MONDAY AT WINGATE FIELD: HEART AND SOUL WITH ANITA BAKER

This from Richard Grayson, who’s piece about "Bonnie and Clyde" at the McCarren Pool was picked up by New York Magazine’s blog yesterday. Grayson is the author of I Brake for Delmore Schwartz and To Think He Kissed Him on Lorimar Street among quite a few other publications.

The Martin Luther King Jr. concert series has been going on in Brooklyn for 25 years, almost as long as Celebrate Brooklyn!  Last week Lauryn Hill appeared, and on Monday night I saw Anita Baker.

The concerts are held in Wingate Field, just north of Kings County Hospital and next to Wingate High School, which opened in 1955 – its then-modernistic banjo-shaped building facilitated ditching classes, graduates have told me – and closed last year, broken up into four small schools.  It’s easily accessible by the 2 or 5 train and several bus lines; I got there easily from Williamsburg.

Baker put on a terrific show; as she said when she came out (after Marty Markowitz read an endless list of names of politicos, community leaders and businesses), “I didn’t bring anything but a bunch of old love songs.”  That’s all she needed for her several thousand fans there.  My favorite Anita Baker song is “Sweet Love”; yours might be "Fairy Tales," some "You Bring Me Joy" and she sang most of them.  Her enthusiasm, and the crowd’s, was palpable.

I was surprised to see very few other Caucasians there.  I know Anita Baker has many white fans, so perhaps some of them worry about their safety at Wingate Field.  Everyone gets patted down before entering (the security guard who checked me out made me take out my eyeglass case to make sure it wasn’t a weapon) and there’s no alcohol allowed.  The police presence was very large, both by the field and on the way to subway and bus stops.  I don’t think it’s just because I grew up around there that I felt perfectly safe.

The shows at Wingate Field are for everyone in Brooklyn.

One thought on “MONDAY AT WINGATE FIELD: HEART AND SOUL WITH ANITA BAKER”

  1. Please Post, Thanks!
    WELCOME TO NOLLYWOOD – FORT GREENE PARK
    On Saturday August 25th, 2007 the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC) in conjunction with New York City Council Member Letitia James and Rooftop Films will screen the new documentary Welcome To Nollywood, by Jamie Meltzer at Brooklyn’s Fort Greene Park.
    Join us for an insightful look at the Nigerian movie industry, the third largest film producer in the world. Rock out to Afro-Beat and Soul.
    We will screen at dusk.
    DJ’s Stone and Rich Medina will spin from 5pm – screening time at dusk (8:30pm).
    Location: on the lawn off Myrle Ave btw Washington Park/North Portland. We will screen the film on a 20’x 20’ inflatable screen!
    Welcome to Nollywood is part of the NBPC’s Afro Pop Home Video Series.
    Saturday, August 25, 2007
    5:00 PM – 10:00 PM
    All Ages
    cover: FREE | Bring a Blanket or Chair – Rain Date – Sunday August 26th
    Contact Email: RSVP@NBPC.TV
    Fort Greene Park
    Myrtle Avenue at Cumberland Street and Dekalb Avenue
    HOMEPAGE
    http://www.nbpc.tv

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