is Mark Myrie, was called to the stand about 2:45 pm Florida time by his attorney David Oscar Markus.
“I was just talking crap. I’m not a drug dealer,” Banton admitted.
He said that he did not want to be outtalked by Johnson, and said Johnson seemed to be a nice person who he liked hanging out with.
Banton admitted also that he had made a false move by sampling cocaine in a warehouse in Tampa. He said he was unaware that he was going to see cocaine as Johnson told him that he was going to inspect a boat.
He said he was fascinated with boats and was very surprised when he saw cocaine.
Banton apologised profusely and when asked by his attorney how he felt, the artiste said, “I am nervous and scared and I have been waiting for 10 months…” before he was interrupted by lead prosecutor Jim Preston who objected to the line of questioning.
Presiding judge Jim Moody sustained the objection.
Under cross examination, Preston, who asked Banton if he had thanked Johnson for making him [Buju] himself again, Banton said, “I would not risk my career which I have been working to build for 20 years for five kilos of cocaine.”
Banton said he was thanking Johnson who he thought could hook him up with a record deal and not a cocaine deal, as his record deal with his former company Tommy Boy Records had expired in 2009.
Meanwhile, Stephen Marley, son of Reggae king Bob Marley, also testified on Banton’s behalf, saying he has known him for over 10 years and never knew him to be a drug dealer.
Banton was arrested at his home at Tamarac, South Florida hours after his former co-accused Ian Thomas and James Mack, were arrested during an alleged drug bust in an undercover operation at a warehouse in Sarasota, Florida in December last year.
All three were charged with conspiracy to possess more than five kilogrammes of cocaine with intent to distribute, while Mack was charged with possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offence.
The drug charge carries a minimum sentence of 20 years to life in addition to a fine of up to US$4 million, while the firearm charge carries a sentence of five years to life and a fine of up to US$250,000.
Both Mack and Thomas, in their plea deals, have agreed to give evidence to assist the US Government in building a case against Banton, in exchange for lesser sentences.
The trial continues tomorrow.

