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SUNI PAZ
Recipient of the 2003 Magic
Penny Award
The Children's Music Network bestows the Magic
Penny Award on someone who has made an outstanding lifetime
contribution to children's music. The 2003 Magic Penny award was
given to Suni Paz, a
pioneering writer and singer of songs in Spanish for children.
Previous Magic Penny honorees include Malvina Reynolds, Ella
Jenkins, Marcia Berman, and Woody Guthrie.
Suni Paz has recorded and has been published extensively.
Singing in English and Spanish, she has performed her children's
music and folk music for years, thrilling audiences of all ages on
stage, radio, and television all over the world. Among the myriad
of concert halls she has graced are the famed Bottom Line in New
York (alongside performers such as Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, Don
Maclean, Richie Havens, and the late folk icon Phil Ochs) and
Madison Square Garden. She has been part of some of the most
important folk music festivals of our time. Her unique songs
inspire positive ideas, the strength of the human spirit, and a
caring worldview.
Suni
Paz is an upbeat, energetic performer, full of love and life. Her
songs have something to say to anyone looking for content,
culture, or just pure joy. She uses folk music, children's music
and popular rhythms from all of Latin America, as well as other
parts of the globe, bringing a natural earth-bound warmth to any
event.
With six children's music and folk music albums for Smithsonian
Folkways, four children's music collections for Santillana, more
than 200 songs for Del Sol, 36 songs for Harcourt-Brace, 36 songs
for Mimosa, 18 songs for Scholastic, and more, Suni is well
established as a prolific writer of inventive, catchy folk music
melodies and thoughtful lyrics that people love to sing, learn,
and dance to.
Suni Paz was born into an extraordinarily talented Argentine
Creole-Italian-Catalonian family of writers, musicians, linguists
and poets. In 1967, she moved from Chile to California with her
two children. There, she designed curriculum for elementary
schools presenting Latin American culture through songs, stories
and dances and thus began her teaching and singing career in the
United States, which has flourished. She is involved in an ongoing
collaboration with award-winning writer and poet Alma Flor Ada,
setting her lyrics to music. She also collaborates with Spanish
illustrator Vivi Escrivá, and poet Isabel Francisca Campoy. Her
expertise encompasses voice-overs for radio and television,
transcription of songs from English and French into Spanish, and
advertising. Suni also performs concerts at community centers,
public libraries, homes for the elderly, conferences for new
teachers and/or experienced educators, and conferences on
children's values.
She chose her performing name Suni, which means lasting, from
the Quechua language, so as to be able to disseminate the rich
indigenous cultures of the Americas in lyrics, rhythms, and
instruments such as the charango, caja, and bombo. Paz is a last
name that is found in every Latin American country. Its meaning is
peace. To find inner peace and share it with others is Suni's
quest in life. To sing and play rhythms from all of the Americas
has been her trademark.
For more information about Suni Paz, visit her website at www.sunipaz.com.
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The Magic Penny Award,
named after the song by Malvina Reynolds, is a Children's
Music Network tribute to people in our community who have
dedicated their lives to empowering children through
music. CMN gives this award annually at our national
gatherings to honor the lifetime achievement of someone
whose work most embodies our mission. In October 1999 the
first award was given posthumously to Malvina herself,
through her daughter, Nancy Schimmel.
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