Μετά από την πρώτη φάση αυτού του εγχειρήματος, που ολοκληρώθηκε τον Μάρτιο του 2011, ήρθε η ώρα και της δεύτερης φάσης:
AND BACK TO THE AMAZON! 12/11/2011
AND BACK TO THE AMAZON! 12/11/2011
It’s been a while! Of course Amazon is still there, and the jungle is still there, and the people are still there. But... classical music is not, so Keys of Change team is on its way to make sure that Bach, Chopin, Granados, Tchaikovsky and many other composers are heard in the most remote parts of our planet.
Panos Karan departed from Europe on 11.11.11 to continue his wonderful journey and bring live classical music to the indigenous people living in the Amazon. Traveling with his electronic keyboard, other equipment and a small backpack, which adds up in total to about 100 kilos, he’s landed in Quito, Ecuador 11 hours later. 11 must be our lucky number!
Using the opportunity of spending one day in Quito, Panos will play three concerts on Saturday (two for the Condor Trust, and a fundraising recital for Keys of Change), and straight after that head to Coca - the starting point of the first trip, to spend a week with Manatee Cruises playing for the local communities he has visited in March.
He will then fly to Peru, to pick up on the second leg of Bach in the Amazon journey, starting in Iquitos. This part of the voyage will lie through the most remote areas of the Amazon, and end in a tri-border town Tabatinga/Leticia (Peru/Brazil/Colombia).
Panos Karan departed from Europe on 11.11.11 to continue his wonderful journey and bring live classical music to the indigenous people living in the Amazon. Traveling with his electronic keyboard, other equipment and a small backpack, which adds up in total to about 100 kilos, he’s landed in Quito, Ecuador 11 hours later. 11 must be our lucky number!
Using the opportunity of spending one day in Quito, Panos will play three concerts on Saturday (two for the Condor Trust, and a fundraising recital for Keys of Change), and straight after that head to Coca - the starting point of the first trip, to spend a week with Manatee Cruises playing for the local communities he has visited in March.
He will then fly to Peru, to pick up on the second leg of Bach in the Amazon journey, starting in Iquitos. This part of the voyage will lie through the most remote areas of the Amazon, and end in a tri-border town Tabatinga/Leticia (Peru/Brazil/Colombia).
Panos is traveling with a Greek videographer (Daphne Kalafati), and later on in Peru they will be joined by a local guide, and a photographer (Eloise Campbell).