Tapes hurt Buju - Damaging testimony against J'can artiste



Damning tapes stun Buju Banton's supporters
BY PAUL HENRY

Alexander Johnson, discussing drug deals and even diamond smuggling from Africa to Europe.
Banton's fans, who had turned out in their numbers for the trial that started on Monday, were also stung by the recordings which were made between July and December 10, 2009 when Banton and two other men were arrested in Florida and slapped with cocaine-related charges.
Yesterday, as the tapes were being played, one woman could be seen clutching her head and covering her ears. Others sat attentively, captivated by the conversations between the four-time Grammy nominee and Johnson, a convicted drug trafficker who has been working with the US Government since 1996 to sink other narco dealers.Thee fans appeared deflated, coming off a high on Monday when the chief investigator in the matter said he had no evidence that Banton was a cocaine trafficker.
Also played for the court was the video recording of December 8, 2009 in which Banton was seen tasting cocaine from a knife given to him by his long-time friend Ian Thomas after he used it to cut open a package containing five kilogrammes of cocaine during an undercover operation by the Sarasota Police Department at a warehouse.
Thomas was heard on the video saying that the cocaine was fish scale. Johnson later told the court that the term meant that the drug was of a high quality.
The mood, however, changed somewhat in the late afternoon when Banton's lawyer started his examination of Johnson, who agreed that the singer did not finance the drug deal for which he, along with Thomas and James Mack from Georgia was arrested and charged with conspiracy to distribute five kilogrammes of cocaine.
Thomas and Mack have since pleaded guilty and have agreed to give evidence against the singer. The prosecution had on Monday indicated to the court that it would not call Thomas as a witness.
If found guilty, Banton could be sentenced to life imprisonment or slapped with millions of US dollars in fines.
Before the recordings were played yesterday, Johnson testified that he met Banton on a flight from Madrid, Spain, to Miami, Florida in July 2009. The flight lasted eight hours, Johnson said, and a conversation about drug dealing came up within an hour.
He said it was the singer who raised the issue. Johnson, who avoided looking at Banton during his evidence-in-chief, said immediately after landing he informed the police about his conversation with Banton which jump-started the investigation that included the recordings.
Johnson told the court that he met with Banton the following day, July 27, to further discuss the drug-trafficking venture, which he said the artiste was interested in starting.
The prosecution then played the expletive-laced recordings, which were made between July and December and in which the 37-year-old Banton was heard telling Johnson, "I am about making money, straight up".
Banton was also heard asking Johnson if he had any contacts to acquire cocaine as he was willing to finance a deal. He also told Johnson that he did not have contacts in Venezuela and Panama, but that he was involved in smuggling diamonds from Africa to Europe.
He was also heard telling Johnson that: "It would be good to have our own contacts," and that he would like to start small, as "I don't want to take any risks".
The artiste also warned the informant that he should stay away from a man known as Lloyd Evans as he was a snitch.
"There are a lot of snitches in the game," Banton warned Johnson at one point, saying that it was hard for him to find anyone to trust.
Banton, dressed in a grey sports coat, shook his head while the recordings were being played and at some points appeared tense.
As the recordings kept rolling, some people in the courtroom chuckled in disbelief. Others seemed captivated.
In one conversation Banton was heard cursing and complaining to Johnson that the gay community, particularly the gay rights group GLAD (Gays and Lesbians Advocates and Defenders), was trying to ruin his career.
Banton had been at odds with the gay community since the 1990s following the release of his anti-gay monster hit Boom
Bye Bye.
He was also heard complaining of being stressed out and said that he had 15 kids whose school fees needed to be paid.
With the case appearing to swing in favour of the prosecution, supporters who had earlier that morning held hands and prayed inside the 13A courtroom for an acquittal -- as has been their routine since the trial started -- expressed hope that the pendulum would again swing in their favour as it approached time for Johnson to be placed under the spotlight of cross-examination from lead defence attorney Markus.
Markus stood, took to the podium with his papers. Banton's supporters held their breath. He politely greeted the 14 jurors -- two of whom are African-Americans, the others white -- then Johnson, and proceeded to whip out a card on which he had key parts of Johnson's evidence typed. On one side of the card, displayed for jurors to see, were a set of check boxes in which he ticked when Johnson answered a question posed.
"Mr Myrie did not invest any money in any drug deal?"
Markus asked.
"With me? No," the reply came.
Johnson, a Colombian who had served three years for drug-trafficking and was spared deportation in order to work with the US Government as an informant, said the artiste never sold or bought drugs and had never wired any money to him to invest in the illicit trade.
Johnson also admitted that Banton had never purchased any cocaine in Panama or Colombia and that their dealings never went beyond talk.
He, however, said that Banton had changed his mind from the initial talks of wanting to traffic drugs to making quick cash. Johnson said that was how the eight kilogrammes of cocaine came into play.
The informant did not readily answer when Markus asked if Myrie had stopped taking his calls following the warehouse meeting of December 8.
"Didn't Ian Thomas tell you, 'He [Myrie] does not want to do anything man? Talk to me. That's not him. He is about music, he eats and sleeps the music'?" Markus asked, to which Johnson replied 'yes'.
Markus is contending that his client had got cold feet and backed out of any previous talks to finance any drug venture and had stopped taking Johnson's calls, and that Thomas took over the deal.
But Johnson stuck to his guns, saying that it was Banton and Thomas who approved the deal, even though the US$130,000 may have come from two men in Georgia called Ike and Tyke.
Johnson also told the court that he had no knowledge that Myrie had financed the deal in the police-controlled warehouse that led to Thomas and Mack's arrest while attempting to purchase cocaine from US Drug Enforcement Agency agents.
Markus is expected to continue cross-examining Johnson when the trial resumes this morning.
Source jamaicaobserver

