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DESCRIPTION:Contact: \nFanny 
 Wong\n408.206.3387\nfanny@afrofunk.org\nwww.afrofunk.org\n\nFOR IMMEDIATE 
 RELEASE \n\n"Bring Your Dancing Shoes" to the Afrofunk Festival, July 27- 
 29, 2006\nAnnual Save the Children Benefit Expands To Three Nights Across 
 Three Cities\n\nSAN FRANCISCO, CA / July 5th, 2006 -- The Afrofunk 
 Festival, the world’s first and only Afrobeat Festival, returns with 
 extra funk for its second year with a three-day tour—July 27 to 29—of 
 San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Santa Cruz. This year’s festival brings 
 together world-renowned musicians from across the globe to raise money for 
 children in Sudan, Niger, and Kenya whose lives have been devastated by war 
 and famine. The Afrofunk Festival will once again donate proceeds to the 
 Save the Children Emergency Relief Fund.\n\nHeadlined by festival producer 
 Sila and the Afrofunk Experience, the lineup for 2006 also includes 
 legendary kora master Prince Diabate, Afrobeat heavyweight Jujuba,  the 
 only American band to ever perform at Fela Kuti’s shrine in Lagos, 
 Nigeria—Aphrodesia, all-female Brazilian funk band Goddess of Funk, and 
 Liberia’s DJ Jeremiah.\n\nAll the artists are excited about performing 
 together in front of the festival’s large crowds, and yet all recognize 
 the gravity of the cause that brings them there. “The festival is a huge 
 party—it’s about dancing, grooving, and just creating a fun, positive 
 atmosphere. But ultimately, we’re here to raise awareness and money to 
 fight the tragic famine and genocide happening right now to children and 
 families in Sudan, Niger, and my own country, Kenya,” says Sila Mutungi, 
 festival producer and lead singer of Sila and the Afrofunk 
 Experience.\n\nIn July 2005 the Afrofunk Festival debuted to sellout crowds 
 and critical acclaim; this year’s performance promises to exceed last 
 year’s success. And with more than 1 million children affected by the 
 crisis in Darfur alone, the festival’s organizers and artists will look 
 for all the help they can get in their fundraising efforts. “It’s been 
 particularly hard to get corporate sponsorship for this year’s event. 
 This festival would not be possible without donations from performing 
 artists and from the people in the community,” Sila adds.\n\n“Children 
 are the hardest hit by the crises in places like Darfur. Everyone can 
 contribute to helping them in some way; the Afrofunk Festival is the most 
 effective way for we as artists to make a difference,” says Sila. “With 
 the malnutrition rates in these places rising and the UN having to cut its 
 aid in half from lack of funds, we believe we can help fill that critical 
 funding gap and hopefully save some lives.”\n\n- end -\n\nAbout the 
 Artists\n\nKenya’s Sila and the Afrofunk Experience combines traditional 
 African rhythms, Afrobeat, Afro-Latin, reggae, and funk to produce an 
 upbeat, multicultural celebration every time they perform. As a boy growing 
 up in his village in Kenya, Sila often gave his clothes and food to the 
 less fortunate children. Thirty years later, Sila transforms his compassion 
 and concern into action by organizing fundraisers like the Afrofunk 
 Festival as well as other benefits for UNICEF, Save the Children Fund and 
 The Red Cross. \n\nPrince Diabate, the legendary kora master from Guinea, 
 has been called the “Jimi Hendrix of the kora.” One of the most 
 innovative West African artists in music today, Diabate’s concerts has 
 earned him rave reviews from The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and 
 The New Yorker. With his wireless, electro-acoustic kora and use of 
 distortion pedals for special effects, he weaves elements of funk, rock, 
 and reggae into the fabric of his music.\n\nJujuba—featuring one of the 
 world’s elite talking drum players in Nigeria’s Nojeem 
 Lassisi—delivers an infectious, danceable, and funky blend of Nigerian 
 Afrobeat and Juju music. The band has appeared on numerous recordings with 
 King Sunny Ade and impressed audiences around the world with its mixture of 
 dense rhythmical forms, articulate melodies, and energetic 
 solos.\n\nAphrodesia, the only American band to ever play at Fela Kuti’s 
 shrine in Lagos, Nigeria, emerged from the fertile San Francisco Bay Area 
 music scene in 2003. The band exploded into the national consciousness in 
 2004 with the “Just Vote Tour,” a swing-state voter registration tour 
 that took them to NYC and back in a vegetable oil-powered bus and landed 
 the group on the cover of USA Today. The band’s debut CD, “Shackrobeat 
 Vol. 1” (Flatbed Lamborghini), was picked as one of the best records of 
 2003 by the East Bay Express; their second CD, 2005’s "Front Lines" (Full 
 Cut Records), won rave reviews from media outlets including Global Rhythm 
 Magazine and Jambase.com, and was featured on National Public Radio. 
 Aphrodesia took its unique brand of “Super Aphro Beat” to showstopping 
 performances in 2004 and 2005 at the Aspen JazzFest, Earthdance Festival, 
 Sierra Nevada World Music Festival, High Sierra Music Festival, and many 
 other venues—coming away with even more high praise. \n\nAll-female 
 Brazilian funk band Goddess of Funk and DJ Jeremiah (Liberia) \n\nAbout the 
 Cause\nUNICEF estimates that 3.4 million persons—equivalent to almost 51% 
 of the total pre-conflict population in the region, have been affected by 
 the crisis in Darfur, and that number is expected to increase as one of the 
 world’s most severe humanitarian crises continues to deteriorate. Some 
 1.87 million of this number are currently internally displaced. 
 Approximately 1.4 million are children under 18 years of age, while over 
 500,000 are children under five. Those who do survive are forced to witness 
 the genocide day after day, unprotected. Hundreds of villages have been 
 bombed and burned; water sources and food stocks have been destroyed; 
 houses looted; families killed. Mosques, schools, and hospitals have been 
 burnt to the ground. And that’s only the beginning. Nearly 3 million 
 people depend on food aid after being driven off their land, yet the UN 
 reports that it is cutting its daily rations in Sudan's Darfur region in 
 half due to severe funding shortfall—the new ration will be half the 
 minimum amount required each day. \n\nFestival Line-up\n\nMoe's Alley - 
 Santa Cruz\n1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz, CA\nJuly 27 (8:30 pm): 
 Aphrodesia, Goddess of Funk, DJ Jeremiah\nJuly 28 (8:30 pm): Sila and the 
 Afrofunk Experience, Jujuba, DJ Jeremiah\nJuly 29 (8:30 pm): Prince 
 Diabate, Jujuba, DJ Jeremiah\nTickets: $15ADV/$17DOOR Box office: 
 831-479-1854. www.moesalley.com\n\n\nFor more information on the artists, 
 requests for interviews, lineup schedule, mp3 downloads, and photos, visit 
 www:afrofunk.org or call Fanny at 408.206.3387\n###\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/07/06/18285966.php
SUMMARY:The 2nd Annual Afrofunk Music Festival
LOCATION:Moe's Alley - Santa Cruz\n1535 Commercial Way, Santa Cruz, CA\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/07/06/18285966.php
DTSTART:20060728T040000Z
DTEND:20060728T100000Z
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