music
Found 6 stories about music
Smithsonian Folklife Festival ‘Goes National’ with Partner Festivals
Have you ever heard music that makes your feet want to dance all by themselves? Well, get ready, because a famous culture festival is spreading the fun across the country! The Smithsonian Folklife Festival announced that it’s teaming up with partner festivals happening April 9–12, 2026—like the Baltimore Irish Trad Fest. So what is a “folklife” festival? Think of it like a giant, friendly show-and-tell for communities. Instead of bringing only one kind of music or food, folklife festivals celebrate traditions—songs, dances, crafts, stories, and even ways people cook special meals. It’s like opening a big treasure chest of “how people do life” in different places. Partner festivals mean more people can join in without traveling far. One town might have fiddles and step dancing. Another might have drumming, weaving, or storytelling. These events often include workshops, where you can learn by watching and trying—like making a simple craft or clapping along to a rhythm. Why does this matter? Because traditions are like invisible threads that connect families and neighbors. When people share them—on stages, in parks, in theaters—it helps everyone feel included and curious. Plus, learning a new song or dance is basically exercise for your brain and your body at the same time. So if you hear a new kind of music this week, try tapping your toes. Your toes might be saying, “Hello, world!”
Minnesota Builds a Huge Online Music Archive to Save Songs and Stories
Have you ever heard a song and suddenly—zap!—you remember a birthday, a road trip, or someone singing in the kitchen? Minnesota just helped launch a statewide online “Music Archive” to protect music memories like that. The Minnesota Historical Society helped launch the Minnesota Music Archive, a digital place where recordings and stories can be collected and shared online. It was introduced at an event on April 2, 2026. And it isn’t just one type of music—Minnesota has lots of genres and communities, and this project aims to keep space for all of them. Think of it like a gigantic virtual library, but instead of only books, it can hold songs, interviews, posters, photos, and “how-this-song-got-made” stories. That matters because music isn’t only sound—it’s history. It can tell you what people celebrated, what dances were popular, what instruments were around, and what languages families sang in. Also, digital archives help protect music when old recordings might get lost, scratched, or forgotten in a dusty box. By saving them online, more people—students, families, and future musicians—can learn from the past and make brand-new sounds for the future.
A Museum Show Celebrates Fashion Designer Elsa Schiaparelli
Okay—can clothing be art? Like, not just ‘nice’… but ‘museum-art’? In London, a big museum called the Victoria and Albert Museum opened an exhibition about designer Elsa Schiaparelli, and it explores how fashion can behave like imagination you can wear. A fashion designer doesn’t just pick colors. They shape fabric, choose textures, and build forms—almost like an architect, but instead of houses, they build outfits. Schiaparelli became famous for bold, playful ideas and for teaming up with artists. That’s a big deal because art is often meant to make you feel something or think something, and fashion can do that too—using buttons, zippers, embroidery, and surprising shapes. In a museum exhibition, you might see clothes displayed carefully, like treasure, along with photos, sketches, and accessories. Accessories are the extra pieces—like hats, jewelry, or bags—that complete a look. So this isn’t just about old clothes. It’s about human creativity: how a person can look at a sleeve, a pocket, or a pattern and say, “What if this was weird… in the most wonderful way?”
Honolulu Festival Turns 30: Dancing, Drums, and a Big Parade Weekend
Have you ever been to a celebration where the whole street feels like it’s dancing? In Honolulu, a huge Japanese culture celebration called the Honolulu Festival marked its 30th anniversary, with events that filled the weekend with music, performances, and big smiles. Festivals are like community show-and-tell—except the “show” is dancing, drumming, costumes, food, and traditions that families have shared for a long, long time. At this festival, people can watch performances that come from different parts of the Pacific region, which is a giant area around the Pacific Ocean with many islands and cultures. And what happens at a festival like this? Imagine a parade where groups move together like a flowing river of color—bright outfits, drums that go boom-boom-boom, and dancers stepping in patterns they practiced again and again. Celebrations like this help people learn from one another. You might see a dance style you’ve never seen before, or hear an instrument that sounds like thunder and raindrops at the same time. It’s also a way for people who live far from their family’s original home to still share their traditions and say, “This is part of us.” And yes—there were big public highlights, like a parade and fireworks in Waikīkī. Fireworks are basically sky art: tiny bursts of color that bloom and fade like glittery flowers. Fireworks can be loud, so it’s okay to cover your ears, and grown-ups help keep everyone safe. That’s our kid-friendly news adventure for today!
The Oscars Happened: A Big Night for Movies and Movie-Making Magic
Did you know a movie isn’t just actors talking in front of a camera? It’s also costumes, music, lights, sounds, drawings, and computer magic—all working together like a huge team project. And this week, that team project got celebrated at the Academy Awards, also called the Oscars. The Oscars are like a giant “thank you” party for movies from the past year. People win awards for acting, directing, writing, music, costumes, and special effects—the stuff that makes you gasp, laugh, or sit super still because the story pulled you in. Let’s picture how many jobs it takes. Someone designs the costumes so characters look like a pirate, a scientist, or a dancing dragon—without needing to say a word. Someone mixes sound so footsteps don’t sound like marshmallows unless they’re supposed to. Someone creates visual effects so a spaceship can soar across the screen even if it was never really there. And here’s why awards matter for kids, too: they remind us that creativity isn’t one thing. Maybe you’re a great storyteller. Maybe you’re a great drawer. Maybe you’re a great music-maker who can turn a simple drumbeat into a heart-thumping chase scene. Now, from movie spotlights to real-life spotlights—let’s travel to a giant celebration in Hawaiʻi!
A Week-Long Festival Begins in India: Mahashivratri in Mandi
Can you imagine a celebration so big that it feels like the whole town is joining one giant parade? In the city of Mandi in India, a major cultural festival called Mahashivratri has begun, starting with a traditional procession and ceremonies. Here’s what makes it extra fascinating: organizers say more than 200 local deities are participating. In this tradition, many communities bring symbols or statues of their deities in a procession, along with music and special rituals. In many places, communities have special symbols, stories, and traditions that help people remember their history and values—kind of like how a school might have a mascot, songs, and special days, but on a much bigger, older scale. A procession is like a moving celebration—people walk together in an organized way, often with music, colorful clothing, and decorations. Imagine drums thumping like a heartbeat, flags fluttering, and the air smelling like tasty food from nearby stalls. Festivals like this can last for days because there’s a lot to share: performances, visiting with neighbors, shopping, and making offerings or prayers, depending on the tradition. Even if your family celebrates different holidays, it’s cool to learn how other communities celebrate—because it reminds us that humans everywhere like to gather, tell stories, and make meaning together.