Our mission is ambitious, inclusive, adventurous and fun, and we accomplish it by producing two annual citywide celebrations: our flagship festival, Make Music New York, held each summer solstice on June 21st—the longest day of the year—and Make Music Winter, a complimentary series of participatory musical parades held each winter solstice on December 21st—the longest night of the year. All of the performances take place annually on June 21st, the first day of summer and longest day of the year. From ten in the morning to ten at night, every kind of musician — young and old, amateur and professional, of every musical persuasion — pours onto streets, sidewalks, parks and plazas to share their music with friends, neighbors, and strangers.

Recycling the land, revealing the future.


Over 1,000 free and participatory concerts each year.
On Tuesday, June 21, from 10 in the morning until 9 at night, musicians of all ages and wildly varying walks of life will perform in plus public spaces throughout the five boroughs, including plazas, sidewalks, gardens, closed-off streets, and even a pier in the Hudson River. From established international artists to middle school choruses, music is played by anyone who wants to take part -- and enjoyed by everyone who wants to listen. From Beethoven symphonies to indie rock extravaganzas, from Punk Island on Gov's Island this year to accordion quartets, from hip-hop cyphers to brass band marathons, there is something for every listener. But don't just listen -- join the celebration and make music yourself!
Celebrating NYC Music Makers and open to all.
After about 3 months of his occasional interjecting of facts See that 14 year old girl. Mormon theology is peculiar, yes, but the media frequently takes things out of context and misrepresents the religion. Yes; I suppose if each of us believe the other is brainwashed, there's going to be major problems later on. I love my husband with my whole soul. If you can only think of alcohol and coffee for a good time, you're very disappointed. I have been that crazy lady with four kids alone at everything, school events, home events, church events.
Before I met my husband I had dated quite a few members and some relationships were quite serious but I never felt right about it. I'm grateful that my husband is not the OCD controlling type that others are complaining about. My number one question is about family - I want him to be able to be around for kids when that time comesso how realistic is it to expect him to be there for their sporting games or whatever they're doing. Needless to say, my life is a little bit crazy. All parent-child relationships do. She's willing to talk about anything I find directly on LDS. My doctor husband also has a daughter from a previous marriage who he travels to see every other weekend. That sentence strikes me as rather bizarre--it seems to be alluding to a causal link between academics and being "emotionally immature," as you put it.