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'Harlem Speaks' with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Thursday, December 21st 6:30 pm FREE at The Museum of the City of New York

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The Jazz Museum in Harlem
104 East 126th Street
New York, NY 10035

Harlem Speaks with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
at The Museum of the City of New York
interviewed by Christian McBride, Larry Blumenfeld
host: Maxx Myrick, XM Satellite Radio

HARLEM SPEAKS
Thursday, December 21st
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, NBA Hall of Famer
6:30 pm
The Museum of the City of New York
call 212-348-8300 to RSVP
FREE

Location for this event: The Museum of the City of New York, auditorium

5th Avenue between 103rd and 104th Street (Use side entrance on 104th just east of 5th)

By bus: M1, M3, M4 or M106 to 104th Street, M2 to 101st Street.

By subway: #6 Lexington Avenue train to 103rd Street, walk three blocks west, or #2 or #3 train to Central Park North (110th Street), walk one block east to Fifth Avenue, then south to 103rd Street.

Time: 6:30 - 8:30 p.m.

National Basketball Association Hall-of-Famer and leading scorer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the Harlem Speaks special guest on December 21, 2006, has had a long love affair with jazz, which began in his youth-- his father was a Juilliard-trained jazz trombonist and vocalist. The Harlem born and bred giant, who moved back home recently, is completing a documentary that explores the relationship between jazz music, hip-hop and basketball titled, On the Shoulders of Giants. “We want to show how hip-hop, which kind of fuels today's basketball stars, is directly related to jazz. When we show that connection we find that things haven't changed at all.""One of the professional teams that was considered to be the best team played out of Harlem," Abdul-Jabbar recently told Hoopsworld.com. “They played out of the Renaissance Ballroom and Casino, which was a dance hall and a place where prominent jazz musicians played. The Renaissance team would play before the main attraction when they played their home games. They would play one half of the game, then they would have one minor band, then they would play the second half of the game and then they might have Duke Ellington until 3am." The documentary, which will feature a soundtrack by Herbie Hancock, is slated for release in February 2007.

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