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Playing for Change

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Stephanie Beach Student Contributor, New York University
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at NYU chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

Continuing the visionary path created by a one-of-a-kind international music collective, Hear Music/Concord Music Group will release Playing For Change  – Songs Around The World Part 2 on May 31st, 2011.  By filming and recording dozens of musicians from around the world, filmmaker, producer and PFC founder, Mark Johnson captures stunning musical collaborations that seamlessly blend diverse styles of music into powerful performances, expanding on the journey that made Playing For Changeone of 2009’s most unusual cultural phenomenons. The 2-disc CD/DVD package is a global mix of cultures and rhythms featuring original songs written for the album, as well as reinterpretations of internationally loved recordings including Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song,” Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” and John Lennon’s “Imagine.”
 
Playing For Change caught the public’s awareness in 2009 when their version of the song “Stand By Me” accumulated over 30 million views on YouTube.  Johnson and his crew mixed the performances of 18 street musicians, a South African Choir and a Native American drum group into a clip that went viral on the Internet after Johnson appeared on PBS’ Bill Moyers’ Journal.   “Stand by Me” laid the foundation for the best-selling CD/DVD set Playing For Change:Songs Around The World, which debuted at #10 on Billboard‘s Pop Chart in April of 2009.
  
The true measure of any movement is what it gives back to the people.  The Playing For Change Foundation embodies this and works toward building, maintaining and connecting music schools across the globe.  

The Foundation’s first project, the Ntonga Music School in South Africa, opened in 2009. In addition, The Foundation has opened three music schools in Nepal as well as schools in Ghana, Mali and Rwanda, with more in the planning stages. To create links between the schools, Playing For Changeis working with engineers from NASA. They want to offer third world countries the ability to connect with the outside world through the Internet. Through this goal, Johnson says, “We had Boston high school music students connect in real time with kids in our school in South Africa.  They were performing and interacting with each other and, at the end of the session, they were in love with each other.  All prejudice was wiped away. That’s the motivation behind the PFC Foundation.”
 
“Songs Around The World, Part 2” is a continuation and evolution of our desire to present music to inspire the world,” Johnson says. “The journey of this album takes us from a village in Mali to the favelas (slums) of Brazil, from New Orleans to India, Jamaica to Japan. We stopped in 15 countries and recorded more than 150 musicians. The quality of our technology has improved. It sounds and looks better.”
 
With the approval and support of the Marley Estate, Playing For Changesought to create a truly global recording of “Redemption Song.” The stunning video features artists including Japanese musician Hiromitsu Agatsuma on shamisen, Congolese guitarist Jason Tamba, Congolese vocalist Mermans Kenkosenki and vocalist Stephen Marley.  The recording also features a performance from The Wailers’ last European tour along with a click track using Bob Marley’s vocal. 
 
The music on Songs Part 2is truly global, a dizzying mix of styles, cultures and rhythms.  Baaba Maal’s arrangement of Bob Marley’s “Three Little Birds” has an African groove that’s complimented by rhythms from eight Brazilian percussionists, Keb’ Mo’s Delta blues guitar, trap drummer Courtney “Bam” Diedrick’s reggae backbeat and D. Chandrajit’s tabla.  Tinariwen, a band of musicians from the deserts of Northern Mali, play a kind of music that incorporates American blues, African rhythms and Tuareg folk music.  They provide the driving pulse for Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground” and their own “Groove in G,” an improvisation that features Ag Alhabib’s electric guitar, Hiromitsu Agatsuma’s shamisen and a dozen Indian, African, Jamaican and Brazilian drummers and percussionists as well as subtle improvisations from sitar, veena and sarod players.
 
Watch the video of Playing For Change’s “Redemption Song” here:

For more information, please visit the website: www.PlayingForChange.com.

Stephanie is in the class of 2014 at New York University studying Journalism and Dramatic Writing. She is currently a production intern at NBC News, after previously interning at ABC News. In addition to being the Campus Correspondent for Her Campus NYU, she is also an entertainment and lifestyle blogger for Seventeen Magazine and a contributing writer for USA TODAY and The Huffington Post, as well as a member of the MTV Insights team. Stephanie loves Broadway and performing in musical theatre, as well as shopping, singing, and playing the piano. Follow her NYC adventures on Twitter at @StephanieJBeach.