Monday, September 20, 2010

DEA agent testifies in Buju's favour


Says he has no evidence reggae singer is a drug dealer
BY PAUL HENRY 


TAMPA, Florida — Drug Enforcement Agent Daniel McCeaffrey, today testified that he had no evidence that Reggae singer Buju Banton, was involved in illicit drug dealing.
McCeaffrey, who gave evidence on the first day of the trial at the Gibbons US Federal Court in downtown Tampa, said there was no evidence that Buju Banton — whose real name is Mark Myrie — received any money from any drug deal.
He also said even though he was investigating Banton for a year, he could find no evidence that the artiste had collected any money from drug dealing.
He made the revelation during cross-examination from Banton's attorney David Markus.
Markus, in his opening salvo, told the 14-member panel of jurors that he would prove that Myrie was not a drug trafficker and had never invested in illicit drug dealing. He said that artiste would waive his right not to testify.
"He's got nothing to hide because the truth is on his side in this case," Markus said.
He said his client's big mistake was that he loved to talk. Markus said Myrie met DEA informant Alexander Johnson, a Colombian national, on a flight from Madrid Spain to Florida last year and during conversation Johnson introduced the subject of drug dealing to him.
He said Myrie had in fact tasted cocaine but that did not qualify him as a drug dealer.
Markus also argued that Myrie did not know about the US$130,000 that his co-defendant James Mack had been held with. The money he said was given to Mack by two men identified as 'Ike' and 'Tike' from Atlanta, Georgia.
The attorney said Mack and Ian Thomas were the ones who were dealing drugs and said his client made a decision not to partake in any deal and went to his Tamarac home in Florida, where he was arrested in December last year.
Mack and Thomas have taken plea deals and have agreed to testify against the artiste. All three are charged with conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute five or more kilogrammes of cocaine. The charge carries a sentence of 20 years to life and a fine of up to US$4 million.
Prosecutor Jim Preston argued that he would prove that Myrie is a known drug dealer who invested in multi-million dollar drug enterprises and he was arrested because he was starting a new venture.
Forensic chemist Alexandra Gongra also gave evidence that the substance that Thomas and Mack were arrested with was cocaine.
Telephone records analyst Donnie Godshoal also gave evidence today.
Dozens of Banton's supporters turned up outside the court to show their solidarity with the four time Grammy nominee.
His former manager Donovan Germaine, VP Records President Chris Chin and Deejay Delly Ranks were also present for the trial.
Source jamaicaobserver

Norma Dodd Laid To Rest

Source jamaicagleaner
BY Howard Campbell


Norma Dodd, wife of legendary music producer Clement Dodd, made her final journey on Saturday with a thanksgiving service for her life at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Kingston, and interment at the Dovecot Cemetery.


A full cast of family, friends and musicians attended the service. Dodd died August 31 at the University Hospital of the West Indies at age 66.


Daughters Carol and Sandra, her surviving children, led the congregation.


Other relatives there were her brothers Errol and Mark Jarrett, stepson Clement Dodd Jnr and niece Maxine Stowe.


Also in attendance were musicologist and family friend Bunny Goodison, radio personalities Radcliffe Butler, Winston Williams, Owen Brown and Barbara Gloudon, who gave the remembrance.


"In an industry noted for its hype, brutality and one-upmanship, Norma went against the grain," was how Goodison remembered Dodd in his tribute.


Some of the performers who recorded for the Dodds' famous Studio One record company paid tribute in song. Saxophonist Headley Bennett delivered My Mother's Eyes, The Silvertones did a rendition of Sam Cooke's That's Heaven to Me while Jimmy Tucker performed Jerusalem.


Clement 'Coxson' Dodd was a former farm worker who started the Downbeat sound system in the late 1950s, then established Studio One in October 1963. Musicians and reggae historians rate him as one of reggae's greatest producers.


At Studio One, he nurtured the careers of several great Jamaican acts including The Wailers, The Heptones, Bob Andy, Marcia Griffiths, Dennis Brown and Burning Spear.


