Desert Star Weekly April 25, 2018 issue

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Your adjudicated newspaper for Riverside County

desert

STAR W E E K L Y

PRESORTED STANDARD

Garthbrooks headlines Sunday at Stagecoach Country Music Festival, see entire line-up on page 13.

US POSTAGE PAID Desert Hot Springs, CA PERMIT NO 00005

April 25, 2018 Vol. 12 No. 33

Beychella

Beyonce Knowles performs onstage during the 2018 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival. Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Coachella

Beyoncé Makes History with Memorable Coachella Performance KMIR Andrew F. Johnson Beyoncé performed for throngs of screaming fans Saturday night at Coachella after a year’s wait. “Y’all ready Coachella?” she asked the crowd as she opened her set, becoming the first woman of color to

headline the music festival in Indio, California. Excited fans had a new nickname for this year’s festival: Beychella. Other headliners included the Weekend and Eminem. “Coachella, thank you for allowing me to be the first

black woman to headline,” Beyoncé said, before singing “Run the World (Girls).” Surprise reunion The singer opened her long-anticipated performance singing “Crazy in Love” accompanied by a New Orleans-style brass marching

band, and later crooned a rendition of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” also known as the black national anthem. She sang several songs from her album “Lemonade,” backed up by the band and surrounded by step dancers. For nearly two

hours, Beyoncé revealed surprise after surprise. A tribute to Nina Simone and quotes from Malcolm X. She also sang “Deja Vu” with her husband, Jay-Z, and danced with Continues on Page 10

Palm Springs opera guild conducts school outreach program Opera in Schools Program Will Impact More Than 15,000 Students

By Desert Star Staff PALM SPRINGS, CA – Palm Springs Opera Guild, one of the longest-standing cultural institutions in the Coachella Valley, will conduct its annual Opera in Schools outreach program at eighteen Palm Springs Unified School District schools across the Coachella Valley. This innovative program, which runs May 16 – June 1 and will celebrate its 14th year, demystifies opera as an art form and positively inspires students by demonstrating that opera is an accessible, entertaining

medium. Since 2005 the Opera Guild has made a positive impact on local students. Last year, the two-week program impacted more than 15,000 students grades K-12. While primarily directed at children, the program also educates teachers, administrators, and student’s families. For two weeks, the Opera in the Schools program will combine four accomplished opera singers, and a piano accompanist, who will visit elementary, middle, and high Continues on Page 7


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