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Music

Mondays, 7-9pm, King Ave. United Methodist Church [in the chapel], 299 King Ave.

Women 16 and up are welcome to join Columbus’ only feminist chorus. New members are invited to come on Monday, January 9; Monday, January 16; Monday, January 23; or Monday, January 30; at 6:45pm; for part assignment; to prepare for our May 21 concert.

Rehearsals are held Mondays, 7-9pm, in the Chapel at King Avenue United Methodist Church [which is handicap accessible in Victorian Village], 299 King Ave.

Mondays, 7-9pm, King Ave. United Methodist Church [in the chapel], 299 King Ave.

Women 16 and up are welcome to join Columbus’ only feminist chorus. New members are invited to come on Monday, January 9; Monday, January 16; Monday, January 23; or Monday, January 30; at 6:45pm; for part assignment; to prepare for our May 21 concert.

Rehearsals are held Mondays, 7-9pm, in the Chapel at King Avenue United Methodist Church [which is handicap accessible in Victorian Village], 299 King Ave.

Mondays, 7-9pm, King Ave. United Methodist Church [in the chapel], 299 King Ave.

Women 16 and up are welcome to join Columbus’ only feminist chorus. New members are invited to come on Monday, January 9; Monday, January 16; Monday, January 23; or Monday, January 30; at 6:45pm; for part assignment; to prepare for our May 21 concert.

Rehearsals are held Mondays, 7-9pm, in the Chapel at King Avenue United Methodist Church [which is handicap accessible in Victorian Village], 299 King Ave.

Friday, November 25, 7:30-9pm, Maynard Ave. Methodist Church, 2350 Indianola Ave.

Instead of spending the day at the mall buying tons of stuff we don’t really need, guitarist and pianist Bill Cohen offers another option as he sings songs expressing gratitude for the things that really matter in our lives — friends, family, freedom, nature, music, art, and more.

$10 per person donations will be accepted at the door.

Friday, November 4, 7-8:30pm, St. Philip Episcopal Church, 166 Woodland Ave.

Bill Cohen and Paisha Thomas will sing songs from the early civil rights movement when blacks and whites sang together, marched together, and even died together.

Plus: old film footage of the movement’s triumphs and tragedies:

• 1960 lunch counter sit-ins

• 1961 freedom rides

• 1963 Birmingham church bombing and the March on Washington

• 1964 Murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi

• 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches

Tuesday, October 25, 8:00pm, Weigel Hall, 1866 College Rd.

Cuban-born brothers Orlando Alonso and Orlay Alonso will share the stage and the keyboard, performing four hands in their Columbus, Ohio concert.

In a nod to our Cuban and Spanish heritage, we have planned a very special program to include works by Lecuona, Cervantes, Falla and Piazzolla, in addition to Dvořák, Debussy, and Stravinsky.

Friday, September 16, 7:30pm, St. John’s Evangelical Protestant Church [UCC], 59 E. Mound St.

Well-known throughout central Ohio, the Dwight Lenox Trio returns to St. John’s “Java and Jazz” Concerts by popular demand on Friday, September 16 at 7pm.

Singer, songwriter, bandleader, Dwight Lenox has appeared with the Columbus Jazz Orchestra [CJO]; CJO Artistic Director Byron Stripling calls Dwight “one of our favorite singers.” We look forward to seeing you at St. John’s where you can sit back and enjoy Dwight Lenox’s silky smooth voice and Stauf’s coffee.

Friday, September 30, 7:30pm, King Ave. United Methodist Church, 299 King Ave.

Civil rights sit-ins. Bell-bottoms. Anti-war marches. Student Power. Afros. Mini-skirts. Hippies. Riots. Space flights. The generation gap.

Those hallmarks of the turbulent 1960s will be rekindled as Bill Cohen leads his annual candlelit musical year-by-year journey through the era, with live and familiar 1960s folksongs, “news reports” of sixties happenings, displays of anti-war buttons and posters, and far-out sixties fashions.

Saturday, August 6, 6-8pm, University Baptist Church, 50 W. Lane Ave.

Rocco Di Pietro, a local composer and a Columbus State Community College faculty member, has created a new piece entitled “Smiles and Screams: Love to Hiroshima and Nagasaki,” a concert with Taubes (an artistic rendering of how life and art interplay), that, along with community voices, will raise the vision of a world less violent and without nuclear weapons.

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