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  • Join us for two nights of true crime with award-winning author and historian Richard L. Carrico as he discusses his new book "Monsters on the Loose." Copies of the book will be available for purchase at the event and there will be a book signing following the lecture.For more information visit: mtrp.org
  • Local author Shilpi Somaya Gowda explores immigration, class tensions and generational conflict in her latest book, "A Great Country."
  • The Crooked Jades offers an intense, rich, and somehow modern performance using old-time American folk music. Sing Out! magazine has this to say about The Crooked Jades:“The Jades, in other words, aren’t playing your grandparents’ old-time music. Nor are they performing the stylized stringband music that our revivalist contemporaries adapted four or five decades ago and take to festival stages and recordings into the present moment. This is sepia tones, bent angles, unexpected accents, unanticipated sounds. It’s banjo ukuleles, minstrel banjos, plucked fiddles, bowed basses, Hawaiian slide guitars, harmoniums, Vietnamese jaw harps, pianos played clawhammer-style. It is the familiar embraced by the strange. It is the antique and the modern, in a distinctly idiosyncratic meaning of each. This is a music that feels at once fiercely inside time yet also above and around it. And all of this is accomplished without a hint of rock, electronica, or the other flourishes to which less imaginative folk bands turn when they think they’ve exhausted the language of tradition. Tradition, the Jades insist, speaks in a host of tongues. If you know what you’re doing, you can speak in as many as you’d like, sometimes at once.”www.crookedjades.com
  • Nominations are NOW being accepted for the 2024 One Book, One San Diego season! Help us find the next One Book, One San Diego kids, teen, adult, and Spanish selections by submitting your nomination today!This online nomination form is now open year round, however please submit nominations prior to March 15 for titles to be considered for the 2024 One Book, One San Diego season.Share your favorite title or two today!View the full list of past One Book selections here
  • Filmmaker Alex Rivest talks about 'Canary' and what glaciers can tell us.
  • Venga y hable con nosotros sobre cómo nuestro cerebro es parte de nuestra salud. En Persona.Para más información: alzsd.orgMantente conectada Facebook y Instagram
  • Welcome to Le Salon De Musiques — a concert experience unlike any other. You will feel the essence of chamber music. Up-close seating allows you to enjoy music the way it was meant to be shared. Following the concert, meet the artists and fellow concertgoers while savoring a high tea buffet catered by The French Gourmet. It’s an afternoon you will not soon forget, an experience that will enrich your life unlike any other form of entertainment. After 11 years in Los Angeles, we’re providing this unique experience to San Diegans, at the La Jolla Woman's Club.Program: Introduced by musicologist Dr. Kristi Brown-Montesano- W. Mozart: String Quartet in C Major K 465- I. Lachner: Trio for Violin, Viola, & Piano No.6 in C Major Op 103 "sd Premiere"- L. Beethoven: Piano Concerto No.5 in E Flat Major Op 73 "emperor"(Arranged for piano & string quintet)Performed by: Benjamin Hoffman, Violin, Kyle Gilner, Violin, Carson Rick, Viola, Allan Hon, Cello, Ryan Baird, Double Bass, Vijay Venkatesh, Piano.(Including high tea buffet after the performance)For more information visit: lesalondemusiques.com
  • Outdoor concert on Shelter IslandA.J. Croce performs Croce Plays Croce, a special night of music featuring a complete set of classics by his late father Jim Croce, some of his own tunes, and songs that influenced both him and his father. For more information visit https://www.humphreysconcerts.com/schedule.cfmA.J. Croce on Facebook / Instagram
  • The group Students for Justice in Palestine organized what they said would be the biggest protest in the history of the campus.
  • The Photographer’s Eye Gallery in Escondido will host an exhibit by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Don Bartletti, “Looking Back at Today: Forty-Five Years on the U.S.-Mexico Border,” which documents decades of struggle along one of the most politically contested boundaries on the planet.The show will match ten black and white images from Bartletti’s early photojournalistic career, which began in 1972, with ten recently shot images from the past three years. The photos illustrate that despite the passage of time, little has changed as people seek to improve their lives.“These sets of photographs describe the heart and soul of my newspaper career,” Bartletti said. “Over four decades I proposed stories about immigration and published thousands of images and photo essays. It remains the breaking news story that has no deadline, is as old as our species and is unlikely to ever end—human migration.”The exhibit will open at The Photographer’s Eye Gallery, 326 E Grand Ave., on May 18 and continue until June 15. Bartletti will give a talk at the Grand Theater Juniper Room, 321 E. Grand Ave., across the street from the gallery, on May 18 at 3 p.m., for which there will be a $10 charge. He will also conduct a meet and greet at the gallery on May 18 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.Bartletti began his work as a photojournalist in 1972 in San Diego County and spent seven years at the San Diego Union-Tribune before moving to the Los Angeles Times in 1984. He is perhaps best known for his photo essay in which he followed undocumented Central American youths as they hopped freight trains through Mexico to the United States, often facing deadly danger. The work, “Enrique’s Journey,” earned Bartletti the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography.While Bartletti’s photographs are documentary, their visual and emotional impact have elevated them to the level of art and have been shown at numerous venues, including the International Center for Photography in New York; the Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil, INBA, in Mexico City; Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York; the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and many others.His work had attracted global recognition and he has been honored with many awards, including the 2002 Robert F. Kennedy Grand Prize for International Photojournalism, the 2002 George Polk Award for International Reporting, and the 2015 Overseas Press Club Award for Reporting on Latin America.Bartletti said that when he began his career as a photojournalist he had no idea he’d be photographing the same story 45 years later.“I thought 40 years ago 30 years ago this could never last,” he said. “But it’s morphed into another kind of migration that proves, once again, there’s no stopping migration for survival. It’s human nature.”For more information visit: thephotographerseyecollective.comStay Connected on Facebook and Instagram
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