Trending...
- ReviewsAlly Launches Evidence-Based Review Platform for VPNs, Business Software, and Online Services
- Top 5 Most Reliable Used Vans in the UK in 2026
- Century Fasteners Corp. Exhibiting at 2026 Farnborough International Airshow
James Teal Presents A Hispanic Heritage Month String Quartet Performance of Latin Music at Alexander Avenue and Bruckner Blvd, Bronx, NY on October 2nd as Part of Award Program
BRONX, N.Y. & NEW YORK - nvtip -- New York, NY – Multifaceted Violinist, James Teal, is one of 3,000 New York City-based artists to receive $5,000 through the City Artist Corps Grants program, presented by The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA), with support from the Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) as well as Queens Theatre.
James Teal was recognized for his passionate renditions of Top 40 and Latino music performed on his electric violin, and he plans to bring the same passion from his solo performances to his String Quartet performance on Alexander Avenue at Bruckner Blvd. in the South Bronx neighborhood of New York on October 2nd, 2021, from 2-4pm.
More on nvtip.com
The pieces to be performed are new String Quartet arrangements of popular Puerto Rican songs by artists such as Marc Anthony, Rafael Hernández Marín, Noel Estrada, and Bad Bunny. These brand new commissioned pieces will be performed by James' newly formed Latin Music String Quartet comprised of James Teal on violin, Jocelyn Rosado on 2nd violin, Brianne Lugo on viola, and David Hincapie on cello. The pieces are arranged for the String Quartet by Raymond Florentino, a Dominican-American composer and cellist who grew up in the Bronx; and James Acampora, an Italian-American composer and cellist, from Long Island, NY.
Over the course of three award cycles, more than 3,000 artists will receive $5,000 grants to engage the public with artist activities across New York City's five boroughs this summer and fall. Artists can use the grant to create new work or phase of a work, or re-stage preexisting creative activities across any discipline.
Members of the public can participate in City Artist Corps Grants programming by following the hashtag #CityArtistCorps on social media.
More on nvtip.com
City Artist Corps Grants was launched in June 2021 by NYFA and DCLA with support from the Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) as well as Queens Theatre. The program is funded by the $25 million New York City Artist Corps recovery initiative announced by Mayor de Blasio and DCLA earlier this year. The grants are intended to support NYC-based working artists who have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. It is strongly recommended that a portion of the grant be used to support artist fees, both for the applying artist and any other artist that are engaged to support the project.
James Teal was recognized for his passionate renditions of Top 40 and Latino music performed on his electric violin, and he plans to bring the same passion from his solo performances to his String Quartet performance on Alexander Avenue at Bruckner Blvd. in the South Bronx neighborhood of New York on October 2nd, 2021, from 2-4pm.
More on nvtip.com
- Mister Omaha Tries The Turf At Lone Star Park
- Andrew D. Levine Releases The Lily Network, an Indian Noir Mystery of Power, Paperwork & Murder
- The Mapping Software Behind America's Viral Maps Just Got Faster and Smarter
- Longevityresearch.ca publishes cross-disease causal analysis quantifying endpoint reduction across 27 diseases
- Joulescope JS320 Launches to Help Engineers Develop Battery-Powered Devices with Greater Confidence
The pieces to be performed are new String Quartet arrangements of popular Puerto Rican songs by artists such as Marc Anthony, Rafael Hernández Marín, Noel Estrada, and Bad Bunny. These brand new commissioned pieces will be performed by James' newly formed Latin Music String Quartet comprised of James Teal on violin, Jocelyn Rosado on 2nd violin, Brianne Lugo on viola, and David Hincapie on cello. The pieces are arranged for the String Quartet by Raymond Florentino, a Dominican-American composer and cellist who grew up in the Bronx; and James Acampora, an Italian-American composer and cellist, from Long Island, NY.
Over the course of three award cycles, more than 3,000 artists will receive $5,000 grants to engage the public with artist activities across New York City's five boroughs this summer and fall. Artists can use the grant to create new work or phase of a work, or re-stage preexisting creative activities across any discipline.
Members of the public can participate in City Artist Corps Grants programming by following the hashtag #CityArtistCorps on social media.
More on nvtip.com
- Ghanaian Afrobeat Artist Praise Kusi Announces Upcoming EP "After 21:00" Releasing July 3, 2026
- TURRENTINE: A Family Legacy United Through Music
- Save 10 Percent Off Summer Stays at KeysCaribbean Resorts
- CGI Announces Pre-Order Launch for New Integrated Behavioral Health Book
- Prince George's County Students Now Have A Rare Opportunity In TV Film Production Career-readiness
City Artist Corps Grants was launched in June 2021 by NYFA and DCLA with support from the Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) as well as Queens Theatre. The program is funded by the $25 million New York City Artist Corps recovery initiative announced by Mayor de Blasio and DCLA earlier this year. The grants are intended to support NYC-based working artists who have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19. It is strongly recommended that a portion of the grant be used to support artist fees, both for the applying artist and any other artist that are engaged to support the project.
Source: Teal Music
0 Comments
Latest on nvtip.com
- SITE Technologies Releases Industry Research Report Exposing the CapEx Intelligence Gap in Commercial Real Estate
- A Business Novel About Ambition, Ethics, and the Hidden Realities of International Business
- Century Fasteners Corp. Exhibiting at 2026 Farnborough International Airshow
- Compton to host first Juneteenth celebration with We Are Us Festival
- DuoKey Launches Quantum Risk Score to Help Enterprises Prioritise Post-Quantum Cryptography Migration
- Top 5 Most Reliable Used Vans in the UK in 2026
- Dominican Fashion Designer Raiza Bonaparte presents the Sovereign Despampanante Collection at the Library of Congress
- What Happens When Congress Says No? New Book Examines the Boland Amendments, Iran-Contra Affair & Jamaican Posse, as US Congress Debate Over Military
- Warm, Dry Summer Forecast Points to a Stronger Wasp and Yellowjacket Season Across the Pacific Northwest
- L-Tron to attend 2026 National Association for School Resource Officers (NASRO) Conference
- Qscription Technologies Appoints Anurag Velekkatt Sunil Kumar to Drive Enterprise Scale
- SafeBets Named Presenting Sponsor of IMCX 2026, Bringing Its No-Deposit Prediction Platform to the Creator Economy's Deal-Making Conference
- A New Pulse for Cardiac Care in Baltimore: St. Elizabeth Rehab & Nursing Welcomes Dr. Hakim Uqdah and Expands Advanced Heart Program
- Inframark–Slater Joint Venture Selected to Manage Fulton County Wastewater Operations
- Calculated Industries Apps Add Help for On-Demand Guidance and Examples
- Cancun International Airport Reports Strong Start to Summer 2026 Travel Season
- Freedomtech Solutions Launches the World's First Pre‑Installed Agentic AI Server — Instant, Sovereign, Infrastructure‑Native Intelligence
- GitKraken Introduces Code Flow, a Framework for Software Development in the Agentic Era
- RIGHT CARS Announces Landmark African Expansion Through Strategic Collaboration Agreement Across Eight Nations
- Boston Industrial Solutions' Natron® 717N Series UV LED Ink Receives CPSIA Certification

