Arts & Culture

11-13-12: Maryland Morning with Sheilah Kast

It's been two weeks since Superstorm Sandy swept through the East Coast, but many communities are still cleaning up the damage caused by the storm. Sheilah speaks with Noah Bradshaw, inspector for the city of Crisfield and Garrett County Administrator Monty Pagenhardt.



11-14-12: Maryland Morning Culture Calendar

Ongoing through December 17
Jews on the Move: Baltimore and the Suburban Exodus, 1945-1968
Hodson Hall, Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore

Wednesday November 14
Maryland Hall’s Showcase Artist Series presents singer/songwriter Dirk Hamilton
Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts
Annapolis
7:30 p.m.

Friday November 16



Sorie Kondi of Sierra Leone, Baltimore RetroCineFest, Justin Sirois on “So Say the Waiters,” and Rupert Wondolowski on… pills.

Sorie Kondi of Sierra Leone shares his music and his story this week on The SignalWe meet a man who grew up blind in a small village in Sierra Leone.  As a child, he taught himself how to play a rare, traditional instrument called the Kondi.  He adopted the name of his instrument, and today, Sorie Kondi is on an unlikely international tour, thanks to a network of world music fan



11-12-12: Musicians For a PKD Cure

Joseph Mulhollen. Credit: Megan Elyse Lloyd.On Saturday at the Golden West Café in Hampden, several local musicians will donate their talents to raise money to support research into a cure for Polycystic Kidney Disease, or PKD.



11-7-12: Maryland Morning with Sheilah Kast

In addition to voting for President Barack Obama, Maryland voted yes on all seven statewide ballot questions. To run down the results from the 2012 Election, Sheilah is joined by WYPR's Fraser Smith and Joel McCord, as well as The Capital's Pamela Wood and Bethany Rodgers of the Frederick News-Post.



11-7-12: One, Two, Three, Four, Beethoven's Fifth

Marin Alsop. Credit: Grant Leighton.Marin Alsop will conduct the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra this weekend in concerts that feature perhaps the most recognizable piece of western art music in the world, paired with a new piece by a composer with Baltimore roots.



Tonier Cain's triumph over trauma

“For 19 years I lived on the streets.  I slept during the day underneath a bridge.  At night I would get up, stand on the corners, prostitute, get my drugs, use all night long, and I’d go back underneath my little bridge and I’d go back to sleep and I’d start all over again.”

-Tonier Cain, Team Leader at the National Center for Trauma Informed Care



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