 International Make Music Day, which is an international festival that started in France, and Randall for the past five years has been making a big thing of it. So we partnered with Vincent Freeman from Underground Recording Studios, and Jess Wilkinson of the White River Craft Center, and we have over ten hours of music all day all around town. We went home because our soundboard was not working. So, as you may have been told when you came in, this is an acoustic show, so it would be a real treat. This hall was built for acoustic classical music in 1907, so this isn't exactly classical music, but it may have voices in some of the traveling areas, even in the background. We have a great summer season. We have little pliers. You can pick up, Tucker has them by the door. They're very small, but the front's got our two outdoor events. We've got a concert with the Bericuna Collective in Malmites, an Afro-Caribbean festival at Fable Farma Learner, and we have, starting this Sunday, we have three bluegrass brunches in Brain Street. We're a park and street circle society and the Ridge Line outdoor collective, biking groups, so there'll be a bike ride that takes off at 10 in the morning, doors open at 11, there'll be food and beer from Veg Hill, and we have Still Hill and Mark Fords and Brian Carroll performing his week. And that will be the last Sunday of every month, June, July, and August. So, pick up one of these for the whole season of events, and the plans are in the works for the fall, so I'm enticing potential sponsors. If you want to support our programming, I'm going to give you a sneak peek, see if there's any programs you'd like to help support. Up next is Grease the Musical. This is our set. Kids have been practicing starting this Monday, and they sound amazing, so I can't get the songs out of my head, but it's going to be great. Chandler's motto is where arts and food can be meat, and this today is really a temporary of that. And I'm a strong believer in the power of music to connect across cultures, communities across borders. So that is the mission of our guests today, and so it's a real treat to welcome them from a music day. We had some of you here joined up across the street for a singing workshop. We had a bilingual singing workshop where we sang some bluegrass tunes, and some Mexican tunes, and some original tunes, and all from South and Central America. So, without further ado, I'm Larry and Joe. Larry Hales from Monagas, Venezuela, and is a legend of young era music. Joe Shroop is from North Carolina and is a Grammy-nominated bluegrass and old-time musician. Larry was forced into exile and is a silent seeker in North Carolina. Joe, after a decade in South America, got stranded back into the stocking grounds in the pandemic. Larry worked construction to make ends meet. Joe's acclaimed Latin grass band, Che Aplasio, was forced into hiatus, and he shifted into action working with asylum-seeking migrants. Then Larry, back Joe, and the rest is history. So currently they're based in the Triangle of North Carolina. They're both versatile multi-instrumentalists and both singer-songwriters on the mission to show that music has no borders. As a duo, they perform a fusion of Venezuelan and Appalachian folk music on the harp, banjo, fajo, fiddle, maracas, guitar, and the upright bass, and whatever else they decide to play with the band. The program they offer features a distinct blend of their musical inheritances and traditions, as well as storytelling about ways that music and social physics coalesce. So please join me in giving a big welcome to Larry and Joe. Simon Diaz and Diego Simón. We're doing it now by the Iano region. Let's see if he's playing. So picture. As a baby, 40 years old, immigration reform is something we advocate for, obviously because Larry himself is an asylum seeker in the perpetual USCIS lingo waiting for their case to be reviewed. They put their case in in 2017. Six years later, they're still waiting and have to renew TPS, temporary protective status, every eight to ten months. So it's a big pain in the butt. Anyway, this is in solidarity with the migrant community, which we are very blessed to have in North Carolina to the tune of going on the fourth of the state population at this point in Latin America. This is Lois DeSistori. I use his anglicized name Moses with his permission. And it's all great. And if you're wondering what the language is, there's a dispute growing. It's not the word for language. North Carolina. Yeah, North Carolina. That's right. I have said that. Hey, this song is very good. There's dates coming up. Tell your friends in New England to come see us if you enjoyed the show. Word of mouth is... Welcome to singing. Oh, which is Ya Comioc. At four. Call your business partnership. I'm not going to say like Laco or Soto. So whatever you want. Or if you're going to... Orchidia. This is an orchidia rhythm. Relax. This is to get up and shake your rough and go back home and relax.