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        <title>Song Stylist/Pianist - Ora Reed - News</title>
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            <title>Ora Reed in Concert with Mississippi Symphony Orchestra</title>
            <link>http://orareed.com/news.html#1</link>
            <description><![CDATA[Ora Reed's delightful fixation with butterflies is no coincidence.<br />It seems as if they both share a kindred spirit of purpose and<br />disposition.<br />   Her golden chrysalis happens to be the Mississippi Delta where she<br />grew up in Greenville and Lexington, respectively.  Just like the<br />butterfly, who makes its own silken cocoon in preparation for its<br />unknowing or maybe instinctive metamorphosis, Ms. Reed has been<br />preparing for her true calling since she was three years old.<br />    Her mother's intuition placed Ms. Reed in piano, clarinet and violin<br />lessons every summer at Jackson State University, where she also<br />received her Bachelor's degree in Music.<br />    At this pivotol moment in her life, Ms. Reed spread her multi-hued,<br />multi-talented, and multi-faceted wings to Baltimore where she<br />imparted knowledge to children who shared her own passion for music.<br />    As fulfilling as this task was for her, she had to stay true to her<br />polymorphic nature, so she expanded her wings to her first<br />professional gig at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas with the Bruce<br />Westcott Band.  She says, " I always knew deep down inside that I<br />could sing like some of the people I would often accompany...a little<br />voice was screaming to get out."  And escape it did.<br />    From there, Ms. Reed became a social butterfly by hosting fabulous<br />soirees for Baltimore' elite and singing at chic supper clubs in<br />Maryland where she was hailed as a "cafe society singer" by the<br />Baltimore Sun.<br />    At times, butterflies must return to their point of origin.  Ms. Reed<br />was called back home to Mississippi to care for her mother, Annie,<br />whose health was failing.  After the death of her beloved mother, Ms.<br />Reed rested her wings to spend quality time with family and friends.<br />She found that morphing abilities were unfaltering as she reveled in<br />positions as Administrative Assistant to a State Senator,<br />Presidential campaign coordinator, concert promotions manager,<br />administrative assistant to the President of the National Baptist<br />Convention, and PR Consultant to Mission Mississippi, a Christian<br />organization that works for racial and denominational reconciliation.<br />    Nevertheless, one's true calling is never far out of reach, when her<br />uncle reminded her that singing was her "God-given talent," Ora<br />stretched her wings as an international sensation.<br />    Places in Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Malaysia, the<br />United Arab Emirates and Carnegie Hall have heard the lustrous voice<br />of Ora Reed as her hands glide over the black and white keys of a<br />well-tuned grand piano.<br />    With triumph always comes struggle.  Ms. Reed is a three-time cancer<br />survivor.  It is said that after a butterfly damages its wings, they<br />are never repaired; but Ms. Reed's faith in God has proved that the<br />unfathomable is attainable.<br />    And beyond the reach of man's hands, God has continually blessed her<br />with a successful career including an album she recorded in a famed<br />studio in Kyoto, Japan (Kampo), entitled This One's For You.  It<br />includes jazz standards such as "Fly Me to the Moon", "It Had to Be<br />You", her favorite gospel song, "Somebody Bigger Than You and I", and<br />a special song for fellow cancer survivors, "We Are Survivors", among<br />the track listing.  She was also named Mississippi Cultural<br />Ambassador in 2006.<br />    Ms. Reed just celebrated her 60th birthday with a three-day<br />celebration where many of her friends from around the globe came to<br />Mississippi to partake in the jubilant occasion.  Now, Mississippi<br />has the privileged opportunity to hear our own Ora Reed at the<br />Mississippi Symphony Orchestra Pops 11: Passion at the Pops concert.<br />    She will perform a plethora of American favorites, all accompanied by<br />the orchestra, under the direction of Maestro Crafton Beck.  She<br />says, "I'm very thankful to get an opportunity work in Jackson, and I<br />don't usually get to perform in Mississippi.  Most of my friends<br />don't get to see me work.  So it's very special."<br />    After the concert, she will travel to the land of silk, Japan, which<br />is her second home, to perform at the Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa in<br />Tokyo for three months.<br />    Don't miss this beautiful butterfly in concert on Saturday, February<br />14, 2009, at Thalia Mara Hall.  Tickets are $15 and up.  For more<br />information, call 601-960-1565 or 601-960-1535 or visit<br /><a href="http://www.msorchestra.com">www.msorchestra.com</a>.]]></description>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
            <source url="http://orareed.com/news.html">Song Stylist/Pianist - Ora Reed - News</source>
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