The Day

Sunday’s Make Music Day events go virtual and live

- — Rick Koster

The essence and spirit of the annual and world-wide Make Music Day, happening Sunday, is focused on live performanc­e. Since 1982, Make Music Day — always held on June 21, the longest day of the year, to ensure even more music — has celebrated musicians from all over, of all skill levels and in any genre. Enter another world-wide event: A plague. Musicians, though, are mostly a committed and optimistic lot. As such, Make Music Day will go on as usual — just in mostly virtual fashion. Locally, Rich Martin, owner of Telegraph Records, has organized a schedule of virtual performanc­es to ensure that many artists aren’t in direct competitio­n with one another. The best way to see and hear these acts, Martin says, is to seek out the artists’ social media pages — although his goal is to coordinate them as well through the Telegraph Records’ site.

THE SCHEDULE:

12:30 p.m. — James Harris 1 p.m. — Jason Deeble 2 p.m. — Anne Castellano 2 p.m. — Leigh and Hunter Duo 2:30 p.m. — Ada Mae Florek 3 and 6 p.m. — DJ sets from Pamela Wilson (NL Drone Orchestra) 4 p.m. — Craig Edwards 4:30 p.m. — Brian Gore and Landon Elliott 5 p.m. — Hugh Birdsall and Dana Tanaki 6 p.m. — Anna May 6:30 p.m. — Kathleen Parks & Brad Bensko 8 p.m. — Stephanie Sutera and Sonorous Rising Also scheduled to perform but with no confirmed set times are the Balkun Brothers and Bruce McDermott.

And singing live at 2 p.m. at the New London Homeless Hospitalit­y Center, 730 State Pier Road, is soul vocalist Nosame Correia. The performanc­e is open to the public with social distancing measures in place.

For more informatio­n on local Make Music Day activities, visit newlondona­rtscouncil.org.

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