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FYI

Wanted: 1K Musicians To Perform Six Songs In Unison On July 21

Two Niagara Falls entrepreneurs hope to make a big noise in Canada's honeymoon capital with a spectacle that serves as a tourism initiative and a local charity fundraiser.

Wanted: 1K Musicians To Perform Six Songs In Unison On July 21

By FYI Staff

Wanted: 250 guitarists, 250 bassists, 250 drummers, and 250 singers.


Where: Firemen’s Park, Niagara Falls.

When: July 21st.

Why? It’s a ‘big’ idea, a charitable fundraiser and ‘why not!’

Saturday, July 21, has been set as The Day of a 1,000 Musicians. The goal is to create a spectacle by gathering 250 vocalists, 250 guitarists, 250 bass players and 250 drummers in one place to perform six songs and raise money for local charities that include music for therapy programs in the region.

Co-organizer Paul Lemire, president of local ad agency VideoSign Inc., came up with the idea after watching a 2015 video of 1,000 musicians gathering in an open field in Cesana, Italy to play the Foo Fighters' “Learn to Fly” in an attempt to get the band to play their town.

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It worked – four months later the Foo Fighters played a 27-song concert for many of the same musicians in the video.

Lemire and co-organizer John Fillion of Rev Publishing are hoping for a similar-sized event July 21 in Niagara Falls.

Admission and participation are free (although cash donations and non-perishable food items gratefully accepted in support of ProjectSHARE).  To register as a performer, volunteer or sponsor, visit.

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Bryce Anderson
Sabrina Carpenter
Pride

Sabrina Carpenter, Ariana Grande, Dua Lipa & More Sign Open Letter for LGBTQ+ Suicide Prevention

The stars are calling on the White House and Congress to protect federal funding for the cause.

To kick off Pride Month this year, Sabrina Carpenter, Ariana Grande, Dua Lipa and several more stars have added their names to an open letter advocating to keep federal funding in place for LGBTQ+ suicide prevention measures.

As unveiled by The Trevor Project on Monday (June 2), the letter comes in direct response to a leaked United States Department of Health and Human Services budget that showed the Donald Trump administration’s plans to eliminate funding for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline’s LGBTQ+-related services, which actively supports young people in the LGBTQ+ community considering suicide. Despite it providing help to more than 1.2 million estimated callers since its launch in 2022, the proposal would have the crisis line’s funding slashed entirely after going into effect on Oct. 1.

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