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Crossing Borders LIVE celebrates Ithaca Festival with Samite

Saturday, June 2 @ 8PM

Admission: $10 ($9 with your festival button)

LIVE Broadcast @ CSMA

WVBR's Crossing Borders Radio Concert Series goes LIVE once again on Saturday, June 2, at 8pm, collaborating with Musicians for World Harmony to present a dance party with Samite! The broadcast takes place downtown at the Community School of Music and Arts, 330 East State Street, in the Third floor performance space. Festival button wearers can receive a dollar discount from the $10 admission price. All proceeds will benefit the Musicians for World Harmony and its African missions. Samite will perform in trio, with Charlie Shew and Jeff Haynes. The evening performance/dance will broadcast simultaneously on 93.5FM beginning at 8PM and can be heard online at wvbr.com

Saturday's performance will present an opportunity for festival goers to end their day by dancing to the mezmerizing and engaging music of the favorite local celebrity upon his return from the 2007 African trip where he is currently visiting orphanages in Kenya and Uganda. Samite was born and raised in Uganda, where his grandfather taught him to play traditional African flute before his fingers were long enough to cover all the sound holes on the flute. When he was twelve, a music teacher placed a western flute in his hands-setting him on his way to becoming one of East Africa's most acclaimed flutists. He performed frequently to enthusiastic audiences throughout Uganda until 1982, when he was forced to flee to Kenya as a political refugee. His smooth vocals were soon mesmerizing audiences in Nairobi, his new home. He sang original and traditional songs in his mother tongue, Luganda, while playing on the kalimba (finger-piano), marimba (wooden xylophone), litungu (seven-stringed Kenyan instrument), and various flutes.

Samite immigrated to the United States in 1987, and now makes his home in Ithaca. Tunula Eno, his sixth CD, reached #2 in the CMJ Music World Chart within the first month of its 2003 release. He performed live on the nationally syndicated radio program "Echoes," and recorded a live performance for the Ngoma Channel on XM Satellite Radio in Washington, DC. His live performance on the nationally syndicated show E-Town has been broadcasted on over 120 stations, as has his performance on nationally syndicated World Vision Radio.

In 2002, Samite founded Musicians for World Harmony (www.musiciansforworldharmony.org) -a 501c3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to enabling musicians throughout the world to share their music to promote peace, understanding, and harmony among peoples, with a special emphasis on the displaced or distressed who can benefit most from the healing power of music. In that capacity he travels as often as possible, with as many people as care to join him, to sing, play music, and exchange stories with severely disadvantaged children.

Samite was a featured performer at Maharishi University's National Conference on Peace at the Maharishi University in Fairfield, Iowa, in 2004. On June 2, 2006, he joined Paul Winter, Wyclef Jean, The African Children's Choir, and other skilled musicians at the United Nations General Assembly conference "Uniting the World against AIDs." Embalasasa, Samite's seventh and newest CD, was recently released by Triloka/Artemis. It is named after a beautifully colored, yet highly poisonous, lizard Samite recalls from his childhood in the Ugandan countryside. "It is a symbol," he explains, "of the modern embalasasa, AIDS, a disease transmitted through the most beautiful, vibrant and natural act-sex." Billboard magazine calls Embalasasa a "superbly chilled-out piece of work . . . [with] moving and seductive melodies."

Samite is currently composing music for a documentary film on the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize Winner, Wangari Mathai of Kenya. This will also be released as his eighth CD. His goal is to open people's minds and hearts to the common threads of human concerns, conveying optimism through stories and song. For more information on Samite's music, live performance schedule and Musicians For World Harmony please visit www.samite.com, info@karunamusic.com This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it and www.musiciansforworldharmony.org.

Review highlights:

The multiple rhythms are forceful but not domineering, and Samite's melodies ride over and through them to create a soothing, almost lullaby-like effect. It's modern African folk music...

Los Angeles Times

When Samite translated his songs, their serenity seemed almost miraculous.

New York Times

Samite wraps his warm voice around melodies that seem to rise up off the Ugandan plateau, caressed by his kalimbas and other native instruments.

Billboard