iFFY The Badman

When speaking of East Harlem-bred musicians, names like Tito Puente and Celia Cruz come to mind. The pioneers of the rich Afro-Latino, mambo and salsa musical genres that have helped shape the area’s music scene today are immortalized through murals and street signs all around the neighborhood. But as East Harlem has evolved, through the wave of cultural and economic change, so has the definition of what an East Harlem musician is supposed to sound like.

Meet iFFY The Badman, a singer and songwriter of pop and soul influenced punk music who is a walking representation of that change.  After moving to East Harlem at 12 years old, his deep Rock and Roll influences clashed with El Barrio’s Afro-Latino culture, and his musical identity has made him stand out from East Harlem’s current musicians. Despite being recently signed to Universal Republic records, gaining his neighborhood’s support for his different sound has been a challenge, one that he has chosen to use as motivation to stick to his guns.

As he performs for the first time in New York City, iFFY The Badman provides a glimpse into how it feels to represent something different than the norm.

Brian Binsack. On the Journey from Music to Business

Brian Binsack in The End New York art-gallery. Photo by Natalia V. Osipova

Brian Binsack, 30, is one of four owners of The End New York in Brooklyn, a new multifunctional creative facility, which combines professional recording and photo studio and a rehearsal room. It has a rooftop space for social event rentals and even art-gallery with paintings and sculptures of contemporary artists.

Binsack signed a lease for the space at the western waterfront on Greenpoint Avenue in February this year, and held the first arts event in May. Two weeks ago, the End New York finished the latest makeover works and organized a launch party to introduce their latest addition, a new performance venue.

Binsack is a professional composer converted into a businessman. In a short interview he describes his journey from music to entrepreneurship and approach in making a successful startup in New York City.

 

[audio:http://cdn.journalism.cuny.edu/blogs.dir/383/files/2011/10/Brian-New.mp3|titles=Brian Binsack Interview] [audio:http://cdn.journalism.cuny.edu/blogs.dir/383/files/2011/10/Brian-Plays.mp3|titles=Brian Binsack is playing cello on the music jam session with his colleagues]