You are reading

Queens BP Launches Summer Concert Series, Kicks Off This Saturday

A musical tribute to hip hop pioneer Biz Markie, featuring DJ Cutmaster Cool V, with Emcee Ralph McDaniels is scheduled for Sept.19 at Baisley Pond Park

Aug. 24, 2021 By Ryan Songalia

The borough will wind down the summer season with a free concert series featuring reggae, children’s music with a Latin twist, and hip hop.

The free series, called Queens Live!” is being presented by Queens Borough President Donovan Richards and will feature three concerts—with the first taking place in the Rockaways this Saturday. The other two events are scheduled at Travers Park in Jackson Heights and Baisley Pond in Springfield Gardens over the course of the next month.

“After an unprecedented 17-month period of loss, uncertainty and seclusion, we are thrilled to be able to bring families from across Queens together this summer for three incredible evenings of great music, memorable experiences and a sense of community we have all sorely missed,”  Richards said.

The event Saturday will take place from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. on the Rockaway Boardwalk—at Beach 94th Street—and will feature reggae artists such as DJ Jah Wise, DJ Vaughn Allstar, Mighty Redeemer and Johnny Osbourne.

The concert is also part of “Reggae on the Boardwalk,” an event founded in Coney Island by Carter Van Pelt in 2010 that highlights local reggae artists in front of multicultural audiences.

The concert series moves to Travers Park in Jackson Heights on Sunday, Sept. 12 for a family-friendly show by 123 Andres, a Latin Grammy Award-winning husband-and-wife duo.

The pair, Andrés Salguero and Christina Sanabria, won the Latin Grammy for Best Children’s Album in 2016, and will be bringing their act to Queens for an evening of song and dance. The concert begins at 6 p.m.

The 123 Andres show will also be hosted in honor of Hispanic Heritage Month and will be part of the Richards’ annual Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration.

The final concert will take place on Sunday, Sept. 19 at Baisley Pond Park in Springfield Gardens, when artists pay tribute to the late hip hop icon Biz Markie, who passed away last month at age 57.

The concert will be hosted by Video Music Box co-creator Ralph McDaniels—known for his hit 1989 single “Just A Friend—and will include Cutmaster Cool-V, who had DJed for Biz Markie.

The show will begin at 6 p.m. and run until 8 p.m.

The free series is being produced by the Queens Borough President’s Office in partnership with NYC Parks and the Kupferberg Center for the Arts at Queens College.

 

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

E train rider beaten with a skateboard during attempted robbery, suspect remains at large a month later: NYPD

Police from the 112th Precinct in Forest Hills and Transit District 20 are looking for a suspect who weaponized a skateboard to bludgeon an E train rider last month.

The attack went down during the early morning hours of Monday, Sept. 16, as the 36-year-old victim was sitting on a southbound E approaching the Forest Hills–71st Avenue station at around 3 a.m. when a stranger approached. The intruder attempted to remove property from the victim’s pocket. The targeted rider began to record the older man with his cell phone. The stranger grabbed a skateboard from another rider and smashed the victim in his head, police said Tuesday.

Former FBI agent from Queens Village charged with possessing arsenals of illegal ghost guns: DA

A former FBI agent from Queens Village is criminally charged with possessing an arsenal of illegal ghost guns and a stockpile of ammunition after law enforcement raided his home and a storage unit in Port Washington, L.I.

Scott Chiang, 53, was arraigned Friday in Queens Criminal Court on a 242-count criminal complaint after the searches at the two locations uncovered 18 illegal firearms, including eight ghost guns and six assault weapons, as well as high-capacity magazines, ammo and gun manufacturing tools.