He died from a heart attack at age 72 in 2004.


The Dodds emigrated to the United States in the 1980s where they established an office for his famed Studio One company in Brooklyn, New York. From their base in Brooklyn, they monitored a Studio One renaissance, thanks to an exclusive distribution deal with Heartbeat Records, an independent company located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.


The couple returned to Jamaica in 1998 to manage distribution and recording at the studio's original Brentford Road headquarters.


Norma Dodd was buried next to her husband.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Buju Banton's Lawyer Spoke on TVJ (Co-Defendant To Plead Guilty In Drug Case

Kids Music Listings this Weekend: September 18,19





Ziggy Marley is coming! Reggae icon - and 2010 Grammy winner for Best Musical Album for Children
You might not think “jazz” and “kids” but this weekend the Red Hook Jazz Festival can show you that these two go together like peanut butter and jelly…well, that is when it also involves a picnic, sprinklers and my old standby playground Mother Cabrini.  The Carroll Park Kids’ Concert Series continues on Sunday with the ever- rockin’ Audra Rox.  The venue is fun, and it’s always a nice concert series.  A great summer farewell: a picnic at Robert Wagner Park (west of Battery Place) with kids’ music. I really like Brady Rymer and Tom Chapin, 2 of the 4 acts performing, so I would recommend this.  The Back to School Bash with the Fuzzy Lemons and Rocknoceros has a lot of people excited about heading out to the Knitting Factory.
Have a wonderful weekend!

Saturday, September 18th

12:00 pm: Moona Luna at the Target Super SabadoMoona Luna, the new Brooklyn-based kid’s music band will be performing their upbeat songs they sing in both Spanish and English.  That accordion will get everyone moving!  Super Sabado at El Museo del Barrio is always great fun.  There are creative arts activities, music, storytelling and everything gets tied together beautifully with a well-thought out theme.  .DetailsEl Museo del Barrio 1230 Fifth Ave (between 104th and 105th Sts) Cost: Free
1:00 pm: Scandinavian Sing-AlongDanish musicians Anne Mette Iversen and Vibe Normann introduce children to English versions of some Scandinavian songs, play musical games, and perform some songs in modern, jazzy arrangements.
Details: 
Scandinavia House 58 Park Avenue  Cost: Members $5; Non-members $7
3:00 pm: Pier 84 Fall Equinox FestivalWelcome in the Fall by the Hudson with the jazz by Piers Lawrence Quartet and bluegrass by the NYCity Slickers.  Then take a spin in a rowboat, do some arts and crafts and no family festival would be complete without face painting!DetailsPier 84 Hudson River (at 44th St)  Cost: Free
4:00 pm: Son De Madre
After you get lunch and do some stretching after dancing to Moona Luna at Super Sabado, hit the dance floor again with Son de Madre, a Latin band that plays Cuban music sprinkled with jazz, funk and Brazilian influenced.  Part of the really interesting Carnegie Hall Neighborhood Concert Series.DetailsEl Museo del Barrio 1230 Fifth Ave (between 104th and 105th Sts) Cost: Free

