Bassist and activist Endea Owens introduced a day of music, meals, and tradition to Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem on August 17 at her annual Neighborhood Cookout. The occasion, introduced by the Marcus Garvey Park Alliance in partnership with the Nationwide Jazz Museum in Harlem and the Capital One Metropolis Parks Basis SummerStage, featured free meals offered by Miss Mamie’s Spoonbread Too, and a efficiency by Owens’ group, The Cookout. “It’s a blessing to be alive and to share these experiences with you,” Owens instructed the gang within the plaza. “It’s all the time for the individuals, however this one is very for the group and also you all. Thanks a lot.”
Owens, who’s well-known as a member of the home band for “Stephen Colbert’s Late Present” and carried out on the Superbowl LV Halftime Present as a part of H.E.R.’s group, has introduced her signature mix of soulful jazz to New York phases since graduating Juilliard in 2018. She launched her newest album, “Caught Up in This Phantasm,” a collaboration with rapper Juicy J, on August 15.
Johnny Knollwood photographs
In 2020, Owens began the Neighborhood Cookout, a nonprofit group that goals to unite communities by meals and music. “There was a brief interval in my life the place I skilled homelessness as a teen as a result of recession,” Owens instructed the AmNews in a post-show interview. “A variety of our primary requirements had been depending on meals pantries, clothes drives from church buildings, and occasions like this.”
The bassist and educator has hosted the cookout in Harlem for 3 years and fed greater than 300 individuals on Sunday. Meals had been ready by Miss Mamie’s Spoonbread Too, a Harlem soul meals restaurant began by former mannequin turned caterer Norma Jean Darden. The menu featured alternatives like Moroccan salmon, jerk or fried hen, and grilled greens, full with crimson velvet or coconut cake for dessert. Attendees lined up for lunch earlier than taking their seats in shady areas throughout the park to take pleasure in a efficiency by Owens and her band, which featured trombonist Jefferey Miller, Summer time Camargo on trumpet, saxophonist Christopher McBride, Arcoiris Sandoval on keys, drummer Norman Edwards, and singer Charenee Wade.
A number of excited concertgoers braved the recent solar to bop upfront as Owens and her band delivered two tight units of requirements that included Invoice Withers’s “Pretty Day,” a rendition of “On the Sunny Aspect of the Road” sung by trombonist Miller, and an extremely quick interpretation of “Cherokee,” which was performed twice to accommodate one instrumental efficiency and one with phrases — each variations had been beneath a minute lengthy.
The chemistry between the viewers and the gamers on stage, all fierce improvisers, was readily obvious, because the musicians examined the boundaries of traditional tunes with smiles on their faces, celebrating jazz within the neighborhood it was born in, simply blocks from the place the long-lasting “A Nice Day in Harlem” picture was taken by Artwork Kane in 1958 that featured 57 of the age’s most influential gamers.
“It’s a labor of affection, however it’s one among my biggest joys — biggest accomplishments — doing this,” Owens stated to the AmNews. “All of us enter this Earth the identical, and all of us go away this Earth the identical. Love goes a great distance.”






















