ABC News with Diane Sawyer: Francisco J. Nunez Awarded MacArthur Grant
/Person of the Week
Francisco Núñez, artistic director and founder of the Young People’s Chorus of New York discusses receiving 2011 MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship.
Read MorePerson of the Week
Francisco Núñez, artistic director and founder of the Young People’s Chorus of New York discusses receiving 2011 MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship.
Read MoreA Chicago skyscraper architect, a New York City children's choir founder and a North Carolina scientist who studies how to prevent sports-related concussions are among the latest 22 recipients of the no-strings-attached MacArthur Foundation "genius grants."
Read MoreFrancisco J. Núñez, 44, is the founder and artistic director of the Young People’s Chorus of New York City, a youth choir as diverse as the city it calls home.
Read MoreWhenever Francisco Nuñez’s prize-winning Young People’s Chorus of New York City performs abroad, the choristers finish on a Big Apple note with “Take the A Train” and “New York, New York.”
Read MoreThe problem with children's choruses, conductor Francisco J. Núñez has discovered, is that few of the major composers in history wrote for children, and many composers writing for children's choruses today are barely destined for publication, much less the history books.
Read MoreCantus in Choro -- A Global View of Choral Singing
Francisco J Núñez talks to Ken Smith about his adventurous project with the Young People's Chorus of New York City.
As the leader of a diverse urban chorus, conductor Francisco Núñez raises young voices -- and spirits.
Read MoreWhen Francisco Nuñez was growing up poor and lonely in Washington Heights – and his best friend was a second-hand piano – he wondered what it would be like to have lots of friends, from all different backgrounds.
Read MoreThe Sullivan Street home of the Children's Aid Society Chorus has a new bauble: a shiny silver trophy representing the chorus's recent second-place finish in the Prague International Choir Festival and Competition.
Read MoreFrancisco Nunez has been tinkering on the piano since his mother brought home an out-of-tune clunker from the Salvation Army on West 46th Street when he was 5. These days, though, Mr. Nunez, 32, usually finds himself beside the piano, surrounded by 44 children ages 12 to 18 who run the gamut: rich and poor, parochial and public, white and black, Jewish and Muslim.
Read More© Francisco J. Núñez, All Rights Reserved.