Sunday September 19th

10:00 am: Musical Development in Children WorkshopIf you ever wondered how do children process music, and how you can support your child’s musical development, this workshop is for you. Naomi Weinberger from Music Together leads this workshop for parents.  Advance registration appreciated. RSVP to weinbergers@yahoo.com
DetailsMusic Together at Kiddie Korner 117 Remsen Street  Adults Only  Cost: Free
11:00 am: Back to School Bash with the Fuzzy Lemons and Rocknoceros
Come have some rocking fun multiplied by two at the Knitting Factory with the Fuzzy Lemons hailing from Hoboken and Rocknoceros from D.C.
DetailsKnitting Factory 361 Metropolitan Ave (at Havemeyer St) Cost: $10, adults free
11:00 am: Princess Katie and Racer Steve
Princess Katie is really funny and Racer Steve shreds.  This duo is totally worth the price of admission and every time my family has seen them, we’ve all come away humming their tunes and laughing about their show.
Details92YTribeca 200 Hudson Street  Cost: $15; Children under 2, free
12:00 pm: Bowery Kids: Erin Lee and the Up Past Bedtime Band
Bowery Kids hosts a family pajama party in the middle of the day featuring Erin Lee and the Up Past Bedtime Band. Bring your own PJs!Details: Bowery Poetry Club 308 Bowery Cost: $10
12:00 pm: The Red Hook Jazz Festival
From 
The Word of Columbia Street Blog—“The Red Hook Jazz Festival is back for its last show this year! It takes place at the Urban Meadow, so bring a blanket and a picnic and enjoy!  Kids love this event. The live music, the grass, the sprinkler, and there’s the Mother Cabrini Playground next door when they’ve had enough. Enough said.”DetailsRed Hook Jazz Festival Urban Meadow corner of President & Van Brunt Streets  Cost: $5.00 per adult/Free for Kids  12:00 to 6:00 pm
1:00 pm: Harmony on the HudsonBring a blanket and a picnic and say goodbye to summer! Performers include: Tom Chapin and Friends (1pm), Harlem Renaissance Orchestra (2pm), and Brady Rymer and the Little Band That Could (3pm) Bash the Trash (4pm), and Double Dutch Divas (5pm).  Other activities include lawn games, street games, art activities and…wait for it..face painting!DetailsRobert F. Wagner, Jr. Park West of Battery Place Cost: Free
2:00 pm: Oran Etkin: Wake Up Clarinet
Internationally acclaimed jazz/world artist and composer Oran Etkin, featured on Putumayo Kids’ award-winning compilation album Jazz Playground, performs tunes from his new CD, Wake Up Clarinet!.
DetailsBorders Books & Music 576 Second Avenue  Cost: Free
2:00 pm: Family Concert: The Sinfonietta of Riverdale
A highlight of Wave Hill’s year-long celebration of Growing Up in the Garden, this performance includes works by Beethoven, Mozart, Sekles, Honegger and Schuller, under the direction of Mark Mandarano. The Sinfonietta is large enough to perform chamber symphonies, but small enough that each of its world-class musicians can be a featured soloist. Advance ticket purchase recommended. Purchase tickets online.DetailsWave Hill West 249th Street and Independence Avenues Bronx Cost: $10.00 – $28.00
2:30 pm: C.A.T.: The Opera-Musical
I’ve noticed that the Bronx Zoo has started having some music so I guess Central Park had to outdo them by staging a whole Opera.  Sounds like fun and it’s free with the price of admission.Details: Central Park Zoo New York NY  Cost: Free with zoo admission  Performance begins immediately following the 2:00pm sea lion feeding and will be held in the tent near the snow monkey exhibit.
3:00 pm: Family Time with Ziggy Marley
Reggae icon – and 2010 Grammy winner for Best Musical Album for Children – Ziggy Marley shares his love for family and music while kicking off the 2010/2011 Big Red Chair Family Series!
DetailsSkirball Center for the Performing Arts 566 Laguardia Place Cost: Adults $30; Children $22
4:00 pm: Carroll Park Kids’ Concert Series: Audra Rox
Audra Rox is awesome and my family loves Carroll Park.  Putting the two together makes an event you really shouldn’t miss.  Plus the proceeds benefit Friends of Carroll Park and PS 29. In the event of inclement weather, event moves to the PS 29 cafeteria.Details: Carroll Park Court & Carroll Streets   Event is from 3:30pm-5:30pm Cost: Free; $5/Family suggested donation
5:30 pm: Family Square DanceI have a real weakness for family square dancing so I list it whenever I can.  I don’t know this park but there is gazebo involved and picnicking is encouraged.DetailsWashington Market Park Greenwich Street and Chambers Street   Cost: Free!!!