FOR RELEASE: Feb.
18, 2013
EDITORIAL CONTACT: Gina
Logue, 615-898-5081, gina.logue@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — An
MTSU professor will lend his expertise to a live Internet audio conversation of
reggae music later this month.
Dr. Mike Alleyne, a professor in the Department of Recording
Industry and author of “The Encyclopedia of Reggae,” will join a panel
discussion on the genre at the State of Reggae Music Reception Thursday, Feb.
28.
The event, which will be hosted by the Coalition to Preserve
Reggae Music (CPR), will take place in the studios of CPRLive in Brooklyn,
N.Y., and will air live on CPRLive from 6 to 10 p.m. EST.
The panel will examine how reggae has developed and expanded
since The Wailers’ album “Catch a Fire” captured worldwide approval when it was
released 40 years ago.
Joining Alleyne on the panel will be Maxine Stowe, niece of
Clement “Sir Coxsone” Dodd, the first black to own his own recording studio in
Jamaica; Clive Chin, reggae historian; and Donovan Germain, founder of
Penthouse Records. The moderator will be Carlyle McKetty, president of CPR and
host of “Real Talk” on CPRLive.
For more information, contact Alleyne at 615-904-8336 or mike.alleyne@mtsu.edu. To hear the
panel discussion, go to www.cprreggae.org
and click on “CPRLive” at the top of the website.
—30—
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