© 2025 | WUWF Public Media
11000 University Parkway
Pensacola, FL 32514
850 474-2787
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • TikTok faced scrutiny Wednesday along with other social media sites over child safety. But its Singaporean CEO was grilled over his nationality when a senator repeatedly asked whether he has CCP ties.
  • Brazil's foreign ministry revealed that the administration of Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing predecessor of current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, had conducted espionage against Paraguay.
  • Nepal was shaken to its core last week after massive anti-corruption protests toppled the government. NPR talks to residents about what comes next after the uprisings.
  • Rising Appalachia LIVE in concert on Thursday, May 5th, 2022 at 8 PM.
    Doors open at 4 PM.

    Opening Acts: Holy RIver & Brynne Heatley & Stacey Vann & ChiroYoga
    Rising Appalachia brings to the stage a collection of sounds, stories, and songs steeped in tradition and a devotion to world culture. Intertwining a deep reverence for folk music and a passion for justice, they have made it their life’s work to sing songs that speak to something ancient yet surging with relevance.
    Whether playing at Red Rocks or in rail cars, at Italian street fairs or to Bulgarian herbalists, this fiercely independent band has blazed a unique and colorful path across the globe. 11 years into their movement, Rising Appalachia believes that the roots of all these old songs are vital to our ever-evolving soundscape.

    Led by the collective voice of sisters Leah and Chloe, and joined by their beloved band - percussionist Biko Casini and bassist/guitarist David Brown - Rising Appalachia is a melting pot of folk music simplicity, textured songwriting, and those bloodline harmonies that only siblings can pull off. Listen for a tapestry of song, clawhammer banjo tunes, fiddle, double bass, acoustic guitar, djembe, barra, bodhran, spoken word, and a wealth of musical layering that will leave you called to action and lulled into rhythmic dance simultaneously. It is both genre-bending and familiar at the same time. Proudly born and raised in the concrete jungle of Atlanta, Georgia, sharpening their instincts in the mountains of Appalachia, and fine-tuning their soul on the streets of New Orleans they have crafted a 6-album career from the dusts of their passion. In 2015 Rising Appalachia founded the Slow Music Movement, to help maintain an independent musical spirit in the face of such a fast-paced world. They are creatively committed to keeping their work accessible at the local street level as well as expanding to larger audiences abroad, and have continued to maintain autonomy by self- managing, recording, producing and creating, and directing their work. They are greatly honored to do the work that they do.
  • The Experience UWF Downtown Lecture Series, in partnership with UWF's Music Hall Artist Series, presents ‘A Stór Mo Chroí, O’ Love of my Heart,’ an evening of Irish song and poetry with Irish brothers Mícheál & Owen Ó Súilleabháin, March 9, 2023.

    The Ó Súilleabháin brothers perform a repertoire of song and poetry that has been handed down to them from their family and wider Irish tradition. Their background in musicology, philosophy and wider academia gives their excellent musicianship a deep yet light-hearted insight. They are also brilliant entertainers, practicing hilarity as well as a deep reverence for the ground of tradition and innovation they inhabit. They have performed with Russell Crowe, The Chieftains, Sinead O Connor and Nigel Kennedy, to name a few. This concert will include a capella song, their own original songs and poetry. There is something for everyone at this special performance, the first by the brothers Ó Súilleabháin in Pensacola.

    The event will be held at Old Christ Church, 405 S Adams St, Pensacola, from 6 - 7:30 p.m. Doors will open at 5:30 p.m.
    Directly following the event, a public reception will be held at the Museum of Commerce, 201 Zaragoza St, Pensacola.
    Both the event and reception are free and open to the public. However, space is limited and tickets are required. Tickets can be secured at Eventbrite.com.
    (Ticket link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/469353588217)

    The Experience UWF Downtown Lecture Series is presented and sponsored by the UWF College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities and is funded, in part, by the John C. Pace Symposium Series. Special thanks to the Pensacola Tiger Bay Club.
    Learn more about the Experience UWF Downtown Lecture Series at uwf.edu/downtownlectures.
  • The day includes breakfast and lunch, a Deja Vu Market, Silent Auction, Mullet Toss, Music, Raffle and 50/50 drawing. Funds raised are used to "Bring Out the Best in Kids." The Optimist Club works closely with the Elberta, AL schools, providing reading to kindergarten and first grade students and scholarships to the HOBY Leadership Conference, the Flight Academy at NAS Pensacola and college scholarships. They also recognize teachers of the year as well as law enforcement personnel. The club sponsors Breakfast with Santa, Easter Egg Hunt and a Fishing Rodeo at no cost to the boys and girls and they provide food for the Baldwin County Special Olympics. They also support other community organizations such as the Lillian Recreational Park and the Lillian Perdido Bay Library.
  • Begin the Advent journey to Christmas when the Choral Society of Pensacola presents a joyous masterpiece by one of the world's greatest composers, Johann Sebastian Bach's "Magnificat." The program also features arrangements of two familiar carols and three selections from Handel’s "Messiah," including the "Hallelujah" chorus.

    Artistic Director Peter Steenblik will lead the 100-voice chorus, chamber orchestra, and four soloists from Pensacola Opera’s Jan Miller Studio Artists program: soprano Rachel Fitzgerald, mezzo-soprano Camille Robles, tenor Micah Perry, and baritone Joseph O'Shea. Our soloists will be Pensacola Opera’s Jan Miller Studio Artists: soprano Rachel Fitzgerald, mezzo-soprano Camille Robles, tenor Micah Perry, and baritone Joseph O'Shea.
  • It's harder to afford homeownership than it's been in decades as a steep run-up in both prices during the pandemic and more recently interest rates hit buyers from both sides.
  • Our resident chef has been experimenting with the age-old dish, and has a few new recipes for you to try.
  • When film companies report their opening weekend box office figures, they often include what are called "previews." 'T'wasn't always thus.
62 of 4,953