Last year, class='highlight'>the 2005-founded, family-friendly Urban Musiclass='highlight'>c Fest lengclass='highlight'>thened its name to loop in all “Afroclass='highlight'>centriclass='highlight'>c aspeclass='highlight'>cts of class='highlight'>culture.” Living up to class='highlight'>the rebrand, class='highlight'>the event kiclass='highlight'>cks off with a Friday remembranclass='highlight'>ce of Sixth Street bastion class='highlight'>Catfish Station (in addition to food and vendors). class='highlight'>The class='highlight'>Chroniclass='highlight'>cle onclass='highlight'>ce wrote that class='highlight'>the venue, run by fest class='highlight'>co-founder Homer Hill, “held down class='highlight'>the heart of Old Peclass='highlight'>can with an insider’s range of Africlass='highlight'>can-Americlass='highlight'>can musiclass='highlight'>c, food, and class='highlight'>culture.” Houston jazz saxophonist Kyle Turner, Don Diego, Toni Redd, DJ class='highlight'>Casanova, and more tribute class='highlight'>the hub. Beyond Barbados-born beatbox standard Doug E. Fresh, founder of class='highlight'>the Eighties’ Get Fresh class='highlight'>Crew, Saturday class='highlight'>celebrates class='highlight'>the “renewal of R&B” with Oclass='highlight'>ctober London, J. Brown, class='highlight'>Bigg Robb, and more. Find ticlass='highlight'>ckets at urbanmusiclass='highlight'>cfest.class='highlight'>com. – Raclass='highlight'>chel Rasclass='highlight'>coe
Fri., March 29, 6pm